CHAPTER XIII

ALLARDYCE, his solicitor, was distressed and shocked. He came hurrying to the Guildhall, to the visiting-room where Warren was waiting for him. A policeman was seated in the room.

Warren rose from behind the long table that divided the room. “Sorry to have brought you to a place like this,” he said.

The solicitor sank into a chair on the other side of the table. “I cannot tell you how sorry I was to get your message. Still—I understand that our time is limited. I have found out that you appear before the magistrates to-morrow morning—yes, of course, you know that. The police will ask for a remand. I shall apply for bail, of course.”

“You won’t get it,” said Warren.

“I think we may. I shall plead that in a case of this sort the defence cannot be handled adequately except in your own office. The complexity of the matter. The mass of documents that have to be examined.”

Warren smiled. “There isn’t going to be a defence,” he said.

Allardyce eyed him seriously. “Do you mean you want to plead guilty?”

“That’s right.”

The solicitor was silent. “I find that very difficult to believe,” he said at last. “If facts are as stated in the charge, there must be some good reason for those facts. Your business isn’t a bucket shop. You had no reason to want to make money in that way—and in point of fact, I understand that you made practically nothing out of the issue.”

Warren nodded. “All the same,” he said, “there will be no defence.”

“Why not?”

“For several reasons. Firstly, because I did it.”

The solicitor raised his hand, and shot a quick glance at the policeman.

“I very much appreciate your wish to get me out of this,” said Warren. “But frankly, Allardyce, that isn’t practical. There’s a confidential letter of mine that they’ve got hold of which blows the gaff properly. I’m sorry, but there it is. It’s a waste of my money and the Crown’s money to contest a case like this.”

“I think,” said the solicitor, “that you should make an effort.”

“I don’t,” said Warren.

After a pause he said, “You’d better understand my point of view. We couldn’t win this case, but even if we did, I’m finished in the City after this. That’s the first point—whether we plead guilty or not guilty, I’m retiring from the City.”

“I see that,” said Allardyce thoughtfully.

“The next thing is, I’m very much concerned about the Hawside Company. I took all of this risk upon myself to get that shipyard started up, and if it comes to grief I shall have done it all for nothing. My arrest won’t have done them any good. Still, they’ll get over that, I think—so long as it doesn’t drag on for too long. But the quicker it’s over, and the less dirty linen washed in public, the better chance that Company will have.”

“Is your interest in the Company so valuable as that?”

Warren shook his head. “I haven’t got much in it. About three thousand pounds or so. But I should be very sorry to see it go under now. Given a decent chance, I think it can get through.”

The solicitor gazed at him curiously. “It seems to mean a great deal to you. But surely, a company that has no soul to be damned, nor backside to be kicked, hardly deserves so much consideration.”

“Our time is getting short,” said Warren. “That is my line, and that is what I’m going to do. How long do you think I’ll get?”

The solicitor laughed nervously. “I really don’t know. Eighteen months?”

Warren shook his head. “I think a good bit more than that.”

He appeared next morning in the police court, neatly dressed and listening to the proceedings with detached gravity. The charges were read over in the court:

“… for that he, Henry Warren, on the twelfth day of November, 1934, being a director of a public company called the Hawside Ship and Engineering Company did circulate a certain written statement which was false in certain material particulars, to wit, in that it was therein falsely stated that certain orders undertaken by the company should prove to be profitable, he the said Henry Warren well knowing the said statement to be false; with intent to induce divers persons unknown to become shareholders in the said public company, contrary to Section 84 of the Larceny Act, 1861.”

For good measure, he was also charged with fraudulently converting moneys belonging to the company for his own use.

The police asked for a remand, which was granted. Allardyce asked for bail, which was refused. Warren went to Brixton in the Black Maria, after formalities in court which had lasted barely for ten minutes.

“Let them get on with it,” he said to Allardyce that afternoon. “You can plead not guilty to that second charge, of fraudulent conversion. But there’s nothing in that—they’ll cut it out before the trial.”

“You’re still sure that you want to plead guilty on the first charge?”

“Absolutely. All you’ve got to do is to get it through as quickly and as quietly as possible.”

The solicitor sighed. “If that’s really the line you want to take, I’ll do my best for you.”

