Authors: Norman Collins
Mrs. Privett, on the other hand, was afraid that Irene might be overdoing it. Taxing her strength too far. But there was no real danger of that. Irene still disliked Rammell's intensely. She certainly didn't intend killing herself for Mr. Preece. In the autumn she was planning to go to the Polytechnic evening Drama School as well.
Tony Rammell, too, still felt himself to be an outsider. He intended chucking his job altogether as soon as he could find something that he could really get his teeth into. He was spending all his spare time learning Russian. The one thing that he really wanted was a visa. Then he would be able to see the Bolskoya Theatre for himself. But Mr. Rammell had declined to help him. Even forbidden him to write to the Foreign Office on the firm's note-paper. It was Sir Harry who was more sympathetic. He could understand the boy's restlessness. His eagerness for travel and adventure. As soon as Tony mentioned it, the old man cottoned on at once. He suggested that the two of them should go somewhere. Monte Carlo. Cannes. Nice. Anywhere in reason that Tony cared to suggest.
There was, however, more to it than his love for young Tony. There was photography. Sir Harry had just bought himself a Leica f.1.4, complete with a bag of tricks that a Press photographer would envy and never use. He wasn't very good with it yet. There were some knobs that he hadn't properly got round to. And sometimes he took three or four snaps all on the same piece of film. But what did it matter? Sir Harry was happy. He had made a lot of new friends, too, at Wallace Heaton's where he bought the camera. And he rather liked the red-haired girl at the chemist's where he took his strange multiple pictures to be developed. The last one showed Mrs. Rammell with Major Cuzzens's head in her lap and a spectral pianist, whom he couldn't even remember, brooding like a cloud over the pair of them. But Sir Harry didn't care. Wherever he went, his camera went with him. And Wednesdays now had a brand new thrill for him. That was because it was on Wednesday that
The Amateur Photographer
came out. The last issue had contained a whole article on Mediterranean lighting.
And that about accounts for everyone. Except Mr. Bloot. He was in a terrible state. He was being driven half crazy because he didn't yet know whether Hetty Florence really intended to marry him. Or whether she was just toying with his affections. That was why he couldn't sleep at nights. Why for the first time in twenty-seven years he had forgotten to change the budgerigars' water. He'd had eleven different budgerigars altogether. But the shame of forgetting to attend to Champion Billy continued to haunt him. It showed that under the strain he was beginning to break up. What's more, he was losing weight. He could now put a half-pound packet of bird seed into the waist-band of his trousers and still do up the top button. It was terrible.
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Mr. Bloot's decision to go round to see Hetty was made without any proper planning or forethought. It was simply the compulsive action of an overwrought and desperate man.
Normally, he didn't ever see Hetty on Wednesdays. That, she told him, was the evening when she washed her hair. And remembering how much of it she had, the occasion had a semi-sacred significance. Sometimes, dreamily, at the moment of dropping off to sleep he had seen himself brushing Hetty's hair. He could hear the swish that the brush made as it swept through the long clinging tresses. Feel the caress of the hair upon his bare hands. Smell the rich fragrance of the real egg-shampoo ... But such intimacies, he told himself, should be reserved for the final mystery of marriage. Better not think about them. Or he would go mad.
And it wasn't merely the strain of a long engagement from which he was suffering. It was worse than that. Because he didn't even know what her intentions towards him really were. For all he could tell she was merely toying with him. That was why he had got to ask her. Put the question point blank. Real take it, or leave it stuff.
He heaved himself up suddenly.
“It's now or never,” he said. “Ah just can't go on like this. Not even if she is washing 'er 'air. She 'asn't got the raht to arsk it of me. Ah'm only 'uman. Ah'm flesh-and-blood, even if Ah am fifty-seven. Ah'm not some sortover monk.”
