A Yellow God: an Idol of Africa eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 337 pages of information about A Yellow God.

A Yellow God: an Idol of Africa eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 337 pages of information about A Yellow God.

He ran down the street and danced for joy like a child, yes, and presented a crossing-sweeper against whom he butted with a whole sixpence in compensation.  Thus he reached the Mansion House, not unsuspected of inebriety by the police, and clambered to the top of a bus crowded with weary and anxious-looking City clerks returning home after a long day’s labour at starvation wage.  In that cold company and a chilling atmosphere some of his enthusiasm evaporated.  He remembered that this step of his meant that sooner or later, within a year or two at most, Yarleys, where his family had dwelt for centuries, must go to the hammer.  Why had he not accepted Aylward’s offer and sold that old fetish to him for L17,000?  There was no question of share-dealing there, and if a very wealthy man chose to give a fancy price for a curiosity, he could take it without doubt or shame.  At least it would have sufficed to save Yarleys, which after all was only mortgaged for L20,000.  For the life of him he could not tell.  He had acted on impulse, a very curious impulse, and there was an end of it perhaps; it might be because his uncle had told him as a boy that the thing was unique, or perhaps because old Jeekie, his negro servant, venerated it so much and swore that it was “lucky.”  At any rate he had declined and there was an end.

But another and a graver matter remained.  He had desired wealth to save Yarleys, but he desired it still more for a different purpose.  Above everything on earth he loved Barbara, his distant cousin and the niece of Mr. Champers-Haswell, who until an hour ago had been his partner.  Now she was a great heiress, and without fortune he could not marry her, even if she would marry him, which remained in doubt.  For one thing her uncle and guardian Haswell, under her father’s will, had absolute discretion in this matter until she reached the age of twenty-five, and for another he was too proud.  Therefore it would seem that in abandoning his business, he had abandoned his chance of Barbara also, which was a truly dreadful thought.

Well, it was in order that he might see her, that he had agreed to visit The Court on the morrow, even though it meant a meeting with his late partners, who were the last people with whom he desired to foregather again so soon.  Then and there he made up his mind that before he bade Barbara farewell, he would tell her the whole story, so that she might not misjudge him.  After that he would go off somewhere—­to Africa perhaps.  Meanwhile he was quite tired out, as tired as though he had lain a week in the grip of fever.  He must eat some food and get to bed.  Sufficient unto the day was the evil thereof, yet on the whole he blessed the name of Jackson, editor of The Judge and his father’s old friend.

When Alan had left the office Sir Robert turned to Mr. Champers-Haswell and asked him abruptly, “What the devil does this mean?”

Mr. Haswell looked up at the ceiling and whistled in his own peculiar fashion, then answered: 

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A Yellow God: an Idol of Africa from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.