‘You may go if you like. But you understand, if you do—’
Cobb, inflamed with desire and jealousy, made an effort to recapture her. Louise sprang away from him; but immediately behind her lay the foolish little chair which he had kicked over, and just beyond
The window was open, and now a servant, rushing in to see what the uproar meant, gave the blaze every benefit of draught.
‘Bring water!’ roared Cobb, who had just succeeded in extinguishing Louise’s dress, and was carrying her, still despite her struggles, out of the room. ‘Here, one of you take Miss Derrick to the next house. Bring water, you!’
All three servants were scampering and screeching about the hall. Cobb caught hold of one of them and all but twisted her arm out of its socket. At his fierce command, the woman supported Louise into the garden, and thence, after a minute or two of faintness on the sufferer’s part, led her to the gate of the neighbouring house. The people who lived there chanced to be taking the air on their front lawn. Without delay, Louise was conveyed beneath the roof, and her host, a man of energy, sped towards the fire to be of what assistance he could.
The lamp-shade, the screen, the little table and the diminutive chair blazed gallantly, and with such a volleying of poisonous fumes that Cobb could scarce hold his ground to do battle. Louise out of the way, he at once became cool and resourceful. Before a flame could reach the window he had rent down the flimsy curtains and flung them outside. Bellowing for the water which was so long in coming, he used the hearthrug to some purpose on the outskirts of the bonfire, but had to keep falling back for fresh air. Then appeared a pail and a can, which he emptied effectively, and next moment sounded the voice of the gentleman from next door.
‘Have you a garden hose? Set it on to the tap, and bring it in here.’
The hose was brought into play, and in no great time the last flame had flickered out amid a deluge. When all danger was at an end, one of the servants, the nurse-girl, uttered a sudden shriek; it merely signified that she had now thought for the first time of the little child asleep upstairs. Aided by the housemaid, she rushed to the nursery, snatched her charge from bed, and carried the unhappy youngster into the breezes of the night, where he screamed at the top of his gamut.
Cobb, when he no longer feared that the house would be burnt down, hurried to inquire after Louise. She lay on a couch, wrapped in a dressing-gown; for the side and one sleeve of her dress had been burnt away. Her moaning never ceased; there was a fire-mark on the lower part of her face, and she stared with eyes of terror and anguish at whoever approached her. Already a doctor had been sent for, and Cobb, reporting that all was safe at ‘Runnymede,’ wished to remove her at once to her own bed room, and the strangers were eager to assist.
‘What will the Mumfords say?’ Louise asked of a sudden, trying to raise herself.
‘Leave all that to me,’ Cobb replied reassuringly. ‘I’ll make it all right; don’t trouble yourself.’
The nervous shock had made her powerless; they carried her in a chair back to ‘Runnymede,’ and upstairs to her bedroom. Scarcely was this done when Mr. and Mrs. Mumford, after a leisurely walk from the station, approached their garden gate. The sight of a little crowd of people in the quiet road, the smell of burning, loud voices of excited servants, caused them to run forward in alarm. Emmeline, frenzied by the certainty that her own house was on fire, began to cry aloud for her child, and Mumford rushed like a madman through the garden.
‘It’s all right,’ said a man who stood in the doorway. ‘You Mr. Mumford? It’s all right. There’s been a fire, but we’ve got it out.’
Emmeline learnt at the same moment that her child had suffered no harm, but she would not pause until she saw the little one and held him in her embrace. Meanwhile, Cobb and Mumford talked in the devastated drawing- room, which was illumined with candles.
‘It’s a bad job, Mr. Mumford. My name is Cobb: I daresay you’ve heard of me. I came to see Miss Derrick, and I was clumsy enough to knock the lamp over.’
‘Knock the lamp over! How could you do that? Were you drunk?’
‘No, but you may well ask the question. I stumbled over something—a little chair, I think—and fell against the table with the lamp on it.’
‘Where’s Miss Derrick?’
‘Upstairs. She got rather badly burnt, I’m afraid. We’ve sent for a doctor.’
‘And here I am,’ spoke a voice behind them. ‘Sorry to see this, Mr. Mumford.’
The two went upstairs together, and on the first landing encountered Emmeline, sobbing and wailing hysterically with the child in her arms. Her husband spoke soothingly.
‘Don’t, don’t, Emmy. Here’s Dr. Billings come to see Miss Derrick. She’s the only one that has been hurt. Go down, there’s a good girl, and send somebody to help in Miss Derrick’s room; you can’t be any use yourself just now.’
‘But how did it happen? Oh,
‘I’ll come and tell you all about it. Better put the boy to bed again, hadn’t you?’
When she had recovered her senses Emmeline took this advice, and, leaving the nurse by the child’s cot, went down to survey the ruin of her property. It was a sorry sight. Where she had left a reception-room such as any suburban lady in moderate circumstances might be proud of; she now beheld a mere mass of unrecognisable furniture, heaped on what had once been a carpet, amid dripping walls and under a grimed ceiling.
‘Oh! Oh!’ She all but sank before the horror of the spectacle. Then, in a voice of fierce conviction, ‘She did it!