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PAGE 2

A Lodger In Maze Pond
by [?]

‘I haven’t had time to clear away the breakfast things,’ she said, speaking rapidly and with an air. ‘Mr. Shergold was late this mornin’; he didn’t get up till nearly ten, an’ then he sat writin’ letters. Did he know as you was comin’, sir?’

‘No; I looked in on the chance of finding him, or learning where he was.’

‘I’m sure he’ll be in about half-past twelve, ’cause he said to me as he was only goin’ to get a breath of air. He hasn’t nothing to do at the ‘ospital just now.’

‘Has he talked of going away?’

‘Going away?’ The girl repeated the words sharply, and examined the speaker’s face. ‘Oh, he won’t be goin’ away just yet, I think.’

Munden returned her look with a certain curiosity, and watched her as she began to clink together the things upon the table. Obviously she esteemed herself a person of some importance. Her figure was not bad, and her features had the trivial prettiness so commonly seen in London girls of the lower orders,–the kind of prettiness which ultimately loses itself in fat and chronic perspiration. Her complexion already began to show a tendency to muddiness, and when her lips parted, they showed decay of teeth. In dress she was untidy; her hair exhibited a futile attempt at elaborate arrangement; she had dirty hands.

Disposed to talk, she lingered as long as possible, but Harvey Munden had no leanings to this kind of colloquy; when the girl took herself off, he drew a breath of satisfaction, and smiled the smile of an intellectual man who has outlived youthful follies.

He stepped over to the lodger’s bookcase. There were about a hundred volumes, only a handful of them connected with medical study. Seeing a volume of his own Munden took it down and idly turned the pages; it surprised him to discover a great many marginal notes in pencil, and an examination of these showed him that Shergold must have gone carefully through the book with an eye to the correction of its style; adjectives were deleted and inserted, words of common usage removed for others which only a fine literary conscience could supply, and in places even the punctuation was minutely changed. Whilst he still pondered this singular manifestation of critical zeal, the door opened, and Shergold came in.

A man of two-and-thirty, short, ungraceful, ill-dressed, with features as little commonplace as can be imagined. He had somewhat a stern look, and on his brow were furrows of care. Light-blue eyes tended to modify the all but harshness of his lower face; when he smiled, as on recognising his friend, they expressed a wonderful innocence and suavity of nature; overshadowed, in thoughtful or troubled mood, by his heavy eyebrows, they became deeply pathetic. His nose was short and flat, yet somehow not ignoble; his full lips, bare of moustache, tended to suggest a melancholy fretfulness. But for the high forehead, no casual observer would have cared to look at him a second time; but that upper story made the whole countenance vivid with intellect, as though a light beamed upon it from above.

‘You hypercritical beggar!’ cried Harvey, turning with the volume in his hand. ‘Is this how you treat the glorious works of your contemporaries?’

Shergold reddened and was mute.

‘I shall take this away with me,’ pursued the other, laughing. ‘It’ll be worth a little study.’

‘My dear fellow–you won’t take it ill of me–I didn’t really mean it as a criticism,’ the deep, musical voice stammered in serious embarrassment.

‘Why, wasn’t it just this kind of thing that caused a quarrel between George Sand and Musset?’

‘Yes, yes; but George Sand was such a peremptory fellow, and Musset such a vapourish young person. Look! I’ll show you what I meant.’

‘Thanks,’ said Munden, ‘I can find that out for myself.’ He thrust the book into his coat-pocket. ‘I came to ask you if you are aware of your uncle’s condition.’