T. TEMBAROM
By FRANCES HODGSON BURNETT
With Four Illustrations
By CHARLES S. CHAPMAN
A.L. BURT COMPANY, PUBLISHERS
114-120 East Twenty-third Street . . New York
PUBLISHED BY ARRANGEMENT WITH THE CENTURY CO.
Copyright, 1913, by
THE CENTURY CO.
----
Published, October, 1913
T. TEMBAROM
THE boys at the
Brooklyn public school which he attended did not know what the "T."
stood for. He would never tell them. All he said in reply to questions was:
"It don't stand for nothin'. You+'ve gotter have a' 'nitial, ain't
you?" His name was, in fact, an almost inevitable school-boy modification
of one felt to be absurd and pretentious. His Christian name was Temple, which
became "Temp." His surname was Barom, so he was at once "Temp Barom."
In the natural tendency to avoid waste of time it was pronounced as one word,
and the letter p being superfluous and cumbersome, it easily settled itself
into "Tembarom," and there remained. By much less inevitable
processes have surnames evolved themselves as centuries rolled by. Tembarom
liked it, and soon almost forgot he had ever been called anything else.
His education really
began when he was ten years old. At that time his mother died of pneumonia,
contracted by going out to sew, at seventy-five cents a day, in shoes almost
entirely without soles, when the remains of a blizzard were melting in the
streets. As, after her funeral, there remained only twenty- five cents in the
shabby bureau which was one of the few articles furnishing the room in the
tenement in which they lived together, Tembarom sleeping on a cot, the world
spread itself before him as a place to explore in search of at least one meal a
day There was nothing to do but to explore it to the best of his ten-year-old
ability.
His father had died two
years before his mother, and Tembarom had vaguely felt it a relief. He had been
a resentful, domestically tyrannical immigrant Englishman, who held in contempt
every American trait and institution. He had come over to better himself,
detesting England and the English because there was "no chance for a man
there," and, transferring his dislikes and resentments from one country to
another, had met with no better luck than he had left behind him. This he felt
to be the fault of America, and his family, which was represented solely by
Tembarom and his mother, heard a good deal about it, and also, rather contradictorily,
a good deal about the advantages and superiority of England, to which in the
course of six months he became gloomily loyal. It was necessary, in fact, for
him to have something with which to compare the United States unfavorably. The
effect he produced on Tembarom was that of causing him, when he entered the
public school round the corner, to conceal with determination verging on
duplicity the humiliating fact that if he had not been born in Brooklyn he
might have been born in England. England was not popular among the boys in the
school. History had represented the country to them in all its tyrannical
rapacity and bloodthirsty oppression of the humble free-born. The manly and
admirable attitude was to say, "Give me liberty or give me death" --
and there was the Fourth of July.
Though Tembarom and his
mother had been poor enough while his father lived, when he died the returns
from his irregular odd jobs no longer came in to supplement his wife's sewing,
and add an occasional day or two of fuller meals, in consequence of which they
were oftener than ever hungry and cold, and in desperate trouble about the rent
of their room. Tembarom, who was a wiry, enterprising little fellow, sometimes
found an odd job himself. He carried notes and parcels when any one would trust
him with them, he split old boxes into kindling-wood, more than once he
"minded" a baby when its mother left its perambulator outside a
store. But at eight or nine years of age one's pay is in proportion to one's
size. Tembarom, however, had neither his father's bitter eye nor his mother's
discouraged one. Something different from either had been reincarnated in him
from some more cheerful past. He had an alluring grin instead -- a grin which
curled up his mouth and showed his sound, healthy, young teeth, -- a lot of
them, -- and people liked to see them.
At the beginning of the
world it is only recently reasonable to suppose human beings were made with
healthy bodies and healthy minds. That of course was the original scheme of the
race. It would not have been worth while to create a lot of things aimlessly
ill made. A journeyman carpenter would not waste his time in doing it, if he
knew any better. Given the power to make a man, even an amateur would make him
as straight as he could, inside and out. Decent vanity would compel him to do
it. He would be ashamed to show the thing and admit he had done it, much less
people a world with millions of like proofs of incompetence. Logically
considered, the race was built straight and clean and healthy and happy. How,
since then, it has developed in multitudinous less sane directions, and lost
its normal straightness and proportions, I am, singularly enough, not entirely
competent to explain with any degree of satisfactory detail. But it cannot be
truthfully denied that this has rather generally happened. There are human
beings who are not beautiful, there are those who are not healthy, there are
those who hate people and things with much waste of physical and mental energy,
there are people who are not unwilling to do others an ill turn by word or
deed, and there are those who do not believe that the original scheme of the
race was ever a decent one.
This is all abnormal
and unintelligent, even the not being beautiful, and sometimes one finds
oneself called upon passionately to resist a temptation to listen to an
internal hint that the whole thing is aimless. Upon this tendency one may as
well put one's foot firmly, as it leads nowhere. At such times it is supporting
to call to mind a certain undeniable fact which ought to loom up much larger in
our philosophical calculations. No one has ever made a collection of statistics
regarding the enormous number of perfectly sane, kind, friendly, decent
creatures who form a large proportion of any mass of human beings anywhere and
everywhere -- people who are not vicious or cruel or depraved, not as a result
of continual self-control, but simply because they do not want to be, because
it is more natural and agreeable to be exactly the opposite things; people who
do not tell lies because they could not do it with any pleasure, and would, on
the contrary, find the exertion an annoyance and a bore; people whose manners
and morals are good because their natural preference lies in that direction.
There are millions of them who in most essays on life and living are virtually
ignored because they do none of the things which call forth eloquent
condemnation or brilliant cynicism. It has not yet become the fashion to record
them. When one reads a daily newspaper filled with dramatic elaborations of
crimes and unpleasantness, one sometimes wishes attention might be called to
them -- to their numbers, to their decencies, to their normal lack of any
desire to do violence and their equally normal disposition to lend a hand. One
is inclined to feel that the majority of persons do not believe in their
existence. But if an accident occurs in the street, there are always several of
them who appear to spring out of the earth to give human sympathy and
assistance; if a national calamity, physical or social, takes place, the world
suddenly seems full of them. They are the thousands of Browns, Joneses, and
Robinsons who, massed together, send food to famine-stricken countries,
sustenance to earthquake-devastated regions, aid to wounded soldiers or miners
or flood-swept homelessness. They are the ones who have happened naturally to
continue to grow straight and carry out the First Intention. They really form
the majority; if they did not, the people of the earth would have eaten one
another alive centuries ago. But though this is surely true, a happy cynicism
totally disbelieves in their existence. When a combination of circumstances
sufficiently dramatic brings one of them into prominence, he is either called
an angel or a fool. He is neither. He is only a human creature who is normal.
After this manner
Tembarom was wholly normal. He liked work and rejoiced in good cheer, when he
found it, however attenuated its form. He was a good companion, and even at ten
years old a practical person. He took his loose coppers from the old bureau
drawer, and remembering that he had several times helped Jake Hutchins to sell
his newspapers, he went forth into the world to find and consult him as to the
investment of his capital.
"Where are you
goin', Tem?" a woman who lived in the next room said when she met him on
the stairs. "What you goin' to do?"
"I 'm goin' to
sell newspapers if I can get some with this," he replied, opening his hand
to show her the extent of his resources.
She was almost as poor
as he was, but not quite. She looked him over curiously for a moment, and then
fumbled in her pocket. She drew out two ten-cent pieces and considered them,
hesitating. Then she looked again at him. That normal expression in his nice
ten-year-old eyes had its suggestive effect.
"You take
this," she said, handing him the two pieces. "It+'ll help you to
start."
"I+'ll bring it
back, ma'am," said Tem. "Thank you, Mis' Hullingworth."
In about two weeks'
time he did bring it back. That was the beginning. He lived through all the
experiences a small boy waif and stray would be likely to come in contact with.
The abnormal class treated him ill, and the normal class treated him well. He
managed to get enough food to eat to keep him from starvation. Sometimes he
slept under a roof and much oftener out-of-doors. He preferred to sleep
out-of-doors more than half of the year, and the rest of the time he did what
he could. He saw and learned many strange things, but was not undermined by
vice because he unconsciously preferred decency. He sold newspapers and annexed
any old job which appeared on the horizon. The education the New York streets
gave him was a liberal one. He became accustomed to heat and cold and wet
weather, but having sound lungs and a tough little body combined with the
normal tendencies already mentioned, he suffered no more physical deterioration
than a young Indian would suffer. After selling newspapers for two years he got
a place as "boy" in a small store. The advance signified by steady
employment was inspiring to his energies. He forged ahead, and got a better job
and better pay as he grew older. By the time he was fifteen he shared a small
bedroom with another boy. In whatsoever quarter he lived, friends seemed
sporadic. Other boys congregated about him. He did not know he had any effect
at all, but his effect, in fact, was rather like that of a fire in winter or a
cool breeze in summer. It was natural to gather where it prevailed.
There came a time when
he went to a night class to learn stenography. Great excitement had been
aroused among the boys he knew best by a rumor that there were
"fellows" who could earn a hundred dollars a week "writing
short." Boyhood could not resist the florid splendor of the idea. Four of
them entered the class confidently looking forward to becoming the recipients
of four hundred a month in the course of six weeks. One by one they dropped
off, until only Tembarom remained, slowly forging ahead. He had never meant
anything else but to get on in the world -- to get as far as he could. He kept
at his "short," and by the time he was nineteen it helped him to a
place in a newspaper office. He took dictation from a nervous and harried
editor, who, when he was driven to frenzy by overwork and incompetencies, found
that the long-legged, clean youth with the grin never added fuel to the flame
of his wrath. He was a common young man, who was not marked by special
brilliancy of intelligence, but he had a clear head and a good temper, and a
queer aptitude for being able to see himself in the other man's shoes -- his
difficulties and moods. This ended in his being tried with bits of new work now
and then. In an emergency he was once sent out to report the details of a fire.
What he brought back was usable, and his elation when he found he had actually
"made good" was ingenuous enough to spur Galton, the editor, into
trying him again.
To Tembarom this was a
magnificent experience. The literary suggestion implied by being "on a
newspaper" was more than he had hoped for. If you have sold newspapers,
and slept in a barrel or behind a pile of lumber in a wood-yard, to report a
fire in a street-car shed seems a flight of literature. He applied himself to
the careful study of newspapers -- their points of view, their style of
phrasing. He believed them to be perfect. To attain ease in expressing himself
in their elevated language he felt to be the summit of lofty ambition. He had
no doubts of the exaltation of his ideal. His respect and confidence almost
made Galton cry at times, because they recalled to him days when he had been
nineteen and had regarded New York journalists with reverence. He liked
Tembarom more and more. It actually soothed him to have him about, and he fell
into giving him one absurd little chance after another. When he brought in
"stuff" which bore too evident marks of utter ignorance, he actually
touched it up and used it, giving him an enlightening, ironical hint or so.
Tembarom always took the hints with gratitude. He had no mistaken ideas of his
own powers. Galton loomed up before him a sort of god, and though the editor
was a man with a keen, though wearied, brain and a sense of humor, the
situation was one naturally productive of harmonious relations. He was of the
many who unknowingly came in out of the cold and stood in the glow of
Tembarom's warm fire, or took refuge from the heat in his cool breeze. He did
not know of the private, arduous study of journalistic style, and it was not
unpleasing to see that the nice young cub was gradually improving. Through pure
modest fear or ridicule, Tembarom kept to himself his vaulting ambition. He
practised reports of fires, weddings, and accidents in his hall bedroom.
A hall bedroom in a
third-rate boarding-house is not a cheerful place, but when Tembarom vaguely
felt this, he recalled the nights spent in empty trucks and behind
lumber-piles, and thought he was getting spoiled by luxury. He told himself
that he was a fellow who always had luck. He did not know, neither did any one
else, that his luck would have followed him if he had lived in a coal-hole. It
was the concomitant of his normal build and outlook on life. Mrs. Bowse, his
hard- worked landlady, began by being calmed down by his mere bearing when he
came to apply for his room and board. She had a touch of grippe, and had just
emerged from a heated affray with a dirty cook, and was inclined to battle when
he presented himself. In a few minutes she was inclined to battle no longer.
She let him have the room. Cantankerous restrictions did not ruffle him.
"Of course what
you say goes," he said, giving her his friendly grin. "Any one that
takes boarders has got to be careful. You+'re in for a bad cold, ain't
you?"
"I+'ve got grippe
again, that's what I+'ve got," she almost snapped.
"Did you ever try
Payson's `G. Destroyer'? G stands for grippe, you know. Catchy name, ain't it?
They say the man that invented it got ten thousand dollars for it. `G.
Destroyer.' You feel like you have to find out what it means when you see it up
on a boarding. I+'m just over grippe myself, and I+'ve got half a bottle in my
pocket. You carry it about with you, and swallow one every half-hour. You just
try it. It set me right in no time."
He took the bottle out
of his waistcoat pocket and handed it to her. She took it and turned it over.
"You+'re awful
good-natured," -- She hesitated, -- "but I ain't going to take your
medicine. I ought to go and get some for myself. How much does it cost?"
"It+'s on the
bottle; but it+'s having to get it for yourself that+'s the matter. You won't
have time, and you+'ll forget it."
"That+'s true
enough," said Mrs. Bowse, looking at him sharply. "I guess you know
something about boarding- houses."
"I guess I know
something about trying to earn three meals a day -- or two of them. It's no
merry jest, whichever way you do it."
WHEN he took possession
of his hall bedroom the next day and came down to his first meal, all the
boarders looked at him interestedly. They had heard of the G. Destroyer from
Mrs. Bowse, whose grippe had disappeared. Jim Bowles and Julius Steinberger
looked at him because they were about his own age, and shared a hall bedroom on
his floor; the young woman from the notion counter in a down-town department
store looked at him because she was a young woman; the rest of the company
looked at him because a young man in a hall bedroom might or might not be noisy
or objectionable, and the incident of the G. Destroyer sounded good-natured.
Mr. Joseph Hutchinson, the stout and discontented Englishman from Manchester,
looked him over because the mere fact that he was a new-comer had placed him by
his own rash act in the position of a target for criticism. Mr. Hutchinson had
come to New York because he had been told that he could find backers among
profuse and innumerable multi- millionaires for the invention which had been
the haunting vision of his uninspiring life. He had not been met with the
careless rapture which had been described to him, and he was becoming violently
antagonistic to American capital and pessimistic in his views of American
institutions. Like Tembarom's father, he was the resentful Englishman.
"I don't think
much o' that chap," he said in what he considered an undertone to his
daughter, who sat beside him and tried to manage that he should not be
infuriated by waiting for butter and bread and second helpings. A fine, healthy
old feudal feeling that servants should be roared at if they did not "look
sharp" when he wanted anything was one of his salient characteristics.
"Wait a bit,
Father; we don't know anything about him yet," Ann Hutchinson murmured
quietly, hoping that his words had been lost in the clatter of knives and forks
and dishes.
As Tembarom had taken
his seat, he had found that, when he looked across the table, he looked
directly at Miss Hutchinson; and before the meal ended he felt that he was in
great good luck to be placed opposite an object of such singular interest. He
knew nothing about "types," but if he had been of those who do, he
would probably have said to himself that she was of a type apart. As it was, he
merely felt that she was of a kind one kept looking at whether one ought to or
not. She was a little thing of that exceedingly light slimness of build which
makes a girl a childish feather-weight. Few girls retain it after fourteen or
fifteen. A wind might supposably have blown her away, but one knew it would
not, because she was firm and steady on her small feet. Ordinary strength could
have lifted her with one hand, and would have been tempted to do it. She had a
slim, round throat, and the English daisy face it upheld caused it to suggest
to the mind the stem of a flower. The roundness of her cheek, in and out of which
totally unexpected dimples flickered, and the forget-me-not blueness of her
eves, which were large and rather round also, made her look like a nice baby of
singularly serious and observing mind. She looked at one as certain
awe-inspiring things in perambulators look at one -- with a far and clear
silence of gaze which passes beyond earthly obstacles and reserves a benign
patience with follies. Tembarom felt interestedly that one really might quail
before it, if one had anything of an inferior quality to hide. And yet it was
not a critical gaze at all. She wore a black dress with a bit of white collar,
and she had so much soft, red hair that he could not help recalling one or two
women who owned the same quantity and seemed able to carry it only as a sort of
untidy bundle. Hers looked entirely under control, and yet was such a wonder of
burnished fullness that it tempted the hand to reach out and touch it. It
became Tembarom's task during the meal to keep his eyes from turning too often
toward it and its owner.
If she had been a girl
who took things hard, she might have taken her father very hard indeed. But
opinions and feelings being solely a matter of points of view, she was very
fond of him, and, regarding him as a sacred charge and duty, took care of him
as though she had been a reverentially inclined mother taking care of a
boisterous son. When his roar was heard, her calm little voice always fell
quietly on indignant ears the moment it ceased. It was her part in life to act
as a palliative: her mother, whose well-trained attitude toward the ruling
domestic male was of the early Victorian order, had lived and died one. A
nicer, warmer little woman had never existed. Joseph Hutchinson had adored and
depended on her as much as he had harried her. When he had charged about like a
mad bull because he could not button his collar, or find the pipe he had
mislaid in his own pocket, she had never said more than "Now, Mr.
Hutchinson," or done more than leave her sewing to button the collar with
soothing fingers, and suggest quietly that sometimes he did chance to carry his
pipe about with him. She was of the class which used to call its husband by a
respectful surname. When she died she left him as a sort of legacy to her
daughter, spending the last weeks of her life in explaining affectionately all
that "Father" needed to keep him quiet and make him comfortable.
Little Ann had never
forgotten a detail, and had even improved upon some of them, as she happened to
be cleverer than her mother, and had, indeed, a far-seeing and clear young mind
of her own. She had been called "Little Ann" all her life. This had
held in the first place because her mother's name had been Ann also, and after
her mother's death the diminutive had not fallen away from her. People felt it belonged
to her not because she was especially little, though she was a small, light
person, but because there was an affectionate humor in the sound of it.
Despite her hard needs,
Mrs. Bowse would have faced the chance of losing two boarders rather than have
kept Mr. Joseph Hutchinson but for Little Ann. As it was, she kept them both,
and in the course of three months the girl was Little Ann to almost every one
in the house. Her normalness took the form of an instinct which amounted to
genius for seeing what people ought to have, and in some occult way filling in
bare or trying places.
"She+'s just a
wonder, that girl," Mrs. Bowse said to one boarder after another.
"She+'s just a
wonder," Jim Bowles and Julius Steinberger murmured to each other in rueful
confidence, as they tilted their chairs against the wall of their hall bedroom
and smoked. Each of the shabby and poverty-stricken young men had of course
fallen hopelessly in love with her at once. This was merely human and
inevitable, but realizing in the course of a few weeks that she was too busy
taking care of her irritable, boisterous old Manchester father, and everybody
else, to have time to be made love to even by young men who could buy new boots
when the old ones had ceased to be water-tight, they were obliged to resign
themselves to the, after all, comforting fact that she became a mother to them,
not a sister. She mended their socks and sewed buttons on for them with a firm
frankness which could not be persuaded into meaning anything more sentimental
than a fixed habit of repairing anything which needed it, and which, while at
first bewildering in its serenity, ended by reducing the two youths to a dust
of devotion.
"She+'s a wonder,
she is," they sighed when at every weekend they found their forlorn and
scanty washing resting tidily on their bed.
In the course of a
week, more or less, Tembarom's feeling for her would have been exactly that of
his two hall-bedroom neighbors, but that his nature, though a practical one,
was not inclined to any supine degree of resignation. He was a sensible youth,
however, and gave no trouble. Even Joseph Hutchinson, who of course resented
furiously any "nonsense" of which his daughter and possession was the
object, became sufficiently mollified by his good spirits and ready good nature
to refrain from open conversational assault.
"I don't mind that
chap as much as I did at first," he admitted reluctantly to Little Ann one
evening after a good dinner and a comfortable pipe. "He+'s not such a fool
as he looks."
Tembarom was given, as
Little Ann was, to seeing what peo ple wanted. He knew when to pass the mustard
and other straying condiments. He picked up things which dropped
inconveniently, he did not interrupt the remarks of his elders and betters, and
several times when he chanced to be in the hall, and saw Mr. Hutchinson, in
irritable, stout Englishman fashion, struggling into his overcoat, he sprang
forward with a light, friendly air and helped him. He did not do it with
ostentatious politeness or with the manner of active youth giving generous aid
to elderly avoirdupois. He did it as though it occurred to him as a natural
result of being on the spot.
It took Mrs. Bowse and
her boarding-house less than a week definitely to like him. Every night when he
sat down to dinner he brought news with him -- news and jokes and new slang.
Newspaper-office anecdote and talk gave a journalistic air to the gathering
when he was present, and there was novelty in it. Soon every one was intimate
with him, and interested in what he was doing. Galton's good-natured patronage
of him was a thing to which no one was indifferent. It was felt to be the right
thing in the right place. When he came home at night it became the custom to
ask him questions as to the bits of luck which befell him. He became "T.
T." instead of Mr. Tembarom, except to Joseph Hutchinson and his daughter.
Hutchinson called him Tembarom, but Little Ann said "Mr. Tembarom"
with quaint frequency when she spoke to him.
"Landed anything
to-day, T. T.?" some one would ask almost every evening, and the interest
in his relation of the day's adventures increased from week to week. Little Ann
never asked questions and seldom made comments, but she always listened
attentively. She had gathered, and guessed from what she had gathered, a rather
definite idea of what his hard young life had been. He did not tell pathetic
stories about himself, but he and Jim Bowles and Julius Steinberger had become
fast friends, and the genial smoking of cheap tobacco in hall bedrooms tends to
frankness of relation, and the various ways in which each had found himself
"up against it" in the course of their brief years supplied material
for anecdotal talk.
"But it+'s bound
to be easier from now on," he would say. "I+'ve got the `short' down
pretty fine -- not fine enough to make big money, but enough to hold down a job
with Galton. He+'s mighty good to me. If I knew more, I believe he+'d give me a
column to take care of-Up-town Society column perhaps. A fellow named Biker+'s
got it. Twenty per. Goes on a bust twice a month, the fool. Gee! I wish I had
his job!"
Mrs. Bowse's house was
provided with a parlor in which her boarders could sit in the evening when so
inclined. It was a fearsome room, which, when the dark, high-ceilinged hall was
entered, revealed depths of dingy gloom which appeared splashed in spots with
incongruous brilliancy of color. This effect was produced by richly framed
department-store chromo lithographs on the walls, aided by lurid
cushion-covers, or "tidies" representing Indian maidens or chieftains
in full war paint, or clusters of poppies of great boldness of hue. They had
either been Christmas gifts bestowed upon Mrs. Bowse or department-store
bargains of her own selection, purchased with thrifty intent. The red-and-green
plush upholstered walnut chairs and sofa had been acquired by her when the
bankruptcy of a neighboring boarding-house brought them within her means. They
were no longer very red or very green, and the cheerfully hopeful design of the
tidies and cushions had been to conceal worn places and stains. The mantelpiece
was adorned by a black-walnut-and-gold-framed mirror, and innumerable vases of
the ornate ninety-eight-cents order. The centerpiece held a large and extremely
soiled spray of artificial wistaria. The end of the room was rendered
attractive by a tent-like cozy-corner built of savage weapons and Oriental
cotton stuffs long ago become stringy and almost leprous in hue. The proprietor
of the bankrupt boarding-house had been "artistic." But Mrs. Bowse
was a good-enough soul whose boarders liked her and her house, and when the gas
was lighted and some one played "rag-time" on the second-hand
pianola, they liked the parlor.
Little Ann did not
often appear in it, but now and then she came down with her bit of sewing, --
she always had a "bit of sewing," -- and she sat in the cozy-corner
listening to the talk or letting some one confide troubles to her. Sometimes it
was the New England widow, Mrs. Peck, who looked like a spinster school-ma'am,
but who had a married son with a nice wife who lived in Harlem and drank
heavily. She used to consult with Little Ann as to the possible wisdom of
putting a drink deterrent privately in his tea. Sometimes it was Mr. Jakes, a
depressed little man whose wife had left him, for no special reason he could
discover. Oftenest perhaps it was Julius Steinberger or Jim Bowles who did
their ingenuous best to present themselves to her as energetic, if not
successful, young business men, not wholly unworthy of attention and always
breathing daily increasing devotion. Sometimes it was Tembarom, of whom her
opinion had never been expressed, but who seemed to have made friends with her.
She liked to hear about the newspaper office and Mr. Galton, and never was
uninterested in his hopes of "making good." She seemed to him the
wisest and most direct and composed person he had ever known. She spoke with
the broad, flat, friendly Manchester accent, and when she let drop a
suggestion, it carried a delightfully sober conviction with it, because what
she said was generally a revelation of logical mental argument concerning
details she had gathered through her little way of listening and saying nothing
whatever.
"If Mr. Biker
drinks, he won't keep his place," she said to Tembarom one night.
"Perhaps you might get it yourself, if you persevere."
Tembarom reddened a
little. He really reddened through joyous excitement.
"Say, I did+n't
know you knew a thing about that," he answered. "You+'re a regular
wonder. You scarcely ever say anything, but the way you get on to things gets
me."
"Perhaps if I
talked more I should+n't notice as much," she said, turning her bit of
sewing round and examining it. "I never was much of a talker. Father+'s a
good talker, and Mother and me got into the way of listening. You do if you
live with a good talker."
Tembarom looked at the
girl with a male gentleness, endeavoring to subdue open expression of the fact
that be was convinced that she was as thoroughly aware of her father's salient
characteristics as she was of other things.
"You do,"
said Tembarom. Then picking up her scissors, which had dropped from her lap,
and politely returning them, he added anxiously: "To think of you
remembering Biker! I wonder, if I ever did get his job, if I could hold it down?"
"Yes,"
decided Little Ann; "you could. I+'ve noticed you+'re that kind of person,
Mr. Tembarom."
"Have you?"
he said elatedly. "Say, honest Injun?"
"Yes."
"I shall be
getting stuck on myself if you encourage me like that," he said, and then,
his face falling, he added, "Biker graduated at Princeton."
"I don't know much
about society," Little Ann remarked, -- "I never saw any either
up-town or down-town or in the country, -- but I should+n't think you+'d have
to have a college education to write the things you see about it in the
newspaper paragraphs."
Tembarom grinned.
"They+'re not real
high-brow stuff, are they," he said. " `There was a brilliant
gathering on Tuesday evening at the house of Mr. Jacob Sturtburger at 79 Two
Hundredth Street on the occasion of the marriage of his daughter Miss Rachel
Sturtburger to Mr. Eichenstein. The bride was attired in white peau de cygne
trimmed with duchess lace.' "
Little Ann took him up.
"I don't know what peau de cygne is, and I daresay the bride does+n't.
I+'ve never been to anything but a village school, but I could make up
paragraphs like that myself."
"That's the
up-town kind," said Tembarom. "The down- town ones wear their
mothers' point-lace wedding-veils sometimes, but they+'re not much different.
Say, I believe I could do it if I had luck."
"So do I,"
returned Little Ann.
Tembarom looked down at
the carpet, thinking the thing over. Ann went on sewing.
"That's the way
with you," he said presently: "you put things into a fellow's head.
You+'ve given me a regular boost, Little Ann."
It is not unlikely that
but for the sensible conviction in her voice he would have felt less bold when,
two weeks later, Biker, having gone upon a "bust" too prolonged, was
dismissed without benefit of clergy, and Galton desperately turned to Tembarom
with anxious question in his eye.
"Do you think you
could take this job?" he said.
Tembarom's heart, as he
believed at the time, jumped into his throat.
"What do you
think, Mr. Galton?" he asked.
"It is+n't a thing
to think about," was Galton's answer. "It+'s a thing I must be sure
of."
"Well," said
Tembarom, "if you give it to me, I+'ll put up a mighty hard fight before I
fall down."
Galton considered him,
scrutinizing keenly his tough, long- built body, his sharp, eager, boyish face,
and especially his companionable grin.
"We+'ll let it go
at that," he decided. "You+'ll make friends up in Harlem, and you
won't find it hard to pick up news. We can at least try it."
Tembarom's heart jumped
into his throat again, and he swallowed it once more. He was glad he was not
holding his hat in his hand because he knew he would have forgotten himself and
thrown it up into the air.
"Thank you, Mr.
Galton," he said, flushing tremendously. "I+'d like to tell you how I
appreciate your trusting me, but I don't know how. Thank you, sir."
When he appeared in
Mrs. Bowse's dining-room that evening there was a glow of elation about him and
a swing in his entry which attracted all eyes at once. For some unknown reason
everybody looked at him, and, meeting his eyes, detected the presence of some
new exultation.
"Landed anything,
T. T.?" Jim Bowles cried out. "You look it."
"Sure I look
it," Tembarom answered, taking his napkin out of its ring with an
unconscious flourish. "I+'ve landed the up-town society page -- landed it,
by gee!"
A good-humored chorus
of ejaculatory congratulation broke forth all round the table.
"Good
business!" "Three cheers for T. T.!" "Glad of it!"
"Here+'s luck!" said one after another.
They were all pleased,
and it was generally felt that Galton had shown sense and done the right thing
again. Even Mr. Hutchinson rolled about in his chair and grunted his approval.
After dinner Tembarom,
Jim Bowles, and Julius Steinberger went up-stairs together and filled the hall
bedroom with clouds of tobacco-smoke, tilting their chairs against the wall,
smoking their pipes furiously, flushed and talkative, working themselves up
with the exhilarated plannings of youth. Jim Bowles and Julius had been down on
their luck for several weeks, and that good old T. T." should come in with
this fairy-story was an actual stimulus. If you have never in your life been
able to earn more than will pay for your food and lodging, twenty dollars looms
up large. It might be the beginning of anything.
"First thing is to
get on to the way to do it," argued Tembarom. "I don't know the first
thing. I+'ve got to think it out. I could+n't ask Biker. He would+n't tell me,
anyhow."
"He+'s pretty mad,
I guess," said Steinberger.
"Mad as
hops," Tembarom answered. "As I was coming down-stairs from Galton's
room he was standing in the hall talking to Miss Dooley, and he said: `That
Tembarom fellow+'s going to do it! He does+n't know how to spell. I should like
to see his stuff come in.' He said it loud, because he wanted me to hear it,
and he sort of laughed through his nose."
"Say, T. T., can
you spell?" Jim inquired thoughtfully
"Spell? Me?
No," Tembarom owned with unshaken good cheer. "What I+'ve got to do
is to get a tame dictionary and keep it chained to the leg of my table. Those
words with two m's or two l's in them get me right down on the mat. But the
thing that looks biggest to me is how to find out where the news is, and the
name of the fellow that+'ll put me on to it. You can't go up a man's front
steps and ring the bell and ask him if he+'s going to be married or buried or
have a pink tea."
"Was+n't that a
knock at the door?" said Steinberger.
It was a knock, and
Tembarom jumped up and threw the door open, thinking Mrs. Bowse might have come
on some household errand. But it was Little Ann Hutchinson instead of Mrs.
Bowse, and there was a threaded needle stuck into the front of her dress, and
she had on a thimble.
"I want Mr.
Bowles's new socks," she said maternally. "I promised I+'d mark them
for him."
Bowles and Steinberger
sprang from their chairs, and came forward in the usual comfortable glow of
pleasure at sight of her.
"What do you think
of that for all the comforts of a home?" said Tembarom. "As if it
was+n't enough for a man to have new socks without having marks put on them!
What are your old socks made of anyhow -- solid gold? Burglars ain't going to
break in and steal them."
"They won't when
I+'ve marked them, Mr. Tembarom, answered Little Ann, looking up at him with
sober, round, forget-me-not blue eyes, but with a deep dimple breaking out near
her lip; "but all three pairs would not come home from the wash if I
did+n't."
"Three
pairs!" ejaculated Tembarom. "He+'s got three pairs of socks! New?
That's what's been the matter with him for the last week. Don't you mark them
for him, Little Ann. 'Tain't good for a man to have everything."
"Here they
are," said Jim, bringing them forward. "Twenty-five marked down to
ten at Tracy's. Are they pretty good.
Little Ann looked them
over with the practised eye of a connoisseur of bargains.
"They+'d be about
a shilling in Manchester shops," she decided, "and they might be put
down to sixpence. They+'re good enough to take care of."
She was not the young
woman who is ready for prolonged lively conversation in halls and at bedroom
doors, and she had turned away with the new socks in her hand when Tembarom,
suddenly inspired, darted after her.
"Say, I+'ve just
thought of something," he exclaimed eagerly. "It+'s something I want
to ask you."
"What is it?"
"It+'s about the
society-page lay-out." He hesitated. "I wonder if it+'d be rushing
you too much if -- say," he suddenly broke off, and standing with his
hands in his pockets, looked down at her with anxious admiration, "I
believe you just know about everything."
"No, I don't, Mr.
Tembarom; but I+'m very glad about the page. Everybody+'s glad."
One of the chief
difficulties Tembarom found facing him when he talked to Little Ann was the
difficulty of resisting an awful temptation to take hold of her -- to clutch
her to his healthy, tumultuous young breast and hold her there firmly. He was
half ashamed of himself when he realized it, but he knew that his venial
weakness was shared by Jim Bowles and Steinberger and probably others. She was
so slim and light and soft, and the serious frankness of her eyes and the
quaint air of being a sort of grown-up child of astonishing intelligence
produced an effect it was necessary to combat with.
"What I wanted to
say," he put it to her, "was that I believe if you+'d just let me
talk this thing out to you it+'d do me good. I believe you+'d help me to get
somewhere. I+'ve got to fix up a scheme for getting next the people who have
things happening to them that I can make society stuff out of, you know. Biker
did+n't make a hit of it, but, gee! I+'ve just got to. I+'ve got to."
"Yes,"
answered Little Ann, her eyes fixed on him thoughtfully; "you+'ve got to,
Mr. Tembarom."
"There+'s not a
soul in the parlor. Would you mind coming down and sitting there while I talk
at you and try to work things out? You could go on with your marking."
She thought it over a
minute.
"I+'ll do it if
Father can spare me," she made up her mind. "I+'ll go and ask
him."
She went to ask him,
and returned in two or three minutes with her small sewing-basket in her hand.
"He can spare
me," she said. "He+'s reading his paper and does+n't want to
talk."
They went down-stairs
together and found the room empty. Tembarom turned up the lowered gas, and
Little Ann sat down in the cozy-corner with her work-basket on her knee.
Tembarom drew up a chair and sat down opposite to her. She threaded a needle
and took up one of Jim's new socks.
"Now," she
said.
"It+'s like
this," he explained. "The page is a new deal, anyhow. There did+n't
used to be an up-town society column at all. It was all Fifth Avenue and the
four hundred; but ours is+n't a fashionable paper, and their four hundred ain't
going to buy it to read their names in it. They+'d rather pay to keep out of
it. Uptown+'s growing like smoke, and there's lots of people up that way
that+'d like their friends to read about their weddings and receptions, and
would buy a dozen copies to send away when their names were in. There+'s no end
of women and girls that+'d like to see their clothes described and let their
friends read the descriptions. They+'d buy the paper, too, you bet. It+'ll be a
big circulation-increaser. It's Galton's idea, and he gave the job to Biker
because he thought an educated fellow could get hold of people. But somehow he
could+n't. Seems as if they did+n't like him. He kept getting turned down. The
page has been mighty poor -- no pictures of brides or anything. Galton+'s been
sick over it. He+'d been sure it+'d make a hit. Then Biker+'s always drinking
more or less, and he+'s got the swell head, anyhow. I believe that's the reason
he could+n't make good with the up- towners."
"Perhaps he was
too well educated, Mr. Tembarom," said Little Ann. She was marking a
letter J in red cotton, and her outward attention was apparently wholly fixed
on her work.
"Say, now,"
Tembarom broke out, "there+'s where you come in. You go on working as if
there was nothing but that sock in New York, but I guess you+'ve just hit the
dot. Perhaps that was it. He wanted to do Fifth Avenue work anyway, and he
did+n't go at Harlem right. He put on Princeton airs when he asked questions.
Gee! a fellow can't put on any kind of airs when he+'s the one that+'s got to
ask."
"You+'ll get on
better," remarked Little Ann. "You+'ve got a friendly way and you+'ve
a lot of sense. I+'ve noticed it."
Her head was bent over
the red J and she still looked at it and not at Tembarom. This was not coyness,
but simple, calm absorption. If she had not been making the J, she would have
sat with her hands folded in her lap, and gazed at the young man with
undisturbed attention.
"Have you?"
said Tembarom, gratefully. "That gives me another boost, Little Ann. What
a man seems to need most is just plain twenty-cents-a-yard sense. Not that I
ever thought I had the dollar kind. I+'m not putting on airs."
"Mr. Galton knows
the kind you have. I suppose that+'s why he gave you the page." The words,
spoken in the shrewd- sounding Manchester accent, were neither flattering nor
unflattering; they were merely impartial.
"Well, now I+'ve
got it, I can't fall down," said Tembarom. "I+'ve got to find out for
myself how to get next to the people I want to talk to. I+'ve got to find out
who to get next to."
Little Ann put in the
final red stitch of the letter J and laid the sock neatly folded on the basket.
"I+'ve just been
thinking something, Mr. Tembarom," she said. "Who makes the
wedding-cakes?"
He gave a delighted
start.
"Gee!" he
broke out, "the wedding-cakes!"
"Yes," Little
Ann proceeded, "they+'d have to have wedding- cakes, and perhaps if you
went to the shops where they+'re sold and could make friends with the people,
they+'d tell you whom they were selling them to, and you could get the addresses
and go and find out things."
Tembarom, glowing with
admiring enthusiasm, thrust out his hand.
"Little Ann,
shake!" he said. "You+'ve given me the whole show, just like I
thought you would. You+'re just the limit."
"Well, a
wedding-cake+'s the next thing after the bride," she answered.
Her practical little
head had given him the practical lead. The mere wedding-cake opened up vistas.
Confectioners supplied not only weddings, but refreshments for receptions and
dances. Dances suggested the "halls" in which they were held. You
could get information at such places. Then there were the churches, and the
florists who decorated festal scenes. Tembarom's excitement grew as he talked.
One plan led to another; vistas opened on all sides. It all began to look so
easy that he could not understand how Biker could possibly have gone into such
a land of promise, and returned embittered and empty-handed.
"He thought too
much of himself and too little of other people," Little Ann summed him up
in her unsevere, reasonable voice. "That+'s so silly."
Tembarom tried not to
look at her affectionately, but his voice was affectionate as well as admiring,
despite him.
"The way you get
on to a thing just in three words!" he said. "Daniel Webster ain't in
it."
"I dare say if you
let the people in the shops know that you come from a newspaper, it'll be a
help," she went on with ingenuous worldly wisdom. "They+'ll think
it+'ll be a kind of advertisement. And so it will. You get some neat cards
printed with your name and Sunday Earth on them."
"Gee!"
Tembarom ejaculated, slapping his knee, "there's another! You think of
every darned thing, don't you?"
She stopped a moment to
look at him.
"You+'d have
thought of it all yourself after a bit," she said. She was not of those
unseemly women whose intention it is manifestly to instruct the superior man.
She had been born in a small Manchester street and trained by her mother, whose
own training had evolved through affectionately discreet conjugal management of
Mr. Hutchinson.
"Never you let a
man feel set down when you want him to see a thing reasonable, Ann," she
had said. "You never get on with them if you do. They can't stand it. The
Almighty seemed to make 'em that way. They+'ve always been masters, and it don't
hurt any woman to let 'em be, if she can help 'em to think reasonable. Just you
make a man feel comfortable in his mind and push him the reasonable way. But
never you shove him, Ann. If you do, he+'ll just get all upset-like. Me and
your father have been right-down happy together, but we never should have been
if I had+n't thought that out before we was married two weeks. Perhaps it+'s
the Almighty's will, though I never was as sure of the Almighty's way of
thinking as some are."
Of course Tembarom felt
soothed and encouraged, though he belonged to the male development which is not
automatically infuriated at a suspicion of female readiness of logic.
"Well, I might
have got on to it in time," he answered, still trying not to look
affectionate, "but I+'ve no time to spare. Gee! but I+'m glad you+'re
here!"
"I sha'n't be here
very long." There was a shade of patient regret in her voice.
"Father+'s got tired of trying America. He+'s been disappointed too often.
He+'s going back to England."
"Back to England!"
Tembarom cried out forlornly, "Oh Lord! What shall we all do without you,
Ann?"
"You+'ll do as you
did before we came," said Little Ann.
"No, we sha'n't.
We can't. I can't anyhow." He actually got up from his chair and began to
walk about, with his hands thrust deep in his pockets.
Little Ann began to put
her first stitches into a red B. No human being could have told what she
thought.
"We must+n't waste
time talking about that," she said. "Let us talk about the page.
There are dressmakers, you know. If you could make friends with a dressmaker or
two they+'d tell you what the wedding things were really made of. Women do like
their clothes to be described right."
HIS work upon the page
began the following week. When the first morning of his campaign opened with a
tumultuous blizzard, Jim Bowles and Julius Steinberger privately sympathized
with him as they dressed in company, but they heard him whistling in his own hall
bedroom as he put on his clothes, and to none of the three did it occur that
time could be lost because the weather was inhuman. Blinding snow was being
whirled through the air by a wind which had bellowed across the bay, and torn
its way howling through the streets, maltreating people as it went, snatching
their breath out of them, and leaving them gaspingly clutching at hats and
bending their bodies before it. Street-cars went by loaded from front to back
platform, and were forced from want of room to whizz heartlessly by groups
waiting anxiously at street corners.
Tembarom saw two or
three of them pass in this way, leaving the waiting ones desperately huddled
together behind them. He braced himself and whistled louder as he buttoned his
celluloid collar.
"I+'m going to get
up to Harlem all the same," he said. "The `L' will be just as jammed,
but there+'ll be a place somewhere, and I+'ll get it."
His clothes were the
outwardly decent ones of a young man who must perforce seek cheap
clothing-stores, and to whom a ten-dollar "hand-me-down" is a source
of exultant rejoicing. With the aid of great care and a straight, well-formed
young body, he managed to make the best of them; but they were not to be
counted upon for warmth even in ordinarily cold weather. His overcoat was a
specious covering, and was not infrequently odorous of naphtha.
"You+'ve got to
know something about first aid to the wounded if you live on ten per," he
had said once to Little Ann. "A suit of clothes gets to be an emergency-case
mighty often if it lasts three years."
"Going up to
Harlem to-day, T. T.?" his neighbor at table asked him as he sat down to
breakfast.
"Right
there," he answered. "I+'ve ordered the limousine round, with the
foot-warmer and fur rugs."
"I guess a day
would+n't really matter much," said Mrs. Bowse, good-naturedly.
"Perhaps it might be better to-morrow."
"And perhaps it
might+n't," said Tembarom, eating "breakfast- food" with a
cheerful appetite. "What you can't be stone- cold sure of to-morrow you
drive a nail in to-day."
He ate a tremendous
breakfast as a discreet precautionary measure. The dark dining-room was warm,
and the food was substantial. It was comfortable in its way.
"You+'d better
hold the hall door pretty tight when you go out, and don't open it far,"
said Mrs. Bowse as he got up to go. "There's wind enough to upset
things."
Tembarom went out in
the hall, and put on his insufficient overcoat. He buttoned it across his
chest, and turned its collar up to his ears. Then he bent down to turn up the
bottoms of his trousers.
"A pair of arctics
would be all to the merry right here," he said, and then he stood upright
and saw Little Ann coming down the staircase holding in her hand a particularly
ugly tartan-plaid woolen neck-scarf of the kind known in England as a
"comforter."
"If you are going
out in this kind of weather," she said in her serene, decided little
voice, "you+'d better wrap this comforter right round your neck, Mr.
Tembarom. It+'s one of Father's, and he can spare it because he's got another,
and, besides, he+'s not going out."
Tembarom took it with a
sudden emotional perception of the fact that he was being taken care of in an
abnormally luxurious manner.
"Now, I appreciate
that," he said. "The thing about you, Little Ann, is that you never
make a wrong guess about what a fellow needs, do you?"
"I+'m too used to
taking care of Father not to see things," she answered.
"What you get on
to is how to take care of the whole world -- initials on a fellow's socks and
mufflers round his neck." His eyes looked remarkably bright.
"If a person were
taking care of the whole world, he+'d have a lot to do," was her sedate
reception of the remark. "You+'d better put that twice round your neck,
Mr. Tembarom."
She put up her hand to
draw the end of the scarf over his shoulder, and Tembarom stood still at once,
as though he were a little boy being dressed for school. He looked down at her
round cheek, and watched one of the unexpected dimples reveal itself in a place
where dimples are not usually anticipated. It was coming out because she was
smiling a small, observing smile. It was an almost exciting thing to look at,
and he stood very still indeed. A fellow who did not own two pairs of boots
would be a fool not to keep quiet.