“There’s one thing more. Tell Morgan to come down and see me here to-morrow. There’s a good bit of business to be cleared up before I go into retirement.”

“I suppose so. What are you going to do with Warren Sons and Mortimer?”

“That’s what I am wondering myself.”

He settled down in Brixton not uncomfortably. His room was bare, but that worried him very little, nor did the close restraint distress him. He discovered that the first and most important element of comfort is an easy mind; freedom from worry and responsibility, he found, formed a considerable palliative to his imprisonment. He had no regrets about the issue of his false prospectus, no great sense of guilt. Instead he had a feeling of achievement and of work well done. Within a very few days of his incarceration he found that he could lie contented on his bed for a great part of the day, quietly contemplating what he had done, what lay before him.

“You’d hardly believe it,” said Morgan to his wife one night, “but I believe he’s happier in prison than he was when he was out.”

“That may well be, with the sort of wife he had.”

“That may be something to do with it. But he hasn’t seen her for a year or so. The decree will be made absolute next month.”

“Is he quite right in his head?”

“I think so. But you know how irritable he used to be? Well, you’d think it would be worse than ever now. Not a bit of it. I’ve never known him so good-humoured.”

His wife smiled. “Maybe he’s got another girl,” she said.

“If that’s it, she may have to wait some time,” said Morgan.

In Sharples the news was greeted with dismay. Warren had never taken any public part in the affairs of the town, had never made a speech or attended any sort of public function. Only a few people in the town knew him by sight. In spite of this, perhaps because of this, he had become a legend in the place, a myth, a fairy tale. For the last six months every child in the town had known the story of the stranger, the poor tramp who had been operated on up in the hospital and who, turning to fairy banker, in gratitude had started up the shipyard for them once again and set them working on three oil tankers, with money coming in regular. Every mother told that story to her children; in the secretive, dumb hearts of the adolescents it burned like a flame. In the pubs towards closing time the men, alcoholically sentimental, would lift their cans to “Mister Bloody Warren”, and turn again to their darts.

And now their Mr. Warren was in clink. It was a shocking thing, incredible. The solid earth beneath their feet seemed to tremble and to slip away; before them loomed the abyss of unemployment once again.

The Almoner heard it first from Mr. Williams. He was working at his ledgers as she came into the office; he stopped, and raised his head.

“Did ye hear the news?” he asked, uncertainly.

She shook her head. “What’s that?”

He hesitated. “They’re saying your Mr. Warren’s in a bit of trouble,” he said diffidently.

She said, “Where?”

“I’m hoping maybe that it’s wrong,” he said gently. “But they’re saying that he’s been arrested, in London, for fraudulent conversion and a charge of falsifying a prospectus.”

She did not speak.

“I think it must be all of a mistake,” he said, after a moment.

She shook her head. “I don’t think so. I think it may be true.”

She turned to him. “Where did you get this from?”

“I was on the telephone down to the Yard, speaking to Jennings. He told me that the news had just come through.”

“He knew that this was coming,” she said in a low tone. “All the time when he was up here last, he must have known of this.”

She raised her head. “Let me know anything else you hear.” She left him, and went up to her room.

She sat for half an hour upon her bed, staring before her, motionless. Then she got up, took out a writing pad, and settled down to put her thoughts into a letter.

I don’t know what the trouble is exactly, yet, [she wrote]. Probably if I did I shouldn’t understand it, because I suppose it’s all company and business stuff. All I know is what everybody else in Sharples knows; that over two thousand families are now in work and happy, who last year were sinking, down and out, and utterly wretched. I know that that is what you set out to do, and whatever else may happen now, I think you must be very proud and happy to have done so much for us. And as for me, I’m very proud that I’ve had the experience of seeing such a wonderful thing done, even at such a cost. You told me from the first that nothing could be done for us by honest means. I can’t be sorry for the decision that you took, and I don’t suppose you are. But I am most deeply sorry that you didn’t have the luck to get away with it.

I suppose that you are going to be tried upon these charges. I can’t believe it will go wrong for you; I shall be praying all the luck in the world for you on that day, and everyone up here will be doing the same. But if things should go badly, then I want you to know that I’m with you one hundred per cent. I’ve lost the sense of difference between the right thing and the wrong thing long ago where Sharples was concerned. I only know one thing for certain; that what you did for us up here was right. My dear, I’m terribly proud of you.

