Piccadilly Jim eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 315 pages of information about Piccadilly Jim.

Piccadilly Jim eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 315 pages of information about Piccadilly Jim.

The clerk behind the counter was quite the wrong sort of person for Jimmy to have had dealings with in his present mood.  What Jimmy needed was a grave, sensible man who would have laid a hand on his shoulder and said “Do nothing rash, my boy!” The clerk fell short of this ideal in practically every particular.  He was about twenty-two, and he seemed perfectly enthusiastic about the idea of Jimmy going to America.  He beamed at Jimmy.

“Plenty of room,” he said.  “Very few people crossing.  Give you excellent accommodation.”

“When does the boat sail?”

“Eight to-morrow morning from Liverpool.  Boat-train leaves Paddington six to-night.”

Prudence came at the eleventh hour to check Jimmy.  This was not a matter, he perceived, to be decided recklessly, on the spur of a sudden impulse.  Above all, it was not a matter to be decided before lunch.  An empty stomach breeds imagination.  He had ascertained that he could sail on the Atlantic if he wished to.  The sensible thing to do now was to go and lunch and see how he felt about it after that.  He thanked the clerk, and started to walk up the Haymarket, feeling hard-headed and practical, yet with a strong premonition that he was going to make a fool of himself just the same.

It was half-way up the Haymarket that he first became conscious of the girl with the red hair.

Plunged in thought, he had not noticed her before.  And yet she had been walking a few paces in front of him most of the way.  She had come out of Panton Street, walking briskly, as one going to keep a pleasant appointment.  She carried herself admirably, with a jaunty swing.

Having become conscious of this girl, Jimmy, ever a warm admirer of the sex, began to feel a certain interest stealing over him.  With interest came speculation.  He wondered who she was.  He wondered where she had bought that excellently fitting suit of tailor-made grey.  He admired her back, and wondered whether her face, if seen, would prove a disappointment.  Thus musing, he drew near to the top of the Haymarket, where it ceases to be a street and becomes a whirlpool of rushing traffic.  And here the girl, having paused and looked over her shoulder, stepped off the sidewalk.  As she did so a taxi-cab rounded the corner quickly from the direction of Coventry Street.

The agreeable surprise of finding the girl’s face fully as attractive as her back had stimulated Jimmy, so that he was keyed up for the exhibition of swift presence-of-mind.  He jumped forward and caught her arm, and swung her to one side as the cab rattled past, its driver thinking hard thoughts to himself.  The whole episode was an affair of seconds.

“Thank you,” said the girl.

She rubbed the arm which he had seized with rather a rueful expression.  She was a little white, and her breath came quickly.

“I hope I didn’t hurt you,” said Jimmy.

“You did.  Very much.  But the taxi would have hurt me more.”

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Piccadilly Jim from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.