"You have+n't told
me I ought+n't to go out till the blizzard lets up," he said presently.
"No, I have+n't,
Mr. Tembarom," she answered. "You+'re one of the kind that mean to do
a thing when they+'ve made up their minds. It+'ll be a nice bit of money if you
can keep the page."
"Galton said he+'d
give me a chance to try to make good," said Tembarom. "And if it+'s
the hit he thinks it ought to be, he+'ll raise me ten. Thirty per.
Vanastorbilts won't be in it. I think I+'ll get married," he added,
showing all his attractive teeth at once.
"I would+n't do
that," she said. "It would+n't be enough to depend on. New York+'s an
expensive place."
She drew back and
looked him over. "That'll keep you much warmer," she decided.
"Now you can go. I+'ve been looking in the telephone-book for
confectioners, and I+'ve written down these addresses." She handed him a
slip of paper.
Tembarom caught his
breath.
"Hully gee!"
he exclaimed, "there never were two of you made! One used up all there was
of it. How am I going to thank you, anyhow!"
"I do hope you+'ll
be able to keep the page," she said. "I do that, Mr. Tembarom."
If there had been a
touch of coquetry in her earnest, sober, round, little face she would have been
less distractingly alluring, but there was no shade of anything but a sort of
softly motherly anxiety in the dropped note of her voice, and it was almost
more than flesh and blood at twenty-five could stand. Tembarom made a hasty,
involuntary move toward her, but it was only a slight one, and it was scarcely
perceptible before he had himself in hand and hurriedly twisted his muffler
tighter, showing his teeth again cheerily.
"You keep on
hoping it all day without a let-up," he said. "And tell Mr.
Hutchinson I+'m obliged to him, please. Get out of the way, Little Ann, while I
go out. The wind might blow you and the hat-stand up-stairs."
He opened the door and
dashed down the high steps into the full blast of the blizzard. He waited at
the street corner while three overcrowded cars whizzed past him, ignoring his
signals because there was not an inch of space left in them for another
passenger. Then he fought his way across two or three blocks to the nearest
"L" station. He managed to wedge himself into a train there, and then
at least he was on his way. He was thinking hard and fast, but through all his
planning the warm hug of the tartan comforter round his neck kept Little Ann
near him. He had been very thankful for the additional warmth as the whirling
snow and wind had wrought their will with him while he waited for the cars at
the street corner. On the "L" train he saw her serious eyes and heard
the motherly drop in her voice as she said, "I do hope you+'ll be able to
keep the page. I do that, Mr. Tembarom." It made him shut his hands hard
as they hung in his overcoat pockets for warmth, and it made him shut his sound
teeth strongly.
"Glee! I+'ve got
to!" his thoughts said for him. "If I make it, perhaps my luck will
have started. When a man's luck gets started, every darned thing+'s to the
good."
The "L" had
dropped most of its crowd when it reached the up-town station among the
hundredth streets which was his destination. He tightened his comforter, tucked
the ends firmly into the front of his overcoat, and started out along the
platform past the office, and down the steep, iron steps, already perilous with
freezing snow. He had to stop to get his breath when he reached the street, but
he did not stop long. He charged forth again along the pavement, looking
closely at the shop-windows. There were naturally but few passers-by, and the
shops were not important-looking; but they were open, and he could see that the
insides of them looked comfortable in contrast with the blizzard-ruled street.
He could not see both sides of the street as he walked up one side of the block
without coming upon a confectioner's. He crossed at the corner and turned back
on the other side. Presently he saw that a light van was standing before one
place, backed up against the sidewalk to receive parcels, its shuddering horse
holding its head down and bracing itself with its forelegs against the wind. At
any rate, something was going on there, and he hurried forward to find out what
it was. The air was so thick with myriads of madly flying bits of snow, which
seemed whirled in all directions in the air, that he could not see anything
definite even a few yards away. When he reached the van he found that he had
also reached his confectioner. The sign over the window read "M. Munsberg,
Confectionery. Cakes. Ice-Cream. Weddings, Balls and Receptions."
"Made a start,
anyhow," said Tembarom.
He turned into the
store, opening the door carefully, and thereby barely escaping being blown
violently against a stout, excited, middle-aged little Jew who was bending over
a box he was packing. This was evidently Mr. Munsberg, who was extremely busy,
and even the modified shock upset his temper.
"Vhere you
goin'?" he cried out. "Can't you look vhere you+'re goin'?"
Tembarom knew this was
not a good beginning, but his natural mental habit of vividly seeing the other
man's point of view helped him after its usual custom. His nice grin showed
itself.
"I was+n't going;
I was coming," he said. "Beg pardon The wind+'s blowing a hundred miles
an hour."
A good-looking young
woman, who was probably Mrs. Munsberg, was packing a smaller box behind the
counter. Tembarom lifted his hat, and she liked it.
"He did+n't do it
a bit fresh," she said later. "Kind o' nice." She spoke to him
with professional politeness.
"Is there anything
you want?" she asked.
Tembarom glanced at the
boxes and packages standing about and at Munsberg, who had bent over his
packing again. Here was an occasion for practical tact.
"I+'ve blown in at
the wrong time," he said. "You+'re busy getting things out on time.
I+'ll just wait. Gee! I+'m glad to be inside. I want to speak to Mr.
Munsberg."
Mr. Munsberg jerked
himself upright irascibly, and broke forth in the accent of the New York German
Jew.
"If you comin' in
here to try to sell somedings, young man, joost you let that same vind vat blew
you in blow you right out pretty quick. I+'m not buyin' nodings. I+'m
busy."
"I+'m not selling
a darned thing," answered Tembarom, with undismayed cheer.
"You vant someding?"
jerked out Munsberg.
"Yes, I want
something," Tembarom answered, "but it+'s nothing any one has to pay
for. I+'m only a newspaper man." He felt a glow of pride as he said the
words. He was a newspaper man even now. "Don't let me stop you a minute.
I+'m in luck to get inside anywhere and sit down. Let me wait."
Mrs. Munsberg read the
Sunday papers and revered them. She also knew the value of advertisement. She
caught her husband's eye and hurriedly winked at him.
"It+'s awful
outside. 'T won't do harm if he waits -- if he ain't no agent," she put
in.
"See," said
Tembarom, handing over one of the cards which had been Little Ann's
businesslike inspiration.
"T. Tembarom. New
York Sunday Earth," read Munsberg, rather grudgingly. He looked at T. Tembarom,
and T. Tembarom looked back at him. The normal human friendliness in the sharp
boyish face did it.
"Vell," he
said, making another jerk toward a chair, "if you ain't no agent, you can
vait."
"Thank you,"
said Tembarom, and sat down. He had made another start, anyhow.
After this the packing
went on fast and furious. A youth appeared from the back of the store, and ran
here and there as he was ordered. Munsberg and his wife filled wooden and
cardboard boxes with small cakes and larger ones, with sandwiches and salads,
candies and crystallized fruits. Into the larger box was placed a huge cake
with an icing temple on the top of it, with silver doves adorning it outside
and in. There was no mistaking the poetic significance of that cake. Outside the
blizzard whirled clouds of snow-particles through the air, and the van horse
kept his head down and his forelegs braced. His driver had long since tried to
cover him with a blanket which the wind continually tore loose from its
fastenings, and flapped about the creature's sides. Inside the store grew hot.
There was hurried moving about, banging of doors, excited voices, irascible
orders given and countermanded. Tembarom found out in five minutes that the
refreshments were for a wedding reception to be held at a place known as
"The Hall," and the goods must be sent out in time to be ready for
the preparations for the wedding supper that night.
"If I knew how to
handle it, I could get stuff for a column just sitting here," he thought.
He kept both eyes and ears open. He was sharp enough to realize that the mere
sense of familiarity with detail which he was gaining was material in itself.
Once or twice he got up and lent a hand with a box in his casual way, and once
or twice he saw that he could lift something down or up for Mrs. Munsberg, who
was a little woman. The natural casualness of his way of jumping up to do the
things prevented any suspicion of officiousness, and also prevented his waiting
figure from beginning to wear the air of a superfluous object in the way. He
waited a long time, and circumstances so favored him as to give him a chance or
so. More than once exactly the right moment presented itself when he could
interject an apposite remark. Twice he made Munsberg laugh, and twice Mrs.
Munsberg voluntarily addressed him.
At last the boxes and
parcels were all carried out and stored in the van, after strugglings with the
opening and shutting of doors, and battlings with outside weather
When this was all over,
Munsberg came back into the store, knocking his hands together and out of
breath.
"Dot+'s all
right," he said. "It'll all be there plenty time. Vould+n't have fell
down on that order for tventy-vive dollars. Dot temple on the cake was
splendid. Joseph he done it fine."
"He never done
nothin' no finer," Mrs. Munsberg said. "It looked as good as anything
on Fift' Avenoo."
Both were relieved and
pleased with themselves, their store, and their cake-decorator. Munsberg spoke
to Tembarom in the manner of a man who, having done a good thing, does not mind
talking about it.
"Dot was a big
order," he remarked
"I should
smile," answered Tembarom. "I+'d like to know whose going to get
outside all that good stuff. That wedding- cake took the tart away from
anything I+'ve ever seen. Which of the four hundred+'s going to eat it?"
"De man vot
ordered dot cake," Munsberg swaggered, "he+'s not got to vorry along
on vun million nor two. He owns de biggest brewery in New York, I guess in America.
He+'s Schwartz of Schwartz & Kapfer."
"Well, he+'s got
it to burn!" said Tembarom.
"He+'s a mighty
good man," went on Munsberg. "He+'s mighty fond of his own people. He
made his first money in Harlem, and he had a big fight to get it, but his own people
vas good to him, an' he+'s never forgot it. He+'s built a fine house here, an'
his girls is fine girls. De vun's goin' to be married to-night her name's
Rachel, an' she+'s goin' to marry a nice feller, Louis Levy. Levy built the big
entertainment-hall vhere the reception+'s goin' to be. It+'s decorated vith two
thousand dollars' worth of bride roses an' lilies of de valley an' smilax. All
de up-town places vas bought out, an' den Schwartz vent down Fift'
Avenoo."
The right moment had
plainly arrived.
"Say, Mr.
Munsberg," Tembarom broke forth, "you+'re giving me just what I
wanted to ask you for. I+'m the new up- town society reporter for the Sunday
Earth, and I came in here to see if you would+n't help me to get a show at
finding out who was going to have weddings and society doings. I did+n't know
just how to start."
Munsberg gave a sort of
grunt. He looked less amiable.
"I s'pose you+'re
used to nothin' but Fift' Avenoo," he said.
Tembarom grinned
exactly at the right time again. Not only his good teeth grinned, but his eyes
grinned also, if the figure may be used.
"Fifth
Avenue!" he laughed. "There's been no Fifth Avenue in mine. I+'m not
used to anything, but you may bet your life I+'m going to get used to Harlem,
if you people+'ll let me. I+'ve just got this job, and I+'m dead stuck on it. I
want to make it go."
"He+'s mighty
different from Biker," said Mrs. Munsberg in an undertone.
"Vhere+'s dod oder
feller?" inquired Munsberg. "He vas a damn fool, dot oder feller,
half corned most de time, an' puttin' on Clarence airs. No one was goin' to
give him nothin'. He made folks mad at de start."
"I+'ve got his
job," said Tembarom, "and if I can't make it go, the page will be
given up. It'll be my fault if that happens, not Harlem's. There+'s society
enough up-town to make a first-class page, and I shall be sick if I can't get
on to it."
He had begun to know
his people. Munsberg was a good- natured, swaggering little Hebrew.
That the young fellow
should make a clean breast of it and claim no down-town superiority, and that
he should also have the business insight to realize that he might obtain
valuable society items from such a representative confectioner as M. Munsberg,
was a situation to incite amiable sentiments.
"Vell, you did+n't
come to de wrong place," he said. "All de biggest things comes to me,
an' I don't mind tellin' you about 'em. 'T ain't goin' to do no harm. Weddings
an' things dey ought to be wrote up, anyhow, if dey're done right. It+'s good
for business. Vy don't dey have no pictures of de supper- tables? Dot+'d be
good."
"There+'s lots of
receptions and weddings this month," said Mrs. Munsberg, becoming
agreeably excited. "And there+'s plenty handsome young girls that+'d like
their pictures published.
"None of them have
been in Sunday papers before, and they+'d like it. The four Schwartz girls
would make grand pictures. They dress splendid, and their bridesmaids dresses
came from the biggest place in Fift' Avenoo."
"Say,"
exclaimed Tembarom, rising from his chair, "I+'m in luck. Luck struck me
the minute I turned in here. If you+'ll tell me where Schwartz lives, and where
the hall is, and the church, and just anything else I can use, I+'ll go out and
whoop up a page to beat the band." He was glowing with exultation. "I
know I can do it. You+'ve started me off."
Munsberg and his wife
began to warm. It was almost as though they had charge of the society page
themselves. There was something stimulating in the idea. There was a suggestion
of social importance in it. They knew a number of people who would be pleased
with the prospect of being in the Sunday Earth. They were of a race which holds
together, and they gave not only the names and addresses of prospective
entertainers, but those of florists and owners of halls where parties were
given.
Mrs. Munsberg gave the
name of a dressmaker of whom she shrewdly guessed that she would be amiably
ready to talk to a society-page reporter.
"That Biker
feller," she said, "got things down all wrong. He called fine white
satin `white nun's-veiling,' and he left out things. Never said nothing about
Miss Lewishon's diamond ring what her grandpa gave her for a wedding-present.
An' it cost two hundred and fifty."
"Well, I+'m a
pretty big fool myself," said Tembarom, "but I should have known
better than that."
When he opened the door
to go, Mrs. Munsberg called after him:
"When you get
through, you come back here and tell us what you done. I+'ll give you a cup of
hot coffee."
He returned to Mrs.
Bowse's boarding-house so late that night that even Steinberger and Bowles had
ended their day. The gas in the hall was turned down to a glimmering point, and
the house was silent for the night. Even a cat who stole to him and rubbed herself
against his leg miauwed in a sort of abortive whisper, opening her mouth wide,
but emitting no sound. When he went cautiously up the staircase he carried his
damp overcoat with him, and hung it in company with the tartan muffler close to
the heater in the upper hall. Then he laid on his bedside table a package of
papers and photographs.
After he had undressed,
he dropped heavily into bed, exhausted, but elate.
"I+'m
dog-tired," he said, "but I guess I+'ve got it going." And
almost before the last word had uttered itself he fell into the deep sleep of
worn-out youth.
MRS. BOWSE'S
boarding-house began to be even better pleased with him than before. He had
stories to tell, festivities to describe, and cheerful incidents to recount.
The boarders assisted vicariously at weddings and wedding receptions, afternoon
teas and dances, given in halls. "Up-town" seemed to them largely
given to entertainment and hilarity of an enviably prodigal sort. Mrs. Bowse's
guests were not of the class which entertains or is entertained, and the
details of banquets and ball-dresses and money-spending were not uncheering
material for conversation. Such topics suggested the presence and dispensing of
a good deal of desirable specie, which in floating about might somehow reach
those who needed it most. The impression was that T. Tembarom was having
"a good time." It was not his way to relate any incidents which were
not of a cheering or laughter-inspiring nature. He said nothing of the times
when his luck was bad, when he made blunders, and, approaching the wrong
people, was met roughly or grudgingly, and found no resource left but to beat a
retreat. He made no mention of his experiences in the blizzard, which
continued, and at times nearly beat breath and life out of him as he fought his
way through it. Especially he told no story of the morning when, after having
labored furiously over the writing of his "stuff" until long after
midnight, he had taken it to Galton, and seen his face fall as he looked over
it. To battle all day with a blizzard and occasional brutal discouragements,
and to sit up half the night tensely absorbed in concentrating one's whole
mental equipment upon the doing of unaccustomed work has its effect. As he
waited, Tembarom unconsciously shifted from one foot to another, and had
actually to swallow a sort of lump in his throat.
"I guess it won't
do," he said rather uncertainly as Galton laid a sheet down.
Galton was worn out
himself and harried by his nerves.
"No, it
won't," he said; and then as he saw Tembarom move to the other foot he
added, "Not as it is."
Tembarom braced himself
and cleared his throat.
"If," he
ventured -- "well, you+'ve been mighty easy on me, Mr Galton -- and this
is a big chance for a fellow like me. If it+'s too big a chance -- why --
that+'s all. But if it+'s anything I could change and it would+n't be too much
trouble to tell me -- "
"There+'s no time
to rewrite it," answered Galton. "It must be handed in to-morrow.
It's too flowery. Too many adjectives. I+'ve no time to give you -- " He
snatched up a blue pencil and began to slash at the paper with it. "Look
here -- and here -- cut out that balderdash -- cut this -- and this -- oh, --
" throwing the pencil down, -- "you+'d have to cut it all out.
There+'s no time." He fell back in his chair with a hopeless movement, and
rubbed his forehead nervously with the back of his hand. Ten people more or
less were waiting to speak to him; he was worn out with the rush of work. He
believed in the page, and did not want to give up his idea; but he did+n't know
a man to hand it to other than this untrained, eager ignoramus whom he had a
queer personal liking for. He was no business of his, a mere stenographer in
his office with whom he could be expected to have no relations, and yet a
curious sort of friendliness verging on intimacy had developed between them.
"There+'d be time
if you thought it would+n't do any harm to give me another chance," said
Tembarom. "I can sit up all night. I guess I+'ve caught on to what you
don't want. I+'ve put in too many fool words. I got them out of other papers,
but I don't know how to use them. I guess I+'ve caught on. Would it do any harm
if you gave me till to-morrow?"
"No, it
would+n't," said Galton, desperately. "If you can't do it, there+'s
no time to find another man, and the page must be cut out. It+'s been no good
so far. It won't be missed. Take it along."
As he pushed back the
papers, he saw the photographs, and picked one up.
"That bride's a
good-looking girl. Who are these others? Bridesmaids? You+'ve got a lot of
stuff here. Biker could+n't get anything." He glanced up at the young
fellow's rather pale face. "I thought you+'d make friends. How did you get
all this?"
"I beat the
streets till I found it," said Tembarom. "I had luck right away. I
went into a confectionery store where they make wedding-cakes. A good-natured
little Dutchman and his wife kept it, and I talked to them -- "
"Got next?"
said Galton, grinning a little.
"They gave me
addresses, and told me a whole lot of things I got into the Schwartz wedding
reception, and they treated me mighty well. A good many of them were willing to
talk. I told them what a big thing the page was going to be, and I -- well, I
said the more they helped me the finer it would turn out. I said it seemed a
shame there should+n't be an up-town page when such swell entertainments were
given. I+'ve got a lot of stuff there."
Galton laughed.
"You+'d get
it," he said. "If you knew how to handle it, you+'d make it a hit.
Well, take it along. If it is+n't right to- morrow, it+'s done for."
Tembarom did+n't tell
stories or laugh at dinner that evening. He said he had a headache. After
dinner he bolted upstairs after Little Ann, and caught her before she mounted
to her upper floor.
"Will you come and
save my life again?" he said. "I+'m in the tightest place I ever was
in in my life."
"I+'ll do anything
I can, Mr. Tembarom," she answered, and as his face had grown flushed by
this time she looked anxious.
"You look
downright feverish."
"I+'ve got chills
as well as fever," he said. "It+'s the page. It seems like I was
going to fall down on it."
She turned back at
once.
"No you won't, Mr.
Tembarom," she said. "I+'m just right- down sure you won't."
They went down to the
parlor again, and though there were people in it, they found a corner apart,
and in less than ten minutes he had told her what had happened.
She took the manuscript
he handed to her.
"If I was well
educated, I should know how to help you," she said, "but I+'ve only
been to a common Manchester school. I don't know anything about elegant
language. What are these?" pointing to the blue-pencil marks.
Tembarom explained, and
she studied the blue slashes with serious attention.
"Well," she
said in a few minutes, laying the manuscript down, "I should have cut
those words out myself if -- if you+'d asked me which to take away. They+'re
too showy, Mr. Tembarom."
Tembarom whipped a
pencil out of his pocket and held it out.
"Say," he put
it to her, "would you take this and draw it through a few of the other
showy ones?"
"I should feel as
if I was taking too much upon myself," she said. "I don't know
anything about it."
"You know a darned
sight more than I do," Tembarom argued. "I did+n't know they were
showy. I thought they were the kind you had to put in newspaper stuff."
She held the sheets of
paper on her knee, and bent her head over them. Tembarom watched her dimples
flash in and out as she worked away like a child correcting an exercise.
Presently he saw she was quite absorbed. Sometimes she stopped and thought,
pressing her lips together; sometimes she changed a letter. There was no
lightness in her manner. A badly mutilated stocking would have claimed her
attention in the same way.
"I think I+'d put
`house' there instead of `mansion' if I were you," she suggested once.
"Put in a whole
block of houses if you like," he answered gratefully. "Whatever you
say goes. I believe Galton would say the same thing."
She went over sheet
after sheet, and though she knew nothing about it, she cut out just what Galton
would have cut out. She put the papers together at last and gave them back to
Tembarom, getting up from her seat.
"I must go back to
father now," she said. "I promised to make him a good cup of coffee
over the little oil-stove. If you+'ll come and knock at the door I+'ll give you
one. It will help you to keep fresh while you work."
Tembarom did not go to
bed at all that night, and he looked rather fagged the next morning when he
handed back the "stuff" entirely rewritten. He swallowed several
times quite hard as he waited for the final verdict.
"You did catch on
to what I did+n't want," Galton said at last. "You will catch on
still more as you get used to the work. And you did get the `stuff,' "
"That -- you mean
-- that goes?" Tembarom stammered.
"Yes, it
goes," answered Galton. "You can turn it in. We+'ll try the page for
a month."
"Gee! Thank the
Lord!" said Tembarom, and then he laughed an excited boyish laugh, and the
blood came back to his face. He had a whole month before him, and if he had
caught on as soon as this, a month would teach him a lot.
He+'d work like a dog.
He worked like a
healthy young man impelled by a huge enthusiasm, and seeing ahead of him
something he had had no practical reason for aspiring to. He went out in all
weathers and stayed out to all hours. Whatsoever rebuffs or difficulties he met
with he never was even on the verge of losing his nerve. He actually enjoyed
himself tremendously at times. He made friends: people began to like to see
him. The Munsbergs regarded him as an inspiration of their own.
"He seen my name
over de store and come in here first time he vas sent up dis vay to look for
t'ings to write," Mr. Munsberg always explained. "Ve vas awful busy
-- time of the Schwartz vedding, an' dere vas dat blizzard. He owned up he vas
new, an' vanted some vun vhat knew to tell him vhat vas goin' on. 'Course I
could do it. Me an' my vife give him addresses an' a lot of items. He vorked
'em up good. Dot up-town page is gettin' first-rate. He says he don' know vhat
he+'d have done if he had+n't turned up here dot day."
Tembarom, having
"caught on" to his fault of style, applied himself with vigor to
elimination. He kept his tame dictionary chained to the leg of his table -- an
old kitchen table which Mrs. Bowse scrubbed and put into his hall bedroom,
overcrowding it greatly. He turned to Little Ann at moments of desperate
uncertainty, but he was man enough to do his work himself. In glorious moments
when he was rather sure that Galton was far from unsatisfied with his progress,
and Ann had looked more than usually distracting in her aloof and sober
alluringness, -- it was her entire aloofness which so stirred his blood, -- he
sometimes stopped scribbling and lost his head for a minute or so, wondering if
a fellow ever could "get away with it" to the extent of making enough
to -- but he always pulled himself up in time.
"Nice fool I look,
thinking that way!" he would say to himself. "She+'d throw me down
hard if she knew. But, my Lord! ain't she just a peach!"
It was in the last week
of the month of trial which was to decide the permanency of the page that he
came upon the man Mrs. Bowse's boarders called his "Freak." He never
called him a "freak" himself even at the first. Even his somewhat
undeveloped mind felt itself confronted at the outset with something too
abnormal and serious, something with a suggestion of the weird and tragic in
it.
In this wise it came
about:
The week had begun with
another blizzard, which after the second day had suddenly changed its mind, and
turned into sleet and rain which filled the streets with melted snow, and made
walking a fearsome thing. Tembarom had plenty of walking to do. This week's
page was his great effort, and was to be a "dandy." Galton must be
shown what pertinacity could do.
"I+'m going to get
into it up to my neck, and then strike out," he said at breakfast on
Monday morning.
Thursday was his most
strenuous day. The weather had decided to change again, and gusts of sleet were
being driven about, which added cold to sloppiness. He had found it difficult
to get hold of some details he specially wanted. Two important and extremely
good-looking brides had refused to see him because Biker had enraged them in
his day. He had slighted the description of their dresses at a dance where they
had been the observed of all observers, and had worn things brought from Paris.
Tem barom had gone from house to house. He had even searched out aunts whose
favor he had won professionally. He had appealed to his dressmaker, whose
affection he had by that time fully gained. She was doing work in the brides'
houses, and could make it clear that he would not call peau de cygne
"Surah silk," nor duchess lace "Baby Irish." But the young
ladies enjoyed being besought by a society page. It was something to discuss
with one's bridesmaids and friends, to protest that "those interviewers"
give a person no peace. "If you don't want to be in the papers, they+'ll
put you in whether you like it or not, however often you refuse them."
They kept Tembarom running about, they raised faint hopes, and then went out
when he called, leaving no messages, but allowing the servant to hint that if
he went up to Two Hundred and Seventy-fifth Street he might chance to find
them.
"All right,"
said Tembarom to the girl, delighting her by lifting his hat genially as he
turned to go down the steps. "I+'ll just keep going. The Sunday Earth
can't come out without those photographs in it. I should lose my job."
When at last he ran the
brides to cover it was not at Two Hundred and Seventy-fifth Street, but in
their own home, to which they had finally returned. They had heard from the servant-girl
about what the young gentleman from the Sunday Earth had said, and they were
mollified by his proper appreciation of values. Tembarom's dressmaker friend
also proffered information.
"I know him
myself," she said, "and he+'s a real nice gentlemanlike young man.
He's not a bit like Biker. He does+n't think he knows everything. He came to me
from Mrs. Munsberg, just to ask me the names of fashionable materials. He said
it was more important than a man knew till he found out."
Miss Stuntz chuckled.
"He asked me to
lend him some bits of samples so he could learn them off by heart, and know
them when he saw them. He's got a pleasant laugh; shows his teeth, and they're
real pretty and white; and he just laughed like a boy and said: `These samples
are my alphabet, Miss Stuntz. I+'m going to learn to read words of three
syllables in them.' "
When late in the
evening Tembarom, being let out of the house after his interview, turned down
the steps again, he carried with him all he had wanted -- information and
photographs, even added picturesque details. He was prepared to hand in a
fuller and better page than he had ever handed in before. He was in as elated a
frame of mind as a young man can be when he is used up with tramping the
streets, and running after street- cars, to stand up in them and hang by a
strap. He had been wearing a new pair of boots, one of which rubbed his heel
and had ended by raising a blister worthy of attention. To reach the nearest
"L" station he must walk across town, through several deserted
streets in the first stages of being built up, their vacant lots surrounded by
high board fencing covered with huge advertising posters. The hall bedroom,
with the gas turned up and the cheap, red-cotton comfort on the bed, made an
alluring picture as he faced the sleety wind.
"If I cut across
to the avenue and catch the `L,' I+'m bound to get there sometime,
anyhow," he said as he braced himself and set out on his way.
The blister on his heel
had given him a good deal of trouble, and he was obliged to stop a moment to
ease it, and he limped when he began to walk again. But he limped as fast as he
could, while the sleety rain beat in his face, across one street, down another
for a block or so, across another, the melting snow soaking even the new boots
as he splashed through it. He bent his head, however, and limped steadily. At
this end of the city many of the streets were only scantily built up, and he
was passing through one at the corner of which was a big vacant lot. At the
other corner a row of cheap houses which had only reached their second story
waited among piles of bricks and frozen mortar for the return of the workmen
the blizzard had dispersed. It was a desolate-enough thoroughfare, and not a
soul was in sight. The vacant lot was fenced in with high boarding plastered
over with flaring sheets advertising whiskies, sauces, and theatrical ventures.
A huge picture of a dramatically interrupted wedding ceremony done in reds and
yellows, and announcing in large letters that Mr. Isaac Simonson presented Miss
Evangeline St. Clair in "Rent Asunder," occupied several yards of the
boarding. As he reached it, the heel of Tembarom's boot pressed, as it seemed
to him, a red-hot coal on the flesh. He had rubbed off the blister. He was
obliged to stop a moment again.
"Gee whizz!"
he exclaimed through his teeth, "I shall have to take my boot off and try
to fix it."
To accomplish this he
leaned against the boarding and Miss Evangeline St. Clair being "Rent
Asunder" in the midst of the wedding service. He cautiously removed his
boot, and finding a hole in his sock in the place where the blister had rubbed
off, he managed to protect the raw spot by pulling the sock over it. Then he
drew on his boot again.
"That+'ll be
better," he said, with a long breath.
As he stood on his feet
again he started involuntarily. This was not because the blister had hurt him,
but because he had heard behind him a startling sound.
"What+'s
that?" broke from him. "What+'s that?"
He turned and listened,
feeling his heart give a quick thump. In the darkness of the utterly empty
street the thing was unnatural enough to make any man jump. He had heard it
between two gusts of wind, and through another he heard it again -- an uncanny,
awful sobbing, broken by a hopeless wail of words.
"I can't remember!
I can't -- remember! O my God!"
And it was not a
woman's voice or a child's; it was a man's, and there was an eerie sort of
misery in it which made Tembarom feel rather sick. He had never heard a man
sobbing before. He belonged to a class which had no time for sobs. This sounded
ghastly.
"Good Lord!"
he said, "the fellow+'s crying! A man!"
The sound came directly
behind him. There was not a human being in sight. Even policemen do not loiter
in empty streets.
"Hello!" he
cried. "Where are you?"
But the low, horrible
sound went on, and no answer came. His physical sense of the presence of the
blister was blotted out by the abnormal thrill of the moment. One had to find
out about a thing like that -- one just had to. One could not go on and leave
it behind uninvestigated in the dark and emptiness of a street no one was
likely to pass through. He listened more intently. Yes, it was just behind him.
"He+'s in the lot
behind the fence," he said. "How did he get there?"
He began to walk along
the boarding to find a gap. A few yards farther on he came upon a broken place
in the inclosure -- a place where boards had sagged until they fell down, or
had perhaps been pulled down by boys who wanted to get inside. He went through
it, and found he was in the usual vacant lot long given up to rubbish. When he
stood still a moment he heard the sobbing again, and followed the sound to the
place behind the boarding against which he had supported himself when he took
off his boot.
A man was lying on the
ground with his arms flung out. The street lamp outside the boarding cast light
enough to reveal him. Tembarom felt as though he had suddenly found himself
taking part in a melodrama, -- "The Streets of New York," for choice,
-- though no melodrama had ever given him this slightly shaky feeling. But when
a fellow looked up against it as hard as this, what you had to do was to hold
your nerve and make him feel he was going to be helped. The normal human thing
spoke loud in him.
"Hello, old
man!" he said with cheerful awkwardness "What+'s hit you?"
The man started and
scrambled to his feet as though he were frightened. He was wet, unshaven, white
and shuddering, piteous to look at. He stared with wild eyes, his chest
heaving.
"What+'s up?"
said Tembarom.
The man's breath caught
itself.
"I don't
remember." There was a touch of horror in his voice, though he was
evidently making an effort to control himself. "I can't -- I can't
remember."
"What+'s your
name? You remember that?" Tembarom put it to him.
"N-n-no!"
agonizingly. "If I could! If I could!"
"How did you get
in here?"
"I came in because
I saw a policeman. He would+n't under stand. He would have stopped me. I must
not be stopped. I must not."
"Where were you
going?" asked Tembarom, not knowing what else to say.
"Home! My God!
man, home!" and he fell to shuddering again. He put his arm against the
boarding and dropped his head against it. The low, hideous sobbing tore him again.
T. Tembarom could not
stand it. In his newsboy days he had never been able to stand starved dogs and
homeless cats. Mrs. Bowse was taking care of a wretched dog for him at the
present moment. He had not wanted the poor brute, -- he was not particularly
fond of dogs, -- but it had followed him home, and after he had given it a bone
or so, it had licked its chops and turned up its eyes at him with such abject
appeal that he had not been able to turn it into the streets again. He was
unsentimental, but ruled by primitive emotions. Also he had a sudden
recollection of a night when as a little fellow he had gone into a vacant lot
and cried as like this as a child could. It was a bad night when some
"tough" big boys had turned him out of a warm corner in a shed, and
he had had nowhere to go, and being a friendly little fellow, the
unfriendliness had hit him hard. The boys had not seen him crying, but he
remembered it. He drew near, and put his hand on the shaking shoulder.
"Say, don't do
that," he said. "I+'ll help you to remember."
He scarcely knew why he
said it. There was something in the situation and in the man himself which was
compelling. He was not of the tramp order. His wet clothes had been decent, and
his broken, terrified voice was neither coarse nor nasal. He lifted his head
and caught Tembarom's arm, clutching it with desperate fingers.
"Could you?"
he poured forth the words. "Could you? I+'m not quite mad. Something
happened. If I could be quiet! Don't let them stop me! My God! my God! my God!
I can't say it. It's not far away, but it won't come back. You+'re a good
fellow; if you're human, help me! help me! help me!" He clung to Tembarom
with hands which shook; his eyes were more abject than the starved dog's; he
choked, and awful tears rolled down his cheeks. "Only help me," he
cried -- "just help, help, help -- for a while. Perhaps not long. It would
come back." He made a horrible effort. "Listen! My name -- I am -- I
am -- it+'s -- "
He was down on the
ground again, groveling. His efforts had failed. Tembarom, overwrought himself,
caught at him and dragged him up.
"Make a
fight," he said. "You can't lie down like that. You+'ve got to put up
a fight. It+'ll come back. I tell you it will. You+'ve had a clip on the head
or something. Let me call an ambulance and take you to the hospital."
The next moment he was
sorry he had said the words, the man's terror was so ill to behold. He grew
livid with it, and uttered a low animal cry.
"Don't drop dead
over it," said Tembarom, rather losing his head. "I won't do it,
though what in thunder I+'m going to do with you I don't know. You can't stay
here."
"For God's
sake!" said the man. "For God's sake!" He put his shaking hand
on Tembarom again, and looked at him with a bewildered scrutiny. "I+'m not
afraid of you," he said; "I don't know why. There+'s something all
right about you. If you+'ll stand by me -- you+'d stand by a man, I+'d swear.
Take me somewhere quiet. Let me get warm and think."
"The less you
think now the better," answered Tembarom. "You want a bed and a bath
and a night's rest. I guess I+'ve let myself in for it. You brush off and brace
yourself and come with me."
There was the hall
bedroom and the red-cotton comfort for one night at least, and Mrs. Bowse was a
soft-hearted woman. If she+'d heard the fellow sobbing behind the fence, she+'d
have been in a worse fix than he was. Women were kinder-hearted than men,
anyhow. The way the fellow's voice sounded when he said, "Help me, help
me, help me!" sounded as though he was in hell. "Made me feel as if I
was bracing up a chap that was going to be electrocuted," he thought,
feeling sickish again. "I+'ve not got backbone enough to face that sort of
thing. Got to take him somewhere."
They were walking
toward the "L" together, and he was wondering what he should say to
Mrs. Bowse when he saw his companion fumbling under his coat at the back as
though he was in search of something. His hands being unsteady, it took him
some moments to get at what he wanted. He evidently had a belt or a hidden
pocket. He got something out and stopped under a street light to show it to
Tembarom. His hands still shook when he held them out, and his look was a
curious, puzzled, questioning one. What he passed over to Tembarom was a roll
of money. Tembarom rather lost his breath as he saw the number on two
five-hundred-dollar bills, and of several hundreds, besides twenties, tens, and
fives.
"Take it -- keep
it," he said. "It will pay."
"Hully gee!"
cried Tembarom, aghast. "Don't go giving away your whole pile to the first
fellow you meet. I don't want it."
"Take it."
The stranger put his hand on his shoulder, the abject look in his eyes
harrowingly like the starved dog's again.
"There+'s
something all right about you. You+'ll help me."
"If I don't take
it for you, some one will knock you upon the head for it." Tembarom
hesitated, but the next instant he stuffed it all in his pocket, incited
thereto by the sound of a whizzing roar.
"There's the `L'
coming," he cried; "run for all you+'re worth." And they fled up
the street and up the steps, and caught it without a second to spare.
AT about the time
Tembarom made his rush to catch the "L" Joseph Hutchinson was passing
through one of his periodical fits of infuriated discouragement. Little Ann
knew they would occur every two or three days, and she did not wonder at them.
Also she knew that if she merely sat still and listened as she sewed, she would
be doing exactly what her mother would have done and what her father would find
a sort of irritated comfort in. There was no use in citing people's villainies
and calling them names unless you had an audience who would seem to agree to
the justice of your accusations.
So Mr. Hutchinson
charged up and down the room, his face red, and his hands thrust in his coat
pockets. He was giving his opinions of America and Americans, and he spoke with
his broadest Manchester accent, and threw in now and then a word or so of
Lancashire dialect to add roughness and strength, the angrier a Manchester man
being, the broader and therefore the more forcible his accent. "Tha"
is somehow a great deal more bitter or humorous or affectionate than the mere
ordinary "You" or "Yours."
" 'Merica,"
he bellowed -- "dang 'Merica! I says -- an' dang 'Mericans. Goin' about
th' world braggin' an' boastin' about their sharpness an' their
open-'andedness. `Go to 'Merica,' folks+'ll tell you, `with an invention, and
there+'s dozens of millionaires ready to put money in it.' Fools!"
"Now,
Father," -- Little Ann's voice was as maternal as her mother's had been,
-- "now, Father, love, don't work yourself up into a passion. You know
it+'s not good for you."
"I don't need to
work myself up into one. I+'m in one. A man sells everything he owns to get to
'Merica, an' when he gets there what does he find? He canna' get near a
millionaire. He+'s pushed here an scuffled there, an' told this chap can't see
him, an' that chap is+n't interested, an' he must wait his chance to catch this
one. An' he waits an' waits, an' goes up in elevators an' stands on one leg in
lobbies, till he's broke' down an' sick of it, an' has to go home to England
steerage."
Little Ann looked up
from her sewing. He had been walking furiously for half an hour, and had been
tired to begin with. She had heard his voice break roughly as he said the last
words. He threw himself astride a chair and, crossing his arms on the back of
it, dropped his head on them. Her mother never allowed this. Her idea was that
women were made to tide over such moments for the weaker sex. Far had it been
from the mind of Mrs. Hutchinson to call it weaker. "But there+'s times,
Ann, when just for a bit they+'re just like children. They need comforting
without being let to know they are being comforted. You know how it is when your
back aches, and some one just slips a pillow under it in the right place
without saying anything. That+'s what women can do if they've got heads. It
needs a head."
Little Ann got up and
went to the chair. She began to run her fingers caressingly through the thick,
grizzled hair.
"There, Father,
love, there!" she said. "We are going back to England, at any rate,
are+n't we? And grandmother will be so glad to have us with her in her cottage.
And America+'s only one place."
"I tried it first,
dang it!" Jerked out Hutchinson. "Every one told me to do it."
He quoted again with derisive scorn: " `You go to 'Merica. 'Merica+'s the
place for a chap like you. 'Merica+'s the place for inventions.' Liars!"
Little Ann went on
rubbing the grizzled head lovingly.
"Well, now we+'re
going back to try England. You never did really try England. And you know how
beautiful it+'ll be in the country, with the primroses in bloom and the young
lambs in the fields." The caressing hand grew even softer. "And
you+'re not going to forget how mother believed in the invention; you can't do
that."
Hutchinson lifted his
head and looked at her.
"Eh, Ann," he
said, "you are a comfortable little body. You+'ve got a way with you just
like your poor mother had. You always say the right thing to help a chap pull
himself together. Your mother did believe in it, did+n't she?"
She had, indeed,
believed in it, though her faith was founded more upon confidence in "Mr.
Hutchinson" than in any profound knowledge of the mechanical appliance his
inspiration would supply. She knew it had something important to do with
locomotive engines, and she knew that if railroad magnates would condescend to
consider it, her husband was sure that fortune would flow in. She had lived
with the "invention," as it was respectfully called, for years.
"That she
did," answered Little Ann. "And before she died she said to me:
`Little Ann,' she said, `there+'s one thing you must never let your father do.
You must never let him begin not to believe in his invention. Your father+'s a
clever man, and it+'s a clever invention, and it+'ll make his fortune yet. You
must remind him how I believed in it and how sure I was.' "
Hutchinson rubbed his
hands thoughtfully. He had heard this before, but it did him good to hear it again.
"She said that,
did she?" he found vague comfort in saying. "She said that?"
"Yes, she did,
Father. It was the very day before she died."
"Well, she never
said anything she had+n't thought out," he said in slow retrospection.
"And she had a good head of her own. Eh, she was a wonderful woman, she
was, for sticking to things. That was th' Lancashire in her. Lancashire folks
knows their own minds."
"Mother knew
hers," said Ann. "And she always said you knew yours. Come and sit in
your own chair, Father, and have your paper."
She had tided him past
the worst currents without letting him slip into them.
"I like folks that
knows their own minds," he said as he sat down and took his paper from
her. "You know yours, Ann; and there+'s that Tembarom chap. He knows his.
I+'ve been noticing that chap." There was a certain pleasure in using a
tone of amiable patronage. "He+'s got a way with him that+'s worth money
to him in business, if he only knew it."
"I don't think he
knows he+'s got a way," Little Ann said. "His way is just him."
"He just gets over
people with it, like he got over me. I was ready to knock his head off first
time he spoke to me. I was ready to knock anybody's head off that day. I+'d
just had that letter from Hadman. He made me sick wi' the way he pottered an'
played the fool about the invention. He believed in it right enough, but he
had+n't the courage of a mouse. He was+n't goin' to be the first one to risk
his money. Him, with all he has! He+'s the very chap to be able to set it
goin'. If I could have got some one else to put up brass, it+'d have started
him. It+'s want o' backbone, that+'s the matter wi' Hadman an' his lot."
"Some of these
days some of them+'re going to get their eyes open," said Little Ann,
"and then the others will be sorry. Mr. Tembarom says they'll fall over
themselves to get in on the ground floor."
Hutchinson chuckled.
"That+'s New
York," he said. "He+'s a rum chap. But he thinks a good bit of the
invention. I+'ve talked it over with him, because I+'ve wanted to talk, and the
one thing I+'ve noticed about Tembarom is that he can keep his mouth
shut."
"But he talks a
good deal," said Ann.
"That+'s the best
of it. You+'d think he was telling all he knows, and he+'s not by a fat lot. He
tells you what you+'ll like to hear, and he+'s not sly; but he can keep a shut
mouth. That+'s Lancashire. Some folks can't do it even when they want to."
"His father came
from England."
"That+'s where the
lad's sense comes from. Perhaps he+'s Lancashire. He had a lot of good ideas
about the way to get at Hadman."
A knock at the door
broke in upon them. Mrs. Bowse presented herself, wearing a novel expression on
her face. It was at once puzzled and not altogether disagreeably excited.
"I wish you would
come down into the dining-room, Little Ann." She hesitated. "Mr.
Tembaron's brought home such a queer man. He picked him up in in the street. He
wants me to let him stay with him for the night, anyhow. I don't think he+'s
crazy, but I guess he+'s lost his memory. Queerest thing I ever saw. He
does+n't know his name or anything."
"See here,"
broke out Hutchinson, dropping his hands and his paper on his knee, "I+'m
not going to have Ann goin' down stairs to quiet lunatics."
"He+'s as quiet as
a child," Mrs. Bowse protested. "There+'s something pitiful about
him, he seems so frightened. He+'s drenched to the skin."
"Call an ambulance
and send him to the hospital," advised Hutchinson.
"That+'s what Mr.
Tembarom says he can't do. It frightens him to death to speak of it. He just
clings to Mr. Tembarom sort of awful, as if he thinks he+'ll save his life. But
that is+n't all," she added in an amazed tone; "he+'s given Mr.
Tembarom more than two thousand dollars."
"What!"
shouted Hutchinson, bounding to his feet quite unconsciously.
"What!"
exclaimed Little Ann.
"Just you come and
look at it," answered Mrs. Bowse, nodding her head. "There+'s over
two thousand dollars in bills spread out on the table in the dining-room this
minute. He had it in a belt pocket, and he dragged it out in the street and
would make Mr. Tembarom take it. Do come and tell us what to do."
