When he acceded and followed her, she quickly turned a corner. They were in another lane thick with fog, which flared with the flame of torches stuck in costers’ barrows which stood here and there—barrows with fried fish upon them, barrows with second-hand-looking vegetables and others piled with more than second-hand-looking garments. Trade was not driving, but near one or two of them dirty, ill-used looking women, a man or so, and a few children stood. At a corner which led into a black hole of a court, a coffee-stand was stationed, in charge of a burly ruffian in corduroys.
“Come along,” said the girl. “There it is. It ain’t strong, but it’s ’ot.”
She sidled up to the stand, drawing Dart with her, as if glad of his protection.
“’Ello, Barney,” she said. “‘Ere’s a gent warnts a mug o’ yer best. I’ve ‘ad a bit o’ luck, an’ I wants one mesself.”
“Garn,” growled Barney. “You an’ yer luck! Gent may want a mug, but y’d show yer money fust.”
“Strewth! I’ve got it. Y’ aint got the chinge fer wot I ’ave in me ’and ’ere. ’As ’e, mister?”
“Show it,” taunted the man, and then turning to Dart. “Yer wants a mug o’ cawfee?”
“Yes.”
The girl held out her hand cautiously—the piece of gold lying upon its palm.
“Look ’ere,” she said.
There were two or three men slouching about the stand. Suddenly a hand darted from between two of them who stood nearest, the sovereign was snatched, a screamed oath from the girl rent the thick air, and a forlorn enough scarecrow of a young fellow sprang away.
The blood leaped in Antony Dart’s veins again and he sprang after him in a wholly normal passion of indignation. A thousand years ago—as it seemed to him—he had been a good runner. This man was not one, and want of food had weakened him. Dart went after him with strides which astonished himself. Up the street, into an alley and out of it, a dozen yards more and into a court, and the man wheeled with a hoarse, baffled curse. The place had no outlet.
“Hell!” was all the creature said.
Dart took him by his greasy collar. Even the brief rush had left him feeling like a living thing—which was a new sensation.
“Give it up,” he ordered.
The thief looked at him with a half-laugh and obeyed, as if he felt the uselessness of a struggle. He was not more than twenty-five years old, and his eyes were cavernous with want. He had the face of a man who might have belonged to a better class. When he had uttered the exclamation invoking the infernal regions he had not dropped the aspirate.
“I ’m as hungry as she is,” he raved.
“Hungry enough to rob a child beggar?” said Dart.
“Hungry enough to rob a starving old woman—or a baby,” with a defiant snort. “Wolf hungry—tiger hungry—hungry enough to cut throats.”
He whirled himself loose and leaned his body against the wall, turning his face toward it. Suddenly he made a choking sound and began to sob.