The Double Life Of Mr. Alfred Burton
gton calle
xtraordinary manner' during the last week or so. Everybody drinks too much there. The table-linen isn't clean, and the bar
n his services were not urgently required at the office, at the Golden Lion, and he had been seen on more than one occasion at the theatre and elsewhere
egular customer, ordered a luncheon which, simple though it was, inspired his companion with respect. The waiter withdrew and the
t all means, Burton?" he deman
m sure," he added, a little hesita
congratulation. A spasm, as though of pain, had suddenly p
er in an absolutely indescribable sort of way. There seems to be s
ut of the habit. It's quite easy. I expect very soon you will f
n was incline
," he declared, "but
pretty well up to now,
ssented, but wit
everything I say as a matter of habit. I tell them now that the goods I am offering are not what they should be, because I can't help it, and th
y, "that there might be an opening in the pro
ngton smi
rton," he replied,
red the subjec
murmured, "where instinctive tru
n answered, gloomily. "Besides, I am
eed in letting Idlemay Hou
er-came to me with his wife, very keen to take a house in that precise neighborhood. I asked him the lowest rent to start wi
t he to
to him, and instead of being scared he went to an expert in drains, who advised him that there w
ght be an opening for an honest
gton looke
e no confidence in it. People like to be gulled. They've been brought up to it. They as
ttle dolefully, "it seems as though this change
ed. Even his cough w
ne might venture upon a somewhat personal question, how did you manage to discover a vocation?
red quite by accident the one form in which it is poss
his knife and fork. He
ton murmur
is breath, a little vaguely. The que
aper and had obviously been paid for, and I saw at once that the only point about it was that the man had put down what he s
in, like an office boy reading the Police Gazette. All the time I am in the streets I am looking at the buildings, and, Burton, this is the extraordinary part of it, I know no more about architecture than a babe unborn, and yet I can tell you where they're wrong, every one of them. T
ass of wine from the bottle wh
, "this is a queer thing
will ever believe it. The person who declared that there was not
ned across
g. I went to see what had become of the flower-pot. I found the little roo
ns of embarrassment. He waited
t of those beans,
on shook his
about them yet," he said.
ey are, then?" Burton
neer did n
him to give me that little tree. I simply did not dare to run the risk. It is a painful subject with me, this, because quite thoughtlessly I endeavored
a little bre
before," he declared. "I should
dington
There are only eleven of them and I have not ye
impressively, "have you forg
dington
" he exclaimed. "I
whose life has been spent in domestic service, and part in a suburban dressmaker's establishment. She keeps the house very clean, pins up the oleographs presented to us
. Waddington groane
olor of the rainbow. She loves strong perfumes, and she is strenuous on the subject of the primary colors. We have a table-cloth with fringed borders for tea on Sunday afternoons. She hates flow
rom his forehead and produced a small s
n! I can see what you are
waved i
air and he has a curl which comes over his forehead. I have never known him when his hands were not both sticky and dirty-his hands
re-opened the
" Burton folded them up in a piece of paper an
should not make my appeal to you in vain. Tell
of fiction, and declare that the idea had been used before. I thought of having one of the beans resolved into its constituents by a scientific physician, but I doubt if I'd get any one to treat the matter seriously. Of course," he went on, "if there
have discovered these beans and profited by them, it does rather appear as though they ha
ome respects I feel happier and life seems a much more interesting place. Yet
firmly, "you'll continue the business
Waddington replied. "The trouble is, ho
" Burton declared. "We will not talk a
ngton pai
en Green as quickly as you can. You will excuse me if
n. What magic, after all, could change Ellen! He forgot for one moment the gulf across which he had so miraculously passed. He thought of himself as he was now, and of Ellen as she had been. The memory of that visit to Garden Green seemed suddenly like a nightmare. The memory of the train, underground for part of the way, with its stuffy odors, made him shiver. The hot, dusty, unmade street, with its hideous rows of stucc
Romance
Fantasy
Romance
Romance
Romance
Modern