The Lighted Way eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 351 pages of information about The Lighted Way.

The Lighted Way eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 351 pages of information about The Lighted Way.

Mr. Jarvis, human automaton though he was, permitted himself an exclamation of surprise.

“Young Chetwode!  Surely you’re not in earnest, sir!”

“Why not?” Mr. Weatherley demanded.  “There’s nothing against him, is there?”

“Nothing against him, precisely,” Mr. Jarvis confessed, “but he’s at the lowest desk in the office, bar Smithers.  His salary is only twenty-eight shillings a week, and we know nothing whatever about him except that his references were satisfactory.  It isn’t to be supposed that he would feel at home in your house, sir.  Now, with Mr. Tidey, sir, it’s quite different.  They live in a very beautiful house at Sydenham now—­quite a small palace, in its way, I’ve been told.”

Mr. Weatherley was getting a little impatient.

“Send Chetwode out for a moment, anyway,” he directed.  “I’ll speak to him here.”

Mr. Jarvis obeyed in silence.  He entered the office and touched the young man in question upon the shoulder.

“Mr. Weatherley wishes to speak to you outside, Chetwode,” he announced.  “Make haste, please.”

Arnold Chetwode put down his pen and rose to his feet.  There was nothing flurried about his manner, nothing whatever to indicate on his part any knowledge of the fact that this was the voice of Fate beating upon his ear.  He did not even show the ordinary interest of a youthful employee summoned for the first time to an audience with his chief.  Standing for a moment by the side of the senior clerk in the middle of the office, tall and straight, with deep brown hair, excellent features, and the remnants of a healthy tan still visible on his forehead and neck, he looked curiously out of place in this unwholesome, gaslit building with its atmosphere of cheese and bacon.  He would have been noticeably good-looking upon the cricket field or in any gathering of people belonging to the other side of life.  Here he seemed almost a curiously incongruous figure.  He passed through the glass-paned door and stood respectfully before his employer.  Mr. Weatherley—­it was absurd, but he scarcely knew how to make his suggestion—­fidgetted for a moment and coughed.  The young man, who, among many other quite unusual qualities, was possessed of a considerable amount of tact, looked down upon his employer with a little well-assumed anxiety.  As a matter of fact, he really was exceedingly anxious not to lose his place.

“I understood from Mr. Jarvis that you wished to speak to me, sir,” he remarked.  “I hope that my work has given satisfaction?  I know that I am quite inexperienced but I don’t think that I have made any mistakes.”

Mr. Weatherley was, to tell the truth, thankful for the opening.

“I have had no complaints, Chetwode,” he admitted, struggling for that note of condescension which he felt to be in order.  “No complaints at all.  I was wondering if you—­you happened to play bridge?”

Once more this extraordinary young man showed himself to be possessed of gifts quite unusual at his age.  Not by the flicker of an eyelid did he show the least surprise or amusement.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Lighted Way from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.