"I+'d get him to
take off his wet clothes and get into bed, and drink some hot spirits and water
first," said Little Ann. "Would+n't you, Mrs. Bowse?"
Hutchinson got up,
newspaper in hand.
"I say, I+'d like
to go down and have a look at that chap myself," he announced.
"If he+'s so
frightened, perhaps -- " Little Ann hesitated.
"That+'s it,"
put in Mrs. Bowse. "He+'s se nervous it+'d make him worse to see another
man. You+'d better wait, Mr. Hutchinson."
Hutchinson sat down
rather grumpily, and Mrs. Bowse and Little Ann went down the stairs together.
"I feel real
nervous myself," said Mrs. Bowse, "it+'s so queer. But he+'s not
crazy. He+'s quiet enough."
As they neared the
bottom of the staircase Little Ann could see over the balustrade into the
dining-room. The strange man was sitting by the table, his disordered,
black-haired head on his arm. He looked like an exhausted thing. Tembarom was
sitting by him, and was talking in an encouraging voice. He had laid a hand on
one of the stranger's. On the table beside them was spread a number of bills
which had evidently Just been counted.
"Here+'s the
ladies," said Tembarom.
The stranger lifted his
head and, having looked, rose and stood upright, waiting. It was the
involuntary, mechanical action of a man who had been trained among gentlemen.
"It+'s Mrs. Bowse
again, and she+'s brought Miss Hutchinson down with her. Miss Hutchinson always
knows what to do," explained Tembarom in his friendly voice.
The man bowed, and his
bewildered eyes fixed themselves on Little Ann.
"Thank you,"
he said. "It+'s very kind of you. I -- I am -- in great trouble."
Little Ann went to him
and smiled her motherly smile at him.
"You're very
wet," she said. "You'll take a bad cold if you+'re not careful. Mrs.
Bowse thinks you ought to go right to bed and have something hot to
drink."
"It seems a long
time since I was in bed," he answered her.
"I+'m very tired.
Thank you." He drew a weary, sighing breath, but he did+n't move his eyes
from the girl's lace. Perhaps the cessation of action in certain cells of his
brain had increased action in others. He looked as though he were seeing something
in Little Ann's face which might not have revealed itself so clearly to the
more normal gaze.
He moved slightly
nearer to her. He was a tall man, and had to look down at her.
"What is your
name?" he asked anxiously. "Names trouble me."
It was Ann who drew a
little nearer to him now. She had to look up, and the soft, absorbed kindness
in her eyes might, Tembarom thought, have soothed a raging lion, it was so
intent on its purpose.
"My name is Ann
Hutchinson; but never you mind about it now," she said. "I+ll tell it
to you again. Let Mr. Tembarom take you up-stairs to bed. You+'ll be better in
the morning." And because his hollow eyes rested on her so fixedly she put
her hand on his wet sleeve.
"You+'re wet
through," she said. "That won't do."
He looked down at her
hand and then at her face again.
"Help me," he
pleaded, "just help me. I don't know what+'s happened. Have I gone
mad?"
"No," she
answered; "not a bit. It'll all come right after a while; you+'ll
see."
"Will it, will
it?" he begged, and then suddenly his eyes were full of tears. It was a
strange thing to see him in his bewildered misery try to pull himself together,
and bite his shaking lips as though he vaguely remembered that he was a man.
"I beg pardon," he faltered: "I suppose I+'m ill."
"I don't know
where to put him," Mrs. Bowse was saying half aside; "I+'ve not got a
room empty."
"Put him in my bed
and give me a shake-down on the floor," said Tembarom. "That+'ll be
all right. He does+n't want me to leave him, anyhow."
He turned to the money
on the table.
"Say," he
said to his guest, "there+'s two thousand five hundred dollars here.
We+'ve counted it to make sure. That+'s quite some money. And it+'s yours --
"
The stranger looked
disturbed and made a nervous gesture.
"Don't,
don't!" he broke in. "Keep it. Some one took the rest. This was
hidden. It will pay."
"You see he is+n't
real' out of his mind," Mrs. Bowse murmured feelingly.
"No, not real' out
of it," said Tembarom. "Say," -- as an inspiration occurred to
him, -- "I guess maybe Miss Hutchinson will keep it. Will you, Little Ann?
You can give it to him when he wants it."
"It+'s a good bit
of money," said Little Ann, soberly; "but I can put it in a bank and
pay Mrs. Bowse his board every week. Yes, I+'ll take it. Now he must go to bed.
It+'s a comfortable little room," she said to the stranger, "and Mrs.
Bowse will make you a hot milk-punch. That+'ll be nourishing."
"Thank you,"
murmured the man, still keeping his yearning eyes on her. "Thank
you."
So he was taken up to
the fourth floor and put into Tembarom's bed. The hot milk-punch seemed to take
the chill out of him, and when, by lying on his pillow and gazing at the shake-
down on the floor as long as he could keep his eyes open, he had convinced
himself that Tembarom was going to stay with him, he fell asleep.
Little Ann went back to
her father carrying a roll of bills in her hands. It was a roll of such size
that Hutchinson started up in his chair and stared at the sight of it.
"Is that the
money?" he exclaimed. "What are you going to do with it? What have
you found out, lass?"
"Yes, this is
it," she answered. "Mr. Tembarom asked me to take care of it. I+'m
going to put it in the bank. But we have+n't found out anything."
THIS was the opening
incident of the series of extraordinary and altogether incongruous events which
took place afterwards, as it appeared to T. Tembarom, like scenes in a play in
which he had become involved in a manner which one might be inclined to regard
humorously and make jokes about, because it was a thousand miles away from
anything like real life. That was the way it struck him. The events referred
to, it was true, were things one now and then read about in newspapers, but
while the world realized that they were actual occurrences, one rather regarded
them, when their parallels were reproduced in books and plays, as belonging
alone to the world of pure and highly romantic fiction.
"I guess the
reason why it seems that way," he summed it up to Hutchinson and Little
Ann, after the worst had come to the worst, "is because we've not only
never known any one it+'s happened to, but we+'ve never known any one that+'s
known any one it+'s happened to. I+'ve got to own up that it makes me feel as
if the fellows+'d just yell right out laughing when they heard it."
The stranger's money
had been safely deposited in a bank, and the stranger himself still occupied
Tembarom's bedroom. He slept a great deal and was very quiet. With great
difficulty Little Ann had persuaded him to let a doctor see him, and the doctor
had been much interested in his case. He had expected to find some signs of his
having received accidentally or otherwise a blow upon the head, but on
examination he found no scar or wound. The condition he was in was frequently
the result of concussion of the brain, sometimes of prolonged nervous strain or
harrowing mental shock. Such cases occurred not infrequently. Quiet and entire
freedom from excitement would do more for such a condition than anything else.
If he was afraid of strangers, by all means keep them from him. Tembarom had
been quite right in letting him think he would help him to remember, and that
somehow he would in the end reach the place he had evidently set out to go to.
Nothing must be allowed to excite him. It was well he had had money on his
person and that he had fallen into friendly hands. A city hospital would not
have been likely to help him greatly. The restraint of its necessary discipline
might have alarmed him.
So long as he was
persuaded that Tembarom was not going to desert him, he was comparatively calm,
though sunk in a piteous and tormented melancholy. His worst hours were when he
sat alone in the hall bedroom, with his face buried in his hands. He would so
sit without moving or speaking, and Little Ann discovered that at these times
he was trying to remember. Sometimes he would suddenly rise and walk about the
little room, muttering, with woe in his eyes. Ann, who saw how hard this was
for him, found also that to attempt to check or distract him was even worse.
When, sitting in her father's room, which was on the other side of the wall,
she heard his fretted, hurried pacing feet, her face lost its dimpled cheerfulness.
She wondered if her mother would not have discovered some way of clearing the
black cloud distracting his brain. Nothing would induce him to go down to the
boarders' dining-room for his meals, and the sight of a servant alarmed him so
that it was Ann who took him the scant food he would eat. As the time of her
return to England with her father drew near, she wondered what Mr. Tembarom
would do without her services. It was she who suggested that they must have a
name for him, and the name of a part of Manchester had provided one. There was
a place called Strangeways, and one night when, in talking to her father, she
referred to it in Tembarom's presence, he suddenly seized upon it.
"Strangeways,"
he said. "That+'d make a good-enough name for him. Let+'s call him Mr.
Strangeways. I don't like the way the fellows have of calling him `the Freak.'
"
So the name had been
adopted, and soon became an established fact.
"The way I feel
about him," Tembarom said, "is that the fellow+'s not a bit of a
joke. What I see is that he+'s up against about the toughest proposition I+'ve
ever known. Gee! that fellow+'s not crazy He+'s worse. If he was out-and-out dippy
and did+n't know it, he+'d be all right. Likely as not he+'d be thinking he was
the Pope of Rome or Anna Held. What knocks him out is that he+'s just right
enough to know he+'s wrong, and to be trying to get back. He reminds me of one
of those chaps the papers tell about sometimes -- fellows that go to work in
livery-stables for ten years and call themselves Bill Jones, and then wake up
some morning and remember they+'re some high- browed minister of the gospel
named the Rev. James Cadwallader."
When the curtain drew up
on Tembarom's amazing drama, Strangeways had been occupying his bed nearly
three weeks, and he himself had been sleeping on a cot Mrs. Bowse had put up
for him in his room. The Hutchinsons were on the point of sailing for England
-- steerage -- on the steamship Transatlantic, and Tembarom was secretly torn
into fragments, though he had done well with the page and he was daring to
believe that at the end of the month Galton would tell him he had "made
good" and the work would continue indefinitely.
If that happened, he
would be raised to "twenty-five per" and would be a man of means. If
the Hutchinsons had not been going away, he would have been floating in clouds
of rose color. If he could persuade Little Ann to take him in hand when she+'d had
time to "try him out," even Hutchinson could not utterly flout a
fellow who was making his steady twenty-five per on a big paper, and was on
such terms with his boss that he might get other chances. Gee! but he was a
fellow that luck just seemed to chase, anyhow! Look at the other chaps, lots of
'em, who knew twice as much as he did, and had lived in decent homes and gone
to school and done their darned best, too, and then had+n't been able to get
there! It did+n't seem fair somehow that he should run into such pure luck.
The day arrived when
Galton was to give his decision. Tembarom was going to hand in his page, and
while he was naturally a trifle nervous, his nervousness would have been a
hopeful and not unpleasant thing but that the Transatlantic sailed in two days,
and in the Hutchinson's rooms Little Ann was packing her small trunk and her
father's bigger one, which held more models and drawings than clothing.
Hutchinson was redder in the face than usual, and indignant condemnation of
America and American millionaires possessed his soul. Everybody was rather
depressed. One boarder after another had wakened to a realization that, with
the passing of Little Ann, Mrs. Bowse's establishment, even with the parlor,
the cozy-corner, and the second-hand pianola to support it, would be a
deserted-seeming thing. Mrs. Bowse felt the tone of low spirits about the
table, and even had a horrible secret fear that certain of her best boarders
might decide to go elsewhere, merely to change surroundings from which they
missed something. Her eyes were a little red, and she made great efforts to
keep things going.
"I can only keep
the place up when I+'ve no empty rooms," she had said to Mrs. Peck,
"but I+'d have boarded her free if her father would have let her stay. But
he would+n't, and, anyway, she+'d no more let him go off alone than she+'d jump
off Brooklyn Bridge."
It had been arranged
that partly as a farewell banquet and partly to celebrate Galton's decision
about the page, there was to be an oyster stew that night in Mr. Hutchinson's
room, which was distinguished as a bed-sitting-room. Tembarom had
diplomatically suggested it to Mr. Hutchinson. It was to be Tembarom's oyster
supper, and somehow he managed to convey that it was only a proper and modest
tribute to Mr. Hutchinson himself. First-class oyster stew and pale ale were
not so bad when properly suggested, therefore Mr. Hutchinson consented. Jim
Bowles and Julius Steinberger were to come in to share the feast, and Mrs.
Bowse had promised to prepare.
It was not an inspiring
day for Little Ann. New York had seemed a bewildering and far too noisy place
for her when she had come to it directly from her grandmother's cottage in the
English village, where she had spent her last three months before leaving
England. The dark rooms of the five-storied boarding-house had seemed gloomy
enough to her, and she had found it much more difficult to adjust herself to
her surroundings than she could have been induced to admit to her father. At
first his temper and the open contempt for American habits and institutions
which he called "speaking his mind" had given her a great deal of
careful steering through shoals to do. At the outset the boarders had resented
him, and sometimes had snapped back their own views of England and courts. Violent
and disparaging argument had occasionally been imminent, and Mrs. Bowse had
worn an ominous look. Their rooms had in fact been "wanted" before
their first week had come to an end, and Little Ann herself scarcely knew how
she had tided over that situation. But tide it over she did, and by
supernatural effort and watchfulness she contrived to soothe Mrs. Bowse until
she had been in the house long enough to make friends with people and aid her
father to realize that, if they went elsewhere, they might find only the same
class of boarders, and there would be the cost of moving to consider. She had
beguiled an arm-chair from Mrs. Bowse, and had re-covered it herself with a
remnant of crimson stuff secured from a miscellaneous heap at a marked- down
sale at a department store. She had arranged his books and papers adroitly and
had kept them in their places so that he never felt himself obliged to search
for any one of them. With many little contrivances she had given his
bed-sitting-room a look of comfort and established homeliness, and he had even
begun to like it.
"Tha 't just like
tha mother, Ann," he had said. "She 'd make a railway station look as
if it had been lived in."
Then Tembarom had
appeared, heralded by Mrs. Bowse and the G. Destroyer, and the first time their
eyes had met across the table she had liked him. The liking had increased.
There was that in his boyish cheer and his not-too-well-fed-looking face which
called forth maternal interest. As she gradually learned what his life had been,
she felt a thrilled anxiety to hear day by day how he was getting on. She
listened for details, and felt it necessary to gather herself together in the
face of a slight depression when hopes of Galton were less high than usual. His
mending was mysteriously done, and in time he knew with amazed gratitude that
he was being "looked after." His first thanks were so awkward, but so
full of appreciation of unaccus tomed luxury, that they almost brought tears to
her eyes, since they so clearly illuminated the entire novelty of any attention
whatever.
"I just don't know
what to say," he said, shuffling from one foot to another, though his nice
grin was at its best. "I+'ve never had a woman do anything for me since I
was ten. I guess women do lots of things for most fellows; but, then, they+'re
mothers and sisters and aunts. I appreciate it like -- like thunder. I feel as
if I was Rockefeller, Miss Ann."
In a short time she had
become "Little Ann" to him, as to the rest, and they began to know
each other very well. Jim Bowles and Julius Steinberger had not been able to
restrain themselves at first from making slangy, yearning love to her, but
Tembarom had been different. He had kept himself well in hand. Yes, she had
liked T. Tembarom, and as she packed the trunks she realized that the Atlantic
Ocean was three thousand miles across, and when two people who had no money
were separated by it, they were likely to remain so. Rich people could travel,
poor people could+n't. You just stayed where things took you, and you must+n't
be silly enough to expect things to happen in your class of life -- things like
seeing people again. Your life just went on. She kept herself very busy, and
did not allow her thoughts any latitude. It would vex her father very much if
he thought she had really grown fond of America and was rather sorry to go
away. She had finished her packing before evening, and the trunks were labeled
and set aside, some in the outside hall and some in the corner of the room. She
had sat down with some mending on her lap, and Hutchinson was walking about the
room with the restlessness of the traveler whose approaching journey will not
let him settle himself anywhere.
"I+'ll lay a
shilling you+'ve got everything packed and ready, and put just where a chap can
lay his hands on it," he said.
"Yes, Father. Your
tweed cap 's in the big pocket of your thick top-coat, and there+'s an extra
pair of spectacles and your pipe and tobacco in the small one."
"And off we go
back to England same as we came!" He rubbed his head, and drew a big,
worried sigh. "Where+'s them going?" he asked, pointing to some newly
laundered clothing on a side table. "You have+n't forgotten 'em, have
you?"
"No, Father. It+'s
just some of the young men's washing. I thought I+'d take time to mend them up
a bit before I went to bed."
"That+'s like tha
mother, too -- taking care of everybody. What did these chaps do before you
came?"
"Sometimes they
tried to sew on a button or so themselves, but oftener they went without. Men
make poor work of sewing. It ought+n't to be expected of them."
Hutchinson stopped and
looked her and her mending over with a touch of curiosity.
"Some of them+'s
Tembarom's?" he asked.
Little Ann held up a
pair of socks.
"These are. He
does wear them out, poor fellow. It+'s tramping up and down the streets to save
car-fare does it. He's never got a heel to his name. But he+'s going to be able
to buy some new ones next week."
Hutchinson began his
tramp again.
"He'll miss thee,
Little Ann; but so'll the other lads, for that matter."
"He+'ll know
to-night whether Mr. Galton+'s going to let him keep his work. I do hope he
will. I believe he+'d begin to get on."
"Well," --
Hutchinson was just a little grudging even at this comparatively lenient
moment, -- "I believe the chap+'ll get on myself. He+'s got pluck and
he+'s sharp. I never saw him make a poor mouth yet."
"Neither did
I," answered Ann.
A door leading into
Tembarom's hall bedroom opened on to Hutchinson's. They both heard some one
inside the room knock at it. Hutchinson turned and listened, jerking his head
toward the sound.
"There+'s that
poor chap again," he said. "He+'s wakened and got restless. What+'s
Tembarom going to do with him, I+'d like to know? The money won't last
forever."
"Shall I let him
in, Father? I dare say he's got restless because Mr. Tembarom+'s not come
in."
"Aye, we+'ll let
him in. He won't have thee long. He can't do no harm so long as I+'m
here."
Little Ann went to the
door and opened it. She spoke quietly.
"Do you want to
come in here, Mr. Strangeways?"
The man came in. He was
clean, but still unshaven, and his clothes looked as though he had been lying
down. He looked round the room anxiously.
"Where has he
gone?" he demanded in an overstrung voice. "Where is he?" He
caught at Ann's sleeve in a sudden access of nervous fear. "What shall I
do if he+'s gone?"
Hutchinson moved toward
him.
" 'Ere,
'ere," he said, "don't you go catchin' hold of ladies. What do you
want?"
"I+'ve forgotten
his name now. What shall I do if I can't remember?" faltered Strangeways.
Little Ann patted his
arm comfortingly.
"There, there,
now! You+'ve not really forgotten it. It's just slipped your memory. You want
Mr. Tembarom -- Mr. T. Tembarom."
"Oh, thank you,
thank you. That's it. Yes, Tembarom. He said T. Tembarom. He said he would+n't
throw me over."
Little Ann led him to a
seat and made him sit down. She answered him with quiet decision.
"Well, if he said
he would+n't, he won't. Will he, Father?"
"No, he won't."
There was rough good nature in Hutchinson's admission. He paused after it to
glance at Ann. "You think a lot of that lad, don't you, Ann?"
"Yes, I do,
Father," she replied undisturbedly. "He+'s one you can trust, too.
He+'s up-town at his work," she explained to Strangeways. "He+'ll be
back before long. He+'s giving us a bit of a supper in here because we+'re
going away."
Strangeways grew
nervous again.
"But he won't go
with you? T. Tembarom won't go?"
"No, no; he+'s not
going. He+'ll stay here," she said soothingly. He had evidently not
observed the packed and labeled trunks when he came in. He seemed suddenly to
see them now, and rose in distress.
"Whose are these?
You said he was+n't going?"
Ann took hold of his
arm and led him to the corner.
"They are not Mr.
Tembarom's trunks," she explained. "They are father's and mine. Look
on the labels. Joseph Hutchinson, Liverpool. Ann Hutchinson, Liverpool."
He looked at them
closely in a puzzled way. He read a label aloud in a dragging voice.
"Ann Hutchinson,
Liverpool. What+'s -- what+'s Liverpool?"
"Oh, come,"
encouraged Little Ann, "you know that. It+'s a place in England. We+'re
going back to England."
He stood and gazed
fixedly before him. Then he began to rub his fingers across his forehead. Ann
knew the straining look in his eyes. He was making that horrible struggle to
get back somewhere through the darkness which shut him in. It was so painful a
thing to see that even Hutchinson turned slightly away.
"Don't!" said
Little Ann, softly, and tried to draw him away.
He caught his breath
convulsively once or twice, and his voice dragged out words again, as though he
were dragging them from bottomless depths.
"Going -- back --
to -- England -- back to England -- to England."
He dropped into a chair
near by, his arms thrown over its back, and broke, as his face fell upon them,
into heavy, deadly sobbing -- the kind of sobbing Tembarom had found it
impossible to stand up against. Hutchinson whirled about testily.
"Dang it!" he
broke out, "I wish Tembarom 'd turn up. What are we to do?" He
did+n't like it himself. It struck him as unseemly.
But Ann went to the
chair, and put her hands on the shuddering shoulder, bending over the
soul-wrung creature, the wisdom of centuries in the soft, expostulatory voice
which seemed to reach the very darkness he was lost in. It was a wisdom of
which she was wholly unaware, but it had been born with her, and was the
building of her being.
" 'Sh!
'S-h-h!" she said. "You must+n't do that. Mr. Tembarom would+n't like
you to do it. He+'ll be in directly. 'Sh! 'Sh, now!" And simple as the
words were, their soothing reached him. The wildness of his sobs grew less.
"See here,"
Hutchinson protested, "this won't do, my man. I won't have it, Ann. I+'m
upset myself, what with this going back and everything. I can't have a chap
coming and crying like that there. It upsets me worse than ever. And you
hangin' over him! It won't do."
Strangeways lifted his
head from his arms and looked at him.
"Aye, I mean what
I say," Hutchinson added fretfully.
Strangeways got up from
the chair. When he was not bowed or slouching it was to be seen that he was a
tall man with square shoulders. Despite his unshaven, haggard face, he had a
sort of presence.
"I+'ll go back to
my room," he said. "I forgot. I ought not to be here."
Neither Hutchinson nor
Little Ann had ever seen any one do the thing he did next. When Ann went with
him to the door of the hall bedroom, he took her hand, and bowing low before
her, lifted it gently to his lips.
Hutchinson stared at
him as he turned into the room and closed the door behind him.
"Well, I+'ve read
of lords and ladies doin' that in books," he said, "but I never
thought I should see a chap do it myself."
Little Ann went back to
her mending, looking very thoughtful.
"Father," she
said, after a few moments, "England made him come near to remembering
something."
"New York+'ll come
near making me remember a lot of things when I+'m out of it," said Mr.
Hutchinson, sitting down heavily in his chair and rubbing his head. "Eh,
dang it! dang it!"
"Don't you let it,
Father," advised Little Ann. "There+'s never any good in thinking
things over."
"You're not as
cheerful yourself as you let on," he said. "You+'ve not got much
color to-day, my lass."
She rubbed one cheek a
little, trying to laugh.
"I shall get it
back when we go and stay with grandmother. It+'s just staying indoors so much.
Mr. Tembarom won't be long now; I+'ll get up and set the table. The things are
on a tray outside."
As she was going out of
the room, Jim Bowles and Julius Steinberger appeared at the door.
"May we come
in?" Jim asked eagerly. "We+'re invited to the oyster stew, and it+'s
time old T. T. was here. Julius and me are just getting dippy waiting up-stairs
to hear if he+'s made good with Galton."
"Well, now, you
sit down and be quiet a bit, or you+'ll be losing your appetites," advised
Ann.
"You can't lose a
thing the size of mine," answered Jim, "any more than you could lose
the Metropolitan Opera-house."
Ann turned her head and
paused as though she were listening. She heard footsteps in the lower hall.
"He+'s coming
now," she announced. "I know his step. He+'s tired. Don't go yet, you
two," she added as the pair prepared to rush to meet him. "When any
one's that tired he wants to wash his face, and talk when he's ready. If
you+'ll just go back to your room I+'ll call you when I+'ve set the
table."
She felt that she
wanted a little more quiet during the next few minutes than she could have if
they remained and talked at the top of elated voices. She had not quite
realized how anxiously she had been waiting all day for the hour when she would
hear exactly what had happened. If he was all right, it it would be a nice
thing to remember when she was in England. In this moderate form she expressed
herself mentally. "It would be a nice thing to remember." She spread
the cloth on the table and began to lay out the plates. Involuntarily she found
herself stopping to glance at the hall bedroom door and listen rather intently.
"I hope he's got
it. I do that. I+'m sure he has. He ought to."
Hutchinson looked over
at her. She was that like her mother, that lass!
"You+'re excited,
Ann," he said.
"Yes, Father, I am
-- a bit. He's -- he's washing his face now." Sounds of splashing water
could be heard through the intervening door.
Hutchinson watched her
with some uneasiness.
"You care a lot
for that lad," he said.
She did not look
fluttered. Her answer was quite candid.
"I said I did,
Father. He+'s taking off his boots."
"You know every
sound he makes, and you+'re going away Saturday, and you+'ll never see him
again."
"That need+n't
stop me caring. It never did any one any harm to care for one of his
sort."
"But it can't come
to anything," Hutchinson began to bluster. "It won't do -- "
"He's coming to
the door, he's turning the handle," said Little Ann.
Tembarom came in. He
was fresh with recent face-washing, and his hair was damp, so that a short lock
curled and stood up. He had been up-town making frantic efforts for hours, but
he had been making them in a spirit of victorious relief, and he did not look
tired at all.
"I+'ve got
it!" he cried out the moment he entered. "I+'ve got it, by jingo! The
job+'s mine for keeps."
"Galton's give it
to you out and out?" Hutchinson was slightly excited himself.
"He's in the
bulliest humor you ever saw. He says I+'ve done first-rate, and if I go on,
he+'ll run me up to thirty."
"Well, I+'m danged
glad of it, lad, that I am!" Hutchinson gave in handsomely. "You put
backbone into it."
Little Ann stood near,
smiling. Her smile met Tembaroms.
"I know you're
glad, Little Ann," he said. "I+'d never have got there but for you.
It was up to me, after the way you started me."
"You know I+'m
glad without me telling you," she answered. "I+'m rightdown
glad."
And it was at this
moment that Mrs. Bowse came into the room.
"It+'s too bad
it+'s happened just now," she said, much flustered. "That+'s the way
with things. The stew+'ll spoil, but he says it+'s real important."
Tembarom caught at both
her hands and shook them.
"I+'ve got it,
Mrs. Bowse. Here+'s your society reporter! The best-looking boarder you+'ve got
is going to be able to pay his board steady."
"I+'m as glad as
can be, and so will everybody be. I knew you+'d get it. But this gentleman+'s
been here twice to-day. He says he really must see you."
"Let him
wait," Hutchinson ordered. "What's the chap want? The stew won't be
fit to eat."
"No, it
won't," answered Mrs. Bowse; "but he seems to think he+'s not the
kind to be put off. He says it+'s more Mr. Tembarom's business than his. He
looked real mad when I showed him into the parlor, where they were playing the
pianola. He asked was+n't there a private room where you could talk."
A certain flurried
interest in the manner of Mrs. Bowse, a something not usually awakened by
inopportune callers, an actual suggestion of the possible fact that she was not
as indifferent as she was nervous, somewhat awakened Mr. Hutchinson's
curiosity.
"Look here,"
he volunteered, "if he+'s got any real business, he can't talk over to the
tune of the pianola you can bring him up here, Tembarom. I+'ll see he don't
stay long if his business is+n't worth talkin' about. He+'ll see the table set
for supper, and that+'ll hurry him."
"Oh, gee! I wish
he had+n't come!" said Tembarom. "I+'ll just go down and see what he
wants. No one+'s got any swell private business with me."
"You bring him up
if he has," said Hutchinson. "We'd like to hear about it."
Tembarom ran down the
stairs quickly.
No one had ever wanted
to see him on business before. There was something important-sounding about it;
perhaps things were starting up for him in real earnest. It might be a message
from Galton, though he could not believe that he had at this early stage
reached such a distinction. A ghastly thought shot a bolt at him, but he shook
himself free of it.
"He+'s not a
fellow to go back on his word, anyhow," he insisted.
There were more
boarders than usual in the parlor. The young woman from the notion counter had
company, and one of her guests was playing "He sut'nly was Good to
Me" on the pianola with loud and steady tread of pedal.
The new arrival had
evidently not thought it worth his while to commit himself to permanency by
taking a seat. He was standing not far from the door with a
businesslike-looking envelop in one hand and a pince-nez in the other, with
which Tembarom saw he was rather fretfully tapping the envelop as he looked
about him. He was plainly taking in the characteristics of the room, and was
not leniently disposed toward them. His tailor was clearly an excellent one,
with entirely correct ideas as to the cut and material which exactly befitted
an elderly gentleman of some impressiveness in the position, whatsoever it
happened to be, which he held. His face was not of a friendly type, and his
eyes held cold irritation discreetly restrained by businesslike civility.
Tembarom vaguely felt the genialities of the oyster supper assume a rather
fourth- rate air.
The caller advanced and
spoke first.
"Mr.
Tembarom?" he inquired.
"Yes,"
Tembarom answered, "I+'m T. Tembarom."
"T.,"
repeated the stranger, with a slightly puzzled expression. "Ah, yes; I
see. I beg pardon."
In that moment Tembarom
felt that he was looked over, taken in, summed up, and without favor. The
sharp, steady eye, however, did not seem to have moved from his face. At the
same time it had aided him to realize that he was, to this well-dressed person
at least, a too exhilarated young man wearing a ten-dollar
"hand-me-down."
"My name is
Palford," he said concisely. "That will convey nothing to you. I am
of the firm of Palford & Grimby of Lincoln's Inn. This is my card."
Tembarom took the card
and read that Palford & Grimby were "solicitors," and he was not
sure that he knew exactly what "solicitors" were.
"Lincoln's
Inn?" he hesitated. "That+'s not in New York, is it?"
"No, Mr. Tembarom;
in London. I come from England."
"You must have had
bad weather crossing," said Tembarom, with amiable intent. Somehow Mr.
Palford presented a more unyielding surface than he was accustomed to. And yet
his hard courtesy was quite perfect.
"I have been here
some weeks."
"I hope you like
New York. Won't you have a seat?"
The young lady from the
notion counter and her friends began to sing the chorus of "He sut'nly was
Good to Me" with quite professional negro accent.
"That+'s just the
way May Irwin done it," one of them laughed.
Mr. Palford glanced at
the performers. He did not say whether he liked New York or not.
"I asked your
landlady if we could not see each other in a private room," he said.
"It would not be possible to talk quietly here."
"We should+n't
have much of a show," answered Tembarom, inwardly wishing he knew what was
going to happen. "But there are no private rooms in the house. We can be
quieter than this, though, if we go up-stairs to Mr. Hutchinson's room. He said
I could bring you."
"That would be
much better," replied Mr. Palford.
Tembarom led him out of
the room, up the first steep and narrow flight of stairs, along the narrow hall
to the second, up that, down another hall to the third, up the third, and on to
the fourth. As he led the way he realized again that the worn carpets, the
steep narrowness, and the pieces of paper unfortunately stripped off the wall
at intervals, were being rather counted against him. This man had probably
never been in a place like this before in his life, and he did+n't take to it.
At the Hutchinsons'
door he stopped and explained:
"We were going to
have an oyster stew here because the Hutchinsons are going away; but Mr.
Hutchinson said we could come up."
"Very kind of Mr.
Hutchinson, I+'m sure."
Despite his stiffly
collected bearing, Mr. Palford looked perhaps slightly nervous when he was
handed into the bed-sitting- room, and found himself confronting Hutchinson and
Little Ann and the table set for the oyster stew. It is true that he had never
been in such a place in his life, that for many reasons he was appalled, and
that he was beset by a fear that he might be grotesquely compelled by existing
circumstances to accept these people's invitation, if they insisted upon his
sitting down with them and sharing their oyster stew. One could not calculate
on what would happen among these unknown quantities. It might be their idea of
boarding-house politeness. And how could one offend them? God forbid that the
situation should intensify itself in such an absurdly trying manner! What a bounder
the unfortunate young man was! His own experience had not been such as to
assist him to any realistic enlightenment regarding him, even when he had seen
the society page and had learned that he had charge of it.
"Let me make you
acquainted with Mr. and Miss Hutchinson," Tembarom introduced. "This
is Mr. Palford, Mr. Hutchinson."
Hutchinson, half hidden
behind his newspaper, jerked his head and grunted:
"Glad to see you,
sir."
Mr. Palford bowed, and
took the chair Tembarom presented.
"I am much obliged
to you, Mr. Hutchinson, for allowing me to come to your room. I have business
to discuss with Mr. Tembarom, and the pianola was being played down-stairs --
rather loudly."
"They do it every
night, dang 'em! Right under my bed," growled Hutchinson. "You're an
Englishman, are+n't you?"
"Yes."
"So am I, thank
God!" Hutchinson devoutly gave forth.
Little Ann rose from
her chair, sewing in hand.
"Father+'ll come
and sit with me in my room," she said.
Hutchinson looked
grumpy. He did not intend to leave the field clear and the stew to its fate if
he could help it. He gave Ann a protesting frown.
"I dare say Mr.
Palford does+n't mind us," he said. "We+'re not strangers."
"Not in the
least," Palford protested. "Certainly not. If you are old friends,
you may be able to assist us."
"Well, I don't
know about that," Hutchinson answered, "We+'ve not known him long,
but we know him pretty well. You come from London, don't you?"
"Yes. From
Lincoln's Inn Fields."
"Law?"
grunted Hutchinson.
"Yes. Of the firm
of Palford & Grimby."
Hutchinson moved in his
chair involuntarily. There was stimulation to curiosity in this. This chap was
a regular top sawyer -- clothes, way of pronouncing his words, manners,
everything. No mistaking him -- old family solicitor sort of chap. What on
earth could he have to say to Tembarom? Tembarom himself had sat down and could
not be said to look at his ease.
"I do not intrude
without the excuse of serious business," Palford explained to him. "A
great deal of careful research and inquiry has finally led me here. I am
compelled to believe I have followed the right clue, but I must ask you a few
questions. Your name is not really Tembarom, is it?"
Hutchinson looked at
Tembarom sharply.
"Not Tembarom? What
does he mean, lad?"
Tembarom's grin was at
once boyish and ashamed.
"Well, it is in
one way," he answered, "and it is+n't in another. The fellows at
school got into the way of calling me that way, -- to save time, I guess, --
and I got to like it. They+'d have guyed my real name. Most of them never knew
it. I can't see why any one ever called a child by such a fool name,
anyhow."
"What was it
exactly?"
Tembarom looked almost
sheepish.
"It sounds like a
thing in a novel. It was Temple Temple Barholm. Two Temples, by gee! As if one
was+n't enough!"
Joseph Hutchinson
dropped his paper and almost started from his chair. His red face suddenly
became so much redder that he looked a trifle apoplectic.
"Temple Barholm
does tha say?" he cried out.
Mr. Palford raised his
hand and checked him, but with a suggestion of stiff apology.
"If you will
kindly allow me. Did you ever hear your father refer to a place called Temple
Barholm?" he inquired.
Tembarom reflected as
though sending his thoughts backward into a pretty thoroughly forgotten and
ignored past. There had been no reason connected with filial affection which
should have caused him to recall memories of his father. They had not liked
each other. He had known that he had been resented and looked down upon as a
characteristically American product. His father had more than once said he was
a "common American lad," and he had known he was.
"Seems to
me," he said at last, "that once when he was pretty mad at his luck I
heard him grumbling about English laws, and he said some of his distant
relations were swell people who would never think of speaking to him, --
perhaps did+n't know he was alive, -- and they lived in a big way in a place
that was named after the family. He never saw it or them, and he said that was
the way in England -- one fellow got everything and the rest were paupers like
himself. He+'d always been poor."
"Yes, the relation
was a distant one. Until this investigation began the family knew nothing of
him. The inquiry has been a tiresome one. I trust I am reaching the end of it.
We have given nearly two years to following this clue."
"What for?"
burst forth Tembarom, sitting upright.
"Because it was
necessary to find either George Temple Barholm or his son, if he had one."
"I+'m his son, all
right, but he died when I was eight years old," Tembarom volunteered.
"I don't remember much about him."
"You remember that
he was not an American?"
"He was English.
Hated it; but he was+n't fond of America."
"Have you any
papers belonging to him?"
Tembarom hesitated
again.
"There+'s a few
old letters -- oh, and one of those glass photographs in a case. I believe
it+'s my grandfather and grandmother, taken when they were married. Him on a
chair, you know, and her standing with her hand on his shoulder."
"Can you show them
to me?" Palford suggested.
"Sure,"
Tembarom answered, getting up from his seat "They're in my room. I turned
them up yesterday among some other things."
When he left them, Mr.
Palford sat gently rubbing his chin. Hutchinson wanted to burst forth with
questions, but he looked so remote and acidly dignified that there was a
suggestion of boldness in the idea of intruding on his reflections. Hutchinson
stared at him and breathed hard and short in his suspense. The stiff old chap
was thinking things over and putting things together in his lawyer's way. He
was entirely oblivious to his surroundings. Little Ann went on with her
mending, but she wore her absorbed look, and it was not a result of her work.
Tembarom came back with
some papers in his hand. They were yellowed old letters, and on the top of the
package there was a worn daguerreotype-case with broken clasp.
"Here they
are," he said, giving them to Palford. "I guess they+'d just been
married," opening the case. "Get on to her embroidered collar and big
breast-pin with his picture in it. That's English enough, is+n't it? He'd given
it to her for a wedding-present. There+'s something in one of the letters about
it."
It was the letters to
which Mr. Palford gave the most attention. He read them and examined post-marks
and dates. When he had finished, he rose from his chair with a slightly
portentous touch of professional ceremony.
"Yes, those are
sufficiently convincing. You are a very fortunate young man. Allow me to
congratulate you."
He did not look
particularly pleased, though he extended his hand and shook Tembarom's
politely. He was rigorously endeavoring to conceal that he found himself called
upon to make the best of an extremely bad job. Hutchinson started forward,
resting his hands on his knees and glaring with ill-suppressed excitement.
"What's that
for?" Tembarom said. He felt rather like a fool. He laughed half
nervously. It seemed to be up to him to understand, and he did+n't understand
in the least.
"You have, through
your father's distant relationship, inherited a very magnificent property --
the estate of Temple Barholm in Lancashire," Palford began to explain, but
Mr. Hutchinson sprang from his chair outright, crushing his paper in his hand.
"Temple
Barholm!" he almost shouted, "I dunnot believe thee! Why, it+'s one
of th' oldest places in England and one of th' biggest. Th' Temple Barholms as
did+n't come over with th' Conqueror was there before him. Some of them was
Saxon kings! And him -- " pointing a stumpy, red finger disparagingly at
Tembarom, aghast and incredulous -- "that New York lad that+'s sold newspapers
in the streets -- you say he+'s come into it?"
"Precisely."
Mr. Palford spoke with some crispness of diction. Noise and bluster annoyed
him. "That is my business here. Mr. Tembarom is, in fact, Mr. Temple
Temple Barholm of Temple Barholm, which you seem to have heard of."
"Heard of it! My
mother was born in the village an' lives there yet. Art tha struck dumb,
lad!" he said almost fiercely to Tembarom. "By Judd! Tha well may
be!"
Tembarom was standing
holding the back of a chair. He was pale, and had once opened his mouth, and
then gulped and shut it. Little Ann had dropped her sewing. His first look had
leaped to her, and she had looked back straight into his eyes.
"I+'m struck
something," he said, his half-laugh slightly unsteady. "Who+'d blame
me?"
"You+'d better sit
down," said Little Ann. "Sudden things are upsetting."
He did sit down. He
felt rather shaky. He touched himself on his chest and laughed again.
"Me!" he
said. "T. T.! Hully gee! It+'s like a turn at a vaudeville."
The sentiment
prevailing in Hutchinson's mind seemed to verge on indignation.
"Thee th' master
of Temple Barholm!" he ejaculated. "Why, it stood for seventy
thousand pound' a year!"
"It did and it
does," said Mr. Palford, curtly. He had less and less taste for the
situation. There was neither dignity nor proper sentiment in it. The young man
was utterly incapable of comprehending the meaning and proportions of the
extraordinary event which had befallen him. It appeared to present to him the
aspect of a somewhat slangy New York joke.
"You do not seem
much impressed, Mr. Temple Barholm," he said.
"Oh, I+'m
impressed, all right," answered Tembarom, "but, say, this thing can't
be true! You could+n't make it true if you sat up all night to do it."
"When I go into
the business details of the matter to- morrow morning you will realize the
truth of it," said Mr. Palford. "Seventy thousand pounds a year --
and Temple Barholm -- are not unsubstantial facts."
"Three hundred and
fifty thousand dollars, my lad -- that+'s what it stands for!" put in Mr.
Hutchinson.
"Well," said
Tembarom, "I guess I can worry along on that if I try hard enough. I
may+n't be able to keep myself in the way I+'ve been used to, but I+'ve got to
make it do."
Mr. Palford stiffened.
He did not know that the garish, flippant-sounding joking was the kind of
defense the streets of New York had provided Mr. Temple Barholm with in many an
hour when he had been a half-clad newsboy with an empty stomach, and a bundle
of unsold newspapers under his arm.
"You are
jocular," he said. "I find the New Yorkers are given to being jocular
-- continuously."
Tembarom looked at him
rather searchingly. Palford would+n't have found it possible to believe that
the young man knew all about his distaste and its near approach to disgust,
that he knew quite well what he thought of his ten-dollar suit, his
ex-newsboy's diction, and his entire incongruousness as a factor in any
circumstances connected with dignity and splendor. He would certainly not have
credited the fact that though he had not the remotest idea what sort of a place
Temple Barholm was, and what sort of men its long line of possessors had been,
he had gained a curious knowledge of their significance through the mental
attitude of their legal representative when he for a moment failed to conceal
his sense of actual revolt.
"It seems sort of
like a joke till you get on to it," he said. "But I guess it ain't
such a merry jest as it seems."
And then Mr. Palford
did begin to observe that he had lost his color entirely; also that he had a
rather decent, sharp-cut face, and extremely white and good young teeth, which
he showed not unattractively when he smiled. And he smiled frequently, but he
was not smiling now.
IN the course of the
interview given to the explaining of business and legal detail which took place
between Mr. Palford and his client the following morning, Tembarom's knowledge
of his situation extended itself largely, and at the same time added in a
proportionate degree to his sense of his own incongruity as connected with it.
He sat at a table in Palford's private sitting-room at the respectable,
old-fashioned hotel the solicitor had chosen -- sat and listened, and answered
questions and asked them, until his head began to feel as though it were
crammed to bursting with extraordinary detail.
It was all
extraordinary to him. He had had no time for reading and no books to read, and
therefore knew little of fiction. He was entirely ignorant of all romance but
such as the New York papers provided. This was highly colored, but it did not
deal with events connected with the possessors of vast English estates and the
details of their habits and customs. His geographical knowledge of Great
Britain was simple and largely incorrect. Information concerning its usual
conditions and aspects had come to him through talk of international marriages
and cup races, and had made but little impression upon him. He liked New York
-- its noise, its streets, its glare, its Sunday newspapers, with their
ever-increasing number of sheets, and pictures of everything on earth which
could be photographed. His choice, when he could allow himself a fifty-cent
seat at the theater, naturally ran to productions which were farcical or
cheerfully musical. He had never reached serious drama, perhaps because he had
never had money enough to pay for entrance to anything like half of the
"shows" the other fellows recommended. He was totally unprepared for
the facing of any kind of drama as connected with himself. The worst of it was
that it struck him as being of the nature of farce when regarded from the
normal New York point of new. If he had somehow had the luck to come into the
possession of money in ways which were familiar to him, -- to "strike it
rich" in the way of a "big job" or "deal," -- he would
have been better able to adjust himself to circumstances. He might not have
known how to spend his money, but he would have spent it in New York on New
York joys. There would have been no foreign remoteness about the thing,
howsoever fantastically unexpected such fortune might have been. At any rate,
in New York he would have known the names of places and things.
Through a large part of
his interview with Palford his elbow rested on the table, and he held his chin
with his hand and rubbed it thoughtfully. The last Temple Temple Barholm had
been an eccentric and uncompanionable person. He had lived alone and had not
married. He had cherished a prejudice against the man who would have succeeded
him as next of kin if he had not died young. People had been of the opinion
that he had disliked him merely because he did not wish to be reminded that
some one else must some day inevitably stand in his shoes, and own the
possessions of which he himself was arrogantly fond. There were always more
female Temple Barholms than male ones, and the families were small. The
relative who had emigrated to Brooklyn had been a comparatively unknown person.
