luck to come up with you, mister. Never had luck like it 'afore."
They went into the pork and ham shop and changed the sovereign. There
was cooked food in the windows--roast pork and boiled ham and corned
beef. She bought slices of pork and beef, and of suet-pudding with a
few currants sprinkled through it.
"Will yer 'elp me to carry it?" she inquired. "I'll 'ave to get a few
pen'worth o' coal an' wood an' a screw o' tea an' sugar. My wig, wot a
feed me an' Polly'll 'ave!"
As they returned to the coffee-stand she broke more than once into a
hop of glee. Barney had changed his mind concerning her. A solid
sovereign which must be changed and a companion whose shabby gentility
was absolute grandeur when compared with his present surroundings made a
difference.
She received her mug of coffee and thick slice of bread and dripping
with a grin, and swallowed the hot sweet liquid down in ecstatic gulps.
"Ain't I in luck?" she said, handing her mug back when it was empty.
"Gi' me another, Barney."
Antony Dart drank coffee also and ate bread and dripping. The coffee
was hot and the bread and dripping, dashed with salt, quite eatable. He
had needed food and felt the better for it.
"Come on, mister," said Glad, when their meal was ended. "I want to get
back to Polly, an' there's coal and bread and things to buy."
She hurried him along, breaking her pace with hops at intervals. She
darted into dirty shops and brought out things screwed up in paper. She
went last into a cellar and returned carrying a small sack of coal over
her shoulders.
"Bought sack an' all," she said elatedly. "A sack's a good thing to
'ave."
"Let me carry it for you," said Antony Dart
"Spile yer coat," with her sidelong upward glance.
"I don't care," he answered. "I don't care a damn."
The final expletive was totally unnecessary, but it meant a thing he did
not say. Whatsoever was thrusting him this way and that, speaking
through his speech, leading him to do things he had not dreamed of
doing, should have its will with him. He had been fastened to the skirts
of this beggar imp and he would go on to the end and do what was to be
done this day. It was part of the dream.
The sack of coal was over his shoulder when they turned into Apple
Blossom Court. It would have been a black hole on a sunny day, and now
it was like Hades, lit grimly by a gas-jet or two, small and flickering,
with the orange haze about them. Filthy,
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