The Pretty Lady eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 303 pages of information about The Pretty Lady.

The Pretty Lady eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 303 pages of information about The Pretty Lady.

“By Jove!  You’re an astounding woman, Con.  You do me good!”

There was a fresh noise beyond the door, and the door opened and Robin rushed in, blanched and hysterical, and with her seemed to rush in terror.

“Oh!  Madame!” she cried.  “As there was no more firing I went on to the roof, and her ladyship—­” She covered her face and sobbed.

G.J. jumped up.

“Go and see,” said Concepcion in a blank voice, not moving.  “I can’t....  It’s the message straight from Potsdam that’s arrived.”

Chapter 35

QUEEN DEAD

G.J. emerged from the crowded and malodorous Coroner’s Court with a deep sense of the rigour and the thoroughness of British justice, and especially of its stolidity.

There had been four inquests, all upon the bodies of air-raid victims:  a road-man, his wife, an orphan baby—­all belonging to the thick central mass of the proletariat, for a West End slum had received a bomb full in the face—­and Lady Queenie Paulle.  The policemen were stolid; the reporters were stolid; the proletariat was stolid; the majority of the witnesses were stolid, and in particular the representatives of various philanthropic agencies who gave the most minute evidence about the habits and circumstances of the slum; and the jurymen were very stolid, and never more so than when, with stubby fingers holding ancient pens, they had to sign quantities of blue forms under the strict guidance of a bareheaded policeman.

The world of Queenie’s acquaintances made a strange, vivid contrast to this grey, grim, blockish world; and the two worlds regarded each other with the wonder and the suspicious resentment of foreigners.  Queen’s world came expecting to behave as at a cause celebre of, for example, divorce.  Its representatives were quite ready to tolerate unpleasing contacts and long stretches of tedium in return for some glimpse of the squalid and the privilege of being able to say that they had been present at the inquest.  But most of them had arrived rather late, and they had reckoned without the Coroner, and comparatively few obtained even admittance.

The Coroner had arrived on the stroke of the hour, in a silk hat and frock coat, with a black bag, and had sat down at his desk and begun to rule the proceedings with an absolutism that no High Court Judge would have attempted.  He was autocrat in a small, close, sordid room; but he was autocrat.  He had already shown his quality in some indirect collisions with the Marquis of Lechford.  The Marquis felt that he could not stomach the exposure of his daughter’s corpse in a common mortuary with other corpses of he knew not whom.  Long experience of the marquisate had taught him to believe that everything could be arranged.  He found, however, that this matter could not be arranged.  There was no appeal from the ukase of the Coroner.  Then he wished to be excused from giving evidence, since his evidence could

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The Pretty Lady from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.