His only intercourse with the head of the house had been confined to a begging
letter, written from America when his circumstances were at their worst. It was
an ill-mannered and ill-expressed letter, which had been considered presuming,
and had been answered chillingly with a mere five-pound note, clearly explained
as a final charity. This begging letter, which bitterly contrasted the writer's
poverty with his indifferent relative's luxuries, had, by a curious trick of
chance which preserved it, quite extraordinarily turned up during an
examination of apparently unimportant, forgotten papers, and had furnished a
clue in the search for next of kin. The writer had greatly annoyed old Mr.
Temple Barholm by telling him that he had called his son by his name --
"not that there was ever likely to be anything in it for him." But a
waif of the New York streets who was known as "Tem" or
"Tembarom" was not a link easily attached to any chain, and the
search had been long and rather hopeless. It had, however, at last reached Mrs.
Bowse's boarding-house and before Mr. Palford sat Mr. Temple Temple Barholm, a
cheap young man in cheap clothes, and speaking New York slang with a nasal
accent. Mr. Palford, feeling him appalling and absolutely without the pale, was
still aware that he stood in the position of an important client of the firm of
Palford & Grimby. There was a section of the offices at Lincoln's Inn
devoted to documents representing a lifetime of attention to the affairs of the
Temple Barholm estates. It was greatly to be hoped that the crass ignorance and
commonness of this young outsider would not cause impossible complications.
"He knows nothing!
He knows nothing!" Palford found himself forced to exclaim mentally not
once, but a hundred times, in the course of their talk.
There was -- this
revealed itself as the interview proceeded -- just one slight palliation of his
impossible benightedness: he was not the kind of young man who, knowing
nothing, huffily protects himself by pretending to know everything. He was of
an unreserve concerning his ignorance which his solicitor felt sometimes almost
struck one in the face. Now and then it quite made one jump. He was singularly
free from any vestige of personal vanity. He was also singularly unready to
take offense. To the head of the firm of Palford & Grimby, who was not
accustomed to lightness of manner, and inclined to the view that a person who
made a joke took rather a liberty with him, his tendency to be jocular, even
about himself and the estate of Temple Barholm, was irritating and somewhat
disrespectful. Mr. Palford did not easily comprehend jokes of any sort;
especially was he annoyed by cryptic phraseology and mammoth exaggeration. For
instance, he could not in the least compass Mr. Temple Barholm's meaning when
he casually remarked that something or other was "all to the merry";
or again, quite as though he believed that he was using reasonable English
figures of speech, "The old fellow thought he was the only pebble on the
beach." In using the latter expression he had been referring to the late
Mr. Temple Barholm; but what on earth was his connection with the sea-shore and
pebbles? When confronted with these baffling absurdities, Mr. Palford either
said. "I beg pardon," or stiffened and remained silent.
When Tembarom learned
that he was the head of one of the oldest families in England, no aspect of the
desirable dignity of his position reached him in the least.
"Well," he
remarked, "there+'s quite a lot of us can go back to Adam and Eve."
When he was told that he
was lord of the manor of Temple Barholm, he did not know what a manor was.
"What+'s a manor,
and what happens if you+'re lord of it?" he asked.
He had not heard of
William the Conqueror, and did not appear moved to admiration of him, though he
owned that he seemed to have "put it over."
"Why did+n't he
make a republic of it while he was about it?" he said. "But I guess
that was+n't his kind. He did+n't do all that fighting for his health."
His interest was not
alone totally dissevered from the events of past centuries; it was as
dissevered from those of mere past years. The habits, customs, and points of
view of five years before seemed to have been cast into a vast waste-paper
basket as wholly unpractical in connection with present experiences.
"A man that's
going to keep up with the procession can't waste time thinking about yesterday.
What he's got to do is to keep his eye on what+'s going to happen the week
after next," he summed it up.
Rather to Mr. Palford's
surprise, he did not speak lightly, but with a sort of inner seriousness. It
suggested that he had not arrived at this conclusion without the aid of sharp
experience. Now and then one saw a touch of this profound practical perception
in him.
It was not to be denied
that he was clear-headed enough where purely practical business detail was
concerned. He was at first plainly rather stunned by the proportions presented
to him, but his questions were direct and of a common-sense order not to be
despised.
"I don't know
anything about it yet," he said once. "It+'s all Dutch to me. I can't
calculate in half-crowns and pounds and half pounds, but I+'m going to find
out. I+'ve got to."
It was extraordinary
and annoying to feel that one must explain everything; but this impossible
fellow was not an actual fool on all points, and he did not seem to be a
weakling. He might learn certain things in time, and at all events one was no
further personally responsible for him and his impossibilities than the
business concerns of his estate would oblige any legal firm to be. Clients,
whether highly desirable or otherwise, were no more than clients. They were not
relatives whom one must introduce to one's friends. Thus Mr. Palford, who was
not a specially humane or sympathetic person, mentally decided. He saw no
pathos in this raw young man, who would presently find himself floundering
unaided in waters utterly unknown to him. There was even a touch of bitter
amusement is the solicitor's mind as he glanced toward the future.
He explained with
detail the necessity for their immediate departure for the other side of the
Atlantic. Certain legal formalities which must at once be attended to demanded
their presence in England. Foreseeing this, on the day when he had finally felt
himself secure as to the identity of his client he had taken the liberty of
engaging optionally certain state-rooms on the Adriana, sailing the following
Wednesday.
"Subject of course
to your approval," he added politely. "But it is imperative that we should
be on the spot as early as possible." He did not mention that he himself
was abominably tired of his sojourn on alien shores, and wanted to be back in
London in his own chambers, with his own club within easy reach.
Tembarom's face changed
its expression. He had been looking rather weighted down and fatigued, and he
lighted up to eagerness.
"Say," he
exclaimed, "why could+n't we go on the Transatlantic on Saturday?"
"It is one of the
small, cheap boats," objected Palford. "The accommodation would be
most inferior."
Tembarom leaned forward
and touched his sleeve in hasty, boyish appeal.
"I want to go on
it," he said; "I want to go steerage."
Palford stared at him.
"You want to go on
the Transatlantic! Steerage!" he ejaculated, quite aghast. This was a
novel order of madness to reveal itself in the recent inheritor of a great
fortune.
Tembarom's appeal grew
franker; it took on the note of a too crude young fellow's misplaced
confidence.
"You do this for
me," he said. "I+'d give a farm to go on that boat. The Hutchinsons
are sailing on it -- Mr. and Miss Hutchinson, the ones you saw at the house
last night."
"I -- it is really
impossible." Mr. Palford hesitated. "As to steerage, my dear Mr.
Temple Barholm, you -- you can't."
Tembarom got up and
stood with his hands thrust deep in his pockets. It seemed to be a sort of
expression of his sudden hopeful excitement.
"Why not?" he
said. "If I own about half of England and have money to burn, I guess I
can buy a steerage passage on a nine-day steamer."
"You can buy
anything you like," Palford answered stiffly. "It is not a matter of
buying. But I should not be conducting myself properly toward you if I allowed
it. It would not be -- becoming."
"Becoming!"
cried Tembarom, "Thunder! It+'s not a spring hat. I tell you I want to go
just that way."
Palford saw abnormal
breakers ahead. He felt that he would be glad when he had landed his charge
safely at Temple Barholm. Once there, his family solicitor was not called upon
to live with him and hobnob with his extraordinary intimates.
"As to
buying," he said, still with marked lack of enthusiasm, "instead of
taking a steerage passage on the Transatlantic yourself, you might no doubt
secure first-class state-rooms for Mr. and Miss Hutchinson on the Adriana,
though I seriously advise against it.
Tembarom shook his
head.
"You don't know
them," he said. "They would+n't let me. Hutchinson+'s a queer old
fellow and he+'s had the hardest kind of luck, but he+'s as proud as they make
'em. Me butt in and offer to pay their passage back, as if they were paupers,
just because I+'ve suddenly struck it rich! Hully gee! I guess not. A fellow
that+'s been boosted up in the air all in a minute, as I have, has got to lie
pretty low to keep folks from wanting to kick him, anyhow. Hutchinson's a
darned sight smarter fellow than I am, and he knows it -- and he+'s Lancashire,
you bet." He stopped a minute and flushed. "As to Little Ann,"
he said -- "me make that sort of a break with her! Well, I should be a
fool."
Palford was a
cold-blooded and unimaginative person, but a long legal experience had built up
within him a certain shrewdness of perception. He had naturally glanced once or
twice at the girl sitting still at her mending, and he had observed that she said
very little and had a singularly quiet, firm little voice.
"I beg pardon. You
are probably right. I had very little conversation with either of them. Miss
Hutchinson struck me as having an intelligent face."
"She+'s a
wonder," said Tembarom, devoutly. "She+'s just a wonder."
"Under the
circumstances," suggested Mr. Palford, "it might not be a bad idea to
explain to her your idea of the steerage passage. An intelligent girl can often
give excellent advice. You will probably have an opportunity of speaking to her
to- night. Did you say they were sailing to-morrow?"
To-morrow! That brought
it so near that it gave Tembarom a shock. He had known that they sailed on
Saturday, and now Saturday had become to-morrow. Things began to surge through
his mind -- all sorts of things he had no time to think of clearly, though it
was true they had darted vaguely about in the delirious excitement of the
night, during which he had scarcely slept at all. His face changed again, and
the appeal died out of it. He began to look anxious and restless.
"Yes, they+'re
going to-morrow," he answered.
"You see,"
argued Mr. Palford, with conviction, "how impossible it would be for us to
make any arrangements in so few hours. You will excuse my saying," he
added punctiliously, that I could not make the voyage in the steerage."
Tembarom laughed. He
thought he saw him doing it.
"That+'s so,"
he said. Then, with renewed hope, he added, "Say, I+'m going to try and
get them to wait till Wednesday."
"I do not think --
" Mr. Palford began, and then felt it wiser to leave things as they were.
"But I+'m not qualified to give an opinion. I do not know Miss Hutchinson
at all."
But the statement was
by no means frank. He had a private conviction that he did know her to a
certain degree. And he did.
THERE was a slight
awkwardness even to Tembarom in entering the dining-room that evening. He had
not seen his fellow boarders, as his restless night had made him sleep later
than usual. But Mrs. Bowse had told him of the excitement he had caused.
"They just
could+n't eat," she said. "They could do nothing but talk and talk
and ask questions; and I had waffles, too, and they got stone-cold."
The babel of friendly
outcry which broke out on his entry was made up of jokes, ejaculations,
questions, and congratulatory outbursts from all sides.
"Good old T.
T.!" "Give him a Harvard yell! Rah! Rah! Rah!" "Lend me
fifty-five cents?" "Where's your tiara?" "Darned glad of
it!" "Make us a speech!"
"Say,
people," said Tembarom, "don't you get me rattled or I can't tell you
anything. I+'m rattled enough already."
"Well, is it
true?" called out Mr. Striper.
"No,"
Tembarom answered back, sitting down. "It could+n't be; that+'s what I
told Palford. I shall wake up in a minute or two and find myself in a hospital
with a peacherino of a trained nurse smoothing `me piller.' You can't fool me
with a pipe-dream like this. Palford's easier; he's not a New Yorker. He says
it is true, and I can't get out of it."
"Whew! Great
Jakes!" A long breath was exhaled all round the table.
"What are you,
anyhow?" cried Jim Bowles across the dishes.
Tembarom rested his
elbow on the edge of the table and began to check off his points on his
fingers.
"I+'m this, he
said: "I+'m Temple Temple Barholm, Esquire, of Temple Barholm, Lancashire,
England. At the time of the flood my folks knocked up a house just about where
the ark landed, and I guess they've held on to it ever since. I don't know what
business they went into, but they made money. Palford swears I+'ve got three
hundred and fifty thousand dollars a year. I was+n't going to call the man a
liar; but I just missed it, by jings!"
He was trying to
"bluff it out." Somehow he felt he had to. He felt it more than ever
when a momentary silence fell upon those who sat about the table. It fell when
he said "three hundred and fifty thousand dollars a year." No one
could find voice to make any remark for a few seconds after that.
"Are you a lord --
or a duke?" some one asked after breath had recovered itself.
"No, I+'m
not," he replied with relief. "I just got out from under that; but
the Lord knows how I did it."
"What are you
going to do first?" said Jim Bowles.
"I+'ve got to go
and `take possession.' That's what Palford calls it. I+'ve been a lost heir for
nearly two years, and I+'ve got to show myself."
Hutchinson had not
joined the clamor of greeting, but had grunted disapproval more than once. He
felt that, as an Englishman, he had a certain dignity to maintain. He knew
something about big estates and their owners. He was not like these common New
York chaps, who regarded them as Arabian Nights tales to make jokes about. He
had grown up as a village boy in proper awe of Temple Barholm. They were
ignorant fools, this lot. He had no patience with them. He had left the village
and gone to work in Manchester when he was a boy of twelve, but as long as he
had remained in his mother's cottage it had been only decent good manners for
him to touch his forehead respectfully when a Temple Barholm, or a Temple
Barholm guest or carriage or pony phaeton, passed him by. And this chap was Mr.
Temple Temple Barholm himself! Lord save us!
Little Ann said nothing
at all; but, then, she seldom said anything during meal-times. When the rest of
the boarders laughed, she ate her dinner and smiled. Several times, despite her
caution, Tembarom caught her eye, and somehow held it a second with his. She
smiled at him when this happened; but there was something restless and eager in
his look which made her wish to evade it. She knew what he felt, and she knew
why he kept up his jokes and never once spoke seriously. She knew he was not
comfortable, and did not enjoy talking about hundreds of thousands a year to
people who worked hard for ten or twenty "per." To-morrow morning was
very near, she kept thinking. To-morrow night she would be lying in her berth
in the steerage, or more probably taking care of her father, who would be very
uncomfortable.
"What will Galten
do?" Mr. Striper asked.
"I don't
know," Tembarom answered, and he looked troubled. Three hundred and fifty
thousand dollars a year might not be able to give aid to a wounded society
page.
"What are you
going to do with your Freak?" called out Julius Steinberger.
Tembarom actually
started. As things had surged over him, he had had too much to think over. He
had not had time to give to his strange responsibility; it had become one
nevertheless.
"Are you going to
leave him behind when you go to England?"
He leaned forward and
put his chin on his hand.
"Why, say,"
he said, as though he were thinking it out, "he+'s spoken about England
two or three times. He's said he must go there. By jings! I+'ll take him with
me, and see what+'ll happen."
When Little Ann got up
to leave the room he followed her and her father into the hall.
"May I come up and
talk it over with you?" he appealed. "I+'ve got to talk to some one
who knows something about it. I shall go dotty if I don't. It+'s too much like
a dream."
"Come on up when
you+'re ready," answered Hutchinson. "Ann and me can give you a tip
or two."
"I+'m going to be
putting the last things in the trunks," said Ann, "but I dare say you
won't mind that. The express+'ll be here by eight in the morning."
"O Lord!"
groaned Tembarom.
When he went up to the
fourth floor a little later, Hutchinson had fallen into a doze in his chair
over his newspaper, and Ann was kneeling by a trunk in the hall, folding small
articles tightly, and fitting them into corners. To Tembarom she looked even
more than usual like a slight child thing one could snatch up in one's arms and
carry about or set on one's knee without feeling her weight at all. An inferior
gas-jet on the wall just above her was doing its best with the lot of soft, red
hair, which would have been an untidy bundle if it had not been hers.
Tembarom sat down on
the trunk next to her.
"O Little
Ann!" he broke out under his breath, lest the sound of his voice might
check Hutchinson's steady snoring. "O Little Ann!"
Ann leaned back,
sitting upon her small heels, and looked up at him.
"You+'re all
upset, and it+'s not to be wondered at, Mr. Temple Barholm," she said.
"Upset! You+'re
going away to-morrow morning! And, for the Lord's sake, don't call me
that!" he protested.
"You+'re going
away yourself next Wednesday. And you are Mr. Temple Barholm. You+'ll never be
called anything else in England.
"How am I going to
stand it?" he protested again. "How could a fellow like me stand it!
To be yanked out of good old New York, and set down in a place like a museum,
with Central Park round it, and called Mr. Temple Temple Barholm instead of
just `Tem' or `T. T.'! It+'s not natural."
"What you must do,
Mr. Temple Barholm, is to keep your head clear, that+'s all," she replied
maturely.
"Lord! if I+'d got
a head like yours!"
She seemed to take him
in, with a benign appreciativeness, in his entirety.
"Well, you
have+n't," she admitted, though quite without disparagement, merely with
slight reservation. "But you+'ve got one like your own. And it+'s a good
head -- when you try to think steady. Yours is a man's head, and mine+'s only a
woman's."
"It+'s Little Ann
Hutchinson's, by gee!" said Tembarom, with feeling.
"Listen here, Mr.
Tem -- Temple Barholm," she went on, as nearly disturbed as he had ever
seen her outwardly. "It+'s a wonderful thing that+'s happened to you.
It+'s like a novel. That splendid place, that splendid name! It seems so queer
to think I should ever have talked to a Mr. Temple Barholm as I+'ve talked to
you."
He leaned forward a
little as though something drew him.
"But" --
there was unsteady appeal in his voice -- "you have liked me, have+n't
you, Little Ann?"
Her own voice seemed to
drop into an extra quietness that made it remote. She looked down at her hands
on her lap.
"Yes, I have liked
you. I have told Father I liked you," she answered.
He got up, and made an
impetuous rush at his goal.
"Then-say, I+'m
going in there to wake up Mr. Hutchinson and ask him not to sail to-morrow
morning."
"You+'d better not
wake him up," she answered, smiling; but he saw that her face changed and
flushed. "It's not a good time to ask Father anything when he+'s just been
waked up. And we have to go. The express is coming at eight."
"Send it away
again; tell 'em you're not going. Tell 'em any old thing. Little Ann, what+'s
the matter with you? Something+'s the matter. Have I made a break?"
He had felt the
remoteness in her even before he had heard it in her dropped voice. It had been
vaguely there even when he sat down on the trunk. Actually there was a touch of
reserve about her, as though she was keeping her little place with the
self-respecting propriety of a girl speaking to a man not of her own world.
"I dare say I+'ve
done some fool thing without knowing it. I don't know where I+'m at,
anyhow," he said woefully.
"Don't look at me
like that, Mr. Temple Barholm," she said -- "as if I was unkind. I --
I+'m not."
"But you+'re
different," he implored. "I saw it the minute I came up. I ran
up-stairs just crazy to talk to you, -- yes, crazy to talk to you -- and you --
well, you were different. Why are you, if you+'re not mad?"
Then she rose and stood
holding one of her neatly rolled packages in her hand. Her eyes were soft and clear,
and appealed maternally to his reason.
"Because
everything+'s different. You just think a bit," she answered.
He stared at her a few
seconds, and then understanding of her dawned upon him. He made a human young
dash at her, and caught her arm.
"What!" he
cried out. "You mean this Temple Barholm song and dance makes things
different? Not on your life! You+'re not the girl to work that on me, as if it
was my fault. You+'ve got to hear me speak my piece. Ann -- you+'ve just got
to!"
He had begun to tremble
a little, and she herself was not steady; but she put a hand on his arm.
"Don't say
anything you+'ve not had time to think about," she said.
"I+'ve been
thinking of pretty near nothing else ever since I came here. Just as soon as I
looked at you across the table that first day I saw my finish, and every day
made me surer. I+'d never had any comfort or taking care of, -- I did+n't know
the first thing about it, -- and it seemed as if all there was of it in the
world was just in you."
"Did you think
that?" she asked falteringly.
"Did I? That's how
you looked to me, and it+'s how you look now. The way you go about taking care
of everybody and just handing out solid little chunks of good sense to every
darned fool that needs them, why -- " There was a break in his voice --
"why, it just knocked me out the first round." He held her a little
away from him, so that he could yearn over her, though he did not know he was
yearning. "See, I'd sworn I'd never ask a girl to marry me until I could
keep her. Well, you know how it was, Ann. I could+n't have kept a goat, and I
was+n't such a fool that I did+n't know it. I+'ve been pretty sick when I
thought how it was; but I never worried you, did I?"
"No, you
did+n't."
"I just got busy.
I worked like -- well, I got busier than I ever was in my life. When I got the
page sure, I let myself go a bit, sort of hoping. And then this Temple Barholm
thing hits me."
"That is the thing
you+'ve got to think of now," said Little Ann. "I+'m going to talk
sensible to you."
"Don't, Ann! Good
Lord! don't!"
"I must." She
put her last tight roll into the trunk and tried to shut the lid. "Please
lock this for me."
He locked it, and then
she seated herself on the top of it, though it was rather high for her, and her
small feet dangled. Her eyes looked large and moist like a baby's, and she took
out a handkerchief and lightly touched them.
"You+'ve made me
want to cry a bit," she said, "but I+'m not going to."
"Are you going to
tell me you don't want me?" he asked, with anxious eyes.
"No, I+'m
not."
"God bless
you!" He was going to make a dash at her again, but pulled himself up
because he must. "No, by jings!" he said. "I+'m not going to
till you let me."
"You see, it+'s
true your head+'s not like mine," she said reasonably. "Men's heads
are mostly not like women's. They+'re men, of course, and they+'re superior to
women, but they+'re what I'd call more fluttery-like. Women must remind them of
things."
"What -- what kind
of things?"
"This kind. You
see, Grandmother lives near Temple Barholm, and I know what it+'s like, and you
don't. And I+'ve seen what seventy thousand-pounds a year means, and you
have+n't. And you+'ve got to go and find out for yourself."
"What+'s the
matter with you coming along to help me?"
"I should+n't help
you; that's it. I should hold you back. I+'m nothing but Ann Hutchinson, and I
talk Manchester -- and I drop my h's."
"I love to hear
you drop your little h's all over the place," he burst forth impetuously.
"I love it."
She shook her head.
"The girls that go
to garden-parties at Temple Barholm look like those in the `Ladies' Pictorial,'
and they+'ve got names and titles same as those in novels."
He answered her in
genuine anguish. He had never made any mistake about her character, and she was
beginning to make him feel afraid of her in the midst of his adoration.
"What do I want
with a girl out of a magazine?" he cried. "Where should I hang her
up?"
She was not unfeeling,
but unshaken and she went on:
"I should look
like a housemaid among them. How would you feel with a wife of that sort, when
the other sort was about?"
"I should feel
like a king, that's what I should feel like," he replied indignantly.
"I should+n't feel
like a queen. I should feel miserable."
She sat with her little
feet dangling, and her hands folded in her lap. Her infantile blue eyes held
him as the Ancient Mariner had been held. He could not get away from the clear
directness of them. He did not want to exactly, but she frightened him more and
more.
"I should be
ashamed," she proceeded. "I should feel as if I had taken an
advantage. What you+'ve got to do is to find out something no one else can find
out for you, Mr. Temple Barholm."
"How can I find it
out without you? It was you who put me on to the wedding-cake; you can put me
on to other things."
"Because I+'ve
lived in the place," she answered unswervingly. "I know how funny it
is for any one to think of me being Mrs. Temple Barholm. You don't."
"You bet I
don't," he answered; "but I+'ll tell you what I do know, and that+'s
how funny it is that I should be Mr. Temple Barholm. I+'ve got on to that all
right, all right. Have you?"
She looked at him with
a reflection that said much. She took him in with a judicial summing up of which
it must be owned an added respect was part. She had always believed he had more
sense than most young men, and now she knew it.
"When a person+'s
clever enough to see things for himself, he+'s generally clever enough to
manage them," she replied.
He knelt down beside
the trunk and took both her hands in his. He held them fast and rather hard.
"Are you throwing
me down for good, Little Ann?" he said. "If you are, I can't stand
it, I won't stand it."
"If you care about
me like that, you+'ll do what I tell you," she interrupted, and she
slipped down from the top of her trunk. "I know what Mother would say.
She+'d say, `Ann, you give that young man a chance.' And I+'m going to give you
one. I+'ve said all I+'m going to, Mr. Temple Barholm."
He took both her elbows
and looked at her closely, feeling a somewhat awed conviction.
"I -- believe --
you have," he said.
And here the sound of
Mr. Hutchinson's loud and stertorous breathing ceased, and he waked up, and
came to the door to find out what Ann was doing.
"What are you two
talking about?" he asked. "People think when they whisper it+'s not
going to disturb anybody, but it+'s worse than shouting in a man's ear."
Tembarom walked into
the room.
"I+'ve been asking
Little Ann to marry me," he announced, "and she won't."
He sat down in a chair
helplessly, and let his head fall into his hands.
"Eh!"
exclaimed Hutchinson. He turned and looked at Ann disturbedly. "I thought
a bit ago tha did+n't deny but what tha+'d took to him?"
"I did+n't,
Father," she answered. "I don't change my mind that quick. I -- would
have been willing to say `Yes' when you would+n't have been willing to let me.
I did+n't know he was Mr. Temple Barholm then."
Hutchinson rubbed the
back of his head, reddening and rather bristling.
"Dost tha think
th' Temple Barholms would look down on thee?"
"I should look
down on myself if I took him up at his first words, when he+'s all upset with
excitement, and has+n't had time to find out what things mean. I+'m -- well,
I+'m too fond of him, Father."
Hutchinson gave her a
long, steady look.
"You are?" he
said.
"Yes, I am."
Tembarom lifted his
head, and looked at her, too.
"Are you?" he
asked.
She put her hands
behind her back, and returned his look with the calm of ages.
"I+'m not going to
argue about it," she answered. "Arguing+'s silly."
His involuntary rising
and standing before her was a sort of unconscious tribute of respect.
"I know
that," he owned. "I know you. That's why I take it like this. But I
want you to tell me one thing. If this had+n't happened, if I+'d only had
twenty dollars a week, would you have taken me?"
"If you+'d had
fifteen, and Father could have spared me I+'d have taken you. Fifteen dollars a
week is three pounds two and sixpence, and I+'ve known curates' wives that had
to bring up families on less. It would+n't go as far in New York as it would in
the country in England, but we could have made it do -- until you got more. I
know you, too, Mr. Temple Barholm."
He turned to her
father, and saw in his florid countenance that which spurred him to bold
disclosure.
"Say," he put
it to him, as man to man, "she stands there and says a thing like that,
and she expects a fellow not to jerk her into his arms and squeeze the life
oiut of her! I dare+n't do it, and I+'m not going to try; but -- well, you said
her mother was like her, and I guess you know what I+'m up against."
Hutchinson's grunting
chuckle contained implications of exultant tenderness and gratified paternal
pride.
"She's th' very
spit and image of her mother," he said, "and she had th' sense of ten
women rolled into one, and th' love of twenty. You let her be, and you+'re as
safe as th' Rock of Ages."
"Do you think I
don't know that?" answered Tembarom, his eyes shining almost to moisture.
"But what hits me, by thunder! is that I+'ve lost the chance of seeing her
work out that fifteen-dollar-a-week proposition, and it drives me crazy."
"I should have
downright liked to try it," said Little Ann, with speculative reflection,
and while she knitted her brows in lovely consideration of the attractive problem,
several previously unknown dimples declared themselves about her mouth.
"Ann,"
Tembarom ventured, "if I go to Temple Barholm and try it a year and learn
all about it -- "
"It would take
more than a year," said Ann.
"Don't make it
two," Tembarom pleaded. "I+'ll sit up at night with wet towels round
my head to learn; I+'ll spend fourteen hours a day with girls that look like
the pictures in the `Ladies' Pictorial,' or whatever it is in England; I+'ll
give them every chance in life, if you+'ll let me off afterward. There must be
another lost heir somewhere; let+'s dig him up and then come back to little old
New York and be happy. Gee! Ann," -- letting himself go and drawing nearer
to her, -- "how happy we could be in one of those little flats in Harlem!"
She was a warm little
human thing, and a tender one, and when he came close to her, glowing with
tempestuous boyish eagerness, her eyes grew bluer because they were suddenly
wet, and she was obliged to move softly back.
"Yes," she
said; "I know those little flats. Any one could -- " She stopped
herself, because she had been going to reveal what a home a woman could make in
rooms like the compartments in a workbox. She knew and saw it all. She drew
back a little again, but she put out a hand and laid it on his sleeve.
"When you+'ve had
quite time enough to find out, and know what the other thing means, I+'ll do
whatever you want me to do," she said. "It won't matter what it is.
I+'ll do it."
"She means
that," Hutchinson mumbled unsteadily, turning aside. "Same as her
mother would have meant it. And she means it in more ways than one."
And so she did. The
promise included quite firmly the possibility of not unnatural changes in
himself such as young ardor could not foresee, even the possibility of his new
life withdrawing him entirely from the plane on which rapture could materialize
on twenty dollars a week in a flat in Harlem.
A TYPE as exotic as
Tembarom's was to his solicitor naturally suggested problems. Mr. Palford found
his charge baffling because, according to ordinary rules, a young man so
rudimentary should have presented no problems not perfectly easy to explain. It
was herein that he was exotic. Mr. Palford, who was not given to subtle analysis
of differences in character and temperament, argued privately that an English
youth who had been brought up in the streets would have been one of two or
three things. He would have been secretly terrified and resentful, roughly
awkward and resentful, or boastfully delighted and given to a common youth's
excitedly common swagger at finding himself suddenly a "swell."
This special kind of
youth would most assuredly have constantly thought of himself as a
"swell" and would have lost his head altogether, possibly with
results in the matter of conduct in public which would have been either
maddening or crushing to the spirit of a well-bred, mature-minded legal
gentleman temporarily thrust into the position of bear-leader.
But Tembarom was none
of these things. If he was terrified, he did not reveal his anguish. He was
without doubt not resentful, but on the contrary interested and curious, though
he could not be said to bear himself as one elated. He indulged in no frolics
or extravagances. He saw the Hutchinsons off on their steamer, and supplied
them with fruit and flowers and books with respectful moderation. He did not
conduct himself as a benefactor bestowing unknown luxuries, but as a young man
on whom unexpected luck had bestowed decent opportunities to express his
friendship. In fact, Palford's taste approved of his attitude. He was evidently
much under the spell of the slight girl with the Manchester accent and sober
blue eyes, but she was neither flighty nor meretricious, and would have sense enough
to give no trouble even when he naturally forgot her in the revelations of his
new life. Her father also was plainly a respectable working-man, with a blunt
Lancashire pride which would keep him from intruding.
"You can't butt in
and get fresh with a man like that," Tembarom said. "Money would+n't
help you. He+'s too independent."
After the steamer had
sailed away it was observable to his solicitor that Mr. Temple Barholm was
apparently occupied every hour. He did not explain why he seemed to rush from
one part of New York to another and why he seemed to be seeking interviews with
persons it was plainly difficult to get at. He was evidently working hard to
accomplish something or other before he left the United States, perhaps. He
asked some astutely practical business questions; his intention seeming to be
to gain a definite knowledge of what his future resources would be and of his
freedom to use them as he chose.
Once or twice Mr.
Palford was rather alarmed by the tendency of his questions. Had he actually
some prodigious American scheme in view? He seemed too young and inexperienced
in the handling of large sums for such a possibility. But youth and
inexperience and suddenly inherited wealth not infrequently led to rash
adventures. Something which Palford called "very handsome" was done
for Mrs. Bowse and the boarding-house. Mrs. Bowse was evidently not proud
enough to resent being made secure for a few years' rent. The extraordinary
page was provided for after a large amount of effort and expenditure of energy.
"I could+n't leave
Galton high and dry," Tembarom explained when he came in after rushing
about. "I think I know a man he might try, but I+'ve got to find him and
put him on to things. Good Lord! nobody rushed about to find me and offer me
the job. I hope this fellow wants it as bad as I did. He+'ll be up in the
air." He discovered the whereabouts of the young man in question, and
finding him, as the youngster almost tearfully declared, "about down and
out," his proposition was met with the gratitude the relief from a
prospect of something extremely like starvation would mentally produce.
Tembarom took him to Galton after having talked him over in detail.
"He+'s had an
education, and you know how much I+'d had when I butted into the page," he
said. "No one but you would have let me try it. You did it only because
you saw -- you saw -- "
"Yes, I saw,"
answered Galton, who knew exactly what he had seen and who found his up-town
social representative and his new situation as interesting as amusing and just
touched with the pathetic element. Galton was a traveled man and knew England
and several other countries well.
"You saw that a
fellow wanted the job as much as I did would be likely to put up a good fight
to hold it down. I was scared out of my life when I started out that morning of
the blizzard, but I could+n't afford to be scared. I guess soldiers who are
scared fight like that when they see bayonets coming at them. You have
to."
"I wonder how
often a man finds out that he does pretty big things when bayonets are coming
at him," answered Galton, who was actually neglecting his work for a few
minutes so that he might look at and talk to him, this New York descendant of
Norman lords and Saxon kings.
"Joe Bennett had
been trying to live off free-lunch counters for a week when I found him,"
Tembarom explained. "You don't know what that is. He+'ll go at the page
all right. I+'m going to take him up-town and introduce him to my friends there
and get them to boost him along."
"You made
friends," said Galton. "I knew you would."
"Some of the best
ever. Good-natured and open-handed. Well, you bet! Only trouble was they wanted
you to eat and drink everything in sight, and they did+n't quite like it when
you could+n't get outside all the champagne they+'d offer you."
He broke into a big,
pleased laugh.
"When I went in
and told Munsberg he pretty near threw a fit. Of course he thought I was
kidding. But when I made him believe it, he was as glad as if he'd had luck
himself. It was just fine the way people took it. Tell you what, it takes good
luck, or bad luck, to show you how good-natured a lot of folks are. They+'ll
treat Bennett and the page all right; you+'ll see."
"They+'ll miss
you." said Galton.
"I shall miss
them," Tembarom answered in a voice with a rather depressed drop in it.
"I shall miss
you," said Galton.
Tembarom's face
reddened a little.
"I guess it+'d
seem rather fresh for me to tell you how I shall miss you," he said.
"I said that first day that I did+n't know how to tell you how I -- well,
how I felt about you giving a mutt like me that big chance. You never thought I
did+n't know how little I did know, did you?" he inquired almost
anxiously.
"That was it --
that you did know and that you had the backbone and the good spirits to go in
and win," Galton replied. "I+'m a tired man, and good spirits and
good temper seem to me about the biggest assets a man can bring into a thing. I
should+n't have dared do it when I was your age. You deserved the Victoria
Cross," he added, chuckling.
"What's the
Victoria Cross?" asked Tembarom.
"You+'ll find out
when you go to England."
"Well, I+'m not
supposing that you don't know about how many billion things I+'ll have to find
out when I go to England."
"There will be several
thousand," replied Galton moderately; "but you'll learn about them as
you go on."
"Say," said
Tembarom, reflectively, "does+n't it seem queer to think of a fellow
having to keep up his spirits because he+'s fallen into three hundred and fifty
thousand a year? You would+n't think he+'d have to, would you?"
"But you find he
has?" queried Galton, interestedly.
Tembarom's lifted eyes
were so honest that they were touching.
"I don't know
where I+'m at," he said. "I+'m going to wake up in a new place --
like people that die. If you knew what it was like, you would+n't mind it so
much; but you don't know a blamed thing. It's not having seen a sample that
rattles you."
"You+'re fond of
New York?"
"Good Lord! it+'s
all the place I know on earth, and it+'s just about good enough for me, by gee!
It's kept me alive when it might have starved me to death. My! I+'ve had good
times here," he added, flushing with emotion. "Good times -- when I
had+n't a whole meal a day!"
"You+'d have good
times anywhere," commented Galton, also with feeling. "You carry them
over your shoulder, and you share them with a lot of other people."
He certainly shared
some with Joe Bennett, whom he took up-town and introduced right and left to
his friendly patrons, who, excited by the atmosphere of adventure and
prosperity, received him with open arms. To have been the choice of T. Tembarom
as a mere representative of the Earth would have been a great thing for
Bennett, but to be the choice of the hero of a romance of wildest opulence was
a tremendous send-off. He was accepted at once, and when Tembarom actually
"stood for" a big farewell supper of his own in "The Hall,"
and nearly had his hand shaken off by congratulating acquaintances, the fact
that he kept the new aspirant by his side, so that the waves of high popularity
flowed over him until he sometimes lost his joyful breath, established him as a
sort of hero himself.
Mr. Palford did not
know of this festivity, as he also found he was not told of several other
things. This he counted as a feature of his client's exoticism. His
extraordinary lack of concealment of things vanity forbids many from confessing
combined itself with a quite cheerful power to keep his own counsel when he
was, for reasons of his own, so inclined.
"He can keep his
mouth shut, that chap," Hutchinson had said once, and Mr. Palford
remembered it. "Most of us can't. I+'ve got a notion I can; but I don't
many's the time when I should. There+'s a lot more in him than you+'d think
for. He+'s naught but a lad, but he is na half such a fool as he looks."
He was neither hesitant
nor timid, Mr. Palford observed. In an entirely unostentatious way he soon
realized that his money gave things into his hands. He knew he could do most
things he chose to do, and that the power to do them rested in these days with
himself without the necessity of detailed explanation or appeal to others, as
in the case, for instance, of this mysterious friend or protégé whose name was
Strangeways. Of the history of his acquaintance with him Palford knew nothing,
and that he should choose to burden himself with a half-witted invalid -- in
these terms the solicitor described him -- was simply inexplainable. If he had
asked for advice or by his manner left an opening for the offering of it, he
would have been most strongly counseled to take him to a public asylum and
leave him there; but advice on the subject seemed the last thing he desired or
anticipated, and talk about his friend was what he seemed least likely to
indulge in. He made no secret of his intentions, but he frankly took charge of
them as his own special business, and left the rest alone.
"Say nothing and
saw wood," Palford had once been a trifle puzzled by hearing him remark
casually, and he remembered it later, as he remembered the comments of Joseph
Hutchinson. Tembarom had explained himself to Little Ann.
"You+'ll
understand," he said. "It is like this. I guess I feel like you do
when a dog or a cat in big trouble just looks at you as if you were all they
had, and they know if you don't stick by them they+'ll be killed, and it just
drives them crazy. It+'s the way they look at you that you can't stand. I
believe something would burst in that fellow's brain if I left him. When he
found out I was going to do it he+'d just let out some awful kind of a yell
I+'d remember till I died. I dried right up almost as soon as I spoke of him to
Palford. He could+n't see anything but that he was crazy and ought to be put in
an asylum. Well, he+'s not. There+'re times when he talks to me almost
sensible; only he's always so awful low down in his mind you're afraid to let
him go on. And he+'s a little bit better than he was. It seems queer to get to
like a man that+'s sort of dotty, but I tell you, Ann, because you+'ll
understand -- I+'ve got to sort of like him, and want to see if I can work it
out for him somehow. England seems to sort of stick in his mind. If I can't
spend my money in living the way I want to live, -- buying jewelry and clothes
for the girl I+'d like to see dressed like a queen -- I+'m going to do this
just to please myself. I+'m going to take him to England and keep him quiet and
see what+'ll happen. Those big doctors ought to know about all there is to
know, and I can pay them any old thing they want. By jings! is+n't it the limit
-- to sit here and say that and know it+'s true!"
Beyond the explaining
of necessary detail to him and piloting him to England, Mr. Palford did not
hold himself many degrees responsible. His theory of correct conduct assumed no
form of altruism. He had formulated it even before he reached middle age. One
of his fixed rules was to avoid the error of allowing sympathy or sentiment to
hamper him with any unnecessary burden. Natural tendency of temperament had
placed no obstacles in the way of his keeping this rule. To burden himself with
the instruction or modification of this unfortunately hopeless young New Yorker
would be unnecessary. Palford's summing up of him was that he was of a type
with which nothing palliative could be done. There he was. As unavoidable
circumstances forced one to take him, -- commonness, slanginess, appalling
ignorance, and all, -- one could not leave him. Fortunately, no respectable
legal firm need hold itself sponsor for a "next of kin" provided by
fate and the wilds of America.
The Temple Barholm
estate had never, in Mr. Palford's generation, been specially agreeable to deal
with. The late Mr. Temple Temple Barholm had been a client of eccentric and
abominable temper. Interviews with him had been avoided as much as possible.
His domineering insolence of bearing had at times been on the verge of
precipitating unheard-of actions, because it was almost more than gentlemanly
legal flesh and blood could bear. And now appeared this young man.
He rushed about New
York strenuously attending to business concerning himself and his extraordinary
acquaintances, and on the day of the steamer's sailing he presented himself at
the last moment in an obviously just purchased suit of horribly cut clothes. At
all events, their cut was horrible in the eyes of Mr. Palford, who accepted no
cut but that of a West End tailor. They were badly made things enough, because
they were unconsidered garments that Tembarom had barely found time to snatch
from a "ready-made" counter at the last moment. He had been too much
"rushed" by other things to remember that he must have them until
almost too late to get them at all. He bought them merely because they were
clothes, and warm enough to make a voyage in. He possessed a monster ulster, in
which, to Mr. Palford's mind, he looked like a flashy black- leg. He did not
know it was flashy. His opportunities for cultivating a refined taste in the
matter of wardrobe had been limited, and he had wasted no time in fastidious
consideration or regrets. Palford did him some injustice in taking it for
granted that his choice of costume was the result of deliberate bad taste. It
was really not choice at all. He neither liked his clothes nor disliked them.
He had been told he needed warm garments, and he had accepted the advice of the
first salesman who took charge of him when he dropped into the big department
store he was most familiar with because it was the cheapest in town. Even when
it was no longer necessary to be cheap, it was time-saving and easy to go into
a place one knew.
The fact that he was as
he was, and that they were the subjects of comment and objects of unabated
interest throughout the voyage, that it was proper that they should be
companions at table and on deck, filled Mr. Palford with annoyed unease.
Of course every one on
board was familiar with the story of the discovery of the lost heir. The
newspapers had reveled in it, and had woven romances about it which might well
have caused the deceased Mr. Temple Barholm to turn in his grave. After the
first day Tembarom had been picked out from among the less-exciting passengers,
and when he walked the deck, books were lowered into laps or eyes followed him
over their edges. His steamer-chair being placed in a prominent position next
to that of a pretty, effusive Southern woman, the mother of three daughters
whose eyes and eyelashes attracted attention at the distance of a deck's
length, he was without undue delay pro vided with acquaintances who were
prepared to fill his every moment with entertainment.
"The three
Gazelles," as their mother playfully confided to Tembarom her daughters
were called in Charleston, were destructively lovely. They were swaying reeds
of grace, and being in radiant spirits at the prospect of "going to
Europe," were companions to lure a man to any desperate lengths. They
laughed incessantly, as though they were chimes of silver bells; they had
magnolia-petal skins which neither wind nor sun blemished; they had nice young
manners, and soft moods in which their gazelle eyes melted and glowed and their
long lashes drooped. They could dance, they played on guitars, and they sang.
They were as adorable as they were lovely and gay.
"If a fellow was
going to fall in love," Tembarom said to Palford, "there+'d be no way
out of this for him unless he climbed the rigging and dragged his food up in a
basket till he got to Liverpool. If he did+n't go crazy about Irene, he+'d wake
up raving about Honora; and if he got away from Honora, Adelia Louise would
have him `down on the mat.' " From which Mr. Palford argued that the
impression made by the little Miss Hutchinson with the Manchester accent had
not yet had time to obliterate itself.
The Gazelles were of
generous Southern spirit, and did not surround their prize with any barrier of
precautions against other young persons of charm. They introduced him to one
girl after another, and in a day or two he was the center of animated circles
whenever he appeard. The singular thing, however, was that he did not appear as
often as the other men who were on board. He seemed to stay a great deal with
Strangeways, who shared his suite of rooms and never came on deck. Sometimes
the Gazelles prettily reproached him. Adelia Louise suggested to the others
that his lack of advantages in the past had made him feel rather awkward and
embarrassed; but Palford knew he was not embarrassed. He accepted his own
limitations too simply to be disturbed by them. Palford would have been extremely
bored by him if he had been of the type of young outsider who is anxious about
himself and expansive in self-revelation and appeals for advice; but sometimes
Tembarom's air of frankness, which was really the least expansive thing in the
world and revealed nothing whatever, besides concealing everything it chose,
made him feel himself almost irritatingly baffled. It would have been more
natural if he had not been able to keep anything to himself and had really
talked too much.
THE necessary business
in London having been transacted, Tembarom went north to take possession of the
home of his forefathers. It had rained for two days before he left London, and
it rained steadily all the way to Lancashire, and was raining steadily when he
reached Temple Barholm. He had never seen such rain before. It was the quiet,
unmoved persistence of it which amazed him. As he sat in the railroad carriage
and watched the slanting lines of its unabating downpour, he felt that Mr.
Palford must inevitably make some remark upon it. But Mr. Palford continued to
read his newspapers undisturbedly, as though the condition of atmosphere
surrounding him were entirely accustomed and natural. It was of course
necessary and proper that he should accompany his client to his destination,
but the circumstances of the case made the whole situation quite abnormal.
