The Secret Agent by Joseph Conrad

desk. He stood still for a moment, then walked up, looked all

round on the floor, sat down in his chair, rang a bell, and waited.

“Chief Inspector Heat gone yet?”

“Yes, sir. Went away half-an-hour ago.”

He nodded. “That will do.” And sitting still, with his hat pushed

off his forehead, he thought that it was just like Heat’s

confounded cheek to carry off quietly the only piece of material

evidence. But he thought this without animosity. Old and valued

servants will take liberties. The piece of overcoat with the

address sewn on was certainly not a thing to leave about.

Dismissing from his mind this manifestation of Chief Inspector

Heat’s mistrust, he wrote and despatched a note to his wife,

charging her to make his apologies to Michaelis’ great lady, with

whom they were engaged to dine that evening.

The short jacket and the low, round hat he assumed in a sort of

curtained alcove containing a washstand, a row of wooden pegs and a

shelf, brought out wonderfully the length of his grave, brown face.

He stepped back into the full light of the room, looking like the

vision of a cool, reflective Don Quixote, with the sunken eyes of a

dark enthusiast and a very deliberate manner. He left the scene of

his daily labours quickly like an unobtrusive shadow. His descent

into the street was like the descent into a slimy aquarium from

which the water had been run off. A murky, gloomy dampness

enveloped him. The walls of the houses were wet, the mud of the

roadway glistened with an effect of phosphorescence, and when he

emerged into the Strand out of a narrow street by the side of

Charing Cross Station the genius of the locality assimilated him.

He might have been but one more of the queer foreign fish that can

be seen of an evening about there flitting round the dark corners.

He came to a stand on the very edge of the pavement, and waited.

His exercised eyes had made out in the confused movements of lights

and shadows thronging the roadway the crawling approach of a

hansom. He gave no sign; but when the low step gliding along the

curbstone came to his feet he dodged in skilfully in front of the

big turning wheel, and spoke up through the little trap door almost

before the man gazing supinely ahead from his perch was aware of

having been boarded by a fare.

It was not a long drive. It ended by signal abruptly, nowhere in

particular, between two lamp-posts before a large drapery

establishment – a long range of shops already lapped up in sheets

of corrugated iron for the night. Tendering a coin through the

trap door the fare slipped out and away, leaving an effect of

uncanny, eccentric ghastliness upon the driver’s mind. But the

size of the coin was satisfactory to his touch, and his education

not being literary, he remained untroubled by the fear of finding

it presently turned to a dead leaf in his pocket. Raised above the

world of fares by the nature of his calling, he contemplated their

actions with a limited interest. The sharp pulling of his horse

right round expressed his philosophy.

Meantime the Assistant Commissioner was already giving his order to

a waiter in a little Italian restaurant round the corner – one of

those traps for the hungry, long and narrow, baited with a

perspective of mirrors and white napery; without air, but with an

atmosphere of their own – an atmosphere of fraudulent cookery

mocking an abject mankind in the most pressing of its miserable

necessities. In this immoral atmosphere the Assistant

Commissioner, reflecting upon his enterprise, seemed to lose some

more of his identity. He had a sense of loneliness, of evil

freedom. It was rather pleasant. When, after paying for his short

meal, he stood up and waited for his change, he saw himself in the

sheet of glass, and was struck by his foreign appearance. He

contemplated his own image with a melancholy and inquisitive gaze,

then by sudden inspiration raised the collar of his jacket. This

arrangement appeared to him commendable, and he completed it by

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