The fact that he had voiced such feelings, even to himself, showed how keyed-up he was. Not that he looked unduly perturbed as he set out. That may, however, have been merely because the weather had turned chilly, and he was wearing his knitted lining. It was a thick lining with padded sides. And knitted things and passion do not go together. There is something mutually irreconcilable. Also, his overcoat was of a cut that suggested social standing rather than romance. It was dark blue with a black velvet half-collar. A thoroughly distinguished piece of tailoring that had been made for a man only a few inches shorter than Mr. Bloot, it had reached him via a misfit specialist off Shaftesbury Avenue. And it showed its origin most distinctly. Every time Mr. Bloot wore it, he added something of Savile Row
and Boodles's to the local landscape of Kentish Town and Tufnell Park.
It was only his gait that revealed that there was something urgent and imperative about the expedition. And there were no flowers this time. The period for bouquet and blandishment was over. A straight “yes” or “no” coming from the other party was what Mr. Bloot now demanded. And this was a pity. Because full-blooded, high-spirited women like Hetty Florence are often touched and left practically defenceless by some little attention, some small floral tribute. That original bunch of sweet peas and gladioli had very nearly won her the first time. But he was not to know that. Subtlety, particularly subtlety in matters of the heart, formed no part of Mr. Bloot's make-up. Nor had he ever needed it. Emmie had been demonstrably of the straightforward, no-nonsense school.
The Tufnell Park Road seemed unusually long this evening. And the bus up the Seven Sisters Road unnaturally slow. As he sat in the corner seat looking out anxiously for Tregunter Road, he kept muttering. His temper was up by now. He was angry and morose. “Wash 'er 'air, indeed,” he said aloud as the bus trundled endlessly along. “If she isn't careful she won't 'ave no one to wash it for.”
The woman next to him glanced apprehensively towards the well-dressed gentleman who was sitting beside her, and then moved over to the seat opposite. She was disappointed in him. He looked such a reliable, distinguished sort of man. And now she could see that he was just a drunken old reprobate like the rest of them. The words: “Ah'm not a bloody monk. Ah'm a 'uman being like the rest of them” had just reached her from across the gangway. But by then the bus had reached Tregunter Road and Mr. Bloot had got out. Just as well, too. Another mumble from him, and she would have rung the bell so that she could get out herself.
Still inwardly fuming by the time he reached the entrance to Artillery Mansions, Mr. Bloot's whole nature changed as he mounted the steel stair-treads. He was no longer angry. He was frightened. Frightened and contrite. He was afraid of losing Hetty altogether. Ashamed of the thoughts that he had just been thinking. When he reached the first landing he paused. In the course of climbing the last flight his courage had completely evaporated. He was no longer in any mood for an ultimatum. He was trembling too much for that. The utmost that he could go through withâand then only with an act of supreme self-controlâwould be to pretend that he had just dropped in. He
was even working out in his mind some vague, improbable story about having been to see a man in Harringay about a budgerigar ...
Passing his tongue across his lips because they were dry, he put out his forefinger and gave the bell-push a quick, nervous jab as though the little porcelain button were red hot.
The abrupt ping of the electric bell made Hetty jump violently. She was not washing her hair. Or anything like it. She was wondering whether to play a seven or take another card from the stack. Her cards had been terrible all evening. She was therefore now concentrating really hard. She had already lost twenty-three-and-sixpence.
“You go, Chick,” she said without looking up into the thick blue haze of cigar smoke that was swirling round the room. “It's only Hutch. He said he'd be here if Daisy'd let him.”
It was not merely the presence of Chick that amazed Mr. Bloot. It was his appearance. For it had grown hot in the small front sitting-room. And Chick had been getting down to things. He had taken off his jacket. Nor had he taken the trouble to dress before going to the front door. His waistcoatâit was a fancy one covered all over with
fleur-de-lys
as though he were the last of the Bourbonsâwas over the back of his chair. This meant that his braces were showing. And they were like no braces that Mr. Bloot had ever seen before. They had pictures of ladies all over them.
But Mr. Bloot's surprise was no greater than that of Chick himself. He had expected to see Hutch. And Hutch was only a small man. A small man with a thin pointed wedge of a face resting on a polka-dot bow tie. He was a commission agent. And he carried about with him something of the unmistakable alertness of his profession. Whereas this ponderous, muffled-up mammoth with his umbrella and his velvet half-collar suggested a different kind of world altogether. It was the world of church wardens and temperance leagues and boys' welfare clubs. Chick immediately felt suspicious. Gripping his cigar firmly between his teeth, he blocked the narrow hall completely.