Throughout the centuries each Temple Barholm had succeeded to his estate in a
natural and conventional manner. He had either been welcomed or resented by his
neighbors, his tenants, and his family, and proper and fitting ceremonies had
been observed. But here was an heir whom nobody knew, whose very existence
nobody had even suspected, a young man who had been an outcast in the streets
of the huge American city of which lurid descriptions are given. Even in New
York he could have produced no circle other than Mrs. Bowse's boarding-house
and the objects of interest to the up-town page, so he brought no one with him;
for Strangeways seemed to have been mysteriously disposed of after their
arrival in London.
Never had Palford &
Grimby on their hands a client who seemed so entirely alone. What, Mr. Palford
asked himself, would he do in the enormity of Temple Barholm, which always
struck one as being a place almost without limit. But that, after all, was
neither here nor there. There he was. You cannot undertake to provide a man
with relatives if he has none, or with acquaintances if people do not want to
know him. His past having been so extraordinary, the neighborhood would naturally
be rather shy of him. At first, through mere force of custom and respect for an
old name, punctilious, if somewhat alarmed, politeness would be shown by most
people; but after the first calls all would depend upon how much people could
stand of the man himself.
The aspect of the
country on a wet winter's day was not enlivening. The leafless and dripping
hedges looked like bundles of sticks; the huge trees, which in June would be
majestic bowers of greenery, now held out great skeleton arms, which seemed to
menace both earth and sky. Heavy-faced laborers tramped along muddy lanes;
cottages with soaked bits of dead gardens looked like hovels; big, melancholy
cart-horses, dragging jolting carts along the country roads, hung their heads
as they splashed through the mire.
As Tembarom had known
few persons who had ever been out of America, he had not heard that England was
beautiful, and he saw nothing which led him to suspect its charms. London had
impressed him as gloomy, dirty, and behind the times despite its pretensions;
the country struck him as "the limit." Hully gee! was he going to be
expected to spend his life in this! Should he be obliged to spend his life in
it. He+'d find that out pretty quick, and then, if there was no hard-and-fast
law against it, him for little old New York again, if he had to give up the
whole thing and live on ten per. If he had been a certain kind of youth, his
discontent would have got the better of him, and he might have talked a good
deal to Mr. Palford and said many disparaging things.
"But the man was
born here," he reflected. "I guess he does+n't know anything else,
and thinks it+'s all right. I+'ve heard of English fellows who did+n't like New
York. He looks like that kind."
He had supplied himself
with newspapers and tried to read them. Their contents were as unexciting as
the rain-sodden landscape. There were no head-lines likely to arrest any man's
attention. There was a lot about Parliament and the Court, and one of them had
a column or two about what lords and ladies were doing, a sort of English
up-town or down-town page.
He knew the stuff, but
there was no snap in it, and there were no photographs or descriptions of
dresses. Galton would have turned it down. He could never have made good if he
had done no better than that. He grinned to himself when he read that the king
had taken a drive and that a baby prince had the measles.
"I wonder what
they+'d think of the Sunday Earth," he mentally inquired.
He would have been much
at sea if he had discovered what they really would have thought of it. They
passed through smoke-vomiting manufacturing towns, where he saw many legs
seemingly bearing about umbrellas, but few entire people; they whizzed smoothly
past drenched suburbs, wet woodlands, and endless-looking brown moors, covered
with dead bracken and bare and prickly gorse. He thought these last great
desolate stretches worse than all the rest.
But the railroad
carriage was luxuriously upholstered and comfortable, though one could not walk
about and stretch his legs. In the afternoon, Mr. Palford ordered in tea, and
plainly expected him to drink two cups and eat thin bread and butter. He felt
inclined to laugh, though the tea was all right, and so was the bread and
butter, and he did not fail his companion in any respect. The inclination to
laugh was aroused by the thought of what Jim Bowles and Julius would say if
they could see old T. T. with nothing to do at 4:30 but put in cream and sugar,
as though he were at a tea-party on Fifth Avenue.
But, gee! this rain did
give him the Willies. If he was going to be sorry for himself, he might begin
right now. But he was+n't. He was going to see this thing through.
The train had been
continuing its smooth whir through fields, wooded lands, and queer,
dead-and-alive little villages for some time before it drew up at last at a
small station. Bereft by the season of its garden bloom and green creepers, it
looked a bare and uninviting little place. On the two benches against the wall
of the platform a number of women sat huddled together in the dampness. Several
of them held children in their laps and all stared very hard, nudging one
another as he descended from the train. A number of rustics stood about the platform,
giving it a somewhat crowded air. It struck Tembarom that, for an
out-of-the-way place, there seemed to be a good many travelers, and he wondered
if they could all be going away. He did not know that they were the curious
element among such as lived in the immediate neighborhood of the station and
had come out merely to see him on his first appearance. Several of them touched
their hats as he went by, and he supposed they knew Palford and were saluting
him. Each of them was curious, but no one was in a particularly welcoming mood.
There was, indeed, no reason for anticipating enthusiasm. It was, however, but
human nature that the bucolic mind should bestir itself a little in the desire
to obtain a view of a Temple Barholm who had earned his living by blacking
boots and selling newspapers, unknowing that he was "one o' th'
gentry."
When he stepped from
his first-class carriage, Tembarom found himself confronted by a very straight,
clean-faced, and well-built young man, who wore a long, fawn-colored livery
coat with claret facings and silver buttons. He touched his cockaded hat, and
at once took up the Gladstone bags. Tembarom knew that he was a footman because
he had seen something like him outside restaurants, theaters, and shops in New
York, but he was not sure whether he ought to touch his own hat or not. He
slightly lifted it from his head to show there was no ill feeling, and then
followed him and Mr. Palford to the carriage waiting for them. It was a severe
but sumptuous equipage, and the coachman was as well dressed and well built as
the footman. Tembarom took his place in it with many mental reservations.
"What are the
illustrations on the doors?" he inquired.
"The Temple
Barholm coat of arms," Mr. Palford answered. "The people at the
station are your tenants. Members of the family of the stout man with the broad
hat have lived as yeoman farmers on your land for three hundred years."
They went on their way,
with more rain, more rain, more dripping hedges, more soaked fields, and more
bare, huge- armed trees. Clop, clop, clop, sounded the horses' hoofs along the
road, and from his corner of the carriage Mr. Palford tried to make polite
conversation. Faces peered out of the windows of the cottages, sometimes a
whole family group of faces, all crowded together, eager to look, from the
mother with a baby in her arms to the old man or woman, plainly grandfather or
grandmother -- sharp, childishly round, or bleared old eyes, all excited and
anxious to catch glimpses.
"They are very
curious to see you," said Mr. Palford. "Those two laborers are
touching their hats to you. It will be as well to recognize their salute."
At a number of the
cottage doors the group stood upon the threshold and touched foreheads or
curtsied. Tembarom saluted again and again, and more than once his friendly
grin showed itself. It made him feel queer to drive along, turning from side to
side to acknowledge obeisances, as he had seen a well-known military hero
acknowledge them as he drove down Broadway.
The chief street of the
village of Temple Barholm wandered almost within hailing distance of the great
entrance to the park. The gates were supported by massive pillars, on which
crouched huge stone griffins. Tembarom felt that they stared savagely over his
head as he was driven toward them as for inspection, and in disdainful silence
allowed to pass between them as they stood on guard, apparently with the
haughtiest mental reservations.
The park through which
the long avenue rolled concealed its beauty to the unaccustomed eye, showing
only more bare trees and sodden stretches of brown grass. The house itself, as
it loomed up out of the thickening rain-mist, appalled Tembarom by its size and
gloomily gray massiveness. Before it was spread a broad terrace of stone,
guarded by more griffins of even more disdainful aspect than those watching
over the gates. The stone noses held themselves rigidly in the air as the
reporter of the up-town society page passed with Mr. Palford up a flight of
steps broad enough to make him feel as though he were going to church. Footmen
with powdered heads received him at the carriage door, seemed to assist him to
move, to put one foot before the other for him, to stand in rows as though they
were a military guard ready to take him into custody.
Then he was inside,
standing in an enormous hall filled with furnishings such as he had never seen
or heard of before. Carved oak, suits of armor, stone urns, portraits, another
flight of church steps mounting upward to surrounding galleries, stained-glass windows,
tigers' and lions' heads, horns of tremendous size, strange and beautiful
weapons, suggested to him that the dream he had been living in for weeks had
never before been so much a dream. He had walked about as in a vision, but
among familiar surroundings. Mrs. Bowse's boarders and his hall bedroom had
helped him to retain some hold over actual existence. But here the reverently
saluting villagers staring at him through windows as though he were General
Grant, the huge, stone entrance, the drive of what seemed to be ten miles
through the park, the gloomy mass of architecture looming up, the regiment of
liveried men-servants, with respectfully lowered but excitedly curious eyes,
the dark and solemn richness inclosing and claiming him -- all this created an
atmosphere wholly unreal. As he had not known books, its parallel had not been
suggested to him by literature. He had literally not heard that such things
existed. Selling newspapers and giving every moment to the struggle for life or
living, one did not come within the range of splendors. He had indeed awakened
in that other world of which he had spoken. And though he had heard that there
was another world, he had had neither time nor opportunity to make mental
pictures of it. His life so far had expressed itself in another language of
figures. The fact that he had in his veins the blood of the Norman lords and
Saxon kings may or may not have had something to do with the fact that he was
not abashed, but bewildered. The same factor may or may not have aided him to
preserve a certain stoic, outward composure. Who knows what remote influences
express themselves in common acts of modern common life? As Cassivellaunus
observed his surroundings as he followed in captive chains his conqueror's
triumphal car through the streets of Rome, so the keen-eyed product of New York
pavement life "took in" all about him. Existence had forced upon him
the habit of sharp observance. The fundamental working law of things had
expressed itself in the simple colloquialism, "Keep your eye skinned, and
don't give yourself away." In what phrases the parallel of this concise
advice formulated itself in 55 B. C. no classic has yet exactly informed us,
but doubtless something like it was said in ancient Rome. Tembarom did not give
himself away, and he took rapid, if uncertain, inventory of people and things.
He remarked, for instance, that Palford's manner of speaking to a servant was
totally different from the manner he used in addressing himself. It was
courteous, but remote, as though he spoke across an accepted chasm to beings of
another race. There was no hint of incivility in it, but also no hint of any
possibility that it could occur to the person addressed to hesitate or resent.
It was a subtle thing, and Tembarom wondered how he did it.
They were shown into a
room the walls of which seemed built of books; the furniture was rich and grave
and luxuriously comfortable. A fire blazed as well as glowed in a fine chimney,
and a table near it was set with a glitter of splendid silver urn and equipage
for tea.
"Mrs. Butterworth
was afraid you might not have been able to get tea, sir," said the
man-servant, who did not wear livery, but whose butler's air of established
authority was more impressive than any fawn color and claret enriched with
silver could have encompassed.
Tea again? Perhaps one
was obliged to drink it at regular intervals. Tembarom for a moment did not
awaken to the fact that the man was speaking to him, as the master from whom
orders came. He glanced at Mr. Palford.
"Mr. Temple
Barholm had tea after we left Crowly," Mr. Palford said. "He will no
doubt wish to go to his room at once, Burrill."
"Yes, sir,"
said Burrill, with that note of entire absence of comment with which Tembarom
later became familiar. "Pearson is waiting."
It was not unnatural to
wonder who Pearson was and why he was waiting, but Tembarom knew he would find
out. There was a slight relief on realizing that tea was not imperative. He and
Mr. Palford were led through the hall again. The carriage had rolled away, and
two footmen, who were talking confidentially together, at once stood at
attention. The staircase was more imposing as one mounted it than it appeared
as one looked at it from below. Its breadth made Tembarom wish to lay a hand on
a balustrade, which seemed a mile away. He had never particularly wished to
touch balustrades before. At the head of the first flight hung an enormous
piece of tapestry, its forest and hunters and falconers awakening Tembarom's
curiosity, as it looked wholly unlike any picture he had ever seen in a
shop-window. There were pictures everywhere, and none of them looked like
chromos. Most of the people in the portraits were in fancy dress. Rumors of a
New York millionaire ball had given him some vague idea of fancy dress. A lot
of them looked like freaks. He caught glimpses of corridors lighted by curious,
high, deep windows with leaded panes. It struck him that there was no end to
the place, and that there must be rooms enough in it for a hotel.
"The tapestry chamber,
of course, Burrill," he heard Mr. Palford say in a low tone.
"Yes, sir. Mr.
Temple Barholm always used it."
A few yards farther on
a door stood open, revealing an immense room, rich and gloomy with
tapestry-covered walls and dark oak furniture. A bed which looked to Tembarom
incredibly big, with its carved oak canopy and massive posts, had a presiding
personality of its own. It was mounted by steps, and its hangings and coverlid
were of embossed velvet, time-softened to the perfection of purples and blues.
A fire enriched the color of everything, and did its best to drive the shadows
away. Deep windows opened either into the leafless boughs of close-growing
trees or upon outspread spaces of heavily timbered park, where gaunt, though
magnificent, bare branches menaced and defied. A slim, neat young man, with a
rather pale face and a touch of anxiety in his expression, came forward at
once.
"This is Pearson,
who will valet you," exclaimed Mr. Palford.
"Thank you,
sir," said Pearson in a low, respectful voice. His manner was correctness
itself.
There seemed to Mr.
Palford to be really nothing else to say. He wanted, in fact, to get to his own
apartment and have a hot bath and a rest before dinner.
"Where am I,
Burrill?" he inquired as he turned to go down the corridor.
"The crimson room,
sir," answered Burrill, and he closed the door of the tapestry chamber and
shut Tembarom in alone with Pearson.
FOR a few moments the
two young men looked at each other, Pearson's gaze being one of respectfulness
which hoped to propitiate, if propitiation was necessary, though Pearson
greatly trusted it was not. Tembarom's was the gaze of hasty investigation and
inquiry. He suddenly thought that it would have been "all to the merry"
if somebody had "put him on to" a sort of idea of what was done to a
fellow when he was "valeted." A valet, he had of course gathered,
waited on one somehow and looked after one's clothes. But were there by chance
other things he expected to do, -- manicure one's nails or cut one's hair, --
and how often did he do it, and was this the day? He was evidently there to do
something, or he would+n't have been waiting behind the door to pounce out the
minute he appeared, and when the other two went away, Burrill would+n't have
closed the door as solemnly as though he shut the pair of them in together to
get through some sort of performance.
"Here+'s where T.
T. begins to feel like a fool," he thought. "And here+'s where
there+'s no way out of looking like one. I don't know a thing."
But personal vanity was
not so strong in him as healthy and normal good temper. Despite the fact that
the neat correctness of Pearson's style and the finished expression of his neat
face suggested that he was of a class which knew with the most finished
exactness all that custom and propriety demanded on any occasion on which
"valeting" in its most occult branches might be done, he was only
"another fellow," after all, and must be human. So Tembarom smiled at
him.
"Hello,
Pearson," he said. "How are you?"
Pearson slightly
started. It was the tiniest possible start, quite involuntary, from which he
recovered instantly, to reply in a tone of respectful gratefulness:
"Thank you, sir,
very well; thank you, sir."
"That+'s all
right," answered Tembarom, a sense of relief because he+'d "got
started" increasing the friendliness of his smile. "I see you got my
trunk open," he said, glancing at some articles of clothing neatly
arranged upon the bed.
Pearson was slightly
alarmed. It occurred to him suddenly that perhaps it was not the custom in
America to open a gentleman's box and lay out his clothes for him. For special
reasons he was desperately anxious to keep his place, and above all things he
felt he must avoid giving offense by doing things which, by being too English,
might seem to cast shades of doubt on the entire correctness of the customs of
America. He had known ill feeling to arise between "gentlemen's
gentlemen" in the servants' hall in the case of slight differences in
customs, contested with a bitterness of feeling which had made them almost an
international question. There had naturally been a great deal of talk about the
new Mr. Temple Barholm and what might be expected of him. When a gentleman was
not a gentleman, -- this was the form of expression in "the hall," --
the Lord only knew what would happen. And this one, who had, for all one knew,
been born in a workhouse, and had been a boot-black kicked about in American
streets, -- they did not know Tembarom, -- and nearly starved to death, and
found at last in a low lodging-house, what could he know about decent living?
And ten to one he'd be American enough to swagger and bluster and pretend he
knew everything better than any one else, and lose his temper frightfully when he
made mistakes, and try to make other people seem to blame. Set a beggar on
horseback, and who did+n't know what he was? There were chances enough and to
spare that not one of them would be able to stand it, and that in a month's
time they would all be looking for new places.
So while Tembarom was
rather afraid of Pearson and moved about in an awful state of uncertainty,
Pearson was horribly afraid of Tembarom, and was, in fact, in such a condition
of nervous anxiety that he was obliged more than once furtively to apply to his
damp, pale young forehead his exceedingly fresh and spotless
pocket-handkerchief.
In the first place,
there was the wardrobe. What could he do? How could he approach the subject
with sufficient delicacy? Mr. Temple Barholm had brought with him only a
steamer trunk and a Gladstone bag, the latter evidently bought in London, to be
stuffed with hastily purchased handkerchiefs and shirts, worn as they came out
of the shop, and as evidently bought without the slightest idea of the kind of
linen a gentleman should own. What most terrified Pearson, who was of a timid
and most delicate-minded nature, was that having the workhouse and the
boot-blacking as a background, the new Mr. Temple Barholm could+n't know, as
all this had come upon him so suddenly. And was it to be Pearson's calamitous
duty to explain to him that he had nothing, that he apparently knew nothing,
and that as he had no friends who knew, a mere common servant must educate him,
if he did not wish to see him derided and looked down upon and actually
"cut" by gentlemen that were gentlemen? All this to say nothing of
Pearson's own well-earned reputation for knowledge of custom, intelligence, and
deftness in turning out the objects of his care in such form as to be a reference
in themselves when a new place was wanted. Of course sometimes there were even
real gentlemen who were most careless and indifferent to appearance, and who,
if left to themselves, would buy garments which made the blood run cold when
one realized that his own character and hopes for the future often depended
upon his latest employer's outward aspect. But the ulster in which Mr. Temple
Barholm had presented himself was of a cut and material such as Pearson's most
discouraged moments had never forced him to contemplate. The limited wardrobe
in the steamer trunk was all new and all equally bad. There was no evening
dress, no proper linen, -- not what Pearson called "proper," -- no
proper toilet appurtenances. What was Pearson called upon by duty to do? If he
had only had the initiative to anticipate this, he might have asked permission
to consult in darkest secrecy with Mr. Palford. But he had never dreamed of
such a situation, and apparently he would be obliged to send his new charge
down to his first dinner in the majestically decorous dining-room, "before
all the servants," in a sort of speckled tweed cutaway, with a brown
necktie.
Tembarom, realizing
without delay that Pearson did not expect to be talked to and being cheered by
the sight of the fire, sat down before it in an easy-chair the like of which
for luxurious comfort he had never known. He was, in fact, waiting for
developments. Pearson would say or do something shortly which would give him a
chance to "catch on," or perhaps he+'d go out of the room and leave
him to himself, which would be a thing to thank God for. Then he could wash his
face and hands, brush his hair, and wait till the dinner-bell rang. They+'d be
likely to have one. They+'d have to in a place like this.
But Pearson did not go
out of the room. He moved about behind him for a short time with footfall so
almost entirely soundless that Tembarom became aware that, if it went on long,
he should be nervous; in fact, he was nervous already. He wanted to know what
he was doing. He could scarcely resist the temptation to turn his head and
look; but he did not want to give himself away more entirely than was
unavoidable, and, besides, instinct told him that he might frighten Pearson,
who looked frightened enough, in a neat and well-mannered way, already. Hully
gee! how he wished he would go out of the room!
But he did not. There
were gently gliding footsteps of Pearson behind him, quiet movements which
would have seemed stealthy if they had been a burglar's, soft removals of
articles from one part of the room to another, delicate brushings, and almost
noiseless foldings. Now Pearson was near the bed, now he had opened a wardrobe,
now he was looking into the steamer trunk, now he had stopped somewhere behind
him, within a few yards of his chair. Why had he ceased moving? What was he
looking at? What kept him quiet?
Tembarom expected him
to begin stirring mysteriously again; but he did not. Why did he not? There
reigned in the room entire silence; no soft footfalls, no brushing, no folding.
Was he doing nothing? Had he got hold of something which had given him a fit?
There had been no sound of a fall; but perhaps even if an English valet had a
fit, he'd have it so quietly and respectfully that one would+n't hear it.
Tembarom felt that he must be looking at the back of his head, and he wondered
what was the matter with it. Was his hair cut in a way so un-English that it
had paralyzed him? The back of his head began to creep under an investigation
so prolonged. No sound at all, no movement. Tembarom stealthily took out his
watch -- good old Waterbury he was+n't going to part with -- and began to watch
the minute-hand. If nothing happened in three minutes he was going to turn
round. One -- two -- three -- and the silence made it seem fifteen. He returned
his Waterbury to his pocket and turned round.
Pearson was not dead.
He was standing quite still and resigned, waiting. It was his business to wait,
not to intrude or disturb, and having put everything in order and done all he
could do, he was waiting for further commands -- in some suspense, it must be
admitted.
"Hello!"
exclaimed Tembarom, involuntarily.
"Shall I get your
bath ready, sir?" inquired Pearson. "Do you like it hot or cold,
sir?"
Tembarom drew a
relieved breath. He had+n't dropped dead and he had+n't had a fit, and here was
one of the things a man did when he valeted you -- he got your bath ready. A
hasty recollection of the much-used, paint-smeared tin bath on the fourth floor
of Mrs. Bowse's boarding-house sprang up before him. Everybody had to use it in
turn, and you waited hours for the chance to make a dash into it. No one stood
still and waited fifteen minutes until you got good and ready to tell him he
could go and turn on the water. Gee whizz!
Being relieved himself,
he relieved Pearson by telling him he might "fix it" for him, and
that he would have hot water.
"Very good, sir.
Thank you, sir," said Pearson, and silently left the room.
Then Tembarom got up
from his chair and began to walk about rather restlessly. A new alarm seized
him. Did Pear son expect to wash him or to stand round and hand him soap and
towels and things while he washed himself?
If it was supposed that
you had+n't the strength to turn the faucets yourself, it might be supposed you
did+n't have the energy to use a flesh-brush and towels. Did valeting include a
kind of shampoo all over?
"I could+n't stand
for that," he said. "I+'d have to tell him there+'d been no Turkish
baths in mine, and I+'m not trained up to them. When I+'ve got on to this kind
of thing a bit more, I'll make him understand what I+'m not in for; but I don't
want to scare the life out of him right off. He looks like a good little
fellow."
Rut Pearson's duties as
valet did not apparently include giving him his bath by sheer physical force.
He was deft, calm, amenable. He led Tembarom down the corridor to the
bath-room, revealed to him stores of sumptuous bath-robes and towels, hot- and
cold-water faucets, sprays, and tonic essences. He forgot nothing and, having
prepared all, mutely vanished, and returned to the bedroom to wait -- and gaze
in troubled wonder at the speckled tweed cutaway. There was an appalling
possibility -- he was aware that he was entirely ignorant of American customs
-- that tweed was the fashionable home evening wear in the States. Tembarom,
returning from his bath much refreshed after a warm plunge and a cold shower,
evidently felt that as a costume it was all that could be desired.
"Will you wear --
these, sir, -- this evening?" Pearson suggested.
It was suggestive of
more than actual inquiry. If he had dared to hope that his manner might suggest
a number of things! For instance, that in England gentlemen really did+n't wear
tweed in the evening even in private. That through some unforeseen
circumstances his employer's evening-dress suit had been delayed, but would of
course arrive to-morrow!
But Tembarom,
physically stimulated by hot and cold water, and relief at being left alone,
was beginning to recover his natural buoyancy.
"Yes, I+'ll wear
'em," he answered, snatching at his hair- brush and beginning to brush his
damp hair. It was a wooden backed brush that Pearson had found in his Gladstone
bag and shudderingly laid in readiness on the dressing-table. "I guess
they+'re all right, ain't they?"
"Oh, quite right,
sir, quite," Pearson ventured -- "for morning wear."
"Morning?"
said Tembarom, brushing vigorously. "Not night?"
"Black, sir,"
most delicately hinted Pearson, "is -- more usual -- in the evening -- in
England." After which he added, "So to speak," with a vague hope
that the mollifying phrase might counteract the effect of any apparently
implied aspersion on colors preferred in America.
Tembarom ceased
brushing his hair, and looked at him in good-natured desire for information.
"Frock-coats or
claw-hammer?" he asked. Despite his natural anxiety, and in the midst of
it, Pearson could not but admit that he had an uncondemnatory voice and a sort
of young way with him which gave one courage. But he was not quite sure of
"claw-hammer."
"Frock-coats for
morning dress and afternoon wear, sir," he ventured. "The evening
cut, as you know, is -- "
"Claw-hammer.
Swallow-tail, I guess you say here," Tembarom ended for him, quite without
hint of rancor, he was rejoiced to see.
"Yes, sir,"
said Pearson.
The ceremony of
dressing proved a fearsome thing as it went on. Pearson moved about deftly and
essayed to do things for the new Mr. Temple Barholm which the new Mr. Temple
Barholm had never heard of a man not doing for himself. He reached for things
Pearson was about to hand to him or hold for him. He unceremoniously achieved
services for himself which it was part of Pearson's manifest duty to perform.
They got into each other's way; there was even danger sometimes of their
seeming to snatch things from each other, to Pearson's unbounded horror. Mr.
Temple Barholm did not express any irritation whatsoever misunderstandings took
place, but he held his mouth rather close-shut, and Pearson, not aware that he
did this as a precaution against open grinning or shouts of laughter as he
found himself unable to adjust himself to his attendant's movements, thought it
possible that he was secretly annoyed and regarded the whole matter with
disfavor. But when the dressing was at an end and he stood ready to go down in
all his innocent ignoring of speckled tweed and brown necktie, he looked
neither flurried nor out of humor, and he asked a question in a voice which was
actually friendly. It was a question dealing with an incident which had aroused
much interest in the servants' hall as suggesting a touch of mystery.
"Mr. Strangeways
came yesterday all right, did+n't he?" he inquired.
"Yes, sir,"
Pearson answered. "Mr. Hutchinson and his daughter came with him. They
call her `Little Ann Hutchinson.' She+'s a sensible little thing, sir, and she
seemed to know exactly what you+'d want done to make him comfortable. Mrs.
Butterworth put him in the west room, sir, and I valeted him. He was not very
well when he came, but he seems better to-day, sir, only he+'s very anxious to
see you."
"That+'s all
right," said Tembarom. "You show me his room. I+'ll go and see him
now."
And being led by
Pearson, he went without delay.
THE chief objection to
Temple Barholm in Tembarom's mind was that it was too big for any human use.
That at least was how it struck him. The entrance was too big, the stairs were
too wide, the rooms too broad and too long and too high to allow of eyes
accustomed to hall bedrooms adjusting their vision without discomfort. The
dining-room in which the new owner took his first meal in company with Mr.
Palford, and attended by the large, serious man who wore no livery and three
tall footmen who did, was of a size and stateliness which made him feel
homesick for Mrs. Bowse's dining-room, with its two hurried, incompetent, and
often-changed waitresses and its prevailing friendly custom of pushing things
across the table to save time. Meals were quickly disposed of at Mrs. Bowse's.
Everybody was due up-town or down-town, and regarded food as an unavoidable,
because necessary, interference with more urgent business. At Temple Barholm
one sat half the night -- this was the impression made upon Tembarom --
watching things being brought in and taken out of the room, carved on a huge
buffet, and passed from one man to another; and when they were brought solemnly
to you, if you turned them down, it seemed that the whole ceremony had to be
gone through with again. All sorts of silver knives, forks, and spoons were
given to one and taken away, and half a dozen sorts of glasses stood by your
plate; and if you made a move to do anything for yourself, the man out of
livery stopped you as though you were too big a fool to be trusted. The food
was all right, but when you knew what anything was, and were inclined to
welcome it as an old friend, it was given to you in some way that made you get
rattled. With all the swell dishes, you had no butter-plate, and ice seemed
scarce, and the dead, still way the servants moved about gave you a sort of
feeling that you were at a funeral and that it was+n't decent to talk so long
as the remains were in the room. The head-man and the footmen seemed to get on
by signs, though Tembarom never saw them making any; and their faces never
changed for a moment. Once or twice he tried a joke, addressing it to Mr.
Palford, to see what would happen. But as Mr. Palford did not seem to see the
humor of it, and gave him the "glassy eye," and neither the head-man
nor the footmen seemed to hear it, he thought that perhaps they did+n't know it
was a joke; and if they did+n't, and they thought anything at all, they must
think he was dippy. The dinner was a deadly, though sumptuous, meal, and long
drawn out, when measured by meals at Mrs. Bowse's. He did not know, as Mr.
Palford did, that it was perfect, and served with a finished dexterity that was
also perfection.
Mr. Palford, however,
was himself relieved when it was at an end. He had sat at dinner with the late
Mr. Temple Barholm in his day, and had seen him also served by the owners of
impassive countenances; but he had been aware that whatsoever of secret dislike
and resentment was concealed by them, there lay behind their immovability an
acceptance of the fact that he represented, even in his most objectionable humors,
centuries of accustomedness to respectful service and of knowledge of his right
and power to claim it. The solicitor was keenly aware of the silent comments
being made upon the tweed suit and brown necktie and on the manner in which
their wearer boldly chose the wrong fork or erroneously made use of a knife or
spoon. Later in the evening, in the servants' hall, the comment would not be
silent, and there could be no doubt of what its character would be. There would
be laughter and the relating of incidents. Housemaids and still-room maids
would giggle, and kitchen-maids and boot-boys would grin and whisper in servile
tribute to the witticisms of the superior servants.
After dinner the rest
of the evening could at least be spent in talk about business matters. There
still remained details to be enlarged upon before Palford himself returned to
Lincoln's Inn and left Mr. Temple Barholm to the care of the steward of his
estate. It was not difficult to talk to him when the sole subject of
conversation was of a business nature.
Before they parted for
the night the mystery of the arrangements made for Strangeways had been
cleared. In fact, Mr. Temple Barholm made no mystery of them. He did not seem
ignorant of the fact that what he had chosen to do was unusual, but he did not
appear hampered or embarrassed by the knowledge. His remarks on the subject
were entirely civil and were far from actually suggesting that his singular
conduct was purely his own business and none of his solicitor's; but for a
moment or so Mr. Palford was privately just a trifle annoyed. The Hutchinsons
had traveled from London with Strangeways in their care the day before. He
would have been unhappy and disturbed if he had been obliged to travel with Mr.
Palford, who was a stranger to him, and Miss Hutchinson had a soothing effect
on him. Strangeways was for the present comfortably installed as a guest of the
house, Miss Hutchinson having talked to the housekeeper, Mrs. Butterworth, and
to Pearson. What the future held for him Mr. Temple Barholm did not seem to
feel the necessity of going into. He left him behind as a subject, and went on
talking cheerfully of other things almost as if he had forgotten him.
They had their coffee
in the library, and afterward sat at the writing-table and looked over
documents and talked until Mr. Palford felt that he could quite decorously
retire to his bedroom. He was glad to be relieved of his duties, and Tembarom
was amiably resigned to parting with him.
Tembarom did not go
up-stairs at once himself. He sat by the fire and smoked several pipes of
tobacco and thought things over. There were a lot of things to think over, and
several decisions to make, and he thought it would be a good idea to pass them
in review. The quiet of the dead surrounded him. In a house the size of this
the servants were probably half a mile away. They+'d need trolleys to get to
one, he thought, if you rang for them in a hurry. If an armed burglar made a
quiet entry without your knowing it, he could get in some pretty rough work before
any of the seventy-five footmen could come to lend a hand. He was not aware
that there were two of them standing in waiting in the hall, their powdered
heads close together, so that their whispers and chuckles could be heard. A
sound of movement in the library would have brought them up standing to a
decorous attitude of attention conveying to the uninitiated the impression that
they had not moved for hours.
Sometimes as he sat in
the big morocco chair, T. Tembarom looked grave enough; sometimes he looked as
though he was confronting problems which needed puzzling out and with which he
was not making much headway; sometimes he looked as though he was thinking of
little Ann Hutchinson, and not infrequently he grinned. Here he was up to the
neck in it, and he was darned if he knew what he was going to do. He did+n't
know a soul, and nobody knew him. He did+n't know a thing he ought to know, and
he did+n't know any one could tell him. Even the Hutchinsons had never been
inside a place like Temple Barholm, and they were going back to Manchester
after a few weeks' stay at the grandmother's cottage.
Before he had left New
York he had seen Hadman and some other fellows and got things started, so that
there was an even chance that the invention would be put on its feet. He had
worked hard and used his own power to control money in the future as a lever
which had proved to be exactly what was needed.
Hadman had been spurred
and a little startled when he realized the magnitude of what really could be
done, and saw also that this slangy, moneyed youth was not merely an
enthusiastic fool, but saw into business schemes pretty sharply and was of a
most determined readiness. With this power ranging itself on the side of
Hutchinson and his invention, it was good business to begin to move, if one did
not want to run a chance of being left out in the cold.
Hutchinson had gone to
Manchester, and there had been barely time for a brief but characteristic
interview between him and Tembarom, when he rushed back to London. Tembarom
felt rather excited when he remembered it, recalling what he had felt in
confronting the struggles against emotion in the blunt-featured, red face, the
breaks in the rough voice, the charging up and down the room like a curiously
elated bull in a china shop, and the big effort to restrain relief and
gratitude the degree of which might seem to under-value the merits of the
invention itself.
Once or twice when he
looked serious, Tembarom was thinking this over, and also once or twice when he
grinned. Relief and gratitude notwithstanding, Hutchinson had kept him in his
place, and had not made unbounded efforts to conceal his sense of the
incongruity of his position as the controller of fortunes and the lord of
Temple Barholm, which was still vaguely flavored with indignation.
When he had finished
his last pipe, Tembarom rose and knocked the ashes out of it.
"Now for
Pearson," he said.
He had made up his mind
to have a talk with Pearson, and there was no use wasting time. If things
did+n't suit you, the best thing was to see what you could do to fix them right
away -- if it was+n't against the law. He went out into the hall, and seeing
the two footmen standing waiting, he spoke to them.
"Say, I did+n't
know you fellows were there," he said. "Are you waiting up for me?
Well, you can go to bed, the sooner the quicker. Good night." And he went
up-stairs whistling.
The glow and richness
and ceremonial order of preparation in his bedroom struck him as soon as he
opened the door. Everything which could possibly have been made ready for his
most luxurious comfort had been made ready. He did not, it is true, care much
for the huge bed with its carved oak canopy and massive pillars.
"But the
lying-down part looks about all right," he said to himself.
The fine linen, the
soft pillows, the downy blankets, would have allured even a man who was not
tired. The covering had been neatly turned back and the snowy whiteness opened.
That was English, he supposed. They had+n't got on to that at Mrs. Bowse's.
"But I guess a
plain little old New York sleep will do," he said. "Temple Barholm or
no Temple Barholm, I guess they can't change that."
Then there sounded a
quiet knock at the door. He knew who it would turn out to be, and he was not
mistaken. Pearson stood in the corridor, wearing his slightly anxious
expression, but ready for orders.
Mr Temple Barholm
looked down at him with a friendly, if unusual, air.
"Say,
Pearson," he announced, "if you+'ve come to wash my face and put my
hair up in crimping-pins, you need+n't do it, because I+'m not used to it. But
come on in."
If he had told Pearson
to enter and climb the chimney, it cannot be said that the order would have
been obeyed upon the spot, but Pearson would certainly have hesitated and
explained with respectful delicacy the fact that the task was not "his
place." He came into the room.
"I came to see, if
I could do anything further and -- " making a courageous onslaught upon
the situation for which he had been preparing himself for hours -- "and
also -- if it is not too late -- to venture to trouble you with regard to your
wardrobe." He coughed a low, embarrassed cough. "In unpacking, sir, I
found -- I did not find -- "
"You did+n't find
much, did you?" Tembarom assisted him.
"Of course,
sir," Pearson apologized, "leaving New York so hurriedly, your --
your man evidently had not time to -- er -- "
Tembarom looked at him
a few seconds longer, as if making up his mind to something. Then he threw
himself easily into the big chair by the fire, and leaned back in it with the
frankest and best-natured smile possible.
"I had+n't any
man," he said. "Say, Pearson," waving his hand to another chair
near by, "suppose you take a seat."
Long and careful
training came to Pearson's aid and supported him, but he was afraid that he
looked nervous, and certainly there was a lack of entire calm in his voice.
"I -- thank you,
sir, -- I think I+'d better stand, sir."
"Why?"
inquired Tembarom, taking his tobacco-pouch out of his pocket and preparing to
fill another pipe.
"You're most kind,
sir, but -- but -- " in impassioned embarrassment -- "I should really
prefer to stand, sir, if you don't mind. I should feel more -- more at 'ome,
sir," he added, dropping an h in his agitation.
"Well, if you+'d
like it better, that's all right," yielded Mr. Temple Barholm, stuffing
tobacco into the pipe. Pearson darted to a table, produced a match, struck it,
and gave it to him.
"Thank you,"
said Tembarom, still good-naturedly. "But there are a few things I+'ve got
to say to you right now."
Pearson had really done
his best, his very best, but he was terrified because of the certain
circumstances once before referred to.
"I beg pardon,
sir," he appealed, "but I am most anxious to give satisfaction in
every respect." He was, poor young man, horribly anxious. "To-day
being only the first day, I dare say I have not been all I should have been. I
have never valeted an American gentleman before, but I+'m sure I shall become
accustomed to everything quite soon -- almost immediately."
"Say," broke
in Tembarom, "you+'re 'way off. I+'m not complaining. You+'re all
right."
The easy good temper of
his manner was so singularly assuring that Pearson, unexplainable as he found
him in every other respect, knew that this at least was to be depended upon,
and he drew an almost palpable breath of relief. Something actually allured him
into approaching what he had never felt it safe to approach before under like
circumstances -- a confidential disclosure.
"Thank you, sir: I
am most grateful. The -- fact is, I hoped especially to be able to settle in
place just now. I -- I+'m hoping to save up enough to get married, sir."
"You are?"
Tembarom exclaimed. "Good business! So was I before all this" -- he
glanced about him -- "fell on top of me."
"I+'ve been saving
for three years, sir, and if I can know I+'m a permanency -- if I can keep this
place -- "
"You+'re going to
keep it all right," Tembarom cheered him up with. "If you+'ve got an
idea you're going to be fired, just you forget it. Cut it right out."
"Is -- I beg your
pardon, sir," Pearson asked with timorous joy, "but is that the
American for saying you+'ll be good enough to keep me on?"
Mr. Temple Barholm
thought a second.
"Is `keep me on'
the English for `let me stay'?"
"Yes, sir."
"Then we+'re all
right. Let+'s start from there. I+'m going to have a heart-to-heart talk with
you, Pearson."
"Thank you,
sir," said Pearson in a deferential murmur. But if he was not
dissatisfied, what was going to happen?
"It'll save us
both trouble, and me most. I+'m not one of those clever Clarences that can keep
up a bluff, making out I know things I don't know. I could+n't deceive a
setting hen or a Berlin wool antimacassar."
Pearson swallowed
something with effort.
"You see, I fell
into this thing kerchunk, and I+'m just rattled -- I+'m rattled." As
Pearson slightly coughed again, he translated for him, "That's American
for `I don't know where I+'m at.' "
"Those American
jokes, sir, are very funny indeed," answered Pearson, appreciatively.
"Funny!" the
new Mr. Temple Barholm exclaimed even aggrievedly. "If you think this
lay-out is an American joke to me, Pearson, there+'s where you're 'way off. Do
you think it a merry jest for a fellow like me to sit up in a high chair in a
dining-room like a cathedral and not know whether he ought to bite his own
bread or not? And not dare to stir till things are handed to him by five husky
footmen? I thought that plain-clothes man was going to cut up my meat, and slap
me on the back if I choked."
Pearson's sense of
humor was perhaps not inordinate, but unseemly mirth, which he had swallowed at
the reference to the setting hen and the Berlin wool antimacassar, momentarily
got the better of him, despite his efforts to cough it down, and broke forth in
a hoarse, ill-repressed sound.
"I beg pardon,
sir," he said with a laudable endeavor to recover his professional
bearing. "It+'s your -- American way of expressing it which makes me
forget myself. I beg pardon."
Tembarom laughed
outright boyishly.
"Oh, cut that
out," he said. "Say, how old are you?"
"Twenty-five,
sir."
"So am I. If
you+'d met me three months ago, beating the streets of New York for a living,
with holes in my shoes and a celluloid collar on, you+'d have looked down on
me. I know you would."
"Oh, no,
sir," most falsely insisted Pearson.
"Oh, yes, you
would," protested Tembarom, cheerfully. "You+'d have said I talked
through my nose, and I should have laughed at you for dropping your h's. Now
you+'re rattled because I+'m Mr. Temple Temple Barholm; but you+'re not half as
rattled as I am."
"You'll get over
it, sir, almost immediately," Pearson assured him, hopefully.
"Of course I
shall," said Tembarom, with much courage. "But to start right I+'ve
got to get over you."
"Me, sir?"
Pearson breathed anxiously.
"Yes. That+'s what
I want to get off my chest. Now, first off, you came in here to try to explain
to me that, owing to my New York valet having left my New York wardrobe behind,
I+'ve not got anything to wear, and so I shall have to buy some clothes."
"I failed to find
any dress-shirts, sir," began Pearson, hesitatingly.
Mr. Temple Barholm
grinned.
"I always failed
to find them myself. I never had a dress- shirt. I never owned a suit of glad
rags in my life."
"Gl -- glad rags,
sir?" stammered Pearson, uncertainly.
"I knew you
did+n't catch on when I said that to you before dinner. I mean claw-hammer and
dress-suit things. Don't you be frightened, Pearson. I never had six good
shirts at once, or two pair of shoes, or more than four ten-cent handkerchiefs
at a time since I was born. And when Mr. Palford yanked me away from New York,
he did+n't suspect a fellow could be in such a state. And I did+n't know I was
in a state, anyhow. I was too busy to hunt up people to tell me, because I was
rushing something important right through, and I could+n't stop. I just bought
the first things I set eyes on and crammed them into my trunk. There, I guess
you know the most of this! but you did+n't know I knew you knew it. Now you do,
and you need+n't be afraid to hurt my feelings by telling me I have+n't a
darned thing I ought to have. You can go straight ahead."
As he leaned back,
puffing away at his pipe, he had thrown a leg over the arm of his chair for
greater comfort, and it really struck his valet that he had never seen a
gentleman more at his ease, even one who was one. His casual candidness
produced such a relief from the sense of strain and uncertainty that Pearson
felt the color returning to his face. An opening had been given him, and it was
possible for him to do his duty.
"If you wish, sir,
I will make a list," he ventured further, "and the proper firms will
send persons to bring things down from London on appro."
"What+'s `appro '
the English for?"
"Approval,
sir."
"Good business!
Good old Pearson!"
"Thank you, sir.
Shall I attend to it to-night, to be ready for the morning post?"
"In five minutes
you shall. But you threw me off the track a bit. The thing I was really going
to say was more important than the clothes business."
There was something
else, then, thought Pearson, some other unexpected point of view.
"What have you to
do for me, anyhow?"
"Valet you,
sir."
"That+'s English
for washing my face and combing my hair and putting my socks on, ain't
it?"
"Well, sir, it
means doing all you require, and being always in attendance when you
change."
"How much do you
get for it?"
"Thirty shillings
a week, sir."
"Say,
Pearson," said Tembarom, with honest feeling, "I+'ll give you sixty
shillings a week not to do it."
Calmed though he had
felt a few moments ago, it cannot be denied that Pearson was aghast. How could
one be prepared for developments of such an order?
"Not to do it,
sir!" he faltered. "But what would the servants think if you had no
one to valet you?"
"That's so. What
would they think?" But he evidently was not dismayed, for he smiled
widely. "I guess the plain- clothes man would throw a fit."
But Pearson's view was
more serious and involved a knowledge of not improbable complications. He knew
"the hall" and its points of view.
"I could+n't draw
my wages, sir," he protested. "There+'d be the greatest dissatisfaction
among the other servants, sir, if I did+n't do my duties. There's always a -- a
slight jealousy of valets and ladies'-maids. The general idea is that they do
very little to earn their salaries. I+'ve seen them fairly hated."
"Is that so? Well,
I+'ll be darned!" remarked Mr. Temple Barholm. He gave a moment to
reflection, and then cheered up immensely.
