He went, without his overcoat, promising to run.
The shop waited with a strange anxiety.
Cyril had created, by his restless movements to and fro, an atmosphere of strained expectancy.
It seemed now as if the whole town stood with beating heart, fearful of tidings and yet burning to get them.
Constance pictured Stafford, which she had never seen, and a court of justice, which she had never seen, and her husband and Daniel in it.
And she waited.
Cyril ran in.
"No!" he announced breathlessly.
"Nothing yet."
"Don't take cold, now you're hot," Constance advised.
But he would keep near the door. Soon he ran off again.
And perhaps fifteen seconds after he had gone, the strident cry of a Signal boy was heard in the distance, faint and indistinct at first, then clearer and louder.
"There's a paper!" said the apprentice.
"Sh!" said Constance, listening.
"Sh!" echoed Miss Insull.
"Yes, it is!" said Constance.
"Miss Insull, just step out and get a paper.
Here's a halfpenny."
The halfpenny passed quickly from one thimbled hand to another.
Miss Insull scurried.
She came in triumphantly with the sheet, which Constance tremblingly took.
Constance could not find the report at first.
Miss Insull pointed to it, and read--
"'Summing up!' Lower down, lower down!
'After an absence of thirty-five minutes the jury found the prisoner guilty of murder, with a recommendation to mercy.
The judge assumed the black cap and pronounced sentence of death, saying that he would forward the recommendation to the proper quarter.'"
Cyril returned.
"Not yet!" he was saying--when he saw the paper lying on the counter. His crest fell.
Long after the shop was shut, Constance and Cyril waited in the parlour for the arrival of the master of the house.
Constance was in the blackest despair.
She saw nothing but death around her.
She thought: misfortunes never come singly.
Why did not Samuel come?
All was ready for him, everything that her imagination could suggest, in the way of food, remedies, and the means of warmth.
Amy was not allowed to go to bed, lest she might be needed.
Constance did not even hint that Cyril should go to bed.
The dark, dreadful minutes ticked themselves off on the mantelpiece until only five minutes separated Constance from the moment when she would not know what to do next.
It was twenty-five minutes past eleven.
If at half-past Samuel did not appear, then he could not come that night, unless the last train from Stafford was inconceivably late.
The sound of a carriage!
It ceased at the door.
Mother and son sprang up.
Yes, it was Samuel!
She beheld him once more.
And the sight of his condition, moral and physical, terrified her.
His great strapping son and Amy helped him upstairs.
"Will he ever come down those stairs again?" This thought lanced Constance's heart.
The pain was come and gone in a moment, but it had surprised her tranquil commonsense, which was naturally opposed to, and gently scornful of, hysterical fears.
As she puffed, with her stoutness, up the stairs, that bland cheerfulness of hers cost her an immense effort of will. She was profoundly troubled; great disasters seemed to be slowly approaching her from all quarters.
Should she send for the doctor?