“Yah?” he asked.
Mr. Bloot did not reply straight away. He was spell-bound, hypnotized by the ladies on Chick's braces. The thought that perhaps he had blundered, that possibly this was number 25b
and not number 23bâthere was a duplicate entrance to Artillery Mansions one door farther up the streetâflashed into his mind. But one glance over Chick's shoulder reassured him. There on the corner on the mahogany hat-stand hung Hetty's magenta rain-cape. There could hardly be two women in one block of flats who would have chosen so rousing, so declamatory a colour. And even above the general odour of cigar smoke he could detect the elusive, penetrating fragrance of the scent that Hetty always used.
“Good evening,” he said in his full, robust-sounding baritone. “Ah wonder if Miss Florence is at home. If so, perhaps Ah might be allowed to 'ave a word with 'er.”
It all sounded civil enough, Chick admitted. But all the same he didn't like it somehow. There was the additional flavour of debt-collection somewhere in the background. And he wasn't the kind of man to see a good sort like Hetty shamelessly dunned in the middle of a quiet game of poker. He shook his head firmly.
“You're unlucky,” he said. “Nothing doing. Oo shall I say called?”
Mr. Bloot felt his whole body go limp. He had been forced to brace himself to come at all. And in the result he was more bewildered than if he had stayed at home. Never a quick thinker he felt the need to play for time.
“It's not important, thank you,” he said. “Ah'll call again. She wasn't erspecting me.”
His voice was level and steady while he was speaking. But inside him, his heart was hammering. For all he knew the man in front of him might be a burglar. A breaker-in. He tried desperately to memorize his appearance. And he was just turning away, with Chick closing the front door inch by inch on him as he retreated, when suddenly through the half-open door of the sitting-room, he heard Hetty's voice.
Only it was not like her usual voice. Not soft. And husky. And vibrating. It was a torn, anguished voice. With the authentic note of desperation ringing through it.
“No, you don't,” she was saying. “That's all you get out of little me. Try it again, and I'll start screaming.”
In the ordinary way Mr. Bloot was neither a violent nor impulsive man. Compared with Hetty Florence's friend, Chick, his reactions were definitely lethargic. But sudden anxietyâabove all, anxiety about a loved oneâcan change a man completely. Make a hero of him.
And Mr. Bloot undeniably had weight on his side. Before
Chick knew properly what was happening, he found himself trapped behind the half-opened door as Mr. Bloot forced his way past him. The hall was only two foot nine and for a moment the pressure was terrific. The japanned letter-box on the back of the front door was rammed mercilessly into Chick's stomach. He was winded.
But only temporarily. Chick had been in tight corners before. In his time, he had emerged many times victorious and unscathed. From a rough-and-tumble in Harringay. A free-for-all in the King's Cross district. A full open-house down Walthamstow way when a policeman had cut his knuckles open on a razor. Even winded and compressed, he did not doubt that he was more than a match for this sinister, bundled-up figure armed only with an umbrella. But he had never before been up against a real master of umbrella fighting. For Mr. Bloot did not attempt to jab or poke or start hitting out. That would have been disastrous. Instead, finding himself in danger of being attacked from behind, he merely turned round and opened his umbrella.
The barrier was impenetrable. On the one side the spokes caught into the mahogany hat-stand and, on the other, they fixed themselves round the electric light company's main fuse-box. The frame of the umbrella bent and sprang back again. It groaned. But it held fast. Chick went down on hands and knees and began crawling underneath. But by then Mr. Bloot had reached the sitting-room, and flung the door wide open.
“Don't nobody move,” he said, in a loud and terrible voice.
He got no farther, however. Because at that instant Chick sprang on him from behind. And it was not an amateur attack. It was low. And classical. And rugger-like. It caught Mr. Bloot just below the knees and sent him pitching. At one moment there were Hetty's two friends sympathetically contemplating the wretchedness of her last poker hand. And at the next, sixteen stone of muffler and blue overcoat suddenly crashed down on top of them.