"I+'ll tell you
how we+'ll fix it. You come up into my room and bring your tatting or read a
newspaper while I dress." He openly chuckled. "Holy smoke! I+'ve got
to put on my shirt and swear at my collar-buttons myself. If I+'m in for having
a trained nurse do it for me, it+'ll give me the Willies. When you danced
around me before dinner -- "
Pearson's horror forced
him to commit the indiscretion of interrupting.
"I hope I did+n't
dance, sir," he implored. "I tried to be extremely quiet."
"That was
it," said Tembarom. "I should+n't have said danced; I meant crept. I
kept thinking I should tread on you, and I got so nervous toward the end I
thought I should just break down and sob on your bosom and beg to be taken back
to home and mother."
"I+'m extremely
sorry, sir, I am, indeed," apologized Pearson, doing his best not to give
way to hysterical giggling. How was a man to keep a decently straight face, and
if one did+n't, where would it end? One thing after another.
"It was not your
fault. It was mine. I have+n't a thing against you. You+'re a first-rate little
chap."
"I will try to be
more satisfactory to-morrow."
There must be no
laughing aloud, even if one burst a blood- vessel. It would not do. Pearson
hastily confronted a vision of a young footman or Mr. Burrill himself passing
through the corridors on some errand and hearing master and valet shouting
together in unseemly and wholly incomprehensible mirth. And the next remark was
worse than ever.
"No, you won't,
Pearson," Mr. Temple Barholm asserted. "There's where you're wrong.
I+'ve got no more use for a valet than I have for a pair of straight-front
corsets."
This contained a
sobering suggestion.
"But you said,
sir, that -- "
"Oh, I+'m not
going to fire you," said Tembarom, genially. "I'll `keep you on,' but
little Willie is going to put on his own socks. If the servants have to be
pacified, you come up to my room and do anything you like. Lie on the bed if
you want to; get a jew's-harp and play on it -- any old thing to pass the time.
And I+'ll raise your wages. What do you say? Is it fixed?"
"I+'m here, sir,
to do anything you require," Pearson answered distressedly; "but I+'m
afraid -- "
Tembarom's face
changed. A sudden thought had struck him.
"I'll tell you one
thing you can do," he said; "you can valet that friend of mine."
"Mr. Strangeways,
sir?"
"Yes. I+'ve got a
notion he would+n't mind it." He was not joking now. He was in fact rather
suddenly thoughtful.
"Say, Pearson,
what do you think of him?"
"Well, sir, I+'ve
not seen much of him, and he says very little, but I should think he was a
gentleman, sir."
Mr. Temple Barholm
seemed to think it over.
"That+'s
queer," he said as though to himself. "That+'s what Ann said."
Then aloud, "Would you say he was an American?"
In his unavoidable
interest in a matter much talked over below stairs and productive of great
curiosity Pearson was betrayed. He could not explain to himself, after he had
spoken, how he could have been such a fool as to forget; but forget himself and
the birthplace of the new Mr. Temple Barholm he did.
"Oh, no,
sir," he exclaimed hastily; "he+'s quite the gentleman, sir, even
though he is queer in his mind." The next instant he caught himself and
turned cold. An American or a Frenchman or an Italian, in fact, a native of any
country on earth so slighted with an unconsciousness so natural, if he had been
a man of hot temper, might have thrown something at him or kicked him out of
the room; but Mr. Temple Barholm took his pipe out of his mouth and looked at
him with a slow, broadening smile.
"Would you call me
a gentleman, Pearson?" he asked.
Of course there was no
retrieving such a blunder, Pearson felt, but --
"Certainly,
sir," he stammered. "Most -- most certainly,
"Pearson,"
said Tembarom, shaking his head slowly, with a grin so good-natured that even
the frankness of his words was friendly humor itself -- "Pearson, you+'re
a liar. But that does+n't jolt me a bit. I dare say I+'m not one, anyhow. We
might put an `ad' in one of your papers and find out."
"I -- I beg your
pardon, sir," murmured Pearson in actual anguish of mind.
Mr. Temple Barholm
laughed outright.
"Oh, I+'ve not got
it in for you. How could you help it?" he said. Then he stopped joking
again. "If you want to please me," he added with deliberation,
"you look after Mr. Strangeways, and don't let anything disturb him. Don't
bother him, but just find out what he wants. When he gets restless, come and
tell me. If I+'m out, tell him I+'m coming back. Don't let him worry. You
understand -- don't let him worry."
"I'll do my best
-- my very best, sir," Pearson answered devoutly. "I+'ve been nervous
and excited this first day because I am so anxious to please -- everything
seems to depend on it just now," he added, daring another confidential
outburst. "But you+'ll see I do know how to keep my wits about me in
general, and I+'ve got a good memory, and I have learned my duties, sir. I+'ll
attend to Mr. Strangeways most particular."
As Tembarom listened,
and watched his neat, blond countenance, and noted the undertone of quite
desperate appeal in his low voice, he was thinking of a number of things. Chiefly
he was thinking of little Ann Hutchinson and the Harlem flat which might have
been "run" on fifteen dollars a week.
"I want to know I
have some one in this museum of a place who+'ll understand," he said --
"some one who+'ll do just exactly what I say and ask no fool questions and
keep his mouth shut. I believe you could do it."
"I+'ll swear I
could, sir. Trust me," was Pearson's astonishingly emotional and hasty
answer.
"I+'m going
to," returned Mr. Temple Barholm. "I+'ve set my mind on putting something
through in my own way. It+'s a queer thing, and most people would say I was a
fool for trying it. Mr. Hutchinson does, but Miss Hutchinson does+n't."
There was a note in his
tone of saying "Miss Hutchinson does+n't" which opened up vistas to
Pearson -- strange vistas when one thought of old Mrs. Hutchinson's cottage and
the estate of Temple Barholm.
"We're just about
the same age," his employer continued and in a sort of way we+'re in just
about the same fix."
Their eyes looked into
each other's a second; but it was not for Pearson to presume to make any
comment whatsoever upon the possible nature of "the fix." Two or
three more puffs and Mr. Temple Barholm spoke again.
Say, Pearson, I don't
want to butt in, but what about that little bunch of calico of yours -- the one
you+'re saving up for?"
"Calico,
sir?" said Pearson at sea, but hopeful. Whatso ever the new Mr. Temple
Barholm meant, one began to realize that it was not likely to be unfriendly.
"That+'s American
for her, Pearson. `Her' stands for the same thing both in English and American,
I guess. What's her name and where is she? Don't you say a word if you don't
want to."
Pearson drew a step
nearer. There was an extraordinary human atmosphere in the room which caused
things to begin to go on in his breast. He had had a harder life than Tembarom
be- because he had been more timid and less buoyant and less unself- conscious.
He had been beaten by a drunken mother and kicked by a drunken father. He had gone
hungry and faint to the board school and had been punished as a dull boy. After
he had struggled into a place as page, he had been bullied by footmen and had
had his ears boxed by cooks and butlers. Ladies- maids and smart housemaids had
sneered at him, and made him feel himself a hopeless, vulgar little worm who
never would "get on." But he had got on, in a measure, because he had
worked like a slave and openly resented nothing. A place like this had been his
fevered hope and dream from his page days, though of course his imagination had
not encompassed attendance on a gentleman who had never owned a dress-shirt in
his life. Yet gentleman or no gentleman, he was a Temple Barholm, and there was
something about him, something human in his young voice and grin and queer,
unheard-of New York jokes, which Pearson had never encountered, and which had
the effect of making him feel somehow more of a man than his timorous nature
had ever allowed of his feeling before. It suggested that they were both, valet
and master, merely masculine human creatures of like kind. The way he had said
"Miss Hutchinson" and the twinkle in his eye when he+'d made that
American joke about the "little bunch of calico"! The curious fact
was that thin, neat, white-blooded-looking Pearson was passionately in love. So
he took the step nearer and grew hot and spoke low.
"Her name is Rose
Merrick, sir, and she+'s in place in London. She+'s lady's-maid to a lady of
title, and it is+n't an easy place. Her lady has a high temper, and she's eco
nomical with her servants. Her maid has to sew early and late, and turn out as
much as if she was a whole dressmaking establishment. She's clever with her
needle, and it would be easier if she felt it was appreciated. But she+'s
treated haughty and severe, though she tries her very best. She has to wait up
half the night after balls, and I+'m afraid it+'s breaking her spirit and her
health. That+'s why, -- I beg your pardon, sir," he added, his voice
shaking -- "that's why I+'d bear anything on earth if I could give her a
little home of her own."
"Gee whizz!"
ejaculated Mr. Temple Barholm, with feeling. "I guess you would!"
"And that's not
all, sir," said Pearson. "She's a beautiful girl, sir, with a figure,
and service is sometimes not easy for a young woman like that. His lordship --
the master of the house, sir, -- is much too attentive. He+'s a man with bad
habits; the last lady's-maid was sent away in disgrace. Her ladyship would+n't
believe she had+n't been forward when she saw things she did+n't like, though
every one in the hall knew the girl hated his bold ways with her, and her
mother nearly broke her heart. He's begun with Rose, and it just drives me mad,
sir, it does!"
He choked, and wiped
his forehead with his clean handkerchief. It was damp, and his young eyes had
fire in them, as Mr. Temple Barholm did not fail to observe.
"I+'m taking a
liberty talking to you like this, sir," he said. "I+'m behaving as if
I did+n't know my place, sir."
Your place is behind
that fellow, kicking him till he+'ll never sit down again except on eider-down
cushions three deep," remarked Mr. Temple Barholm, with fire in his eyes
also. "That's where your place is. It's where mine would be if I was in
the same house with him and caught him making a goat of himself. I bet nine
Englishmen out of ten would break his darned neck for him if they got on to his
little ways, even if they were lordships themselves."
"The decent ones
won't know," Pearson said. "That+'s not what happens, sir. He can
laugh and chaff it off with her ladyship and coax her round. But a girl that+'s
discharged like that, Rose says, that's the worst of it: she says she's got a
character fastened on to her for life that no respectable man ought to marry
her with."
Mr. Temple Barholm
removed his leg from the arm of his chair and got up. Long-legged, sinewy, but
somewhat slouchy tn his badly made tweed suit, sharp New York face and awful
American style notwithstanding, he still looked rather nice as he laid his hand
on his valet's shoulder and gave him a friendly push.
"See here,"
he said. "What you+'ve got to say to Rose is that she+'s just got to cut
that sort of thing out -- cut it right out. Talking to a man that+'s in love
with her as if he was likely to throw her down because lies were told. Tell her
to forget it -- forget it quick. Why, what does she suppose a man's for, by
jinks? What+'s he for?"
"I+'ve told her
that, sir, though of course not in American. I just swore it on my knees in
Hyde Park one night when she got out for an hour. But she laid her poor head on
the back of the bench and cried and would+n't listen. She says she cares for me
too much to -- "
Tembarom's hand
clutched his shoulder. His face lighted and glowed suddenly.
"Care for you too
much," he asked. "Did she say that? God bless her!"
"That+'s what I
said," broke in Pearson.
"I heard another
girl say that -- just before I left New York -- a girl that+'s just a
wonder," said his master. "A girl can be a wonder, can't she?"
"Rose is,
sir," protested Pearson. "She is, indeed, sir. And her eyes are that
blue -- "
"Blue, are
they?" interrupted Tembarom. "I know the kind. I+'m on to the whole
thing. And what's more, I+'m going to fix it. You tell Rose -- and tell her
from me -- that she+'s going to leave that place, and you+'re going to stay in
this one, and -- well, presently things+'ll begin to happen. They+'re going to
be all right -- all right," he went on, with immensely convincing
emphasis. "She+'s going to have that little home of her own." He
paused a moment for reflection, and then a sudden thought presented itself to
him. "Why, darn it!" he exclaimed, "there must be a whole raft
of little homes that belong to me in one place or another. Why could+n't I fix
you both up in one of them?"
"Oh, sir!"
Pearson broke forth in some slight alarm. He went so fast and so far all in a
moment. And Pearson really possessed a neat, well-ordered conscience, and,
moreover, "knew his place." "I hope I did+n't seem to be
expecting you to trouble yourself about me, sir. I must+n't presume on your
kindness."
"It+'s not
kindness; it+'s -- well, it+'s just human. I+'m going to think this thing over.
You just keep your hair on, and let me do my own valeting, and you+'ll see
I+'ll fix it for you somehow."
What he thought of doing,
how he thought of doing it, and what Pearson was to expect, the agitated young
man did not know. The situation was of course abnormal, judged by all
respectable, long-established custom. A man's valet and his valet's "young
woman" were not usually of intimate interest. Gentlemen were sometimes
"kind" to you -- gave you half a sovereign or even a sovereign, and
perhaps asked after your mother if you were supporting one; but --
"I never dreamed
of going so far, sir," he said. "I forgot myself, I+'m afraid."
"Good thing you
did. It's made me feel as if we were brothers." He laughed again, enjoying
the thought of the little thing who cared for Pearson "too much" and
had eyes that were "that blue." "Say, I+'ve Just thought of
something else. Have you bought her an engagement-ring yet?"
"No, sir. In our
class of life jewelry is beyond the means."
"I just
wondered," Mr. Temple Barholm said. He seemed to be thinking of something
that pleased him as he fumbled for his pocket-book and took a clean banknote
out of it. "I+'m not on to what the value of this thing is in real money,
but you go and buy her a ring with it, and I bet she+'ll be so pleased you+'ll
have the time of your life."
Pearson taking it, and
recognizing its value in unreal money, was embarrassed by feeling the necessity
of explanation.
"This is a
five-pound note, sir. It+'s too much, sir, it is in deed. This would furnish
the front parlor." He said it al- most solemnly.
Mr. Temple Barholm
looked at the note interestedly.
"Would it? By
jinks!" and his laugh had a certain softness of recollection. "I
guess that+'s just what Ann would say. She'd know what it would furnish, you
bet your life!"
"I+'m most
grateful, sir," protested Pearson, "but I ought+n't to take it. Being
an American gentleman and not accustomed to English money, you don't realize
that -- "
"I+'m not
accustomed to any kind of money," said his master. "I+'m scared to be
left alone in the room with it. That+'s what+'s the matter. If I don't give
some away, I shall never know I+'ve got it. Cheer up, Pearson. You take that
and buy the ring, and when you start furnishing, I+'ll see you don't get
left."
"I don't know what
to say, sir," Pearson faltered emotionally. "I don't, indeed."
"Don't say a
darned thing." replied Mr. Temple Barholm. And just here his face changed
as Mr. Palford had seen it change before, and as Pearson often saw it change
later. His New York jocular irreverence dropped from him, and he looked mature
and oddly serious.
"I+'ve tried to
sort of put you wise to the way I+'ve lived and the things I have+n't had ever
since I was born," he said, "but I guess you don't really know a
thing about it. I+'ve got more money coming in every year than a thousand of me
would ever expect to see in their lives, according to my calculation. And I
don't know how to do any of the things a fellow who is what you call `a
gentleman' would know how to do. I mean in the way of spending it. Now, I+'ve
got to get some fun out of it. I should be a mutt if I did+n't, so I+'m going
to spend it my own way. I may make about seventy-five different kinds of a fool
of myself, but I guess I sha'n't do any particular harm."
"You+'ll do good,
sir, -- to every one."
"Shall I?"
said Tembarom, speculatively. "Well, I+'m not exactly setting out with
that in my mind. I+'m no Young Men's Christian Association, but I+'m not in for
doing harm, any way. You take your five-pound note -- come to think of it,
Palford said it came to about twenty-five dollars, real money. Hully gee! I never
thought I+'d have twenty-five dollars to give away! It makes me feel like I was
Morgan."
"Thank you, sir,
thank you," said Pearson, putting the note into his pocket with rapt
gratitude in his neat face. "You -- you do not wish me to remain -- to do
anything for you?"
Not a thing. But just
go and find out if Mr. Strangeways is asleep. If he is+n't and seems restless,
I+'ll come and have a talk with him."
"Yes, sir,"
said Pearson, and went at once.
IN the course of two
days Mr. Palford, having given his client the benefit of his own exact
professional knowledge of the estate of Temple Barholm and its workings and
privileges as far as he found them transferable and likely to be understood,
returned to London, breathing perhaps something like a sigh of relief when the
train steamed out of the little station. Whatsoever happened in days to come,
Palford & Grimby had done their most trying and awkward duty by the latest
Temple Barholm. Bradford, who was the steward of the estate, would now take him
over, and could be trusted to furnish practical information of any ordinary
order.
It did not appear to
Mr. Palford that the new inheritor was particularly interested in his
possessions or exhilarated by the extraordinary turn in his fortunes. The
enormity of Temple Barholm itself, regarded as a house to live in in an
everyday manner, seemed somewhat to depress him. When he was taken over its
hundred and fifty rooms, he wore a detached air as he looked about him, and
such remarks as he made were of an extraordinary nature and expressed in terms
peculiar to America. Neither Mr. Palford nor Burrill understood them, but a
young footman who was said to have once paid a visit to New York, and who
chanced to be in the picture-gallery when his new master was looking at the
portraits of his ancestors, over- hearing one observation, was guilty of a
convulsive snort, and immediately made his way into the corridor, coughing
violently. From this Mr. Palford gathered that one of the transatlantic jokes
had been made. That was the New York idea -- to be jocular. Yet he had not
looked jocular when he had made the remark which had upset the equilibrium of
the young footman. He had, in fact, looked reflective before speaking as he
stood and studied a portrait of one of his ancestors. But, then, he had a trick
of saying things incomprehensibly ridiculous with an unmoved expression of
gravity, which led Palford to feel that he was ridiculous through utter
ignorance and was not aware that he was exposing the fact. Persons who thought
that an air of seriousness added to a humorous remark were especially annoying
to the solicitor, because they frequently betrayed one into the position of
seeming to be dull in the matter of seeing a point. That, he had observed, was
often part of the New York manner -- to make a totally absurdly exaggerated or
seemingly ignorance -- revealing observation, and then leave one's hearer to
decide for himself whether the speaker was an absolute ignoramus and fool or a
humorist.
More than once he had
somewhat suspected his client of meaning to "get a rise out of him,"
after the odious manner of the tourists described in "The Innocents
Abroad," though at the same time he felt rather supportingly sure of the
fact that generally, when he displayed ignorance, he displayed it because he
was a positive encyclopedia of lack of knowledge.
He knew no more of
social customs, literature, and art than any other street lad. He had not
belonged to the aspiring self- taught, who meritoriously haunt the night schools
and free libraries with a view to improving their minds. If this had been his
method, he might in one sense have been more difficult to handle, as Palford
had seen the thing result in a bumptiousness most objectionable. He was
markedly not bumptious, at all events.
A certain degree of
interest in or curiosity concerning his ancestors as represented in the
picture-gallery Mr. Palford had observed. He had stared at them and had said
queer things -- sometimes things which perhaps indicated a kind of uneducated
thought. The fact that some of them looked so thoroughly alive, and yet had
lived centuries ago, seemed to set him reflecting oddly. His curiosity,
however, seemed to connect itself with them more as human creatures than as
historical figures.
"What did that one
do?" he inquired more than once. "What did he start, or did+n't he
start anything?"
When he disturbed the
young footman he had stopped before a dark man in armor.
"Who+'s this
fellow in the tin overcoat?" he asked seriously, and Palford felt it was
quite possible that he had no actual intent of being humorous.
"That is Miles
Gaspard Nevil John, who fought in the Crusades with Richard Cœur de Lion,"
he explained. "He is wearing a suit of armor." By this time the
footman was coughing in the corridor.
"That+'s English
history, I guess," Tembarom replied. "I+'ll have to get a
history-book and read up about the Crusades."
He went on farther, and
paused with a slightly puzzled expression before a boy in a costume of the
period of Charles II.
"Who+'s this
Fauntleroy in the lace collar?" he inquired. "Queer!" he added,
as though to himself. "I can't ever have seen him in New York." And
he took a step backward to look again.
"That is Miles
Hugo Charles James, who was a page at the court of Charles II. He died at
nineteen, and was succeeded by his brother Denzel Maurice John."
"I feel as if I+'d
had a dream about him sometime or other," said Tembarom, and he stood
still a few seconds before he passed on. "Perhaps I saw something like him
getting out of a carriage to go into the Van Twillers' fancy-dress ball. Seems
as if I+'d got the whole show shut up in here. And you say they're all my own
relations?" Then he laughed. "If they were alive now!" he said.
"By jinks!"
His laughter suggested
that he was entertained by mental visions. But he did not explain to his
companion. His legal adviser was not in the least able to form any opinion of
what he would do, how he would be likely to comport himself, when he was left
entirely to his own devices. He would not know also, one might be sure, that
the county would wait with repressed anxiety to find out. If he had been a
minor, he might have been taken in hand, and trained and educated to some
extent. But he was not a minor.
On the day of Mr.
Palford's departure a thick fog had descended and seemed to enwrap the world in
the white wool. Tembarom found it close to his windows when he got up, and he
had dressed by the light of tall wax candles, the previous Mr. Temple Barholm
having objected to more modern and vulgar methods of illumination.
"I guess this is
what you call a London fog," he said to Pearson.
"No, not exactly
the London sort, sir," Pearson answered. "A London fog is yellow --
when it is+n't brown or black. It settles on the hands and face. A fog in the
country is+n't dirty with smoke. It+'s much less trying, sir."
When Palford had
departed and he was entirely alone, Tembarom found a country fog trying enough
for a man without a companion. A degree of relief permeated his being with the
knowledge that he need no longer endeavor to make suitable reply to his
solicitor's efforts at conversation. He had made conversational efforts
himself. You could+n't let a man feel that you would+n't talk to him if you
could when he was doing business for you, but what in thunder did you have to
talk about that a man like that would+n't be bored stiff by? He did+n't like
New York, he did+n't know anything about it, and he did+n't want to know, and
Tembarom knew nothing about anything else, and was homesick for the very stones
of the roaring city's streets. When he said anything, Palford either did+n't
understand what he was getting at or he did+n't like it. And he always looked
as if he was watching to see if you were trying to get a joke on him. Tembarom
was frequently not nearly so much inclined to be humorous as Mr. Palford had
irritably suspected him of being. His modes of expression might on numerous
occasions have roused to mirth when his underlying idea was almost entirely
serious. The mode of expression was merely a result of habit.
Mr. Palford left by an
extremely early train, and after he was gone, Tembarom sat over his breakfast
as long as possible, and then, going to the library, smoked long. The library
was certainly comfortable, though the fire and the big wax candles were called
upon to do their best to defy the chill, mysterious dimness produced by the
heavy, white wool curtain folding itself more and more thickly outside the
windows.
But one cannot smoke in
solitary idleness for much more than an hour, and when he stood up and knocked
the ashes out of his last pipe, Tembarom drew a long breath.
"There's a hundred
and thirty-six hours in each of these days," he said. "That+'s nine
hundred and fifty-two in a week, and four thousand and eighty in a month --
when it+'s got only thirty days in it. I+'m not going to calculate how many there+'d
be in a year. I+'ll have a look at the papers. There+'s Punch. That+'s their
comic one."
He looked out the
American news in the London papers, and sighed hugely. He took up Punch and
read every joke two or three times over. He did not know that the number was a
specially good one and that there were some extremely witty things in it. The
jokes were about bishops in gaiters, about garden-parties, about curates or
lovely young ladies or rectors' wives and rustics, about Royal Academicians or
esthetic poets. Their humor appealed to him as little and seemed as obscure as
his had seemed to Mr. Palford.
"I+'m not laughing
my head off much over these," he said. "I guess I+'m not on to the
point."
He got up and walked
about. The "L" in New York was roaring to and fro loaded with men and
women going to work or to do shopping. Some of them were devouring morning
papers bearing no resemblance to those of London, some of them carried parcels,
and all of them looked as though they were intent on something or other and
had+n't a moment to waste. They were all going somewhere in a hurry and had to
get back in time for something. When the train whizzed and slackened at a
station, some started up, hastily caught their papers or bundles closer, and
pushed or were pushed out on the platform, which was crowded with other people
who rushed to get in, and if they found seats, dropped into them hastily with
an air of relief. The street-cars were loaded and rang their bells loudly,
trucks and carriages and motors filled the middle of the thoroughfares, and
people crowded the pavements. The store windows were dressed up for Christmas,
and most of the people crowded before them were calculating as to what they
could get for the inadequate sums they had on hand.
The breakfast at Mrs.
Bowse's boarding-house was over, and the boarders had gone on cars or elevated
trains to their day's work. Mrs. Bowse was getting ready to go out and do some
marketing. Julius and Jim were down-town deep in the work pertaining to their
separate "jobs." They+'d go home at night, and perhaps, if they were
in luck, would go to a "show" somewhere, and afterward come and sit
in their tilted chairs in the hall bedroom and smoke and talk it over. And he
would+n't be there, and the Hutchinsons' rooms would be empty, unless some new
people were in them. Galton would be sitting among his papers, working like
mad. And Bennett -- well, Bennett would be either "getting out his
page," or would be rushing about in the hundredth streets to find items and
follow up weddings or receptions.
"Gee!" he
said, "every one of them trying their best to put something over, and with
so much to think of they+'ve not got time to breathe! It+'d be no trouble for
them to put in a hundred and thirty-six hours. They+'d be darned glad of them.
And, believe me, they+'d put something over, too, before they got through. And
I+'m here, with three hundred and fifty thousand dollars a year round my neck
and not a thing to spend it on, unless I pay some one part of it to give me
lessons in tatting. What is tatting, anyhow?
He did+n't really know.
It was vaguely supposed to imply some intensely feminine fancy-work done by old
ladies, and used as a figure of speech in jokes.
"If you could ride
or shoot, you could amuse yourself in the country," Palford had said.
"I can ride in a
street-car when I+'ve got five cents," Tembarom had answered. "That's
as far as I+'ve gone in riding -- and what in thunder should I shoot?"
"Game,"
replied Mr. Palford, with chill inward disgust. "Pheasants, partridges,
woodcock, grouse -- "
"I should+n't
shoot anything like that if I went at it," he responded shamelessly.
"I should shoot my own head off, or the fellow's that stood next to me,
unless he got the drop on me first."
He did not know that he
was ignominious. Nobody could have made it clear to him. He did not know that
there were men who had gained distinction, popularity, and fame by doing
nothing in particular but hitting things animate and inanimate with magnificent
precision of aim.
He stood still now and
listened to the silence.
"There+'s not a
sound within a thousand miles of the place. What do fellows with money do to
keep themselves alive?" he said piteously. "They+'ve got to do
something. Shall I have to go out and take a walk, as Palford called it? Take a
walk, by gee!"
He could+n't conceive
it, a man "taking a walk" as though it were medicine -- a walk
nowhere, to reach nothing, just to go and turn back again.
"I+'ll begin and
take in sewing," he said, "or I+'ll open a store in the village -- a
department store. I could spend something on that. I+'ll ask Pearson what he
thinks of it -- or Burrill. I+'d like to see Burrill if I said that to
him."
He decided at last that
he would practise his "short" awhile; that would be doing something,
at any rate. He sat down at the big writing-table and began to dash off mystic
signs at furious speed. But the speed did not keep up. The silence of the great
room, of the immense house, of all the scores of looms and galleries and
corridors, closed in about him. He had practised his "short" in the
night school, with the "L" thundering past at intervals of five
minutes; in the newspaper office, with all the babel of New York about him and
the bang of steam-drills going on below in the next lot, where the foundation
of a new building was being excavated; he had practised it in his hall bedroom
at Mrs. Bowse's, to the tumultuous accompaniment of street sounds and the whizz
and ting-a- ling of street-cars dashing past, and he had not been disturbed. He
had never practised it in any place which was silent, and it was the silence
which became more than he could stand. He actually jumped out of his chair when
he heard mysterious footsteps outside the door, and a footman appeared and
spoke in a low voice which startled him as though it had been a thunderclap.
"A young person
with her father wants to see you, sir," he announced. "I don't think
they are villagers, but of the working- class, I should say."
"Where are
they?"
"I did+n't know
exactly what to do, sir, so I left them in the hall. The young person has a
sort of quiet, determined way -- "
"Little Ann, by
gee!" exclaimed Tembarom with mad joy, and shot out of the room.
The footman -- he had
not seen Little Ann when she had brought Strangeways -- looked after him and
rubbed his chin.
"Would+n't you
call that a rummy sort for Temple Barholm?" he said to one of his fellows
who had appeared in the hall near him.
"It's not my
sort," was the answer. "I+'m going to give notice to old
Butterworth."
Hutchinson and Little
Ann were waiting in the hall. Hutchinson was looking at the rich, shadowy
spaces about him with a sort of proud satisfaction. Fine, dark corners with
armored figures lurking in them, ancient portraits, carved oak settles, and
massive chairs and cabinets -- these were English, and he was an Englishman,
and somehow felt them the outcome of certain sterling qualities of his own. He
looked robustly well, and wore a new rough tweed suit such as one of the gentry
might tramp about muddy roads and fields in. Little Ann was dressed in
something warm and rough also, a brown thing, with a little close, cap-like,
brown hat, from under which her red hair glowed. The walk in the cold, white
fog had made her bloom fresh, soft-red and white-daisy color. She was smiling,
and showing three distinct dimples, which deepened when Tembarom dashed out of
the library.
"Hully gee!"
he cried out, "but I+'m glad to see you!"
He shook hands with
both of them furiously, and two footmen stood and looked at the group with
image-like calm of feature, but with curiously interested eyes. Hutchinson was
aware of them, and endeavored to present to them a back which by its stolid
composure should reveal that he knew more about such things than this chap did
and was+n't a bit upset by grandeur.
"Hully gee!"
cried Tembarom again, "how glad I am! Come on in and sit down and let+'s
talk it over."
Burrill made a stately
step forward, properly intent on his duty, but his master waved him back.
"Say," he
said hastily, "don't bring in any tea They don't want it. They+'re
Americans."
Hutchinson snorted. He
could not stand being consigned to ignominy before the footmen.
"Nowt o' th'
sort," he broke forth. "We+'re noan American. Tha 'rt losing tha
head, lad."
"He's forgetting
because he met us first in New York," said Little Ann, smiling still more.
"Shall I take your
hat and cane, sir?" inquired Burrill, unmovedly, at Hutchinson's side.
"He was+n't going
to say anything about tea," explained Little Ann as they went into the
library. "They don't expect to serve tea in the middle of the morning, Mr.
Temple Barholm."
"Don't they?"
said Tembarom, reckless with relieved delight. "I thought they served it
every time the clock struck. When we were in London it seemed like Palford had
it when he was hot and when he was cold and when he was glad and when he was
sorry and when he was going out and when he was coming in. It+'s brought up to
me, by jinks! as soon as I wake, to brace me up to put on my clothes -- and
Pearson wants to put those on."
He stopped short when
they reached the middle of the room and looked her over.
"O Little
Ann!" he breathed tumultuously. "O Little Ann!"
Mr. Hutchinson was
looking about the library as he had looked about the hall.
"Well, I never
thought I+'d get inside Temple Barholm in my day," he exclaimed. "Eh,
lad, tha must feel like a bull in a china shop."
"I feel like a
whole herd of 'em," answered Tembarom.
Hutchinson nodded. He
understood.
"Well, perhaps
tha+'ll get over it in time," he conceded, "but it+'ll take thee a
good bit." Then he gave him a warmly friendly look. "I+'ll lay you
know what Ann came with me for to-day." The way Little Ann looked at him
-- the way she looked at him!
"I came to thank
you, Mr. Temple Barholm," she said -- "to thank you." And there
was an odd, tender sound in her voice.
"Don't you do it,
Ann," Tembarom answered. "Don't you do it."
"I don't know much
about business, but the way you must have worked, the way you must have had to
run after people, and find them, and make them listen, and use all your New
York cleverness -- because you are clever. The way you+'ve forgotten all about
yourself and thought of nothing but father and the invention! I do know enough
to understand that, and it seems as if I can't think of enough to say. I just
wish I could tell you what it means to me." Two round pearls of tears
brimmed over and fell down her cheeks. "I promised mother faithful' I'd
take care of him and see he never lost hope about it," she added,
"and sometimes I did+n't know whatever I was going to do."
It was perilous when
she looked at one like that, and she was so little and light that one could
have snatched her up in his arms and carried her to the big arm-chair and sat
down with her and rocked her backward and forward and poured forth the whole
thing that was making him feel as though he might explode.
Hutchinson provided
salvation.
"Tha pulled me out
o' the water just when I was going under, lad. God bless thee!" he broke
out, and shook his hand with rough vigor. "I signed with the North
Electric yesterday."
"Good
business!" said Tembarom. "Now I+'m in on the ground floor with
what+'s going to be the biggest money-maker in sight."
"The way tha
talked New York to them chaps took my fancy," chuckled Hutchinson.
"None o' them chaps wants to be the first to jump over the hedge."
"We+'ve got 'em
started now," exulted Tembarom.
"Tha started
'em," said Hutchinson, "and it+'s thee I+'ve got to thank."
"Say, Little
Ann," said Tembarom, with sudden thought, "who+'s come into money
now? You+'ll have it to burn."
"We've not got it
yet, Mr. Temple Barholm," she replied, shaking her head. "Even when
inventions get started, they don't go off like sky-rockets."
"She knows
everything, does+n't she?" Tembarom said to Hutchinson. "Here, come
and sit down. I+'ve not seen you for 'steen years."
She took her seat in
the big arm-chair and looked at him with softly examining eyes, as though she
wanted to understand him sufficiently to be able to find out something she
ought to do if he needed help.
He saw it and half
laughed, not quite unwaveringly.
"You'll make me
cry in a minute," he said. "You don't know what it+'s like to have
some one from home and mother come and be kind to you."
"How is Mr.
Strangeways?" she inquired.
"He+'s well taken
care of, at any rate. That+'s where he+'s got to thank you. Those rooms you and
the housekeeper chose were the very things for him. They're big and
comfortable, and 'way off in a place where no one+'s likely to come near. The
fellow that+'s been hired to valet me valets him instead, and I believe he
likes it. It seems to come quite natural to him, any how. I go in and see him
every now and then and try to get him to talk. I sort of invent things to see
if I can start him thinking straight. He+'s quieted down some and he looks
better. After a while I+'m going to look up some big doctors in London and find
out which of 'em 's got the most plain horse sense. If a real big one would
just get interested and come and see him on the quiet and not get him excited,
he might do him good. I+'m dead stuck on this stunt I+'ve set myself -- getting
him right. It+'s something to work on."
"You+'ll have
plenty to work on soon," said Little Ann. "There+'s a lot of everyday
things you+'ve got to think about. They may seem of no consequence to you, but
they are, Mr. Temple Barholm."
"If you say they
are, I guess they are," he answered. "I+'ll do anything you say,
Ann."
"I came partly to
tell you about some of them to-day," she went on, keeping the yearningly
thoughtful eyes on him. It was rather hard for her, too, to be firm enough when
there was so much she wanted to say and do. And he did not look half as
twinkling and light-heartedly grinning as he had looked in New York.
He could+n't help
dropping his voice a little coaxingly, though Mr. Hutchinson was quite
sufficiently absorbed in examination of his surroundings.
"Did+n't you come
to save my life by letting me have a look at you, Little Ann -- did+n't
you?" he pleaded.
She shook her
wonderful, red head.
"No, I did+n't,
Mr. Temple Barholm," she answered with Manchester downrightness.
"When I said what I did in New York, I meant it. I did+n't intend to hang
about here and let you -- say things to me. You must+n't say them. Father and
me are going back to Manchester in a few days, and very soon we have to go to
America again because of the business."
"America!" he
said. "Oh, Lord!" he groaned. "Do you want me to drop down dead
here with a dull, sickening thud, Ann?"
"You+'re not going
to drop down dead," she replied convincedly. "You're going to stay
here and do whatever it+'s your duty to do, now you+'ve come into Temple
Barholm."
"Am I?" he
answered. "Well, we+'ll see what I+'m going to do when I+'ve had time to
make up my mind. It may be something different from what you+'d think, and it
may+n't. Just now I+'m going to do what you tell me. Go ahead, Little
Ann."
She thought the matter
over with her most destructive little air of sensible intentness.
"Well, it may seem
like meddling, but it is+n't," she began rather concernedly. "It+'s
just that I+'m used to looking after people. I wanted to talk to you about your
clothes."
"My clothes?"
he replied, bewildered a moment; but the next he understood and grinned.
"I have+n't got any. My valet -- think of T. T. with a valet! -- told me
so last night."
"That+'s what I
thought," she said maternally. "I got Mrs. Bowse to write to me, and
she told me you were so hurried and excited you had+n't time for
anything."
"I just rushed
into Cohen's the last day and yanked a few things off the ready-made
counter."
She looked him over
with impersonal criticism.
"I thought so.
Those you+'ve got on won't do at all." Tembarom glanced at them.
"That+'s what
Pearson says."
"They+'re not the
right shape," she explained. "I know what a gentleman's clothes mean
in England, and -- " her face flushed, and sudden, warm spirit made her
speak rather fast -- "I could+n't abide to think of you coming here and --
being made fun of -- just because you had+n't the right clothes."
She said it, the little
thing, as though he were hers -- her very own, and defend him against
disrespect she would. Tembarom, being but young flesh and blood, made an
impetuous dart toward her, and checked himself, catching his breath.
"Ann," he
said, "has your grandmother got a dog?"
"Y-e-s," she
said, faltering because she was puzzled.
"How big is
he?"
"He+'s a big one.
He+'s a brindled bulldog. Why?"
"Well," he
said, half pathetic, half defiant, "if you+'re going to come and talk to
me like that, and look like that, you+'ve got to bring that bull along and set
him on me when I make a break; for there's nothing but a dog can keep me where
you want me to stay -- and a big one at that."
He sat down on an
ottoman near her and dropped his head on his hands. It was not half such a joke
as it sounded.
Little Ann saw it
was+n't and she watched him tenderly, catching her breath once quickly. Men had
ways of taking some things hard and feeling them a good bit more than one would
think. It made trouble many a time if one could+n't help them to think
reasonable.
"Father," she
said to Hutchinson.
"Aye," he
answered, turning round.
"Will you tell Mr.
Temple Barholm that you think I+'m right about giving him his chance?"
"Of course I think
she+'s right," Hutchinson blustered, "and it is+n't the first time
either. I+'m not going to have my lass married into any family where she'd be
looked down upon."
But that was not what
Little Ann wanted; it was not, in fact, her argument. She was not thinking of
that side of the situation.
"It+'s not me that
matters so much, Father," she said; "it+'s him."
"Oh, is it?"
disagreed Hutchinson, dictatorially. "That's not th' road I look at it.
I+'m looking after you, not him. Let him take care of himself. No chap shall
put you where you won't be looked up to, even if I am grateful to him. So there
you have it."
"He can't take
care of himself when he feels like this," she answered. "That+'s why
I+'m taking care of him. He+'ll think steadier when he+'s himself again."
She put out her hand and softly touched his shoulder.
"Don't do
that," she said. "You make me want to be silly." There was a
quiver in her voice, but she tried to change it. "If you don't lift your
head," she added with a great effort at disciplinarian firmness, "I
shall have to go away without telling you the other things."
He lifted his head, but
his attempt at a smile was not hilarious.
"Well, Ann,"
he submitted, "I+'ve warned you. Bring along your dog."
She took a sheet of
paper out of one of the neat pockets in her rough, brown coat.
"I just wrote down
some of the very best tailors' addresses -- the very best," she explained.
"Don't you go to any but the very best, and be a bit sharp with them if
they're not attentive. They'll think all the better of you. If your valet 's a
smart one, take him with you."
"Yes, Ann,"
he said rather weakly. "He+'s going to make a list of things himself,
anyhow."
"That sounds as if
he+'d got some sense." She handed him the list of addresses. "You
give him this, and tell him he must go to the very best ones."
"What do I want to
put on style for?" he asked desperately.
"I don't know a
soul on this side of the Atlantic Ocean."
"You soon
will," she replied, with calm perspicacity. "You+'ve got too much
money not to."
A gruff chuckle made
itself heard from Hutchinson's side of the room.
"Aye, seventy
thousand a year+'ll bring th' vultures about thee, lad."
"We need+n't call
them vultures exactly," was Little Ann's tolerant comment; "but a lot
of people will come here to see you. That was one of the things I thought I
might tell you about.
"Say, you+'re a
wonder!"
"I+'m nothing of
the sort I+'m just a girl with a bit of common sense -- and grandmother 's one
that+'s looked on a long time, and she sees things. The country gentlemen will
begin to call on you soon, and then you+'ll be invited to their houses to meet
their wives and daughters, and then you'll be kept pretty busy."
Hutchinson's bluff
chuckle broke out again.
"You will that, my
lad, when th' match-making mothers get after you. There+'s plenty on 'em."
"Father+'s
joking," she said. Her tone was judicially unprejudiced. "There are
young ladies that -- that+'d be very suitable. Pretty ones and clever ones.
You'll see them all."
"I don't want to
see them."
"You can't help
it," she said, with mild decision. "When there are daughters and a
new gentleman comes into a big property in the neighborhood, it+'s nothing but
natural that the mothers should be a bit anxious."
"Aye, they+'ll be
anxious enough. Mak' sure o' that," laughed Hutchinson.
"Is that what you
want me to put on style for, Little Ann?" Tembarom asked reproachfully.
"I want you to put
it on for yourself. I don't want you to look different from other men.
Everybody+'s curious about you. They're ready to laugh because you came from
America and once sold newspapers."
"It+'s the men
he+'ll have to look out for," Hutchinson put in, with an experienced air.
"There+'s them that+'ll want to borrow money, and them that+'ll want to
drink and play cards and bet high. A green American lad+'ll be a fine pigeon
for them to pluck. You may as well tell him, Ann; you know you came here to do
it."
"Yes, I did,"
she admitted. "I don't want you to seem not to know what people are up to
and what they expect."
That little note of
involuntary defense was a dangerous thing for Tembarom. He drew nearer.
"You don't want
them to take me for a fool, Little Ann. You+'re standing up for me; that+'s
it."
"You can stand up
for yourself, Mr. Temple Barholm, if you+'re not taken by surprise," she
said confidently. "If you understand things a bit, you won't be."
His feelings almost
overpowered him.
"God bless your
dear little soul!" he broke out. "Say, if this goes on, that dog of
your grandmother's would+n't have a show, Ann. I should bite him before he
could bite me."
"I won't go on if
you can't be sensible, Mr. Temple Barholm. I shall just go away and not come
back again. That+'s what I shall do." Her tone was that of a young mother.
He gave in
incontinently.
"Good Lord!
no!" he exclaimed. "I+'ll do anything if you+'ll stay. I+'ll lie down
on the mat and not open my mouth. Just sit here and tell me things. I know you
won't let me hold your hand, but just let me hold a bit of your dress and look
at you while you talk." He took a bit of her brown frock between his
fingers and held it, gazing at her with all his crude young soul in his eyes.
"Now tell me," he added.
"There's only one
or two things about the people who+'ll come to Temple Barholm. Grandmother+'s
talked it over with me. She knew all about those that came in the late Mr.
Temple Barholm's time. He used to hate most of them."
"Then why in
thunder did he ask them to come?"
"He did+n't.
They+'ve got clever, polite ways of asking themselves sometimes. He could+n't
bear the Countess of Mallowe. She+'ll come. Grandmother says you may be sure of
that."
"What+'ll she come
for?"
Little Ann's pause and
contemplation of him were fraught with thoughtfulness.
"She+'ll come for
you," at last she said.
"She+'s got a
daughter she thinks ought to have been married eight years ago," announced
Hutchinson.
Tembarom pulled at the
bit of brown tweed he held as though it were a drowning man's straw.
"Don't you drive
me to drink, Ann," he said. "I+'m frightened. Your grandmother will
have to lend me the dog."
This was a flightiness
which Little Ann did not encourage.
"Lady Joan --
that+'s her daughter -- is very grand and haughty. She+'s a great beauty.
You+'ll look at her, but perhaps she won't look at you. But it+'s not her I+'m
troubled about. I+'m thinking of Captain Palliser and men like him."
"Who+'s he?"
"He+'s one of
those smooth, clever ones that+'s always getting up some company or other and
selling the stock. He+'ll want you to know his friends and he+'ll try to lead
you his way."
As Tembarom held to his
bit of her dress, his eyes were adoring ones, which was really not to be
wondered at. She was adorable as her soft, kind, wonderfully maternal girl face
tried to control itself so that it should express only just enough to help and
nothing to disturb.
"I don't want him
to spoil you. I don't want anything to make you -- different. I could+n't bear
it."
He pulled the bit of
dress pleadingly.
"Why, Little
Ann?" he implored quite low.
