BY A.S.M. HUTCHINSON
THE HAPPY WARRIOR
ONCE ABOARD THE LUGGER--
THE CLEAN HEART
IF WINTER COMES
IF WINTER COMES BY A.S.M. HUTCHINSON
BOSTON LITTLE, BROWN, AND COMPANY 1921
Published, August, 1921 Reprinted, August, 1921 (twice) Reprinted, September, 1921 (four times) Reprinted, October, 1921
PRINTED BY C.H. SIMONDS COMPANY BOSTON, MASS., U.S.A.
"...O Wind, If Winter comes, can Spring be far behind?"
--SHELLEY
CONTENTS
PART ONE PAGE MABEL 1
PART TWO
NONA 77
PART THREE
EFFIE 187
PART FOUR
MABEL--EFFIE--NONA 317
PART ONE
MABEL
IF WINTER COMES
CHAPTER I
I
To take Mark Sabre at the age of thirty-four, and in the year 1912, and at the place Penny Green is to necessitate looking back a little towards the time of his marriage in 1904, but happens to find him in good light for observation. Encountering him hereabouts, one who had shared school days with him at his preparatory school so much as twenty-four years back would have found matter for recognition.
A usefully garrulous person, one Hapgood, a solicitor, found much.
"Whom do you think I met yesterday? Old Sabre! You remember old Sabre at old Wickamote's?... Yes, that's the chap. Used to call him Puzzlehead, remember? Because he used to screw up his forehead over things old Wickamote or any of the other masters said and sort of drawl out, 'Well, I don't see that, sir.'... Yes, rather!... And then that other expression of his. Just the opposite. When old Wickamote or some one had landed him, or all of us, with some dashed punishment, and we were gassing about it, used to screw up his nut in the same way and say, 'Yes, but I see what he _means_.' And some one would say, 'Well, what does he mean, you ass?' and he'd start gassing some rot till some one said, 'Good lord, fancy sticking up for a master!' And old Puzzlehead would say, 'You sickening fool, I'm not sticking _up_ for him. I'm only saying he's right from how he looks at it and it's no good saying he's wrong.'... Ha! Funny days.... Jolly nice chap, though, old Puzzlehead was.... Yes, I met him.... Fact, I run into him occasionally. We do a mild amount of business with his firm. I buzz down there about once a year. Tidborough. He's changed, of course. So have you, you know. That Vandyke beard, what? Ha! Old Sabre's not done anything outrageous like that. Real thing I seemed to notice about him when I bumped into him yesterday was that he didn't look very cheery. Looked to me rather as though he'd lost something and was wondering where it was. Ha! But--dashed funny--I mentioned something about that appalling speech that chap made in that blasphemy case yesterday.... Eh? yes, absolutely frightful, wasn't it?--well, I'm dashed if old Sabre didn't puzzle up his nut in exactly the same old way and say, 'Yes, but I see what he _means_.' I reminded him and ragged him about it no end. Absolutely the same words and expression. Funny chap ... nice chap....
