The Double Life Of Mr. Alfred Burton
his place in a third-class carriage in his customary train to Garden Green. Ned
demanded in amazement. "Have you robbed a bank and goin
His eyes seemed filled with some nameles
rmer style of dress," he replied
d exclaimed. "Strike me blind if I should have known
truth. It is one of those matters, I suppose," h
le dazed. "Come in and have some farthing nap with the boys. They
he was unable to keep the d
night, t
e platform. Good sports and excellent fellows he had thought them yesterday. To-day he had no words for them. He simply knew that they grated upon every nerve in his body a
ttering with paint, appalled him. The larger villas-self-conscious types all reeking with plaster and false decorations-set him shivering. He turned into his own street and his heart sank. Something had indeed touched his eyes and he saw new and terrible things. The row of houses looked as though they had come out of a child's playbox. They were all untrue, shoddy, uninviting. The waste space on the other side of the unmade
He's cut off all the hair from his lip and he's got
with some measure of good looks woefully obscured by a hard and unsympathetic expression. Burton knew these things also. It flashed into his mind as he stood there that her first attraction to him had be
Alfred?" his better half demanded. "What are you
r arms akimbo, disapproval written in her face. Her hair was exceedingly untidy and there was a smut
demanded. "And why are you dressed li
nsolation. A newly-discovered sens
clothes," he replied. "
eated, almost hysterically. "Do you mea
ike it," Bur
hat, no t
ook his h
ished, for the present, at any rate,
," Ellen ord
he had imagined. The suite of furniture which was the joy of his wife's heart had been, it is true, exceedingly cheap, but the stamped magenta velvet was as crude in its coloring as his own discarded t
. The distaste upon her face had rather increased. She looke
rying a man who looked like a gentleman, at least! Do you mean
Burton replie
el
a few words? You have given expression to your disli
got to say?" she de
your bun," Bur
ife shrieked, her hands fly
n repeated. "I don't like that brooch with the false diamonds, and
the moment she failed to express hers
but it makes you walk like a duck, and it leaves unconcealed so much of your s
rday," Ellen gasped, "and I wasn't go
her any one does not," Burton insisted. "Your own sense of self-respect should tell yo
mother faltered. "You're get
lain sailor-suit, or a tweed knickerbocker suit with a flannel collar, would be better than
ed sharply. "Haven't forgotten you'
urton admitted, "but I
ed towards
nished all that rubbishing talk. There's some tea in the
of the table for a few moments, gazing helplessly about him. Presently Ellen descended the stairs and called
hat!" he sho
hort upon her w
y you're coming out with us like that-coming t
his head. "You may not be quite used to it yet, but I can assure you that it is far more
h and closed it again
nts to hear the soldier music and we are
with whom he was occasionally forced to hold futile conversation. He hated the sly punch in the ribs from one of his quondam companions, the artful murmur about getting the missis to look another way and the hurried visit to a neighboring public-house, the affected anger and consequent jokes which followed upon their return. As they walked homeward, the cold ugliness of it all seemed almost to paralyze his newly awakene
jokes. What Mr. and Mrs. Johnson must have thought of you, I can't imagine, standing there like a stick when they stopped to be civil for a few minutes, and behaving as though you never ev
am
He thirsted to tell the truth, but a new and gentle kindliness ke
ed?" she again demanded. "Have you l
gh. His manner was so entirely non-provocati
ersisted. "What is it that you don't like a
to have been able to prevaricate, but he could n
ke you to wash your face thoroughly in plain soap and water and never again touch a powder-puff or that nasty red stuff you have on your lips. I should like you to throw away those fancy blouses with the imitation lace, which
ificial means of lending brightness to her eyes. What sh
?" she demande
ve all spread into little holes, and one can't help noticing it, especially as your shoes are such a bright yellow. That stuff that looks like lace at the bottom of your petticoat has
trembling lips. "What about m
r worst. It must be very uncomfortable to wear, too, with all those pins sticking out of it. Colored glass they are made of, aren't they?
nis
at her app
o things about the h
e more eloquent she became. When she had finished, Burton had disappeared. She followed him to the doo