"Because,"
she said, feeling that perhaps she was rash -- "because if you were
different, you would+n't be T. Tembarom; and it was T. Tembarom that -- that
was T. Tembarom," she finished hastily.
He bent his head down
to the bit of tweed and kissed it.
"You just keep
looking after me like that," he said, "and there+'s not one of them
can get away with me."
She got up, and he rose
with her. There was a touch of fire in the forget-me-not blue of her eyes.
"Just you let them
see -- just you let them see that you+'re not one they can hold light and make
use of." But there she stopped short, looking up at him. He was looking
down at her with a kind of matureness in his expression. "I need+n't be
afraid," she said. "You can take care of yourself; I ought to have
known that."
"You did," he
said, smiling; "but you wanted to sort of help me. And you+'ve done it, by
gee! just by saying that thing about T. Tembarom. You set me right on my feet.
That's you."
Before they went away
they paid a visit to Strangeways in his remote, undisturbed, and beautiful
rooms. They were in a wing of the house untouched by any ordinary passing to
and fro, and the deep windows looked out upon gardens which spring and summer
would crowd with loveliness from which clouds of perfume would float up to him
on days when the sun warmed and the soft airs stirred the flowers, shaking the
fragrance from their full incense-cups. But the white fog shut out to-day even
their winter bareness. There were light and warmth inside, and every added
charm of rich harmony of deep color and comfort made beautiful. There were
books and papers waiting to be looked over, but they lay untouched on the
writing-table, and Strangeways was sitting close to the biggest window, staring
into the fog. His eyes looked hungry and hollow and dark. Ann knew he was
"trying to remember" something.
When the sound of
footsteps reached his ear, he turned to look at them, and rose mechanically at
sight of Ann. But his expression was that of a man aroused from a dream of
far-off places.
"I remember
you," he said, but hesitated as though making an effort to recall
something.
"Of course you
do," said Little Ann. "You know me quite well. I brought you here.
Think a bit. Little -- Little -- "
"Yes," he
broke forth. "Of course, Little Ann! Thank God I+'ve not forgotten."
He took her hand in both his and held it tenderly. "You have a sweet little
face. It's such a wise little face!" His voice sounded dreamy.
Ann drew him to his
chair with a coaxing laugh and sat down by him.
"You're flattering
me. You make me feel quite shy," she said. "You know him, too,"
nodding toward Tembarom.
"Oh, yes," he
replied, and he looked up with a smile. "He is the one who remembers. You
said you did." He had turned to Tembarom.
"You bet your life
I do," Tembarom answered. "And you will, too, before long."
"If I did not try
so hard," said Strangeways, thoughtfully. "It seems as if I were shut
up in a room, and so many things were knocking at the doors -- hundreds of them
-- knocking because they want to be let in. I am damnably unhappy --
damnably." He hung his head and stared at the floor. Tembarom put a hand
on his shoulder and gave him a friendly shake.
"Don't you worry a
bit," he said. "You take my word for it. It+'ll all come back. I+'m
working at it myself." Strangeways lifted his head.
"You are the one I
know best. I trust you." But there was the beginning of a slight drag in
his voice. "I don't always -- quite recollect -- your name. Not quite.
Good heavens! I must+n't forget that."
Little Ann was quite
ready.
"You won't,"
she said, "because it+'s different from other names. It begins with a
letter -- just a letter, and then there is the name. Think."
"Yes, yes,"
he said anxiously.
Little Ann bent forward
and fixed her eyes on his with concentrated suggestion. They had never risked
confusing him by any mention of the new name. She began to repeat letters of
the alphabet slowly and distinctly until she reached the letter T.
"T," she
ended with much emphasis -- "R. S. T."
His expression cleared
itself.
"T," he
repeated. "T -- Tembarom. R, S, T. How clever you are!"
Little Ann's gaze
concentrated itself still more intently.
"Now you+'ll never
forget it again," she said, "because of the T. You+'ll say the other
letters until you come to it. R, S, T."
"T.
Tembarom," he ended relievedly. "How you help me!" He took her
hand and kissed it very gently.
"We are all going
to help you," Ann soothed him, "T. Tembarom most of all."
"Say,"
Tembarom broke out in an aside to her, "I+'m going to come here and try
things on him every day. When it seems like he gets on to something, however
little a thing it is, I+'m going to follow it up and see if it won't get
somewhere."
Ann nodded.
"There+'ll be
something some day," she said. "Are you quite comfortable here?"
she asked aloud to Strangeways.
"Very comfortable,
thank you," he answered courteously. "They are beautiful rooms. They
are furnished with such fine old things. This is entirely Jacobean. It+'s quite
perfect." He glanced about him. "And so quiet. No one comes in here
but my man, and he is a very nice chap. I never had a man who knew his duties
better."
Little Ann and Tembarom
looked at each other.
"I should+n't be a
bit surprised," she said after they had left the room, "if it
would+n't be a good thing to get Pearson to try to talk to him now and then.
He+'s been used to a man-servant."
"Yes,"
answered Tembarom. "Pearson did+n't rattle him, you bet your life."
HE could not persuade them
to remain to take lunch with him. The firmness of Hutchinson's declination was
not unconnected with a private feeling that "them footmen chaps 'u'd be on
the lookout to see the way you handled every bite you put in your mouth."
He could+n't have stood it, dang their impudence! Little Ann, on her part,
frankly and calmly said, "It would+n't do." That was all, and
evidently covered everything.
After they had gone,
the fog lifted somewhat, but though it withdrew from the windows, it remained
floating about in masses, like huge ghosts, among the trees of the park. When
Tembarom sat down alone to prolong his lunch with the aid of Burrill and the
footmen, he was confronted by these unearthly shapes every time he lifted his
eyes to the window he faced from his place at the table. It was an outlook
which did not inspire to cheerfulness, and the fact that Ann and her father
were going back to Manchester and later to America left him without even the
simple consolation of a healthy appetite. Things were bound to get better after
a while; they were bound to. A fellow would be a fool if he could+n't fix it
somehow so that he could enjoy himself, with money to burn. If you made up your
mind you could+n't stand the way things were, you did+n't have to lie down under
them, with a thousand or so "per" coming in. You could fix it so that
it would be different. By jinks! there was+n't any law against your giving it
all to the church but just enough to buy a flat in Harlem outright, if you
wanted to. But you were+n't going to run crazy and do a lot of fool things in a
minute, and be sorry the rest of your life. Money was money. And first and
foremost there was Ann, with her round cheeks flushed and her voice all sweet
and queer, saying, "You would+n't be T. Tembarom; and it was T. Tembarom
that -- that was T. Tembarom."
He could+n't help
knowing what she had begun to say, and his own face flushed as he thought of
it. He was at that time of life when there generally happens to be one center
about which the world revolves. The creature who passes through this period of
existence without watching it revolve about such a center has missed an
extraordinary and singularly developing experience. It is sometimes happy,
often disastrous, but always more or less developing. Speaking calmly,
detachedly, but not cynically, it is a phase. During its existence it is the
blood in the veins, the sight of the eyes, the beat of the pulse, the throb of
the heart. It is also the day and the night, the sun, the moon, and the stars,
heaven and hell, the entire universe. And it does+n't matter in the least to
any one but the creatures living through it. T. Tembarom was in the midst of
it. There was Ann. There was this new crazy thing which had happened to him --
"this fool thing," as he called it. There was this monstrous,
magnificent house, -- he knew it was magnificent, though it was+n't his kind,
-- there was old Palford and his solemn talk about ancestors and the name of
Temple Barholm. It always reminded him of how ashamed he had been in Brooklyn
of the "Temple Temple" and how he had told lies to prevent the
fellows finding out about it. And there was seventy thousand pounds a year, and
there was Ann, who looked as soft as a baby, -- Good Lord! how soft she+'d feel
if you got her in your arms and squeezed her! -- and yet was somehow strong
enough to keep him just where she wanted him to stay and believed he ought to
stay until "he had found out." That was it. She was+n't doing it for
any fool little idea of making herself seem more important: she just believed
it. She was doing it because she wanted to let him "have his chance,"
just as if she were his mother instead of the girl he was clean crazy about.
His chance! He laughed outright -- a short, confident laugh which startled
Burrill exceedingly.
When he went back to
the library and lighted his pipe he began to stride up and down as he continued
to think it over.
"I wish she was as
sure as I am," he said. "I wish she was as sure of me as I am of
myself -- and as I am of her." He laughed the short, confident laugh
again. "I wish she was as sure as I am of us both. We+'re all right. I+'ve
got to get through this, and find out what it+'s best to do, and I+'ve got to
show her. When I+'ve had my chance good and plenty, us two for little old New
York! Gee! won't it be fine!" he exclaimed imaginatively. "Her going
over her bills, looking like a peach of a baby that+'s trying to knit its
brows, and adding up, and thinking she ought to economize. She+'d do it if we
had ten million." He laughed outright joyfully. "Good Lord! I should
kiss her to death!"
The simplest process of
ratiocination would lead to a realization of the fact that though he was lonely
and uncomfortable, he was not in the least pathetic or sorry for himself. His
normal mental and physical structure kept him steady on his feet, and his
practical and unsentimental training, combining itself with a touch of iron
which centuries ago had expressed itself through some fighting Temple Barholm
and a medium of battle-axes, crossbows, and spears, did the rest.
"It'd take more
than this to get me where I'd be down and out. I+'m feeling fine," he
said. "I believe I+'ll go and `take a walk,' as Palford says."
The fog-wreaths in the
park were floating away, and he went out grinning and whistling, giving Burrill
and the footman a nod as he passed them with a springing young stride. He got
the door open so quickly that he left them behind him frustrated and staring at
each other.
"It was+n't our
fault," said Burrill, gloomily. "He+'s never had a door opened for
him in his life. This won't do for me."
He was away for about
an hour, and came back in the best of spirits. He had found out that there was
something in "taking a walk" if a fellow had nothing else to do. The
park was "fine," and he had never seen anything like it. When there
were leaves on the trees and the grass and things were green, it would be
better than Central Park itself. You could have base-ball matches in it. What a
cinch it would be if you charged gate-money! But he supposed you could+n't if
it be longed to you and you had three hundred and fifty thousand a year. You
had to get used to that. But it did seem a fool business to have all that land
and not make a cent out of it. If it was just outside New York and you cut it
up into lots, you+'d just pile it up. He was quite innocent -- calamitously
innocent and commercial and awful in his views. Thoughts such as these had been
crammed into his brain by life ever since he had gone down the staircase of the
Brooklyn tenement with his twenty-five cents in his ten-year-old hand.
The stillness of the
house seemed to have accentuated itself when he returned to it. His sense of it
let him down a little as he entered. The library was like a tomb -- a
comfortable luxurious tomb with a bright fire in it. A new Punch and the
morning papers had been laid upon a table earlier in the day, and he sat down
to look at them.
"I guess about
fifty-seven or eight of the hundred and thirty- six hours have gone by,"
he said. "But, gee! ain't it lonesome!"
He sat so still trying
to interest himself in "London Day by Day" in the morning paper that
the combination of his exercise in the fresh air and the warmth of the fire
made him drowsy. He leaned back in his chair and closed his eyes without being
aware that he did so. He was on the verge of a doze.
He remained upon the
verge for a few minutes, and then a soft, rustling sound made him open his
eyes.
An elderly little lady
had timidly entered the room. She was neatly dressed in an old-fashioned and
far-from-new black silk dress, with a darned lace collar and miniature brooch
at her neck. She had also thin, gray side-ringlets dangling against her cheeks
from beneath a small, black lace cap with pale- purple ribbons on it. She had
most evidently not expected to find any one in the room, and, having seen
Tembarom, gave a half-frightened cough.
"I -- I beg your
pardon," she faltered. "I really did not mean to intrude --
really."
Tembarom jumped up,
awkward, but good-natured. Was she a kind of servant who was a lady?
"Oh, that+'s all
right," he said.
But she evidently did
not feel that it was all right. She looked as though she felt that she had been
caught doing something wrong, and must properly propitiate by apology.
"I+'m so sorry. I
thought you had gone out -- Mr. Temple Barholm."
"I did go out --
to take a walk; but I came in."
Having been discovered
in her overt act, she evidently felt that duty demanded some further ceremony
from her. She approached him very timidly, but with an exquisite, little
elderly early-Victorian manner. She was of the most astonishingly perfect type,
though Tembarom was not aware of the fact. The manner, a century earlier, would
have expressed itself in a curtsy.
"It is Mr. Temple
Barholm, is+n't it?" she inquired.
"Yes; it has been
for the last few weeks," he answered, wondering why she seemed so in awe
of him and wishing she did+n't.
"I ought to
apologize for being here," she began.
"Say, don't,
please!" he interrupted. "What I feel is, that it ought to be up to
me to apologize for being here."
She was really quite
flurried and distressed.
"Oh, please, Mr.
Temple Barholm!" she fluttered, proceeding to explain hurriedly, as though
he without doubt understood the situation. "I should of course have gone
away at once after the late Mr. Temple Barholm died, but -- but I really had
nowhere to go -- and was kindly allowed to remain until about two months ago,
when I went to make a visit. I fully intended to remove my little belongings
before you arrived, but I was detained by illness and could not return until
this morning to pack up. I understood you were in the park, and I remembered I
had left my knitting-bag here." She glanced nervously about the room, and
seemed to catch sight of something on a remote corner table. "Oh, there it
is. May I take it?" she said, looking at him appealingly. "It was a
kind present from a dear lost friend, and -- and -- " She paused, seeing
his puzzled and totally non-comprehending air. It was plainly the first moment
it had dawned upon her that he did not know what she was talking about. She
took a small alarmed step toward him.
"Oh, I beg your
pardon," she exclaimed in delicate anguish. "I+'m afraid you don't
know who I am. Perhaps Mr. Palford forgot to mention me. Indeed, why should he
mention me? There were so many more important things. I am a sort of distant --
very distant relation of yours. My name is Alicia Temple Barholm."
Tembarom was relieved.
But she actually had+n't made a move toward the knitting-bag. She seemed afraid
to do it until he gave her permission. He walked over to the corner table and
brought it to her, smiling broadly
"Here it is,"
he said. "I+'m glad you left it. I+'m very happy to be acquainted with
you, Miss Alicia."
He was glad just to see
her looking up at him with her timid, refined, intensely feminine appeal. Why
she vaguely brought back something that reminded him of Ann he could not have
told. He knew nothing whatever of types early-Victorian or late.
He took her hand,
evidently to her greatest possible amazement, and shook it heartily. She knew
nothing whatever of the New York street type, and it made her gasp for breath
but naturally with an allayed terror.
"Gee!" he
exclaimed whole-heartedly, "I+'m glad to find out I+'ve got a relation. I
thought I had+n't one in the world. Won't you sit down?" He was drawing
her toward his own easy-chair. But he really did+n't know, she was agitatedly
thinking. She really must tell him. He seemed so good tempered and -- and
different. She herself was not aware of the enormous significance which lay in
that word "different." There must be no risk of her seeming to
presume upon his lack of knowledge.
"It is most kind
of you," she said with grateful emphasis, but I must+n't sit down and
detain you. I can explain in a few words -- if I may."
He positively still
held her hand in the oddest, natural, boyish way, and before she knew what she
was doing he had made her take the chair -- quite made her.
"Well, just sit
down and explain," he said. "I wish to thunder you would detain me.
Take all the time you like. I want to hear all about it -- honest Injun."
There was a cushion in
the chair, and as he talked, he pulled it out and began to arrange it behind
her, still in the most natural and matter-of-fact way -- so natural and
matter-of-fact, indeed, that its very natural matter-of-factedness took her
breath away.
"Is that fixed all
right?" he asked.
Being a little lady,
she could only accept his extraordinary friendliness with grateful
appreciation, though she could not help fluttering a little in her
bewilderment.
"Oh, thank you,
thank you, Mr. Temple Barholm," she said.
He sat down on the
square ottoman facing her, and leaned forward with an air of making a frank
confession.
"Guess what I was
thinking to myself two minutes before you came in? I was thinking, `Lord, I+'m
lonesome -- just sick lonesome!' And then I opened my eyes and looked -- and
there was a relation! Hully gee! I call that luck!"
"Dear me!"
she said, shyly delighted. "Do you, Mr. Temple Barholm -- really?"
Her formal little way
of saying his name was like Ann's.
"Do I? I+'m
tickled to death. My mother died when I was ten, and I+'ve never had any women
kin-folks."
"Poor bo -- "
She had nearly said "Poor boy!" and only checked the familiarity just
in time -- " Poor Mr. Temple Barholm!"
"Say, what are we
two to each other, anyhow?" He put it to her with great interest.
"It is a very
distant relationship, if it is one at all," she answered. "You see, I
was only a second cousin to the late Mr. Temple Barholm, and I had not really
the slightest claim upon him." She placed pathetic emphasis on the fact. "It
was most generous of him to be so kind to me. When my poor father died and I
was left quite penniless, he gave me a -- a sort of home here."
"A sort of
home?" Tembarom repeated.
"My father was a
clergyman in very straitened circumstances. We had barely enough to live upon
-- barely. He could leave me nothing. It actually seemed as if I should have to
starve -- it did, indeed." There was a delicate quiver in her voice.
"And though the late Mr. Temple Barholm had a great antipathy to ladies,
he was so -- so noble as to send word to me that there were a hundred and fifty
rooms in his house, and that if I would keep out of his way I might live in one
of them.
"That was
noble," commented her distant relative.
"Oh, yes, indeed,
especially when one considers how he disliked the opposite sex and what a
recluse he was. He could not endure ladies. I scarcely ever saw him. My room
was in quite a remote wing of the house, and I never went out if I knew he was
in the park. I was most careful. And when he died of course I knew I must go
away."
Tembarom was watching
her almost tenderly.
"Where did you
go?"
"To a kind
clergyman in Shropshire who thought he might help me."
"How was he going
to do it?"
She answered with an
effort to steady a somewhat lowered and hesitating voice.
"There was near
his parish a very nice -- charity," -- her breath caught itself
pathetically, -- "some most comfortable almshouses for decayed
gentlewomen. He thought he might be able to use his influence to get me into
one." She paused and smiled, but her small, wrinkled hands held each other
closely.
Tembarom looked away.
He spoke as though to himself, and without knowing that he was thinking aloud.
"Almshouses!"
he said. "Would+n't that jolt you!" He turned on her again with a
change to cheerful concern. "Say that cushion of yours ain't comfortable.
I+'m going to get you another one." He jumped up and, taking one from a
sofa, began to arrange it behind her dexterously.
"But I must+n't
trouble you any longer. I must go, really," she said, half rising
nervously. He put a hand on her shoulder and made her sit again.
"Go where?"
he said. "Just lean back on that cushion, Miss Alicia. For the next few
minutes this is going to be my funeral."
She was at once
startled and uncomprehending. What an extraordinary expression! What could it
mean?
"F --
funeral?" she stammered.
Suddenly he seemed
somehow to have changed. He looked as serious as though he was beginning to
think out something all at once. What was he going to say?
"That's New York
slang," he answered. "It means that I want to explain myself to you
and ask a few questions."
"Certainly,
certainly, Mr. Temple Barholm."
He leaned his back
against the mantel, and went into the matter practically.
"First off,
have+n't you any folks?" Then, answering her puzzled look, added, "I
mean relations."
Miss Alicia gently
shook her head.
"No sisters or
brothers or uncles or aunts or cousins?"
She shook her head
again.
He hesitated a moment,
putting his hands in his pockets and taking them out again awkwardly as he
looked down at her.
"Now here+'s where
I+'m up against it," he went on. "I don't want to be too fresh or to
butt in, but -- did+n't old Temple Barholm leave you any money?"
"Oh, no!" she
exclaimed. "Dear me! no! I could+n't possibly expect such a thing."
He gazed at her as
though considering the situation. "Could+n't you?" he said.
There was an odd
reflection in his eyes, and he seemed to consider her and the situation again.
"Well," he
began after his pause, "what I want to know is what you expect me to
do."
There was no unkindness
in his manner, in fact, quite the contrary, even when he uttered what seemed to
Miss Alicia these awful, unwarranted words. As though she had forced herself
into his presence to make demands upon his charity! They made her tremble and
turn pale as she got up quickly, shocked and alarmed.
"Oh, nothing!
nothing! nothing whatever, Mr. Temple Barholm!" she exclaimed, her
agitation doing its best to hide itself behind a fine little dignity. He saw in
an instant that his style of putting it had been " 'way off," that
his ignorance had betrayed him, that she had misunderstood him altogether. He
almost jumped at her.
"Oh, say, I
did+n't mean that!" he cried out. "For the Lord's sake! don't think
I+'m such a Tenderloin tough as to make a break like that! Not on your
life!"
Never since her birth
had a male creature looked at Miss Alicia with the appeal which showed itself
in his eyes as he actually put his arm half around her shoulders, like a boy
begging a favor from his mother or his aunt.
"What I meant was
-- " He broke off and began again quite anxiously, "say, just as a
favor, will you sit down again and let me tell you what I did mean?"
It was that natural,
warm, boyish way which overcame her utterly. It reminded her of the only boy
she had ever really known, the one male creature who had allowed her to be fond
of him. There was moisture in her eyes as she let him put her back into her
chair. When he had done it, he sat down on the ottoman again and poured himself
forth.
"You know what
kind of a chap I am. No, you don't, either. You may+n't know a thing about me;
and I want to tell you. I+'m so different from everything you+'ve ever known
that I scare you. And no wonder. It+'s the way I+'ve lived. If you knew, you+'d
understand what I was thinking of when I spoke just now. I+'ve been cold, I+'ve
been hungry, I+'ve walked the wet streets on my uppers. I know all about going
without. And do you expect that I am going to let a -- a little thing like you
-- go away from here without friends and without money on the chance of getting
into an almshouse that is+n't vacant? Do you expect that of me? Not on your
life! That was what I meant."
Miss Alicia quivered;
the pale-purple ribbons on her little lace cap quivered.
"I have+n't,"
she said, and the fine little dignity was piteous, "a shadow of a claim
upon you." It was necessary for her to produce a pocket-handkerchief. He
took it from her, and touched her eyes as softly as though she were a baby.
"Claim
nothing!" he said. "I+'ve got a claim on you. I+'m going to stake one
out right now." He got up and gesticulated, taking in the big room and its
big furniture. "Look at all this! It fell on me like a thunderbolt. It+'s
nearly knocked the life out of me. I+'m like a lost cat on Broadway. You can't
go away and leave me, Miss Alicia; it+'s your duty to stay. You+'ve just got to
stay to take care of me." He came over to her with a wheedling smile.
"I never was taken care of in my life. Just be as noble to me as old
Temple Barholm was to you: give me a sort of home."
If a little gentlewoman
could stare, it might be said that Miss Alicia stared at him. She trembled with
amazed emotion.
"Do you mean --
" Despite all he had said, she scarcely dared to utter the words lest,
after all, she might be taking for granted more than it was credible could be
true. "Can you mean that if I stayed here with you it would make Temple
Barholm seem more like home? Is it possible you -- you mean that?"
"I mean just that
very thing."
It was too much for
her. Finely restrained little elderly gentlewoman as she was, she openly broke
down under it.
"It can't be
true!" she ejaculated shakily. "It is+n't possible. It is too -- too beautiful
and kind. Do forgive me! I c-a-n't help it." She burst into tears.
She knew it was most
stupidly wrong. She knew gentlemen did not like tears. Her father had told her
that men never really forgave women who cried at them. And here, when her fate
hung in the balance, she was not able to behave herself with feminine decorum.
Yet the new Mr. Temple
Barholm took it in as matter-of- fact a manner as he seemed to take everything.
He stood by her chair and soothed her in his dear New York voice.
"That's all right,
Miss Alicia," he commented. "You cry as much as you want to, just so
that you don't say no. You+'ve been worried and you+'re tired. I+'ll tell you
there+'s been two or three times lately when I should like to have cried myself
if I+'d known how. Say," he added with a sudden outburst of imagination,
"I bet anything it+'s about time you had tea."
The suggestion was so
entirely within the normal order of things that it made her feel steadier, and
she was able to glance at the clock.
"A cup of tea
would be refreshing," she said. "They will bring it in very soon, but
before the servants come I must try to express -- "
But before she could
express anything further the tea appeared. Burrill and a footman brought it on
splendid salvers, in massive urn and tea-pot, with chaste, sacrificial flame
flickering, and wonderful, hot buttered and toasted things and wafers of bread
and butter attendant. As they crossed the threshold, the sight of Miss Alicia's
small form enthroned in their employer's chair was one so obviously
unanticipated that Burrill made a step backward and the footman almost lost the
firmness of his hold on the smaller tray. Each recovered himself in time,
however, and not until the tea was arranged upon the table near the fire was
any outward recognition of Miss Alicia's presence made. Then Burrill, pausing,
made an announcement entirely without prejudice:
"I beg pardon,
sir, but Higgins's cart has come for Miss Temple Barholm's box; he is asking
when she wants the trap."
"She does+n't want
it at all," answered Tembarom. "Carry her trunk up-stairs again.
She+'s not going away."
The lack of proper
knowledge contained in the suggestion that Burrill should carry trunks upstairs
caused Miss Alicia to quail in secret, but she spoke with outward calm.
"No,
Burrill," she said. "I am not going away."
"Very good,
Miss," Burrill replied, and with impressive civility he prepared to leave
the room. Tembarom glanced at the tea-things.
"There+'s only one
cup here," he said. "Bring one for me."
Burrill's expression
might perhaps have been said to start slightly.
"Very good,
sir," he said, and made his exit. Miss Alicia was fluttering again.
"That cup was
really for you, Mr. Temple Barholm," she ventured.
"Well, now it+'s
for you, and I+'ve let him know it," replied Tembarom.
"Oh, please,"
she said in an outburst of feeling -- "please let me tell you how grateful
-- how grateful I am!"
But he would not let
her.
"If you do,"
he said, "I+'ll tell you how grateful I am, and that+'ll be worse. No,
that+'s all fixed up between us. It goes. We won't say any more about it."
He took the whole
situation in that way, as though he was assuming no responsibility which was
not the simple, inevitable result of their drifting across each other -- as
though it was only what any man would have done, even as though she was a sort
of delightful, unexpected happening. He turned to the tray.
"Say, that looks
all right, does+n't it?" he said. "Now you are here, I like the way
it looks. I did+n't yesterday."
Burrill himself brought
the extra cup and saucer and plate. He wished to make sure that his senses had
not deceived him. But there she sat who through years had existed discreetly in
the most unconsidered rooms in an uninhabited wing, knowing better than to
presume upon her privileges -- there she sat with an awed and rapt face gazing
up at this new outbreak into Temple Barholm's and "him joking and grinning
as though he was as pleased as Punch."
TO employ the figure of
Burrill, Tembarom was indeed "as pleased as Punch." He was one of the
large number of men who, apart from all sentimental relations, are made
particularly happy by the kindly society of women; who expand with quite
unconscious rejoicing when a woman begins to take care of them in one way or
another. The unconsciousness is a touching part of the condition. The feminine
nearness supplies a primeval human need. The most complete of men, as well as
the weaklings, feel it. It is a survival of days when warm arms held and
protected, warm hands served, and affectionate voices soothed. An accomplished
male servant may perform every domestic service perfectly, but the fact that he
cannot be a woman leaves a sense of lack. An accustomed feminine warmth in the
surrounding daily atmosphere has caused many a man to marry his housekeeper or
even his cook, as circumstances prompted.
Tembarom had known no
woman well until he had met Little Ann. His feeling for Mrs. Bowse herself had
verged on affection, because he would have been fond of any woman of decent
temper and kindliness, especially if she gave him opportunities to do friendly
service. Little Ann had seemed the apotheosis of the feminine, the warmly
helpful, the subtly supporting, the kind. She had been to him an amazement and
a revelation. She had continually surprised him by revealing new
characteristics which seemed to him nicer things than he had ever known before,
but which, if he had been aware of it, were not really surprising at all. They
were only the characteristics of a very nice young feminine creature.
The presence of Miss
Alicia, with the long-belated fashion of her ringlets and her little cap, was
delightful to him. He felt as though he would like to take her in his arms and
hug her. He thought perhaps it was partly because she was a little like Ann,
and kept repeating his name in Ann's formal little way. Her delicate terror of
presuming or intruding he felt in its every shade. Mentally she touched him
enormously. He wanted to make her feel that she need not be afraid of him in
the least, that he liked her, that in his opinion she had more right in the
house than he had. He was a little frightened lest through ignorance he should
say things the wrong way, as he had said that thing about wanting to know what
she expected him to do. What he ought to have said was, "You+'re not
expecting me to let that sort of thing go on." It had made him sick when
he saw what a break he+'d made and that she thought he was sort of insulting
her. The room seemed all right now that she was in it. Small and unassuming as
she was, she seemed to make it less over-sized. He did+n't so much mind the
loftiness of the ceiling, the depth and size of the windows, and the walls
covered with thousands of books he knew nothing whatever about. The innumerable
books had been an oppressing feature. If he had been one of those "college
guys" who never could get enough of books, what a "cinch" the
place would have been for him -- good as the Astor Library! He had+n't a word to
say against books, -- good Lord! no, -- but even if he+'d had the education and
the time to read, he did+n't believe he was naturally that kind, anyhow. You
had to be "that kind" to know about books. He did+n't suppose she --
meaning Miss Alicia -- was learned enough to make you throw a fit. She did+n't
look that way, and he was mighty glad of it, because perhaps she would+n't like
him much if she was. It would worry her when she tried to talk to him and found
out he did+n't know a darned thing he ought to.
They+'d get on together
easier if they could just chin about common sort of every-day things. But
though she did+n't look like the Vassar sort, he guessed that she was not like
himself: she had lived in libraries before, and books did+n't frighten her.
She+'d been born among people who read lots of them and maybe could talk about
them. That was why she somehow seemed to fit into the room. He was aware that,
timid as she was and shabby as her neat dress looked, she fitted into the whole
place, as he did not. She+'d been a poor relative and had been afraid to death
of old Temple Barholm, but she+'d not been afraid of him because she was+n't
his sort. She was a lady; that was what was the matter with her. It was what
made things harder for her, too. It was what made her voice tremble when she+'d
tried to seem so contented and polite when she+'d talked about going into one
of those "decayed almshouses." As if the old ladies were vegetables
that had gone wrong, by gee! he thought.
He liked her little,
modest, delicate old face and her curls and her little cap with the ribbons so
much that he smiled with a twinkling eye every time he looked at her. He wanted
to suggest something he thought would be mighty comfortable, but he was half
afraid he might be asking her to do something which was+n't "her
job," and it might hurt her feelings. But he ventured to hint at it.
"Has Burrill got
to come back and pour that out?" he asked, with an awkward gesture toward
the tea-tray. "Has he just got to?"
"Oh, no, unless
you wish it," she answered. "Shall -- may I give it to you?"
"Will you?"
he exclaimed delightedly. "That would be fine. I shall feel like a regular
Clarence."
She was going to sit at
the table in a straight-backed chair, but he sprang at her.
"This big one is
more comfortable," he said, and he dragged it forward and made her sit in
it. "You ought to have a footstool," he added, and he got one and put
it under her feet. "There, that+'s all right."
A footstool, as though
she were a royal personage and he were a gentleman in waiting, only probably
gentlemen in waiting did not jump about and look so pleased. The cheerful
content of his boyish face when he himself sat down near the table was
delightful.
"Now," he
said, "we can ring up for the first act."
She filled the tea-pot
and held it for a moment, and then set it down as though her feelings were too
much for her.
"I feel as if I
were in a dream," she quavered happily. "I do indeed."
"But it+'s a nice
one, ain't it?" he answered. "I feel as if I was in two. Sitting here
in this big room with all these fine things about me, and having afternoon tea
with a relation! It just about suits me. It did+n't feel like this yesterday,
you bet your life!"
"Does it seem --
nicer than yesterday?" she ventured. "Really, Mr. Temple
Barholm?"
"Nicer!" he
ejaculated. "It's got yesterday beaten to a frazzle."
It was beyond all
belief. He was speaking as though the advantage, the relief, the happiness,
were all on his side. She longed to enlighten him.
"But you can't
realize what it is to me," she said gratefully, "to sit here, not
terrified and homeless and -- a beggar any more, with your kind face before me.
Do forgive me for saying it. You have such a kind young face, Mr. Temple Barholm.
And to have an easy-chair and cushions, and actually a buffet brought for my
feet!" She suddenly recollected herself. "Oh, I mustn't let your tea
get cold," she added, taking up the tea-pot apologetically. "Do you
take cream and sugar, and is it to be one lump or two?"
"I take everything
in sight," he replied joyously, "and two lumps, please."
She prepared the cup of
tea with as delicate a care as though it had been a sacramental chalice, and
when she handed it to him she smiled wistfully.
"No one but you
ever thought of such a thing as bringing a buffet for my feet -- no one except
poor little Jem," she said, and her voice was wistful as well as her
smile.
She was obviously
unaware that she was introducing an entirely new acquaintance to him. Poor
little Jem was supposed to be some one whose whole history he knew.
"Jem?" he
repeated, carefully transferring a piece of hot buttered crumpet to his plate.
"Jem Temple
Barholm," she answered. "I say little Jem because I remember him only
as a child. I never saw him after he was eleven years old."
"Who was he?"
he asked. The tone of her voice and her manner of speaking made him feel that
he wanted to hear something more.
She looked rather
startled by his ignorance. "Have you -- have you never heard of him?"
she inquired.
"No. Is he another
distant relation?"
Her hesitation caused
him to neglect his crumpet, to look up at her. He saw at once that she wore the
air of a sensitive and beautifully mannered elderly lady who was afraid she had
made a mistake and said something awkward.
"I am so
sorry," she apologized. "Perhaps I ought not to have mentioned
him."
"Why should+n't he
be mentioned?"
She was embarrassed.
She evidently wished she had not spoken, but breeding demanded that she should
ignore the awkwardness of the situation, if awkwardness existed.
"Of course -- I
hope your tea is quite as you like it -- of course there is no real reason. But
-- shall I give you some more cream? No? You see, if he had+n't died, he -- he
would have inherited Temple Barholm."
Now he was interested.
This was the other chap.
"Instead of
me?" he asked, to make sure. She endeavored not to show embarrassment and
told herself it did+n't really matter -- to a thoroughly nice person. But --
"He was the next
of kin -- before you. I+'m so sorry I did+n't know you had+n't heard of him. It
seemed natural that Mr. Palford should have mentioned him."
"He did say that
there was a young fellow who had died, but he did+n't tell me about him. I
guess I did+n't ask. There were such a lot of other things. I+'d like to hear
about him. You say you knew him?"
"Only when he was
a little fellow. Never after he grew up. Something happened which displeased my
father. I+'m afraid papa was very easily displeased. Mr. Temple Barholm
disliked him, too. He would not have him at Temple Barholm."
"He had+n't much
luck with his folks, had he?" remarked Tembarom.
"He had no luck
with any one. I seemed to be the only person who was fond of him, and of course
I did+n't count."
"I bet you counted
with him," said Tembarom.
"I do think I did.
Both his parents died quite soon after he was born, and people who ought to have
cared for him were rather jealous because he stood so near to Temple Barholm.
If Mr. Temple Barholm had not been so eccentric and bitter, everything would
have been done for him; but as it was, he seemed to belong to no one. When he
came to the vicarage it used to make me so happy. He used to call me Aunt
Alicia, and he had such pretty ways." She hesitated and looked quite
tenderly at the tea-pot, a sort of shyness in her face. "I am sure,"
she burst forth, "I feel quite sure that you will understand and won't
think it indelicate; but I had thought so often that I should like to have a
little boy -- if I had married," she added in hasty tribute to propriety.
Tembarom's eyes rested
on her in a thoughtfulness openly touched with affection. He put out his hand
and patted hers two or three times in encouraging sympathy.
"Say," he
said frankly, "I just believe every woman that+'s the real thing+'d like
to have a little boy -- or a little girl -- or a little something or other.
That+'s why pet cats and dogs have such a cinch of it. And there+'s men that+'s
the same way. It+'s sort of nature."
"He had such a
high spirit and such pretty ways," she said again. "One of his pretty
ways was remembering to do little things to make one comfortable, like thinking
of giving one a cushion or a buffet for one's feet. I noticed it so much
because I had never seen boys or men wait upon women. My own dear papa was used
to having women wait upon him -- bring his slippers, you know, and give him the
best chair. He did+n't like Jem's ways. He said he liked a boy who was a boy
and not an affected nincompoop. He was+n't really quite just." She paused
regretfully and sighed as she looked back into a past doubtlessly enriched with
many similar memories of "dear papa." "Poor Jem! Poor Jem!"
she breathed softly.
Tembarom thought that
she must have felt the boy's loss very much, almost as much as though she had
really been his mother; perhaps more pathetically because she had not been his
mother or anybody's mother. He could see what a good little mother she would
have made, looking after her children and doing everything on earth to make
them happy and comfortable, just the kind of mother Ann would make, though she
had not Ann's steady wonder of a little head or her shrewd farsightedness. Jem
would have been in luck if he had been her son. It was a darned pity he had+n't
been. If he had, perhaps he would not have died young.
"Yes," he
answered sympathetically, "it+'s hard for a young fellow to die. How old
was he, anyhow? I don't know."
"Not much older
than you are now. It was seven years ago. And if he had only died, poor dear!
There are things so much worse than death."
"Worse!"
"Awful disgrace is
worse," she faltered. She was plainly trying to keep moisture out of her
eyes.
"Did he get into
some bad mix-up, poor fellow?" If there had been anything like that, no
wonder it broke her up to think of him.
"It surely did
break her up. She flushed emotionally.
"The cruel thing
was that he did+n't really do what he was accused of," she said.
"He did+n't?"
"No; but he was a
ruined man, and he went away to the Klondike because he could not stay in
England. And he was killed -- killed, poor boy! And afterward it was found out
that he was innocent -- too late."
"Gee!"
Tembarom gasped, feeling hot and cold. "Could you beat that for rotten
luck! What was he accused of?"
Miss Alicia leaned
forward and spoke in a whisper. It was too dreadful to speak of aloud.
"Cheating at cards
-- a gentleman playing with gentlemen. You know what that means."
Tembarom grew hotter
and colder. No wonder she looked that way, poor little thing!
"But," -- he
hesitated before he spoke, -- "but he was+n't that kind, was he? Of course
he was+n't."
"No, no. But, you
see," -- she hesitated herself here, -- "everything looked so much
against him. He had been rather wild." She dropped her voice even lower in
making the admission.
Tembarom wondered how
much she meant by that.
"He was so much in
debt. He knew he was to be rich in the future, and he was poor just in those
reckless young days when it seemed unfair. And he had played a great deal and
had been very lucky. He was so lucky that sometimes his luck seemed uncanny.
Men who had played with him were horrible about it afterward."
"They would be,"
put in Tembarom. "They+'d be sore about it, and bring it up."
They both forgot their
tea. Miss Alicia forgot everything as she poured forth her story in the manner
of a woman who had been forced to keep silent and was glad to put her case into
words. It was her case. To tell the truth of this forgotten wrong was again to
offer justification of poor handsome Jem whom everybody seemed to have dropped
talk of, and even preferred not to hear mentioned.
"There were such
piteously cruel things about it," she went on. "He had fallen very
much in love, and he meant to marry and settle down. Though we had not seen
each other for years, he actually wrote to me and told me about it. His letter made
me cry. He said I would understand and care about the thing which seemed to
have changed everything and made him a new man. He was so sorry that he had not
been better and more careful. He was going to try all over again. He was not
going to play at all after this one evening when he was obliged to keep an
engagement he had made months before to give his revenge to a man he had won a
great deal of money from. The very night the awful thing happened he had told
Lady Joan, before he went into the card-room, that this was to be his last
game."
Tembarom had looked
deeply interested from the first, but at her last words a new alertness added
itself.
"Did you say Lady
Joan?" he asked. "Who was Lady Joan?"
"She was the girl
he was so much in love with. Her name was Lady Joan Fayre."
"Was she the
daughter of the Countess of Mallowe?"
"Yes. Have you
heard of her?"
He recalled Ann's
reflective consideration of him before she had said, "She+'ll come after
you." He replied now: "Some one spoke of her to me this morning. They
say she+'s a beauty and as proud as Lucifer."
"She was, and she
is yet, I believe. Poor Lady Joan -- as well as poor Jem!"
"She did+n't
believe it, did she?" he put in hastily. "She did+n't throw him
down?"
"No one knew what
happened between them afterward. She was in the card-room, looking on, when the
awful thing took place."
She stopped, as though
to go on was almost unbearable. She had been so overwhelmed by the past shame
of it that even after the passing of years the anguish was a living thing. Her
small hands clung hard together as they rested on the edge of the table.
Tembarom waited in thrilled suspense. She spoke in a whisper again:
"He won a great
deal of money -- a great deal. He had that uncanny luck again, and of course
people in the other rooms heard what was going on, and a number drifted in to
look on. The man he had promised to give his revenge to almost showed signs of
having to make an effort to conceal his irritation and disappointment. Of
course, as he was a gentleman, he was as cool as possible; but just at the most
exciting moment, the height of the game, Jem made a quick movement, and -- and
something fell out of his sleeve."
"Something,"
gasped Tembarom, "fell out of his sleeve!"
Miss Alicia's eyes
overflowed as she nodded her beribboned little cap.
"It" -- her
voice was a sob of woe -- "it was a marked card. The man he was playing
against snatched it and held it up. And he laughed out loud."
"Holy cats!"
burst from Tembarom; but the remarkable exclamation was one of genuine horror,
and he turned pale, got up from his seat, and took two or three strides across
the room, as though he could not sit still.
"Yes, he laughed
-- quite loudly," repeated Miss Alicia, "as if he had guessed it all
the time. Papa heard the whole story from some one who was present."
Tembarom came back to
her rather breathless.
"What in thunder
did he do -- Jem?" he asked.
She actually wrung her
poor little hands.
"What could he do?
There was a dead silence. People moved just a little nearer to the table and
stood and stared, merely waiting. They say it was awful to see his face --
awful. He sprang up and stood still, and slowly became as white as if he were
dying before their eyes. Some one thought Lady Joan Fayre took a step toward him,
but no one was quite sure. He never uttered one word, but walked out of the
room and down the stairs and out of the house."
"But did+n't he
speak to the girl?"
"He did+n't even
look at her. He passed her by as if she were stone."
"What happened next?"
"He disappeared.
No one knew where at first, and then there was a rumor that he had gone to the
Klondike and had been killed there. And a year later -- only a year! Oh, if he
had only waited in England! -- a worthless villain of a valet he had discharged
for stealing met with an accident, and because he thought he was going to die,
got horribly frightened, and confessed to the clergyman that he had tucked the
card in poor Jem's sleeve himself just to pay him off. He said he did it on the
chance that it would drop out where some one would see it, and a marked card
dropping out of a man's sleeve anywhere would look black enough, whether he was
playing or not. But poor Jem was in his grave, and no one seemed to care,
though every one had been interested enough in the scandal. People talked about
that for weeks."
Tembarom pulled at his
collar excitedly.
"It makes me sort
of strangle," he said. "You+'ve got to stand your own bad luck, but
to hear of a chap that+'s had to lie down and take the worst that could come to
him and know it was+n't his -- just know it! And die before he's cleared! That
knocks me out."
Almost every sentence
he uttered had a mystical sound to Miss Alicia, but she knew how he was taking
it, with what hot, young human sympathy and indignation. She loved the way he
took it, and she loved the feeling in his next words:
"And the girl --
good Lord! -- the girl?"
"I never met her,
and I know very little of her; but she has never married."
"I+'m glad of
that," he said. "I+'m darned glad of it. How could she?" Ann
would+n't, he knew. Ann would have gone to her grave unmarried. But she would
have done things first to clear her man's name. Somehow she would have cleared
him, if she+'d had to fight tooth and nail till she was eighty.
"They say she has
grown very bitter and haughty in her manner. I+'m afraid Lady Mallowe is a very
worldly woman. One hears they don't get on together, and that she is bitterly
disappointed because her daughter has not made a good match. It appears that
she might have made several, but she is so hard and cynical that men are afraid
of her. I wish I had known her a little -- if she really loved Jem."
Tembarom had thrust his
hands into his pockets, and was standing deep in thought, looking at the huge
bank of red coals in the fire-grate. Miss Alicia hastily wiped her eyes.
"Do excuse
me," she said.
"I+'ll excuse you
all right," he replied, still looking into the coals. "I guess I
should+n't excuse you as much if you did+n't." He let her cry in her
gentle way while he stared, lost in reflection.
"And if he had+n't
fired that valet chap, he would be here with you now -- instead of me. Instead
of me," he repeated.
And Miss Alicia did not
know what to say in reply. There seemed to be nothing which, with propriety and
natural feeling, one could say.
