The Lodger eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 305 pages of information about The Lodger.

The Lodger eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 305 pages of information about The Lodger.

His mind had wandered off, away from Daisy and this nice young chap, to his now constant anxious preoccupation.  “You come along to-morrow,” he said, “and I’ll see you gets your walk with Daisy.  It’s only right you and she should have a chance of seeing one another without old folk being by; else how’s the girl to tell whether she likes you or not!  For the matter of that, you hardly knows her, Joe—­” He looked at the young man consideringly.

Chandler shook his head impatiently.  “I knows her quite as well as I wants to know her,” he said.  “I made up my mind the very first time I see’d her, Mr. Bunting.”

“No!  Did you really?” said Bunting.  “Well, come to think of it, I did so with her mother; aye, and years after, with Ellen, too.  But I hope you’ll never want no second, Chandler.”

“God forbid!” said the young man under his breath.  And then he asked, rather longingly, “D’you think they’ll be out long now, Mr. Bunting?”

And Bunting woke up to a due sense of hospitality.  “Sit down, sit down; do!” he said hastily.  “I don’t believe they’ll be very long.  They’ve only got a little bit of shopping to do.”

And then, in a changed, in a ringing, nervous tone, he asked, “And how about your job, Joe?  Nothing new, I take it?  I suppose you’re all just waiting for the next time?”

“Aye—­that’s about the figure of it.”  Chandler’s voice had also changed; it was now sombre, menacing.  “We’re fair tired of it—­ beginning to wonder when it’ll end, that we are!”

“Do you ever try and make to yourself a picture of what the master’s like?” asked Bunting.  Somehow, he felt he must ask that.

“Yes,” said Joe slowly.  “I’ve a sort of notion—­a savage, fierce-looking devil, the chap must be.  It’s that description that was circulated put us wrong.  I don’t believe it was the man that knocked up against that woman in the fog—­no, not one bit I don’t.  But I wavers, I can’t quite make up my mind.  Sometimes I think it’s a sailor—­the foreigner they talks about, that goes away for eight or nine days in between, to Holland maybe, or to France.  Then, again, I says to myself that it’s a butcher, a man from the Central Market.  Whoever it is, it’s someone used to killing, that’s flat.”

“Then it don’t seem to you possible—?” (Bunting got up and walked over to the window.) “You don’t take any stock, I suppose, in that idea some of the papers put out, that the man is”—­then he hesitated and brought out, with a gasp—­“a gentleman?”

Chandler looked at him, surprised.  “No,” he said deliberately.  “I’ve made up my mind that’s quite a wrong tack, though I knows that some of our fellows—­big pots, too—­are quite sure that the fellow what gave the girl the sovereign is the man we’re looking for.  You see, Mr. Bunting, if that’s the fact—­well, it stands to reason the fellow’s an escaped lunatic; and if he’s an escaped lunatic he’s got a keeper, and they’d be raising a hue and cry after him; now, wouldn’t they?”

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Project Gutenberg
The Lodger from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.