Warren received this letter in Brixton Prison. He answered it a couple of days later.

My dear,

I want to thank you for your letter, and I want to tell you myself, rather than you should see it in the papers, that I’m going to prison. In business there isn’t a shadow of excuse for what I did. I am certainly guilty on the first charge, and I should only waste the time and money of the court by pleading otherwise. And so, I am afraid that it may be some time before we meet again.

My main concern now is to see that the Company gets through. I think it will do so, given reasonable luck in trade revival in the country, and that now seems to be well on the way. I have seen Cheriton and Hogan in that last few days and told them what I think they ought to do, and now it is largely out of my hands. This time in Brixton on remand is valuable to me because I can write letters relatively freely, and I am making what arrangements are in my power so to arrange my own business that it can be called upon to support your company in Sharples with financial help, if needs be, while I am in prison. Later on the letter position will get more difficult—one in three months seems to be the ration—and so I must do all my business now.

And lastly, about ourselves. If a few weeks’ time my decree will be made absolute. If I had got away with it in this affair, I should have asked you to marry me as soon as that happened. I believe you know that. Because I’m now in quod, I’m not going to insult your intelligence by pretending that I’m just a very good friend. I’m not. When I get out of this I shall probably ask you to marry me because I think we could be wonderfully happy together—and you’ll probably refuse me for my prison record. That’s all I’m going to say about that, but now you know what’s coming to you.

Be tranquil. It isn’t coming for some time.

Warren was tried at the Old Bailey, about a month after his arrest. Because of his plea of guilty to the first charge the proceedings were short, almost a formality. No evidence was offered by the Crown upon the second charge, and acquittal on this charge was ordered by the judge. The first charge was proved upon the plea of guilty.

The judge, magnificent in scarlet and ermine, said:

“You have pleaded guilty to the charge of issuing a prospectus statement of the Hawside Ship and Engineering Company, well knowing that statement to be false in its material particulars, with the intention of defrauding the public. That charge has now been proved against you. It has been suggested upon your behalf that I should treat this as a first offence. I cannot take that course. A heartless and wicked fraud has been practised upon the public, which must bring a great deal of distress to many people; in my view that offence is aggravated by the position which you have held hitherto. I find that the charge has been proved against you, I find that fraud was committed deliberately for your own ends, and I sentence you to three years’ penal servitude.”

Warren was ushered from the dock, and the judge turned to the next case.

He served his sentence in Parkhurst Prison, in the Isle of Wight. He was taken there by two prison officers three days after the trial, admitted to the prison, and put into a cell.

He was uncomfortable at first, with all the strangeness of a new boy at school. He found Parkhurst to be not unlike his public school in many ways, and very similar indeed to the new boy. There was the same awkward search for information about times of work and exercise and meals, about rights and privileges.

Another similarity that made him feel at home in the first days was to the Army. He had served for the first six months of the War as a private soldier, a gunner in the Royal Field Artillery; rough food and clothing were no novelty to him. He did not like them, but they held no terrors for him; they were not strange, unknown things. And in another way, they brought with them an association that was not unwelcome to him.

This association was a memory of a very restful time. Looking back upon his life since he had left his public school, the five years before the War, the War itself, and the time subsequent, one period stood out in memory as utterly different from the rest. During the time when he had been a private soldier he had held no responsibility for anything at all. That made that six months totally different from the rest of his working life. It had been a pleasant time, a very restful time, when nothing had been expected of him but that he should keep his body and his equipment clean and in good condition. Beyond that, he was not responsible for anything at all, not even for securing his own food or his own bed. All that was done for him. He held that six months in his memory as a time of great mental rest, a peace that he had never known before or since.

In Parkhurst Prison he found these circumstances to be largely reproduced, but modified in ways that made them appropriate to his age. The immensely strenuous physical labour of the Army was replaced by a working day of five hours in the shoe shop, learning to build army boots, and by an hour’s parade a day in the prison exercise yard. The rest of the twenty-four hours were spent in his cell, with no responsibilities at all.

