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PAGE 10

The Matador Of The Five Towns
by [?]

“What are those discs?” I inquired.

“The lads have to come and buy them earlier in the day,” said Buchanan. “We haven’t time to sell this edition for cash, you see.”

“Well,” I said as we left, “I’m very much obliged.”

“What on earth for?” Buchanan asked.

“Everything,” I said.

We returned through the squares of Hanbridge and by Trafalgar Road to Stirling’s house at Bleakridge. And everywhere in the deepening twilight I could see the urchins, often hatless and sometimes scarcely shod, scudding over the lamp-reflecting mire with sheets of wavy green, and above the noises of traffic I could hear the shrill outcry: “Signal. Football Edition. Football Edition. Signal.” The world was being informed of the might of Jos Myatt, and of the averting of disaster from Knype, and of the results of over a hundred other matches–not counting Rugby.

V

During the course of the evening, when Stirling had thoroughly accustomed himself to the state of being in sole charge of an expert from the British Museum, London, and the high walls round his more private soul had yielded to my timid but constant attacks, we grew fairly intimate. And in particular the doctor proved to me that his reputation for persuasive raciness with patients was well founded. Yet up to the time of dessert I might have been justified in supposing that that much-praised “manner” in a sick-room was nothing but a provincial legend. Such may be the influence of a quite inoffensive and shy Londoner in the country. At half-past ten, Titus being already asleep for the night in an arm-chair, we sat at ease over the fire in the study telling each other stories. We had dealt with the arts, and with medicine; now we were dealing with life, in those aspects of it which cause men to laugh and women uneasily to wonder. Once or twice we had mentioned the Brindleys. The hour for their arrival was come. But being deeply comfortable and content where I was, I felt no impatience. Then there was a tap on the window.

“That’s Bobbie!” said Stirling, rising slowly from his chair. “He won’t refuse whisky, even if you do. I’d better get another bottle.”

The tap was repeated peevishly.

“I’m coming, laddie!” Stirling protested.

He slippered out through the hall and through the surgery to the side door, I following, and Titus sneezing and snuffing in the rear.

“I say, mester,” said a heavy voice as the doctor opened the door. It was not Brindley, but Jos Myatt. Unable to locate the bell-push in the dark, he had characteristically attacked the sole illuminated window. He demanded, or he commanded, very curtly, that the doctor should go up instantly to the Foaming Quart at Toft End.

Stirling hesitated a moment.

“All right, my man,” said he, calmly.

“Now?” the heavy, suspicious voice on the doorstep insisted.

“I’ll be there before ye if ye don’t sprint, man. I’ll run up in the car.” Stirling shut the door. I heard footsteps on the gravel path outside.

“Ye heard?” said he to me. “And what am I to do with ye?”

“I’ll go with you, of course,” I answered.

“I may be kept up there a while.”

“I don’t care,” I said roisterously. “It’s a pub and I’m a traveller.”

Stirling’s household was in bed and his assistant gone home. While he and Titus got out the car I wrote a line for the Brindleys: “Gone with doctor to see patient at Toft End. Don’t wait up.–A.L.” This we pushed under Brindley’s front door on our way forth. Very soon we were vibrating up a steep street on the first speed of the car, and the yellow reflections of distant furnaces began to shine over house roofs below us. It was exhilaratingly cold, a clear and frosty night, tonic, bracing after the enclosed warmth of the study. I was joyous, but silently. We had quitted the kingdom of the god Pan; we were in Lucina’s realm, its consequence, where there is no laughter. We were on a mission.