Table of contents (by pages)
- 1: If Winter Comes by A. S. M. Hutchinson
- 2: It's about seven miles from Tidborough
- 3: Lord Tybar sold the Development site to the developers
- 4: Westward of Penny Green is Chovensbury
- 5: And successive Wirks appeared as surely
- 6: Longer persons than Old Wirk had died
- 7: And he detested wearing slippers and never did wear slippers
- 8: And High Jinks and Low Jinks tittered broadly
- 9: About High Jinks and Low Jinks
- 10: High Jinks and Low Jinks rather enjoyed it
- 11: High Jinks and Low Jinks backwards
- 12: This finally determined him to buy Byron
- 13: The first bus that came took them through South London
- 14: Let your little daily scrap be something you've thought
- 15: CHAPTER IV IMabel was two years younger than Sabre
- 16: To Mabel there was nothing mysterious in birth
- 17: And the only real generosity generosity of mind
- 18: Solitary passage between Tidborough and Penny Green
- 19: Rebecca promptly unsmirked her smirk
- 20: Had in Tidborough what is called
- 21: Haply in Tidborough on a treat
- 22: Between the vestments and the lecterns
- 23: Communicated the offices of Sabre and of Mr
- 24: But he did not respect Twyning
- 25: In an extended notice of four new textbooks
- 26: Will make it bright and brighter yet
- 27: And to encourage their independence
- 28: The lady Farguses called this daily walk exercise
- 29: The Farguses kept but one servant
- 30: He amazed Sabre by telling him
- 31: What can you call him but Hopscotch
- 32: Successive Punchers of old time
- 33: That dreadful floppy hat doesn't suit him
- 34: It gave Sabre extraordinary sensations
- 35: Toller is going to take a house for eighty pounds a year
- 36: Marko is actually taking off his hat to us
- 37: Of her hair Lady Tybar had said frequently
- 38: And pungent flavour of the saddlery
- 39: Said Lord Tybar in a very gloomy voice
- 40: There's that old blighter Sooper
- 41: Yet it seemed to Sabre a very long silence
- 42: Twyning rarely entered Sabre's room
- 43: Twyning read aloud the first words
- 44: Twyning seemed really concerned
- 45: Twyning did not take up the point
- 46: You cannot bounce into a partnership
- 47: Beg Canon Toomuch to step up to my room
- 48: Toller taking a house beyond her means did not amuse him
- 49: He mounted his bicycle and rode purposefully back to Mabel
- 50: This was what he called niggling
- 51: Whyever didn't she write to me
- 52: She snipped three roses with astonishing swiftness
- 53: The niggling had been carried off
- 54: Boom Bagshaw has not arrived yet
- 55: Now I got this salmon in specially from Tidborough
- 56: Boom Bagshaw addressed to Mabel
- 57: Sabre was fidgeting for Bagshaw to be gone
- 58: The incident they brought up rankled
- 59: That's what I call sneering He
- 60: I'd had about enough of the Tybars
- 61: Were wholly and exasperatingly incomprehensible to her
- 62: If she hadn't married Tybar she'd have married me
- 63: About how we just go on flotsam
- 64: The second hard upon the other and overriding it
- 65: Do you talk them out with Mabel
- 66: Like hearing how unsatisfactory I am
- 67: These Bagshaw chaps you know Bagshaw
- 68: Cruel conventions can be as cruel
- 69: She and Lord Tybar made an unusual picture
- 70: The uncommonly pretty woman addressed as Puggo replied
- 71: Nona chose deliberately between Tybar and me
- 72: Who had been in particularly hopscotch
- 73: The Ri te O voice of the Hopscotch
- 74: Finding extraordinary rest in thought of Nona
- 75: Fargus or those Perches goodness only knows
- 76: Sabre saw Nona alight from her car and go into the draper's
- 77: Nona began some account of her summer visitations
- 78: ' And you said you were flotsam
- 79: I crossed out flotsam in the dictionary and wrote Nona
- 80: Visioning life more poignantly
- 81: The place whereon he stood entered into his thoughts
- 82: And Marko this is the word graceless
- 83: Otway spoke with astonishing intensity
- 84: Otway was waiting with fidgety impatience
- 85: Nona had said that Tybar knew she thought often of him
- 86: The Kaiser let off loud Hochs
- 87: Colonel Cody flew to his death in one waterplane
- 88: You get some of these Unionists together
- 89: We are perpetually at loggerheads
- 90: Mabel hated Miss Bypass because Miss Bypass was
- 91: He had Miss Bypass in momentary conversation
- 92: And most frightfully conscious of it
- 93: Go to the chemist's and get some pumice stone
- 94: Most strongly of all called another refuge
- 95: He cried with a sudden loudness
- 96: With the most delicious thrills
- 97: Meaningless and unpronounceable writing
- 98: He paused before young Twyning
- 99: I'm getting so I've got nowhere to turn
