Harrison’s Slight Error
by
The one o’clock down express was just on the point of starting. The engine-driver, with his hand on the lever, whiled away the moments, like the watchman in The Agamemnon, by whistling. The guard endeavoured to talk to three people at once. Porters flitted to and fro, cleaving a path for themselves with trucks of luggage. The Usual Old Lady was asking if she was right for some place nobody had ever heard of. Everybody was saying good-bye to everybody else, and last, but not least, P. St H. Harrison, of St Austin’s, was strolling at a leisurely pace towards the rear of the train. There was no need for him to hurry. For had not his friend, Mace, promised to keep a corner-seat for him while he went to the refreshment-room to lay in supplies? Undoubtedly he had, and Harrison, as he watched the struggling crowd, congratulated himself that he was not as other men. A corner seat in a carriage full of his own particular friends, with plenty of provisions, and something to read in case he got tired of talking–it would be perfect.
So engrossed was he in these reflections, that he did not notice that from the opposite end of the platform a youth of about his own age was also making for the compartment in question. The first intimation he had of his presence was when the latter, arriving first at the door by a short head, hurled a bag on to the rack, and sank gracefully into the identical corner seat which Harrison had long regarded as his own personal property. And to make matters worse, there was no other vacant seat in the compartment. Harrison was about to protest, when the guard blew his whistle. There was nothing for it but to jump in and argue the matter out en route. Harrison jumped in, to be greeted instantly by a chorus of nine male voices. ‘Outside there! No room! Turn him out!’ said the chorus. Then the chorus broke up into its component parts, and began to address him one by one.
‘You rotter, Harrison,’ said Babington, of Dacre’s, ‘what do you come barging in here for? Can’t you see we’re five aside already?’
‘Hope you’ve brought a sardine-opener with you, old chap,’ said Barrett, the peerless pride of Philpott’s, ”cos we shall jolly well need one when we get to the good old Junct-i-on. Get up into the rack, Harrison, you’re stopping the ventilation.’
The youth who had commandeered Harrison’s seat so neatly took another unpardonable liberty at this point. He grinned. Not the timid, deprecating smile of one who wishes to ingratiate himself with strangers, but a good, six-inch grin right across his face. Harrison turned on him savagely.
‘Look here,’ he said, ‘just you get out of that. What do you mean by bagging my seat?’
‘Are you a director of this line?’ enquired the youth politely. Roars of applause from the interested audience. Harrison began to feel hot and uncomfortable.
‘Or only the Emperor of Germany?’ pursued his antagonist.
More applause, during which Harrison dropped his bag of provisions, which were instantly seized and divided on the share and share alike system, among the gratified Austinians.
‘Look here, none of your cheek,’ was the shockingly feeble retort which alone occurred to him. The other said nothing. Harrison returned to the attack.
‘Look here,’ he said, ‘are you going to get out, or have I got to make you?’
Not a word did his opponent utter. To quote the bard: ‘The stripling smiled.’ To tell the truth, the stripling smiled inanely.
The other occupants of the carriage were far from imitating his reserve. These treacherous friends, realizing that, for those who were themselves comfortably seated, the spectacle of Harrison standing up with aching limbs for a journey of some thirty miles would be both grateful and comforting, espoused the cause of the unknown with all the vigour of which they were capable.