It lies in the nature of a man to make himself a home, and Warren grew very fond of his cell. It was a small room, but big enough for him, with walls half painted, half whitewashed, and kept at a comfortable temperature by a hot-water radiator. The heavily barred window looked to the east over the Cowes-Newport road and the valley of the Medina to the higher land by Wootton; being upon the top floor of his hall he could see most of the east end of the Island. He soon found that the prison discipline wisely connives at the possession of small, innocent articles, and in the eighth month of his sentence he obtained possession of a small telescope constructed out of cardboard tubes. From that time on the scrutiny of the wide, varied countryside became an abiding interest to him; for the first time in his life he had leisure to enjoy and savour to the full the simple pleasure of watching other people go about their work.

He was allowed two books a week from the prison library. In the first week of his sentence he read both books through in one day, devouring them with the swift efficiency that he gave to all his business matters. He finished that day with the restless, nervous fatigue that he had come to regard as part of a normal life—and was out of literature for the rest of the week. On the third day he read half of one of the books through again, and was surprised to notice that there was something to be gained by doing so.

By the third month he was taking his books slowly, as a connoisseur, thinking about them and extracting the last ounce from each. Never before had he had leisure to do that with any book, and he found a new pleasure in reading in this way.

For the first time in his life, too, he had long hours for reflection. He soon found that it was possible to sleep more than twelve hours a day, and he did so for months on end; in spite of that, there were many hours in each day when he had no occupation but to reflect. His reflections were not troublesome to him. He would have to serve two years and three months if he obtained full remission of sentence for good conduct; he had arranged a calendar among the studs on the door of his cell on which he could cross off the days in pencil. He was forty-four years old. It was a pity to lose two years and three months of your life at that age, but it was not an impossibly long time, and he was not distressed by the idea. His sentence had not involved the loss of any money to him personally, and he would still have ample for his needs when he came out of prison. He would never be able to go back to the City. He did not particularly want to do so. But he would have to find some other occupation for his still abundant energy, and it was on that problem that his reflections principally concentrated.

With his restless, vivid imagination that had started so many enterprises in the past, this soon developed into an absorbing occupation. With a pencil on a sheet of paper he planned for himself a course of contemplation, a comprehensive mental survey which would cover the entire field of possible occupations for his later years. He planned his survey in main sections of industries and occupations, with subsections geographical. Thus on a morning, turning to his page, he would discover that his programme was to consider the timber industry on the west coast of Canada. That day the active brain was dragging out of pigeon-holes in that dim filing-room we call the memory all that he had ever heard about that industry, the economics, processes, personalities, geography, scenery, potentialities. All day he lay upon his bed, sifting and sorting his material, occupied and amused.

He was, in fact, engaged in living a life of pure contemplation in conditions that were comfortable and yet sufficiently ascetic. His position was entirely comparable to that of a novice in a monastery. The same detachment from the turmoil of the outside world, the same ascetic life, the same long hours of contemplation rule the novice and the prisoner, and Warren found in prison a great part of the peace that a more devout man might find within a monastery.

And with this peace, cause or effect, came sleep. The nervous strain of twenty years came soaking out of him in month after month of quiet, dreamless sleep. He slept, and slept, and slept.

A convict in prison is allowed a visit from a friend or relative after the first four months of his sentence, thereafter every three months; in long sentences the visits grow more frequent as the years go on. The visit lasts for half an hour. Warren’s first visit, after four months, was by Lord Cheriton.

They met in one of the visiting-rooms down by the gate.

“We’ve not got very long,” said Cheriton. “I came down because I knew that you’d like to hear how things are going on in Sharples, and because I want your advice before our next Board meeting.”

“How did your Extraordinary General Meeting go off?”

“Never a hitch. Only about seven turned up, and those principally because they wanted to see the Yard at work. We elected Grierson to the Board, you know.”

Warren nodded. “That was the right thing to do.”

“I think so. Now for the orders in hand. The Laevol orders are much more secure now than when you saw them last—the Delaware Oil Corporation have come in on that, you know. The progress payments are practically up-to-date, and I think those ships will be all right. But if they aren’t, the North Borneos are in the market for two tankers. Hogan reckons he could shift two of them there, if needs be. But I think they’ll be all right with Laevol.”

“Watch out for trickery on the last payment,” said Warren. “Take nothing but real money.”

Cheriton nodded. “After the tankers, we’ve got three small tramps, and one vessel of eight thousand tons—for Carew and Mason. She’s at a fair price—the others aren’t so good. But the real thing is, we’ve got a good chance of a look-in on the Admiralty side.”