- 100: Whichever way she answered him
- 101: The day appointed for his letter to Nona
- 102: Otway had predicted this months ago
- 103: The staircase Miss Fargus took it up immediately
- 104: Nona always understood everything
- 105: A pot of jam and a bag of flour
- 106: Sabre was feeling considerably more at ease
- 107: Sabre was accosted and taken into the Mess by Cottar
- 108: What the Sikes from the table
- 109: All rattling and jingling with swinging accoutrements
- 110: He had only been at Tidborough a month
- 111: Colonel Rattray said doubtfully
- 112: The names struck Sabre like successive blows
- 113: Sabre what do they know about it
- 114: Fortune himself and appeared to Sabre
- 115: Sabre had been standing with Twyning at Mr
- 116: He stopped and Sabre heard him gulp
- 117: Fumbling old hand between the strong brown fingers
- 118: But he remained fearfully depressed
- 119: Twyning breathed heavily through his nose
- 120: Twyning changed to a hearty laugh
- 121: Twyning spun around from the bookcase and came forward
- 122: They riled her and he had set himself not to rile her
- 123: But I don't see how the Psalms you mean the Bible Psalms
- 124: I've just finished my budget to Tony
- 125: Tybar says he hopes the angels were near him
- 126: Nona had written of it in ringing words
- 127: With Nona he talked of how he felt of England Dear earth
- 128: Perch was very broken and very querulous
- 129: Telling him how much more than wonderful Bright Effie was
- 130: Fargus and the three Miss Farguses still at home replied
- 131: More pronounced now that masklike aspect of her face
- 132: Perch and shut this refuge from its oppression
- 133: Perch that stood there whimpering
- 134: Coming upon his overwrought state
- 135: Some patch of colour about young Pinnock caught his eye
- 136: I reckon that's so at Chovensbury anyway
- 137: Sabre was surprised at such consideration
- 138: He took the coins from his pocket
- 139: So individual development beneath universal calamity
- 140: He looked wonderingly upon the identity that was his own
- 141: But Mabel did not reply to these inquiries
- 142: I hope she isn't bullying Effie
- 143: And he knew that Mabel knew he disliked it
- 144: And Twyning in daily relations
- 145: Twyning appeared to be thinking
- 146: But that come careering headlong as though malignity
- 147: The nurse bent across the cot and peered through the port
- 148: The position old Puzzlehead Sabre has got himself into
- 149: But I tell you old Sabre fairly overwhelmed me
- 150: I suppose because it's got to be unpicked
- 151: You look out for the glide down into the trough
- 152: I make no extra charge for that said Hapgood
- 153: CHAPTER II IContinued Hapgood All right
- 154: Or might have been if she hadn't looked so uncommonly sad
- 155: Then suddenly there was old Sabre at the head of the stairs
- 156: Hapgood and I were at school together
- 157: Just in profoundly interested bafflement
- 158: ' and she chucked the letter over to him
- 159: I'm telling you just what Sabre told me
- 160: I see her point of view absolutely
- 161: He says the man Twyning worked that
- 162: I didn't say that to poor old Sabre
- 163: 'What a most in teresting face
- 164: What on earth was he doing down at Brighton
- 165: Some frightful blunder committed
- 166: Poor old Sabre said it was too terrible for him
- 167: He capable of a beastly thing like that
- 168: And that was enter his defence at the registry
- 169: I'm the coroner's officer at Tidborough
- 170: A tumbler was on a small table and a bottle of oxalic acid
- 171: Effie has killed herself and her baby
- 172: This was that jolly little Effie of the old
- 173: I hit up Tidborough about twelve
- 174: Was just going out of the box when Humpo called him back
- 175: And all the time he'd be stooping down to Twyning
- 176: What this Humpo fiend was laying out for was
- 177: Humpo wipes his streaming face
- 178: And after this Humpo like that
- 179: But they stopped him when Humpo got at him
- 180: For what purpose did you buy this oxalic acid
- 181: Twyning pulls Humpo's coat and points at Sabre's hat
- 182: Sabre in Tidborough very next day
- 183: This Lady Tybar gets in front of him
- 184: I went along to the Royal with this Lady Tybar
- 185: He was the murderer of Effie and of her child
- 186: He rather horribly mimicked Twyning
- 187: Sabre gave a sound that was just a whimper
- 188: He stared at Sabre in astounded indignation
- 189: Hapgood turned furiously on Mr
- 190: They would have incriminated themselves
- 191: The Divorce Court says to the petitioner
- 192: Cut like his own waistcoats but short
- 193: Your obedient servants Sarah Jinks hi
