Eight o'clock on a July evening - and you had been walking all day, stopping at pubs on the way, drinking heavily. And now you were on the Strand passing the ivy-grown church. In the distance across the waters the great red sinking sun flashed its rays.
And there before you rose an old-style Methodist chapel. You thought at once of those early preachers threatening a worse hell than any pit of fire and brimstone. Your father had been Lay Preacher, you recalled, and your mind drifted to the man possessed by many devils; the one who ran mad among the tombs and cried out.
It was now growing darker suddenly, moonless, with the wind blowing icily through the streets, driving a thin drizzle of rain before it.
And you were dog tired, bone weary. The salty taste of the wind in your mouth. You felt as though some Nemesis were following you. A close observer would have noticed the look of terror in your eyes. The quintessence of madness, you reflected. For a moment, you felt like a man standing on the brink of a precipice, while beneath you yawned unfathomable darkness. You felt you were stymied at every turn, like a swimmer floundering in a merciless current.
And so you decided to turn into a hotel where you would spend time drinking double scotches.
The sharp edges of the bar were becoming nicely rounded. A faint mist was obscuring the far end of the room. This was not the first bar you had visited that day.
Presently, two or three working-men came in, and the atmosphere of the room seemed to grow warmer and more cheerful.
You suddenly had a sense of Eleanor's presence there. Then you realized that this was the pub that you had often visited with her. You hadn't intended to come in here. You hadn't intended to reopen the past.
At the bar a girl perched on a stool. Large bright blue eyes that suggested an unknown world. Perhaps this was what you needed, a girl to help you forget.
She must have felt your gaze. Her eyes flashed into yours.
Then she winked, and without so much as by your leave, came and sat at your table.
'What's a nice-looking fellow like you doing on your own?' You gave a start like a man aroused from a dream. 'Aren't you going to invite me a drink?'
'Oh, uh β sure.' You mutter.
But you could not focus your attention on the girl. Memory after memory crowded into your brain, and made the past live again.
The girl made a few more attempts at desultory conversation, saying she had a room upstairs if you were interested. You made a non-commital remark and she turned away.
And at that moment there was a sudden influx of people into the room, chattering, and in less than no time the place was crowded.
Your mind drifted to that Indian summer you had first met Eleanor.
Then had come into your mind the knowledge which made the night black, made your world seem a charnel-house. It was queer, you thought, how you could go on behaving just as usual on the surface, while all the time you knew inside that you were really dead. You had that dreadful feeling of moving apart in a nightmare world of your own, spiritually cut off from the people around you.
But you had lost what was dearest to you in life. Your wife, Eleanor was dead. And you were plunged into the blackest hell. No hope of ever seeing her again. You had known the utter desolation of loss.
The girl at your table was getting impatient. 'Well, are you coming?' she demanded. But so deep were you in your memory you made no answer.
More people came into the room and others left.
The girl with a toss of her head went off looking for a more promising client.
Eventually you were to leave the hotel and to make your way through the suburb to another pub. Outside the wind was rising and the night was dark and moonless. A light rain continued to fall.
Inside the Morning Star Hotel you booked a room for the night after collecting a fresh bottle of whiskey from the bottle shop and then made your way upstairs.
Alone in your room you are in a state of delirium as you continue drinking. You are confronted by a vast oval looking-glass filling the greater part of one wall, with the brightest and clearest glass you've ever seen, throwing back the flickering reflections from the neon light outside your window.
You walked across the room to the mirror to look at yourself. And in the mirror you saw, behind yourself, behind your own reflection a man standing well back in the glass. Quickly, you turned around but there is no one in the room behind you. Then you turned back to the looking-glass.
And as you look once more into the glass, it is not quite your own face you see. A much older man looks back at you. At first you thought this older man might be your father, but the features were different as your father was nearly bald whereas this man has a large shock of grey hair.
Soon you realized that the man in the glass was an older version of yourself, you as you will most probably be in about twenty or thirty years' time. The white face gleamed with the look of a dipsomaniac.
You looked into the mirror and it is as though your self had split, splintered might be the better word. Your reflection seems to take on a life of its own. It was yourself and yet you were separate and distant from your self. Your shadow-self, as it were.
'It's myself! But as a much older man!' And you gasp aloud your own name in a strangled voice.
A dead white face.A face as white as wax.A pair of red-rimmed eyes. Eyes filled with a terrible hunger. A mop of coarse hair. The vague sense of apprehension which gripped you was quickening into a sharp fear.
And then the man in the reflection moved to a position towards the table in front of the glass. A gleam of speculative interest filled his dreadful eyes. His mouth was open, his throat muscles were working, but no sound issued forth.
This amused you and you addressed the figure in the looking-glass by your own name, talking to it quite familiarly.
'Well, Arnold Robartes, they got you off. You're a free man. The jury brought in a verdict of 'Not Guilty'. They couldn't link you directly to Eleanor's death. And so you've escaped a murder rap! Dad got Owen Galbally, the best defence lawyer, and he got you off. So you're free.'
The man in the looking-glass again attempted to talk but although his lips were moving you could not hear what he said. His lips kept on moving. And you were trying to guess what he was saying.