“Rearmament?”

“That’s right. I went with Hogan to the Admiralty the other day for a formal conference on our capacity. They’ve got us earmarked for a couple of destroyers, if things get too bad politically and they have to accelerate the programme.”

“That’s very good, if it comes off.”

“I don’t suppose it will. Now, that’s about all of my news. We’ve got two thousand eight hundred men employed, and that’s about our full capacity, unless we went on night shift and that’s not practical upon commercial work.”

He paused. “Now, what I want from you is this, Warren. Have you got any view about our first year’s balance sheet?”

“Plenty,” said Warren.

He leaned his arms upon the table. “You must make this first year’s accounts as bad as ever they can be,” he said. “You’ve got a marvellous opportunity to do so now, one that you’ll never have again. You must examine every contract that you’ve got, with Jennings, and Grierson must tell the auditors that every contract will be carried out at a loss. He’ll probably be right, of course—but he must pile it on. You’ve got to make reserves this year against every possible contingency, probable or improbable.”

“I see.”

“You must show in this year all the losses that you’re going to make next year, and the year after. If you can swing the figure of this year’s loss up to a hundred thousand pounds—that’s grand. If you can get the auditors to make it a hundred and fifty thousand—so much the better.”

Cheriton shook his head. “I don’t think we could get it up to that.”

“Get it as high as you can. In your chairman’s speech, just say that full reserves have been made in this year’s accounts for contracts negotiated by the late chairman. That’s literally all you need to say by way of explanation.”

“I don’t exactly like the thought of that.”

“I do. Man alive, you’ve got a chance here to make the Yard secure for the next ten years if you can play your hand the way it should be played. Pile everything into this year’s loss, including a lot that really ought not to be there. If you do that, next year you’ll be bound to show a profit, and the year after, if you’ve done it properly this year. Then, as soon as you’re showing profits and a decent show of orders in hand, get rid of this year’s losses by writing down your capital, pay a dividend, and make another issue to replace the capital.”

“I see what you mean,” said Cheriton at last. “I’ll have to think it over. But we’ve got nobody upon the Board, now that you’re shut up here, to help us in that sort of business.”

Warren smiled. “That’s probably a good thing, in itself. It’s possible to be too clever in that way.” He thought for a minute. “Still, I’m sure that what I’ve told you is your proper course. Look, go and have a talk with Heinroth. Tell him that you’ve seen me, and tell him that I’ve suggested this. Get his advice. He’s very close in with the market, and he underwrote the issue, so he’ll want to see it go. He’s a good chap, too. Tell him I want his help in this thing as a personal matter. Take his advice.”

Cheriton nodded. “He’s a Jew, I suppose?”

“He is,” said Warren firmly, “and a damn good chap. I did a lot with Heinroth, and he never let me down.”

Cheriton went away, and Warren settled down again to his quiet life. In a short letter, a fortnight later, Cheriton told Warren that the had discussed the Company with Heinroth, and that they were proceeding cautiously upon the lines that Warren had suggested.

He got another letter, a week after that, from Miss MacMahon. “I don’t know,” she wrote diffidently, “if you would like me to come and see you. I’ll understand you if you feel you’d rather not. But Lord Cheriton told me that he’s been to see you, and I understand that you are allowed a visitor every three months. I have to come to London early in the New Year, and I could come on down from there. Get a message to me before then to let me know if you’d like me to come down; you know I’d come a great deal farther than that. But I know you can’t write very often, so I shan’t expect to hear from you before Christmas.”

He had an opportunity that month to include a message to her in a letter written to Cheriton by special permission, on matters connected with the Company. He wrote, “Tell Miss MacMahon I agree with her proposal in regard to the man that she wrote to me about, and I should be glad if she would carry on upon the lines that she suggests.”

She came to him on a raw, windy day in January, when he had served seven months of his sentence. She got up from the table as he came into the visiting-room.

“I shouldn’t have known you,” she exclaimed. “You’re looking so well. Henry—whatever have they done to you? You’re looking ten years younger.”

He smiled at her. “I’m sorry, my dear. That wasn’t what was meant to happen to me here.”

“But it has!” She stepped back merrily, and looked at him. “It’s quite absurd. You’ve put on weight, haven’t you?”

