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PAGE 3

Topham’s Chance
by [?]

‘Mr. Starkey, M.A.?’ he inquired, rather nervously, though his smile and his upright posture did not lack a certain dignity.

‘Quite right,’ murmured Topham, who was authorised to represent his principal to any one coming on business. ‘Will you take a seat?’

‘You will know my name,’ began the stranger. ‘Wigmore–Abraham Wigmore.’

‘Very glad to meet you, Mr. Wigmore. I was on the point of sending your last batch of papers to the post. You will find, this time, I have been able to praise them unreservedly.’

The listener fairly blushed with delight; then he grasped his short beard with his left hand and laughed silently, showing excellent teeth.

‘Well, Mr. Starkey,’ he replied at length in a moderately subdued voice, ‘I did really think I’d managed better than usual. But there’s much thanks due to you, sir. You’ve helped me, Mr. Starkey, you really have. And that’s one reason why, happening to come up to London, I wished to have the pleasure of seeing you; I really did want to thank you, sir.’

CHAPTER III

Topham was closely observing this singular visitor. He had always taken ‘Abraham Wigmore’ for a youth of nineteen or so, some not over-bright, but plodding and earnest clerk or counter-man in the little Gloucestershire town from which the correspondent wrote; it astonished him to see this mature and most respectable person. They talked on. Mr. Wigmore had a slight west-country accent, but otherwise his language differed little from that of the normally educated; in every word he revealed a good and kindly, if simple, nature. At length a slight embarrassment interfered with the flow of his talk, which, having been solely of tuitional matters, began to take a turn more personal. Was he taking too much of Mr. Starkey’s time? Reassured on this point, he begged leave to give some account of himself.

‘I dare say, Mr. Starkey, you’re surprised to see how old I am. It seems strange to you, no doubt, that at my age I should be going to school.’ He grasped his beard and laughed. ‘Well, it is strange, and I’d like to explain it to you. To begin with, I’ll tell you what my age is; I’m seven-and-forty. Only that. But I’m the father of two daughters–both married. Yes, I was married young myself, and my good wife died long ago, more’s the pity.’

He paused, looked round the room, stroked his hard-felt hat, Topham murmuring a sympathetic sound.

‘Now, as to my business, Mr. Starkey. I’m a fruiterer and greengrocer. I might have said fruiterer alone; it sounds more respectable, but the honest truth is, I do sell vegetables as well, and I want you to know that, Mr. Starkey. Does it make you feel ashamed of me?’

‘My dear sir! What business could be more honourable? I heartily wish I had one as good and as lucrative.’

‘Well, that’s your kindness, sir,’ said Wigmore, with a pleased smile. ‘The fact is, I have done pretty well, though I’m not by any means a rich man: comfortable, that’s all. I gave my girls a good schooling, and what with that and their good looks, they’ve both made what may be called better marriages than might have been expected. For down in our country, you know, sir, a shopkeeper is one thing, and a gentleman’s another. Now my girls have married gentlemen.’

Again he paused, and with emphasis. Again Topham murmured, this time congratulation.

‘One of them is wife to a young solicitor; the other to a young gentleman farmer. And they’ve both gone to live in another part of the country. I dare say you understand that, Mr. Starkey?’

The speaker’s eyes had fallen; at the same time a twitching of the brows and hardening of the mouth changed the expression of his face, marking it with an unexpected sadness, all but pain.

‘Do you mean, Mr. Wigmore,’ asked Topham, ‘that your daughters desire to live at a distance from you?’

‘Well, I’m sorry to say that’s what I do mean, Mr. Starkey. My son-in-law the solicitor had intended practising in the town where he was born; instead of that he went to another a long way off. My son-in-law the gentleman farmer was to have taken a farm close by us; he altered his mind, and went into another county. You see, sir! It’s quite natural: I find no fault. There’s never been an unkind word between any of us. But–‘