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.

It was lost in the resounding echoes of the immense vault.  Edgar certainly did not hear it.  But he caught the great black initials, “E.W.” on the kit-bag as the porter staggered along, and stopped the aimless man, and the kit-bag was thrown into the apartment.  Doors were now banging.  Christine saw Edgar take out his purse and fumble at it.  But Edgar’s companion pushed Edgar into the train and himself gave a tip which caused the porter to salute extravagantly.  The porter, at any rate, had been rewarded.  Christine began to cry, not from chagrin, but with relief.  Women on the platform waved absurd little white handkerchiefs.  Heads and khaki shoulders stuck out of the carriage windows of the shut train.  A small green flag waved; arms waved like semaphores.  The train ought to have been gliding away, but something delayed it, and it was held as if spellbound under the high, dim semicircle of black glass, amid the noises of steam, the hissing of electric globes, the horrible rattle of luggage trucks, the patter of feet, and the vast, murmuring gloom.  Christine saw Edgar leaning from a window and gazing anxiously about.  The little handkerchiefs were still courageously waving, and she, too, waved a little wisp.  But he did not see her; he was not looking in the right place for her.

She thought:  Why did he not stay near the gate for me?  But she thought again:  Because he feared to miss the train.  It was necessary that he should be close to his compartment.  He knows he is not quite sober.

She wondered whether he had any relatives, or any relations with another woman.  He seemed to be as solitary as she was.

On the same side of the platform-gate as herself a very tall, slim, dandy of an officer was bending over a smartly-dressed girl, smiling at her and whispering.  Suddenly the girl turned from him with a disdainful toss of the head and said in a loud, clear Cockney voice: 

“You can’t tell the tale to me, young man.  This is my second time on earth.”

Christine heard the words, but was completely puzzled.  The train moved, at first almost imperceptibly.  The handkerchiefs showed extreme agitation.  Then a raucous song floated from the train: 

“John Brown’s baby’s got a pimple on his—­shoooo—­ John Brown’s baby’s got a pimple on his—­shoooo—­ John Brown’s baby’s got a pimple on his—­shoooo—­ and we all went marching home.  Glory, glory, Alleluia!  Glory, glory ...”

The rails showed empty where the train had been, and the sound of the song faded and died.  Some of the women were crying.  Christine felt that she was in a land of which she understood nothing but the tears.  She also felt very cold in the legs.

Chapter 22

GETTING ON WITH THE WAR

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Pretty Lady from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.