Buried Alive: a Tale of These Days eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 221 pages of information about Buried Alive.

Buried Alive: a Tale of These Days eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 221 pages of information about Buried Alive.
sleeves.  He wore a black silk necktie, with a small pearl pin in the mathematical centre of the perfect rhomboid of the upper part of a sailor’s knot.  His gloves were of slate colour.  The chief characteristic of his faintly striped trousers was the crease, which seemed more than mortal.  His boots were of glace kid and as smooth as his cheeks.  The cheeks had a fresh boyish colour, and between them, over admirable snowy teeth, projected the hooked key to this temperament.  It is possible that Alice, from sheer thoughtlessness, shared the vulgar prejudice against Jews; but certainly she did not now feel it.  The man’s personal charm, his exceeding niceness, had always conquered that prejudice, whenever encountered.  Moreover, he was only about thirty-five in years, and no such costly and beautiful male had ever yet stood on Alice’s doorstep.

She at once, in her mind, contrasted him with the curates of the previous week, to the disadvantage of the Established Church.  She did not know that this man was more dangerous than a thousand curates.

“Is this Mr. Leek’s?” he inquired smilingly, and raised his hat.

“Yes,” said Alice with a responsive smile.

“Is he in?”

“Well,” said Alice, “he’s busy at his work.  You see in this weather he can’t go out much—­not to work—­and so he—­”

“Could I see him in his studio?” asked the glossy man, with the air of saying, “Can you grant me this supreme favour?”

It was the first time that Alice had heard the attic called a studio.  She paused.

“It’s about pictures,” explained the visitor.

“Oh!” said Alice.  “Will you come in?”

“I’ve run down specially to see Mr. Leek,” said the visitor with emphasis.

Alice’s opinion as to the seriousness of her husband’s gift for painting had of course changed in two years.  A man who can make two or three hundred a year by sticking colours anyhow, at any hazard, on canvases—­ by producing alleged pictures that in Alice’s secret view bore only a comic resemblance to anything at all—­that man had to be taken seriously in his attic as an artisan.  It is true that Alice thought the payment he received miraculously high for the quality of work done; but, with this agreeable Jew in the hall, and the coupe at the kerb, she suddenly perceived the probability of even greater miracles in the matter of price.  She saw the average price of ten pounds rising to fifteen, or even twenty, pounds—­provided her husband was given no opportunity to ruin the affair by his absurd, retiring shyness.

“Will you come this way?” she suggested briskly.

And all that elegance followed her up to the attic door:  which door she threw open, remarking simply—­

“Henry, here is a gentleman come to see you about pictures.”

A Connoisseur

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Buried Alive: a Tale of These Days from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.