He nodded. “About a stone. I’m up to twelve stone now.”

“You should be more than that.” She came and sat down with him at the table, the warder discreetly in the background. “You know, Henry, I was afraid you might be terribly run down. I sort of dreaded what you might be like. One thinks about such horrible things—prison, you know. When one doesn’t know about it.”

“I know,” he said. “It’s very sweet of you to come.”

“I had to, if you’d let me. And now I find you simply bursting with health like this. My dear, I’m terribly glad. Tell me, do you find the time pass very slowly?”

He shook his head. “I did for the first week. But now—I don’t know. It just slips away.”

She settled down to tell him all about Sharples and such items of the business of the shipyard as she knew. He learned that the town was growing almost normal; new shops had been opened, Woolworths had returned, and the trams were running once again. There was a lot of talk that Lord Cheriton was trying to open up the rolling-mills again. Attendances at out-patients were very much down on last year. The first of the oil tankers had been launched shortly before Christmas, and was now finishing at the quayside. There was a lot of talk in the town that they might have to build destroyers for the Admiralty.

The half-hour allowed them for the visit, stretched by the warder in charge to forty minutes, was over before she had been able to tell him half of all her news; Warren went back to his cell, cheerful and content. Equally happily she walked back along the Cowes road to Newport station, to begin upon her long journey back to Sharples.

She came to him again in April, and in July, and every three months for the remainder of his sentence. In the intervals she wrote to him each week, long, informative letters designed to keep him in touch with the world of his business interests, to supply him with the information in the newspapers that were withheld from him. She got into touch with Morgan, still secretary of Warren Sons and Mortimer, and learned from him weekly what his chief would like to know. Besides her own news, and the news of Sharples, her letters told him about commodity prices, the Gold Standard, and the rates on Treasury Bills. He learned about the French Budget from her and about the changes in the Government in Greece, and he was continuously informed about the principal movements of the stock market.

In November 1937 Warren was released, and walked out of the prison a free man.

He had told nobody the exact day of his release; he did not know it himself until a few days previously. He went by bus to Cowes, and thence by boat and train to Southampton and London. There he reported to the Criminal Record Officer at Scotland Yard, and went to a hotel.

Next day, he travelled up to Sharples by night. He breakfasted in Newcastle, and took the local train to Sharples. A talkative gentleman, stout and rubicund, got into the carriage with him, observed that it was a fine morning, and extracted from him the information that he was going to Sharples.

“Eh, Sharples,” he said, wheezing a little. “Wonderful the way that Sharples has come on. Time was—not so long ago, either—there wasn’t a man in work in Sharples. And that’s a fact I’m telling you.”

Warren nodded. “I heard it had a bad time in the slump.”

“Aye. And then there was that financial swindle some years back. One of those fly-by-night City financiers—chairman of the shipyard, too—he got them in a proper mess. Got three years for it, he did, and serve him dam’ well right. But since that time they’ve gone ahead, and they’ve been full of work this long time past. Building destroyers for the Admiralty now, so they tell me.”

“It’s good to see the work come back again,” said Warren mildly.

“Aye. Barlows the shipyard was, before they changed the name. There was seven Barlow destroyers at the Battle of Jutland—did ye ever hear that?”

Warren got out of the train at Sharples, and went walking through the streets towards the Yard. The town was utterly different from his memory of it; in two and a half years it had changed almost beyond all recognition. The streets were full of cars, delivery vans, vehicles of all sorts; the pavements thronged with housewives shopping with their baskets. The desolate air of cleanliness had altogether gone; the sky was grimed with chimney smoke. The children playing in the little streets looked more robust and better clothed, with colour in their cheeks. At every corner there appeared to be a new shop front, trams and buses clanged and screamed along the streets, and around the doors of the re-opened Woolworths perambulators were clustered thickly. He passed a new, large super-cinema.

The clamour of the shipyard beat upon his ears a quarter of a mile away, the surge and ebb of the clatter of the pneumatic riveters. As he approached the gate he saw the half-built ships looming up behind the wall; there was one, half plated on the slips, that was obviously a warship of some sort. He approached the gate slowly, almost diffidently. So much had happened here; it was so different from when he last had seen it. He had the feeling of an interloper in the place.

