The Toys of Peace, and other papers eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 212 pages of information about The Toys of Peace, and other papers.

The Toys of Peace, and other papers eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 212 pages of information about The Toys of Peace, and other papers.

Two extra assistants had been engaged for the following afternoon, and their services were in brisk demand; the shop was crowded.  People bought and bought, and never seemed to get to the end of their lists.  Mr. Scarrick had never had so little difficulty in persuading customers to embark on new experiences in grocery wares.  Even those women whose purchases were of modest proportions dawdled over them as though they had brutal, drunken husbands to go home to.  The afternoon had dragged uneventfully on, and there was a distinct buzz of unpent excitement when a dark-eyed boy carrying a brass bowl entered the shop.  The excitement seemed to have communicated itself to Mr. Scarrick; abruptly deserting a lady who was making insincere inquiries about the home life of the Bombay duck, he intercepted the newcomer on his way to the accustomed counter and informed him, amid a deathlike hush, that he had run out of quail seed.

The boy looked nervously round the shop, and turned hesitatingly to go.  He was again intercepted, this time by the nephew, who darted out from behind his counter and said something about a better line of oranges.  The boy’s hesitation vanished; he almost scuttled into the obscurity of the orange corner.  There was an expectant turn of public attention towards the door, and the tall, bearded stranger made a really effective entrance.  The aunt of Mrs. Greyes declared afterwards that she found herself sub-consciously repeating “The Assyrian came down like a wolf on the fold” under her breath, and she was generally believed.

The newcomer, too, was stopped before he reached the counter, but not by Mr. Scarrick or his assistant.  A heavily veiled lady, whom no one had hitherto noticed, rose languidly from a seat and greeted him in a clear, penetrating voice.

“Your Excellency does his shopping himself?” she said.

“I order the things myself,” he explained; “I find it difficult to make my servants understand.”

In a lower, but still perfectly audible, voice the veiled lady gave him a piece of casual information.

“They have some excellent Jaffa oranges here.”  Then with a tinkling laugh she passed out of the shop.

The man glared all round the shop, and then, fixing his eyes instinctively on the barrier of biscuit tins, demanded loudly of the grocer:  “You have, perhaps, some good Jaffa oranges?”

Every one expected an instant denial on the part of Mr. Scarrick of any such possession.  Before he could answer, however, the boy had broken forth from his sanctuary.  Holding his empty brass bowl before him he passed out into the street.  His face was variously described afterwards as masked with studied indifference, overspread with ghastly pallor, and blazing with defiance.  Some said that his teeth chattered, others that he went out whistling the Persian National Hymn.  There was no mistaking, however, the effect produced by the encounter on the man who had seemed to force it. 

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The Toys of Peace, and other papers from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.