Upon the blackened, ten-foot wall not many yards from the gate there was a sign that he did not remember. Hesitating for a moment to go in, he went across to look at it. It was a bronze plaque, about three feet square, apparently a memorial of some sort, dignified and restrained. As he approached he saw it bore, embossed in low relief, the sculptured head and shoulders of a man, in profile. He read the words below.

HENRY WARREN
1934
HE GAVE US WORK

He stood there staring at it for a few minutes, smiling a little; illogically moisture welled into his eyes. A few children, playing some complicated game chalked out upon the pavement, stopped to notice the stranger.

“Mary,” said Ellen Anderson in a hoarse whisper. “Ma-ree! Coom over here. I got somethin’ I want to tell you.

“That bloke there,” she whispered. “It’s the man in the picture.”

“ ’Tisn’t.”

“ ’Course it is.”

“I bet you ’tisn’t.”

“I bet you.”

“All right. Now you got to go and ask him.”

Ellen wriggled nervously. “You ask him.”

You got to ask him. You bet it was.”

“All right. I will ask him.” Warren became aware of a very dirty little girl pulling at his sleeve.

“Please, mister,” she whispered nervously. “Are you the man in the picsher?”

Warren smiled. “That’s right,” he said, “I’m the man in the picture.”

The little girl left him, sped across the road, and into the kitchen of a little house. “Coom over here and look, Mummy—quick!” she gasped. “I seen the man in the picsher!”

Warren turned into the Yard, and went down to the offices.

In the African bush, and in towns like Sharples, news travels very fast. Warren was hardly at the office building before a dozen women were clustered at the gate, peering at him down the entrance road. He had hardly got to Cheriton’s office before the men upon the ships knew all about it. A chattering and gossiping ran down the streets from house to house; women threw their shawls over their heads, went to the door and out into the street—to see what was happening. Within the Yard the men upon the ground sidled towards the offices; the men upon the ships, seeing the flow, knocked off their work and paused to watch. The word went round from mouth to mouth that Mr. Warren had come back.

Dennison, the foreman plater, stopped a thin trickle of men leaving the job. “God love us, men,” he cried, “are ye all daft? It’s twenty minutes yet to go before dinner. Get back on to the job.”

“They’re saying Mr. Warren’s in the offices.”

“What’s that to you? Get back along, and go on working till it’s time for dinner.”

“Hoots,” said one. “If it wasn’t for Mr. Warren there wouldn’t be no dinner.”

There was a laugh. The stream of men towards the offices grew larger, uncontrollable. In a moment men were streaming off the ships, the foremen pleading with them desperately. Only the fitters in the engine-room of one destroyer stayed at work; their foreman had been middleweight boxing champion in the Navy.

The men surged round the offices. They surged into the time office led by Jock McCoy, a charge hand labourer. The desk clerk rose like a flushed partridge.

“You’re not allowed in here,” he cried.

The navvy thrust his way across the room. “Git oot o’ the way, ye wee daft fule,” he said. “There ane thing only in this place will tell the toon that Mr. Warren’s back, an’ that thing’s gaen’ to wurk. An’ if ye dinna like it, ye can stop yer bluidy earoles.”

The hooter wailed in short, staccato bursts. It blew long blasts, short blasts, continuous blasts, intermittent blasts as various hands tried the experience of pulling at the cord. It brought the women to the doors, the shopkeepers out into the streets, enquiring what the noise was all about. It brought a stream of women and children down towards the gates. It brought the farm hands, far beyond the town, to a standstill beside their byres; in the little harbour at the entrance to the river it brought the fishermen together, wondering what the row was all about. It brought the stoker in the shipyard from his boilers in a frenzy, agonised that he was losing all his steam.

It brought the Sisters in the hospital to the entrance of their wards. It brought the porter flying to the Almoner’s little office off the Secretary’s room.

She started in her chair. “But it can’t be …” she exclaimed. “He wasn’t coming here till some time next week!”

She sat hesitant, irresolute, listening to the mad cacophony of the hooter. Out of her window she saw people in the street, all streaming down towards the yard.

Mr. Williams came into his office, a sheaf of invoices in hand. He sat down at his table, opened a ledger. Presently he raised his head and looked at her.

“They’re saying that your Mr. Warren’s in the town,” he said mildly. “Are ye no’ going down to meet him?”

Then she, too, left her desk, and ran with the rest.


THE END