"It makes me feel
just fine to know I+'m not going to have my dinner all by myself," he said
to her before she left the library.
She had a way of
blushing about things he noticed, when she was shy or moved or did+n't know
exactly what to say. Though she must have been sixty, she did it as though she
were sixteen. And she did it when he said this, and looked as though suddenly
she was in some sort of trouble.
"You are going to
have dinner with me," he said, seeing that she hesitated -- "dinner
and breakfast and lunch and tea and supper and every old thing that goes. You
can't turn me down after me staking out that claim."
"I+'m afraid --
" she said. "You see, I have lived such a secluded life. I scarcely
ever left my rooms except to take a walk. I+'m sure you understand. It would
not have been necessary even if I could have afforded it, which I really
could+n't -- I+'m afraid I have nothing -- quite suitable -- for evening
wear."
"You
have+n't!" he exclaimed gleefully. "I don't know what is suitable for
evening wear, but I have+n't got it either. Pearson told me so with tears in
his eyes. It never was necessary for me either. I+'ve got to get some things to
quiet Pearson down, but until I do I+'ve got to eat my dinner in a tweed
cutaway; and what I+'ve caught on to is that it+'s unsuitable enough to throw a
man into jail. That little black dress you+'ve got on and that little cap are
just 'way out of sight, they+'re so becoming. Come down just like you
are."
She felt a little as
Pearson had felt when confronting his new employer's entire cheerfulness in
face of a situation as exotically hopeless as the tweed cutaway, and nothing
else by way of resource. But there was something so nice about him, something
which was almost as though he was actually a gentleman, something which
absolutely, if one could go so far, stood in the place of his being a gentleman
It was impossible to help liking him more and more at every queer speech he
made. Still, there were of course things he did not realise, and perhaps one
ought in kindness to give him a delicate hint.
"I+'m
afraid," she began quite apologetically. "I+'m afraid that the
servants, Burrill and the footmen, you know, will be -- will think -- "
"Say," he
took her up, "let's give Burrill and the footmen the Willies out and out.
If they can't stand it, they can write home to their mothers and tell 'em
they+'ve got to take 'em away. Burrill and the footmen need+n't worry. They+'re
suitable enough, and it+'s none of their funeral, anyhow."
He was+n't upset in the
least. Miss Alicia, who, as a timid dependent either upon "poor dear
papa" or Mr. Temple Barholm, had been secretly, in her sensitive, ladylike
little way, afraid of superior servants all her life, knowing that they
realized her utterly insignificant helplessness, and resented giving her
attention because she was not able to show her appreciation of their services
in the proper manner -- Miss Alicia saw that it had not occurred to him to
endeavor to propitiate them in the least, because somehow it all seemed a joke
to him, and he did+n't care. After the first moment of being startled, she
regarded him with a novel feeling, almost a kind of admiration. Tentatively she
dared to wonder if there was not something even rather -- rather aristocratic
in his utter indifference.
If he had been a duke,
he would not have regarded the servants' point of view; it would+n't have
mattered what they thought. Perhaps, she hastily decided, he was like this
because, though he was not a duke, boot-blacking in New York notwithstanding he
was a Temple Barholm. There were few dukes as old of blood as a Temple Barholm.
That must be it. She was relieved.
Whatsoever lay at the
root of his being what he was and as he was, he somehow changed the aspect of
things for her, and without doing anything but be himself, cleared the
atmosphere of her dread of the surprise and mental reservations of the footmen
and Burrill when she came down to dinner in her high-necked, much-cleaned, and
much-repaired black silk, and with no more distinguishing change in her toilet
than a white lace cap instead of a black one, and with "poor dear
mamma's" hair bracelet with the gold clasp on her wrist, and a weeping- willow
made of "poor dear papa's" hair in a brooch at her collar.
It was so curious,
though still "nice," but he did not offer her his arm when they were
going into the dining-room, and he took hold of hers with his hand and
affectionately half led, half pushed, her along with him as they went. And he
himself drew back her chair for her at the end of the table opposite his own.
He did not let a footman do it, and he stood behind it, talking in his cheerful
way all the time, and he moved it to exactly the right place, and then actually
bent down and looked under the table.
"Here," he
said to the nearest man-servant, "where+'s there a footstool? Get one,
please," in that odd, simple, almost aristocratic way. It was not a rude
dictatorial way, but a casual way, as though he knew the man was there to do
things, and he did+n't expect any time to be wasted.
And it was he himself
who arranged the footstool, making it comfortable for her, and then he went to
his own chair at the head of the table and sat down, smiling at her joyfully
across the glass and silver and flowers.
"Push that thing
in the middle on one side, Burrill," he said. "It's too high. I can't
see Miss Alicia."
Burrill found it
difficult to believe the evidence of his hearing.
"The epergne, sir?"
he inquired.
"Is that what
it+'s called, an apern? That's a new one on me. Yes, that+'s what I mean. Push
the apern over."
"Shall I remove it
from the table, sir?" Burrill steeled himself to exact civility. Of what
use to behave otherwise? There always remained the liberty to give notice if
the worst came to the worst, though what the worst might eventually prove to be
it required a lurid imagination to depict. The epergne was a beautiful thing of
crystal and gold, a celebrated work of art, regarded as an exquisite
possession. It was almost remarkable that Mr. Temple Barholm had not said,
"Shove it on one side," but Burrill had been spared the poignant
indignity of being required to "shove."
"Yes, suppose you
do. It+'s a fine enough thing when it is+n't in the way, but I+'ve got to see
you while I talk, Miss Alicia," said Mr. Temple Barholm. The episode of
the epergne -- Burrill's expression, and the rigidly restrained mouths of Henry
and James as the decoration was removed, leaving a painfully blank space of
table-cloth until Burrill silently filled it with flowers in a low bowl --
these things temporarily flurried Miss Alicia somewhat, but the pleased smile
at the head of the table calmed even that trying moment.
Then what a delightful
meal it was, to be sure! How entertaining and cheerful and full of interesting
conversation! Miss Alicia had always admired what she reverently termed
"conversation." She had read of the houses of brilliant people where
they had it at table, at dinner and supper parties, and in drawing-rooms. The
French, especially the French ladies, were brilliant conversationalists. They
held "salons" in which the conversation was wonderful -- Mme. de Staël
and Mme. Roland, for instance; and in England, Lady Mary Wortley Montague,
Sydney Smith, and Horace Walpole, and surely Miss Fanny Burney, and no doubt L.
E. L., whose real name was Miss Letitia Elizabeth Landon -- what conversation
they must have delighted their friends with and how instructive it must have
been even to sit in the most obscure corner and listen!
Such gifted persons
seemed to have been chosen by Providence to delight and inspire every one
privileged to hear them. Such privileges had been omitted from the scheme of
Miss Alicia's existence. She did not know, she would have felt it sacrilegious
to admit it even if the fact had dawned upon her, that "dear papa"
had been a heartlessly arrogant, utterly selfish, and tyrannical old blackguard
of the most pronounced type. He had been of an absolute morality as far as
social laws were concerned. He had written and delivered a denunciatory sermon
a week, and had made unbearable by his ministrations the suffering hours and
the last moments of his parishioners during the long years of his pastorate.
When Miss Alicia, in reading records of the helpful relationship of the male
progenitors of the Brontés, Jane Austen, Fanny Burney, and Mrs. Browning, was
frequently reminded of him, she revealed a perception of which she was not
aware. He had combined the virile qualities of all of them. Consequently,
brilliancy of conversation at table had not been the attractive habit of the
household; "poor dear papa" had confined himself to scathing
criticism of the incompetence of females who could not teach their menials to
"cook a dinner which was not a disgrace to any de cent household."
When not virulently aspersing the mutton, he was expressing his opinion of
muddle-headed weakness which would permit household bills to mount in a manner
which could only bring ruin and disaster upon a minister of the gospel who
throughout a protracted career of usefulness had sapped his intellectual
manhood in the useless effort to support in silly idleness a family of
brainless and maddening fools. Miss Alicia had heard her character, her unsuccessful
physical appearance, her mind, and her pitiful efforts at table-talk, described
in detail with a choice of adjective and adverb which had broken into terrified
fragments every atom of courage and will with which she had been sparsely
dowered.
So, not having herself
been gifted with conversational powers to begin with, and never having enjoyed
the exhibition of such powers in others, her ideals had been high. She was not
sure that Mr. Temple Barholm's fluent and cheerful talk could be with exactness
termed "conversation." It was perhaps not sufficiently lofty and
intellectual, and did not confine itself rigorously to one exalted subject. But
how it did raise one's spirits and open up curious vistas! And how good
tempered and humorous it was, even though sometimes the humor was a little
bewildering! During the whole dinner there never occurred even one of those
dreadful pauses in which dead silence fell, and one tried, like a frightened
hen flying from side to side of a coop, to think of something to say which
would not sound silly, but perhaps might divert attention from dangerous
topics. She had often thought it would be so interesting to hear a Spaniard or
a native Hindu talk about himself and his own country in English. Tembarom
talked about New York and its people and atmosphere, and he did not know how
foreign it all was. He described the streets -- Fifth Avenue and Broadway and
Sixth Avenue -- and the street-cars and the elevated railroad, and the way
"fellows" had to "hustle" "to put it over." He
spoke of a boarding-house kept by a certain Mrs. Bowse, and a presidential
campaign, and the election of a mayor, and a quick-lunch counter, and when
President Garfield had been assassinated, and a department store, and the
electric lights, and the way he had of making a sort of picture of every thing
was really instructive and, well, fascinating. She felt as though she had been
taken about the city in one of the vehicles the conductor of which described
things through a megaphone.
Not that Mr. Temple
Barholm suggested a megaphone, whatsoever that might be, but he merely made you
feel as if you had seen things. Never had she been so entertained and
enlightened. If she had been a beautiful girl, he could not have seemed more as
though in amusing her he was also really pleasing himself. He was so very funny
sometimes that she could not help laughing in a way which was almost
unladylike, because she could not stop, and was obliged to put her handkerchief
up to her face and wipe away actual tears of mirth.
Fancy laughing until
you cried, and the servants looking on!
Once Burrill himself
was obliged to turn hastily away, and twice she heard him severely reprove an
overpowered young footman in a rapid undertone.
Tembarom at least felt
that the unlifting heaviness of atmosphere which had surrounded him while
enjoying the companionship of Mr. Palford was a thing of the past.
The thrilled interest,
the surprise and delight of Miss Alicia would have stimulated a man in a
comatose condition, it seemed to him. The little thing just loved every bit of
it -- she just "eat it up." She asked question after question,
sometimes questions which would have made him shout with laughter if he had not
been afraid of hurting her feelings. She knew as little of New York as he knew
of Temple Barholm, and was, it made him grin to see, allured by it as by some
illicit fascination. She did not know what to make of it, and sometimes she was
obliged hastily to conceal a fear that it was a sort of Sodom and Gomorrah; but
she wanted to hear more about it, and still more.
And she brightened up
until she actually did not look frightened, and ate her dinner with an
excellent appetite.
"I really never
enjoyed a dinner so much in my life," she said when they went into the
drawing-room to have their coffee. "It was the conversation which made it
so delightful. Conversation is such a stimulating thing!"
She had almost decided
that it was "conversation," or at least a wonderful substitute.
When she said good
night to him and went beaming to bed, looking forward immensely to breakfast
next morning, he watched her go up the staircase, feeling wonderfully normal
and happy.
"Some of these
nights, when she+'s used to me," he said as he stuffed tobacco into his
last pipe in the library -- "some of these nights I+'m darned if I sha'n't
catch hold of the sweet, little old thing and hug her in spite of myself. I
sha'n't be able to help it." He lit his pipe, and puffed it even
excitedly. "Lord!" he said, "there+'s some blame' fool going
about the world right now that might have married her. And he+'ll never know
what a break he made when he did+n't."
A FUGITIVE fine day
which had strayed into the month from the approaching spring appeared the next
morning, and Miss Alicia was uplifted by the enrapturing suggestion that she
should join her new relative in taking a walk, in fact that it should be she
who took him to walk and showed him some of his possessions. This, it had
revealed itself to him, she could do in a special way of her own, because
during her life at Temple Barholm she had felt it her duty to "try to do a
little good" among the villagers. She and her long-dead mother and sister
had of course been working adjuncts of the vicarage, and had numerous somewhat
trying tasks to perform in the way of improving upon "dear papa's"
harrying them into attending church, chivying the mothers into sending their
children to Sunday-school, and being unsparing in severity of any conduct which
might be construed into implying lack of appreciation of the vicar or respect
for his eloquence.
It had been necessary
for them as members of the vicar's family -- always, of course, without adding
a sixpence to the household bills -- to supply bowls of nourishing broth and
arrowroot to invalids and to bestow the aid and encouragement which result in a
man of God's being regarded with affection and gratitude by his parishioners.
Many a man's career in the church, "dear papa" had frequently
observed, had been ruined by lack of intelligence and effort on the part of the
female members of his family.
"No man could
achieve proper results," he had said, "if he was hampered by the
selfish influence and foolishness of his womenkind. Success in the church
depends in one sense very much upon the conduct of a man's female
relatives."
After the deaths of her
mother and sister, Miss Alicia had toiled on patiently, fading day by day from
a slim, plain, sweet- faced girl to a slim, even plainer and sweeter-faced
middle- aged and at last elderly woman. She had by that time read aloud by
bedsides a great many chapters in the Bible, had given a good many tracts, and
bestowed as much arrowroot, barley-water, and beef-tea as she could possibly
encompass without domestic disaster. She had given a large amount of conscientious,
if not too intelligent, advice, and had never failed to preside over her
Sunday- school class or at mothers' meetings. But her timid unimpressiveness
had not aroused enthusiasm or awakened comprehension. "Miss Alicia,"
the cottage women said, "she+'s well meanin', but she+'s not one with a
head." "She reminds me," one of them had summed her up, "of
a hen that lays a' egg every day, but it+'s too small for a meal, and 'u'd
never hatch into anythin'."
During her stay at
Temple Barholm she had tentatively tried to do a little "parish
work," but she had had nothing to give, and she was always afraid that if
Mr. Temple Barholm found her out, he would be angry, because he would think she
was presuming. She was aware that the villagers knew that she was an object of
charity herself, and a person who was "a lady" and yet an object of
charity was, so to speak, poaching upon their own legitimate preserves. The
rector and his wife were rather grand people, and condescended to her greatly
on the few occasions of their accidental meetings. She was neither smart nor
influential enough to be considered as an asset.
It was she who
"conversed" during their walk, and while she trotted by Tembarom's
side looking more early-Victorian than ever in a neat, fringed mantle and a
small black bonnet of a fashion long decently interred by a changing world,
Tembarom had never seen anything resembling it in New York; but he liked it and
her increasingly at every moment.
It was he who made her
converse. He led her on by asking her questions and being greatly interested in
every response she made. In fact, though he was quite unaware of the situation,
she was creating for him such an atmosphere as he might have found in a book,
if he had had the habit of books. Everything she told him was new and quaint
and very often rather touching. She related anecdotes about herself and her
poor little past without knowing she was doing it. Before they had talked an
hour he had an astonishing clear idea of "poor dear papa" and "dearest
Emily" and "poor darling mama" and existence at Roweroft
Vicarage. He "caught on to" the fact that though she was very much
given to the word "dear," -- people were "dear," and so
were things and places, -- she never even by chance slipped into saying
"dear Roweroft," which she would certainly have done if she had ever
spent a happy moment in it.
As she talked to him he
realized that her simple accustomedness to English village life and all its
accompaniments of county surroundings would teach him anything and everything
he might want to know. Her obscurity had been surrounded by stately
magnificence, with which she had become familiar without touching the merest
outskirts of its privileges. She knew names and customs and families and things
to be cultivated or avoided, and though she would be a little startled and much
mystified by his total ignorance of all she had breathed in since her birth, he
felt sure that she would not regard him either with private contempt or with a
lessened liking because he was a vandal pure and simple.
And she had such a
nice, little, old polite way of saying things. When, in passing a group of
children, he failed to understand that their hasty bobbing up and down meant
that they were doing obeisance to him as lord of the manor, she spoke with the
prettiest apologetic courtesy.
"I+'m sure you
won't mind touching your hat when they make their little curtsies, or when a
villager touches his forehead," she said.
"Good Lord!
no," he said, starting. "Ought I? I did+n't know they were doing it
at me." And he turned round and made a handsome bow and grinned almost
affectionately at the small, amazed party, first puzzling, and then delighting,
them, because he looked so extraordinarily friendly. A gentleman who laughed at
you like that ought to be equal to a miscellaneous distribution of pennies in
the future, if not on the spot. They themselves grinned and chuckled and nudged
one another, with stares and giggles.
"I am sorry to say
that in a great many places the villagers are not nearly so respectful as they
used to be," Miss Alicia explained. "In Roweroft the children were
very remiss about curtseying. It's quite sad. But Mr. Temple Barholm was very
strict indeed in the matter of demanding proper respectfulness. He has turned
men off their farms for incivility. The villagers of Temple Barholm have much
better manners than some even a few miles away."
"Must I tip my hat
to all of them?" he asked.
"If you please. It
really seems kinder. You -- you need+n't quite lift it, as you did to the
children just now. If you just touch the brim lightly with your hand in a sort
of military salute -- that is what they are accustomed to."
After they had passed
through the village street she paused at the end of a short lane and looked up
at him doubtfully.
"Would you -- I
wonder if you would like to go into a cottage," she said.
"Go into a
cottage?" he asked. "What cottage? What for?"
He had not the remotest
idea of any reason why he should go into a cottage inhabited by people who were
entire strangers to him, and Miss Alicia felt a trifle awkward at having to
explain anything so wholly natural.
"You see, they are
your cottages, and the people are your tenants, and -- "
"But perhaps they
might+n't like it. It might make 'em mad," he argued. "If their
water-pipes had busted, and they+'d asked me to come and look at them or
anything; but they don't know me yet. They might think I was Mr.
Buttinski."
"I don't quite --
" she began. "Buttinski is a foreign name; it sounds Russian or
Polish. I+'m afraid I don't quite understand why they should mistake you for
him."
Then he laughed -- a
boyish shout of laughter which brought a cottager to the nearest window to peep
over the pots of fuchsias and geraniums blooming profusely against the diamond
panes.
"Say," he
apologized, "don't be mad because I laughed. I+'m laughing at myself as
much as at anything. It's a way of saying that they might think I was `butting
in' too much -- pushing in where I was+n't asked. See? I said they might think
I was Mr. Butt-in-ski! It+'s just a bit of fool slang. You+'re not mad, are
you?"
"Oh, no!" she
said. "Dear me! no. It is very funny, of course. I+'m afraid I+'m
extremely ignorant about -- about foreign humor." It seemed more delicate
to say "foreign" than merely "American." But her gentle
little countenance for a few seconds wore a baffled expression, and she said
softly to herself, "Mr. Buttinski, Butt-in -- to intrude. It sounds quite
Polish; I think even more Polish than Russian."
He was afraid he would
yell with glee, but he did not. Herculean effort enabled him to restrain his
feelings, and present to her only an ordinary-sized smile.
"I should+n't know
one from the other," he said; "but if you say it sounds more Polish,
I bet it does."
"Would you like to
go into a cottage?" she inquired. "I think it might be as well. They
will like the attention."
"Will they? Of
course I+'ll go if you think that. What shall I say?" he asked somewhat
anxiously.
"If you think the
cottage looks clean, you might tell them so, and ask a few questions about
things. And you must be sure to inquire about Susan Hibblethwaite's legs."
"What?"
ejaculated Tembarom.
"Susan
Hibblethwaite's legs," she replied in mild explanation. "Susan is Mr.
Hibblethwaite's unmarried sister, and she has very bad legs. It is a thing one
notices continually among village people, more especially the women, that they
complain of what they call `bad legs.' I never quite know what they mean,
whether it is rheumatism or something different, but the trouble is always
spoken of as `bad legs.' And they like you to inquire about them, so that they
can tell you their symptoms."
"Why don't they
get them cured?"
"I don't know,
I+'m sure. They take a good deal of medicine when they can afford it. I think
they like to take it. They+'re very pleased when the doctor gives them `a
bottle o' summat,' as they call it. Oh, I must+n't forget to tell you that most
of them speak rather broad Lancashire."
"Shall I
understand them?" Tembarom asked, anxious again. "Is it a sort of
Dago talk?"
"It is the English
the working-classes speak in Lancashire. `Summat' means `something.' `Whoam'
means `home.' But I should think you would be very clever at understanding
things."
"I+'m scared
stiff," said Tembarom, not in the least uncourageously; "but I want
to go into a cottage and hear some of it. Which one shall we go into?"
There were several
whitewashed cottages in the lane, each in its own bit of garden and behind its
own hawthorn hedge, now bare and wholly unsuggestive of white blossoms and
almond scent to the uninitiated. Miss Alicia hesitated a moment.
"We will go into
this one, where the Hibblethwaites live," she decided. "They are
quite clean, civil people. They have a naughty, queer, little crippled boy, but
I suppose they can't keep him in order because he is an invalid. He+'s rather
rude, I+'m sorry to say, but he+'s rather sharp and clever, too. He seems to
lie on his sofa and collect all the gossip of the village."
They went together up
the bricked path, and Miss Alicia knocked at the low door with her knuckles. A
stout, apple- faced woman opened it, looking a shade nervous.
"Good morning, Mrs.
Hibblethwaite," said Miss Alicia in a kind but remote manner. "The
new Mr. Temple Barholm has been kind enough to come to see you. It+'s very good
of him to come so soon, is+n't it?"
"It is that,"
Mrs. Hibblethwaite answered respectfully, looking him over. "Wilt tha coom
in, sir?"
Tembarom accepted the
invitation, feeling extremely awkward because Miss Alicia's initiatory comment
upon his goodness in showing himself had "rattled" him. It had made
him feel that he must appear condescending, and he had never condescended to
any one in the whole course of his existence. He had, indeed, not even been
condescended to. He had met with slanging and bullying, indifference and
brutality of manner but he had not met with condescension
"I hope you+'re
well, Mrs. Hibblethwaite," he answered. "You look it."
"I deceive ma
looks a good bit, sir," she answered. "Mony a day ma legs is nigh as
bad as Susan's."
"Tha 'rt jealous
o' Susan's legs," barked out a sharp voice from a corner by the fire.
The room had a flagged
floor, clean with recent scrubbing with sandstone; the whitewashed walls were
decorated with pictures cut from illustrated papers; there was a big fireplace,
and by it was a hard-looking sofa covered with blue-and-white checked cotton
stuff. A boy of about ten was lying on it, propped up with a pillow. He had a
big head and a keen, ferret- eyed face, and just now was looking round the end
of his sofa at the visitors.
"Howd tha tongue,
Tummas!" said his mother.
"I wunnot howd
it," Tummas answered. "Ma tongue+'s th' on'y thing about me as works
right, an' I+'m noan goin' to stop it.
"He's a young
nowt," his mother explained; "but he's a cripple, an' we conna do owt
wi' him."
"Do not be rude,
Thomas," said Miss Alicia, with dignity.
"Dunnot be rude
thysen," replied Tummas. "I+'m noan o' thy lad."
Tembarom walked over to
the sofa.
"Say," he
began with jocular intent, "you+'ve got a grouch on, ain't you?"
Tummas turned on him
eyes which bored. An analytical observer or a painter might have seen that he
had a burning curiousness of look, a sort of investigatory fever of expression.
"I dunnot know
what tha means," he said. "Happen tha 'rt talkin' 'Merican?"
"That+'s just what
it is," admitted Tembarom. "What are you talking?"
"Lancashire,"
said Tummas. "Theer+'s some sense i' that."
Tembarom sat down near
him. The boy turned over against his pillow and put his chin in the hollow of
his palm and stared.
"I+'ve wanted to
see thee," he remarked. "I+'ve made mother an' Aunt Susan an' feyther
tell me every bit they've heared about thee in the village. Theer was a lot of
it. Tha coom fro' 'Meriker?"
"Yes."
Tembarom began vaguely to feel the demand in the burning curiosity.
"Gi' me that theer
book," the boy said, pointing to a small table heaped with a miscellaneous
jumble of things and standing not far from him. "It+'s a' atlas," he
added as Tembarom gave it to him. "Yo' con find places in it." He
turned the leaves until he found a map of the world. "Theer's
'Meriker," he said, pointing to the United States. "That theer+'s
north and that theer+'s south. All th' real 'Merikens comes from the North,
wheer New York is."
"I come from New
York," said Tembarom.
"Tha wert born i'
th' workhouse, tha run about th' streets i' rags, tha pretty nigh clemmed to
death, tha blacked boots, tha sold newspapers, tha feyther was a common
workin'-mon -- and now tha 's coom into Temple Barholm an' sixty thousand a
year."
"The last part's
true all right," Tembarom owned, "but there+'s some mistakes in the
first part. I was+n't born in the workhouse, and though I+'ve been hungry
enough, I never starved to death -- if that 's what `clemmed' means.
Tummas looked at once
disappointed and somewhat incredulous."
"That 's th' road
they tell it i' th' village," he argued.
"Well, let then
tell it that way if they like it best. That+'s not going to worry me,"
Tembarom replied uncombatively.
Tummas's eyes bored
deeper into him.
"Does na tha
care?" he demanded.
"What should I
care for? Let every fellow enjoy himself his own way."
"Tha 'rt not a bit
like one o' th' gentry," said Tummas. "Tha 'rt quite a common chap.
Tha 'rt as common as me, for aw tha foine clothes."
"People are common
enough, anyhow," said Tembarom.
"There 's nothing
much commoner, is there? There+'s millions of 'em everywhere -- billions of
'em. None of us need put on airs."
"Tha 'rt as common
as me," said Tummas, reflectively. "An' yet tha owns Temple Barholm
an' aw that brass. I conna; mak' out how th' loike happens."
"Neither can I;
but it does all samee."
"It does na happen
i' 'Meriker," exulted Tummas. "Everybody+'s equal theer."
"Rats!"
ejaculated Tembarom. "What about multimillionaires?"
He forgot that the age
of Tummas was ten. It was impossible not to forget it. He was, in fact, ten
hundred, if those of his generation had been aware of the truth. But there he
sat, having spent only a decade of his most recent incarnation in a whitewashed
cottage, deprived of the use of his legs.
Miss Alicia, seeing
that Tembarom was interested in the boy entered into domestic conversation with
Mrs. Hibblethwaite at the other side of the room. Mrs. Hibblethwaite was soon
explaining the uncertainty of Susan's temper on wash-days, when it was necessary
to depend on her legs.
"Can't you walk at
all?" Tembarom asked. Tummas shook his head. "How long have you been
lame?"
"Ever since I wur
born. It+'s summat like rickets. I+'ve been lyin' here aw my days. I look on at
foak an' think 'em over. I+'ve got to do summat. That's why I loike th' atlas.
Little Ann Hutchinson gave it to me onct when she come to see her
grandmother."
Tembarom sat upright.
"Do you know
her?" he exclaimed.
"I know her best
o' onybody in th' world. An' I loike her best."
"So do I,"
rashly admitted Tembarom.
"Tha does?"
Tummas asked suspiciously. "Does she loike thee?"
"She says she
does." He tried to say it with proper modesty.
"Well, if she says
she does, she does. An' if she does, then yo an' me+'ll be friends." He
stopped a moment, and seemed to be taking Tembarom in with thoroughness.
"I could get a lot out o' thee," he said after the inspection.
"A lot of
what?" Tembarom felt as though he would really like to hear.
"A lot o' things I
want to know about. I wish I+'d lived th' life tha+'s lived, clemmin' or no
clemmin'. Tha+'s seen things goin' on every day o' thy loife."
"Well, yes,
there+'s been plenty going on, plenty," Tembarom admitted.
"I+'ve been lying
here for ten year'," said Tummas, savagely. "An' I+'ve had nowt i'
th' world to do an' nowt to think on but what I could mak' foak tell me about
th' village. But nowt happens but this chap gettin' drunk an' that chap deein'
or losin' his place, or wenches gettin' married or havin' childer. I know
everything that happens, but it+'s nowt but a lot o' women clackin'. If I+'d
not been a cripple, I+'d ha' been at work for mony a year by now, 'arnin' money
to save by an' go to 'Meriker."
"You seem to be
sort of stuck on America. How+'s that?"
"What dost
mean?"
"I mean you seem
to like it."
"I dunnot loike it
nor yet not loike it, but I+'ve heard a bit more about it than I have about th'
other places on th' map. Foak goes there to seek their fortune, an' it seems
loike there+'s a good bit doin'."
"Do you like to
read newspapers?" said Tembarom, inspired to his query by a recollection
of the vision of things "doin' " in the Sunday Earth.
"Wheer+'d I get
papers from?" the boy asked testily. "Foak like us has+n't got th'
brass for 'em."
"I+'ll bring you
some New York papers," promised Tembarom, grinning a little in
anticipation. "And we+'ll talk about the news that's in them. The Sunday
Earth is full of pictures. I used to work on that paper myself."
"Tha did?"
Tummas cried excitedly. "Did tha help to print it, or was it th' one tha
sold i' th' streets?"
"I wrote some of
the stuff in it."
"Wrote some of th'
stuff in it? Wrote it thaself? How could tha, a common chap like thee?" he
asked, more excited still, his ferret eyes snapping.
"I don't know how
I did it," Tembarom answered, with increased cheer and interest in the
situation. "It was+n't high- brow sort of work."
Tummas leaned forward
in his incredulous eagerness.
"Does tha mean
that they paid thee for writin' it -- paid thee?"
"I guess they
would+n't have done it if they+'d been Lancashire," Tembarom answered.
"But they had+n't much more sense than I had. They paid me twenty-five
dollars a week -- that+'s five pounds."
"I dunnot believe
thee," said Tummas, and leaned back on his pillow short of breath.
"I did+n't believe
it myself till I+'d paid my board two weeks and bought a suit of clothes with
it," was Tembarom's answer, and he chuckled as he made it.
But Tummas did believe
it. This, after he had recovered from the shock, became evident. The curiosity
in his face intensified itself; his eagerness was even vaguely tinged with
something remotely resembling respect. It was not, however, respect for the
money which had been earned, but for the store of things "doin' " which
must have been required. It was impossible that this chap knew things undreamed
of.
"Has tha ever been
to th' Klondike?" he asked after a long pause.
"No. I+'ve never
been out of New York."
Tummas seemed fretted
and depressed.
"Eh, I+'m sorry for
that. I wished tha+'d been to th' Klondike. I want to be towd about it,"
he sighed. He pulled the atlas toward him and found a place in it.
"That theer+'s
Dawson," he announced. Tembarom saw that the region of the Klondike had
been much studied. It was even rather faded with the frequent passage of
searching fingers, as though it had been pored over with special curiosity.
"There+'s
gowd-moines theer," revealed Tummas. "An' theer+'s welly nowt else
but snow an' ice. A young chap as set out fro' here to get theer froze to death
on th' way."
"How did you get
to hear about it?"
"Ann she browt me
a paper onct." He dug under his pillow, and brought out a piece of
newspaper, worn and frayed and cut with age and usage. "This heer+'s
what+'s left of it." Tembarom saw that it was a fragment from an old
American sheet and that a column was headed "The Rush for the
Klondike."
"Why didna tha go
theer?" demanded Tummas. He looked up from his fragment and asked his
question with a sudden reflectiveness, as though a new and interesting aspect
of things had presented itself to him.
"I had too much to
do in New York," said Tembarom. "There+'s always something doing in
New York, you know."
Tummas silently
regarded him a moment or so.
"It+'s a pity tha
did+n't go," he said. "Happen tha+'d never ha' coom back."
Tembarom laughed the
outright laugh.
"Thank you,"
he answered.
Tummas was still
thinking the matter over and was not disturbed.
"I was na thinkin'
o' thee," he said in an impersonal tone. "I was thinkin' o' t' other
chap. If tha+'d gon i'stead o' him, he+'d ha' been here i'stead o' thee. Eh,
but it+'s funny." And he drew a deep breath like a sigh having its birth
in profundity of baffled thought.
Both he and his evident
point of view were "funny" in the Lancashire sense, which does not
imply humor, but strangeness and the unexplainable. Singular as the phrasing
was, Tembarom knew what he meant, and that he was thinking of the oddity of
chance. Tummas had obviously heard of "poor Jem" and had felt an
interest in him.
"You're talking
about Jem Temple Barholm I guess," he said. Perhaps the interest he
himself had felt in the tragic story gave his voice a tone somewhat responsive
to Tummas's own mood, for Tummas, after one more boring glance, let himself go.
His interest in this special subject was, it revealed itself, a sort of
obsession. The history of Jem Temple Barholm had been the one drama of his
short life.
"Aye, I was
thinkin' o' him," he said. "I should na ha' cared for th' Klondike so
much but for him."
"But he went away
from England when you were a baby."
"Th' last toime he
coom to Temple Barholm wur when I wur just born. Foak said he coom to ax owd
Temple Barholm if he'd help him to pay his debts, an' th' owd chap awmost
kicked him out o' doors. Mother had just had me, an' she was weak an' poorly
an' sittin' at th' door wi' me in her arms, an' he passed by an' saw her. He
stopped an' axed her how she was doin'. An' when he was goin' away, he gave her
a gold sovereign, an' he says, `Put it in th' savin's-bank for him, an' keep it
theer till he+'s a big lad an' wants it.' It+'s been in th' savin's-bank ever
sin'. I+'ve got a whole pound o' ma own out at interest. There+'s not many lads
ha' got that."
"He must have been
a good-natured fellow," commented Tembarom. "It was darned bad luck
him going to the Klondike."
"It was good luck
for thee," said Tummas, with resentment.
"Was it?" was
Tembarom's unbiased reply. "Well, I guess it was, one way or the other.
I+'m not kicking, anyhow."
Tummas naturally did
not know half he meant. He went on talking about Jem Temple Barholm, and as he
talked his cheeks flushed and his eyes lighted.
"I would na spend
that sovereign if I was starvin'. I+'m going to leave it to Ann Hutchinson in
ma will when I dee. I+'ve axed questions about him reet and left ever sin' I
can remember, but theer+'s nobody knows much. Mother says he was fine an'
handsome, an' gentry through an' through. If he+'d coom into th' property, he+'d
ha' coom to see me again I+'ll lay a shillin', because I+'m a cripple an' I
canna spend his sovereign. If he+'d coom back from th' Klondike, happen he+'d
ha' towd me about it." He pulled the atlas toward him, and laid his thin
finger on the rubbed spot. "He mun ha' been killed somewheer about
here," he sighed. "Somewheer here. Eh, it+'s funny."
Tembarom watched him.
There was something that rather gave you the "Willies" in the way
this little cripple seemed to have taken to the dead man and worried along all
these years thinking him over and asking questions and studying up the Klondike
because he was killed there. It was because he+'d made a kind of story of it.
He+'d enjoyed it in the way people enjoy stories in a newspaper. You always had
to give 'em a kind of story; you had to make a story even if you were telling
about a milk-wagon running away. In newspaper offices you heard that was the
secret of making good with what you wrote. Dish it up as if it was a sort of
story.
He not infrequently
arrived at astute enough conclusions concerning things. He had arrived at one
now. Shut out even from the tame drama of village life, Tummas, born with an
abnormal desire for action and a feverish curiosity, had hungered and thirsted
for the story in any form whatsoever. He caught at fragments of happenings, and
colored and dissected them for the satisfying of unfed cravings. The vanished
man had been the one touch of pictorial form and color in his ten years of
existence. Young and handsome and of the gentry, unfavored by the owner of the
wealth which some day would be his own possession, stopping
"gentry-way" at a cottage door to speak good-naturedly to a pale
young mother, handing over the magnificence of a whole sovereign to be saved
for a new-born child, going away to vaguely understood disgrace, leaving his
own country to hide himself in distant lands, meeting death amid snow and ice
and surrounded by gold-mines, leaving his empty place to be filled by a
boot-black newsboy -- true there was enough to lie and think over and to try to
follow with the help of maps and excited questions.
"I wish I could
ha' seen him," said Tummas. "I+'d awmost gi' my sovereign to get a
look at that picture in th' gallery at Temple Barholm."
"What
picture?" Tembarom asked. "Is there a picture of him there?"
"There is na one
o' him, but there+'s one o' a lad as deed two hundred year' ago as they say wur
th' spit an' image on him when he wur a lad hissen. One o' th' owd servants
towd mother it wur theer."
This was a natural stimulus
to interest and curiosity.
"Which one is it?
Jinks! I+'d like to see it myself. Do you know which one it is? There+'s
hundreds of them."
"No, I dunnot
know," was Tummas's dispirited answer, "an' neither does mother. Th'
woman as knew left when owd Temple Barholm deed."
"Tummas,"
broke in Mrs. Hibblethwaite from the other end of the room, to which she had
returned after taking Miss Alicia out to complain about the copper in the
"wash-'us' -- " "Tummas, tha+'st been talkin' like a magpie. Tha
'rt a lot too bold an' ready wi' tha tongue. Th' gentry+'s noan comin' to see
thee if tha clacks th' heads off theer showthers."
"I+'m afraid he
always does talk more than is good for him," said Miss Alicia. "He
looks quite feverish."
"He has been
talking to me about Jem Temple Barholm," explained Tembarom. "We+'ve
had a regular chin together. He thinks a heap of poor Jem."
Miss Alicia looked
startled, and Mrs. Hibblethwaite was plainly flustered tremendously. She quite
lost her temper.
"Eh," she
exclaimed, "tha wants tha young yed knocked off, Tummas Hibblethwaite.
He+'s fair daft about th' young gentleman as -- as was killed. He axes
questions mony a day till I+'d give him th' stick if he wasna a cripple. He
moithers me to death."
"I+'ll bring you some
of those New York papers to look at," Tembarom said to the boy as he went
away.
He walked back through
the village to Temple Barholm, holding Miss Alicia's elbow in light,
affectionate guidance and support, a little to her embarrassment and also a little
to her delight. Until he had taken her into the dining-room the night before
she had never seen such a thing done. There was no over-familiarity in the
action. It merely seemed somehow to suggest liking and a wish to take care of
her.
"That little fellow
in the village," he said after a silence in which it occurred to her that
he seemed thoughtful, "what a little freak he is! He+'s got an idea that
there+'s a picture in the gallery that+'s said to look like Jem Temple Barholm
when he was a boy. Have you ever heard anything about it? He says a servant
told his mother it was there."
"Yes, there is
one," Miss Alicia answered. "I sometimes go and look at it. But it
makes me feel very sad. It is the handsome boy who was a page in the court of
Charles II. He died in his teens. His name was Miles Hugo Charles James. Jem
could see the likeness himself. Sometimes for a little joke I used to call him
Miles Hugo."
"I believe I
remember him," said Tembarom. "I believe I asked Palford his name. I
must go and have a look at him again. He had+n't much better luck than the
fellow that looked like him, dying as young as that."
FORM, color, drama, and
divers other advantages are necessary to the creation of an object of interest.
Presenting to the world none of these assets, Miss Alicia had slipped through
life a scarcely remarked unit. No little ghost of prettiness had attracted the
wandering eye, no suggestion of agreeable or disagreeable power of
self-assertion had arrested attention. There had been no hour in her life when
she had expected to count as being of the slightest consequence. When she had
knocked at the door of the study at Roweroft Vicarage, and "dear
papa" had exclaimed irritably: "Who is that? Who is that?" she
had always replied, "It is only Alicia."
This being the case,
her gradual awakening to the singularity of her new situation was mentally a
process full of doubts and sometimes of alarmed bewilderments. If in her
girlhood a curate, even a curate with prominent eyes and a receding chin, had
proposed to her that she should face with him a future enriched by the prospect
of being called upon to bring up a probable family of twelve on one hundred and
fifty pounds a year, with both parish and rectory barking and snapping at her
worn- down heels, she would have been sure to assert tenderly that she was
afraid she was "not worthy." This was the natural habit of her mind,
and in the weeks which followed the foggy afternoon when Tembarom "staked
out his claim" she dwelt often upon her unworthiness of the benefits
bestowed upon her.
First the world
below-stairs, then the village, and then the county itself awoke to the fact
that the new Temple Temple Barholm had "taken her up." The first
tendency of the world below-stairs was to resent the unwarranted uplifting of a
person whom there had been a certain luxury in regarding with disdain and
treating with scarcely veiled lack of consideration. To be able to do this with
a person who, after all was said and done, was not one of the servant class,
but a sort of lady of birth, was not unstimulating. And below-stairs the sense
of personal rancor against "a 'anger-on" is strong. The meals served
in Miss Alicia's remote sitting-room had been served at leisure, her tea had
rarely been hot, and her modestly tinkled bell irregularly answered. Often her
far from liberally supplied fire had gone out on chilly days, and she had been
afraid to insist on its being relighted. Her sole defense against inattention
would have been to complain to Mr. Temple Barholm, and when on one occasion a
too obvious neglect had obliged her to gather her quaking being together in
mere self-respect and say, "If this continues to occur, William, I shall
be obliged to speak to Mr. Temple Barholm," William had so looked at her
and so ill hid a secret smile that it had been almost tantamount to his saying,
"I+'d jolly well like to see you."
And now! Sitting at the
end of the table opposite him, if you please! Walking here and walking there
with him! Sitting in the library or wherever he was, with him talking and
laughing and making as much of her as though she were an aunt with a fortune to
leave, and with her making as free in talk as though at liberty to say anything
that came into her head! Well, the beggar that had found himself on horseback
was setting another one galloping alongside of him. In the midst of this
natural resentment it was "a bit upsetting," as Burrill said, to find
it dawning upon one that absolute exactness of ceremony was as much to be
required for "her" as for "him." Miss Alicia had long felt
secretly sure that she was spoken of as "her" in the servants' hall.
That businesslike sharpness which Palford had observed in his client aided
Tembarom always to see things without illusions. He knew that there was no
particular reason why his army of servants should regard him for the present as
much more than an intruder; but he also knew that if men and women had
employment which was not made hard for them, and were well paid for doing, they
were not anxious to lose it, and the man who paid their wages might give orders
with some certainty of finding them obeyed. He was "sharp" in more
ways than one. He observed shades he might have been expected to overlook. He
observed a certain shade in the demeanor of the domestics when attending Miss
Alicia, and it was a shade which marked a difference between service done for
her and service done for himself. This was only at the outset, of course, when
the secret resentment was felt; but he observed it, mere shade though it was.
He walked out into the
hall after Burrill one morning. Not having yet adjusted himself to the rule
that when one wished to speak to a man one rang a bell and called him back,
fifty times if necessary, he walked after Burrill and stopped him.
"This is a pretty
good place for servants, ain't it?" he said.
"Yes, sir."
"Good pay, good
food, not too much to do?"
"Certainly,
sir," Burrill replied, somewhat disturbed by a casualness which yet
suggested a method of getting at something or other.
"You and the rest
of them don't want to change, do you?"
"No, sir. There is
no complaint whatever as far as I have heard."
"That+'s all
right." Mr. Temple Barholm had put his hands into his pockets, and stood
looking non-committal in a steady sort of way. "There+'s something I want
the lot of you to get on to-right away. Miss Temple Barholm is going to stay here.
She+'s got to have everything just as she wants it. She+'s got to be pleased.
She+'s the lady of the house. See?"
"I hope,
sir," Burrill said with professional dignity, "that Miss Temple
Barholm has not had reason to express any dissatisfaction."
"I+'m the one that
would express it -- quick," said Tembarom. "She would+n't have time
to get in first. I just wanted to make sure I should+n't have to do it. The
other fellows are under you. You+'ve got a head on your shoulders, I guess.
It+'s up to you to put 'em on to it. That+'s all."
"Thank you,
sir," said Burrill.
His master went back
into the library smiling genially, and Burrill stood still a moment or so
gazing at the door he closed behind him.
Be sure the village,
and finally circles not made up of cottagers, heard of this, howsoever
mysteriously. Miss Alicia was not aware that the incident had occurred. She
could not help observing, however, that the manners of the servants of the
household curiously improved; also, when she passed through the village, that
foreheads were touched without omission and the curtseys of playing children
were prompt. When she dropped into a cottage, housewives polished off the seats
of chairs vigorously before offering them, and symptoms and needs were
explained with a respectful fluency which at times almost suggested that she
might be relied on to use influence.
"I+'m afraid I
have done the village people injustice," she said leniently to Tembarom.
"I used to think them so disrespectful and unappreciative. I dare say it
was because I was so troubled myself. I+'m afraid one's own troubles do
sometimes make one unfair."
"Well, yours are
over," said Tembarom. "And so are mine as long as you stay by
me."
Never had Miss Alicia
been to London. She had remained, as was demanded of her by her duty to dear
papa, at Roweroft, which was in Somersetshire. She had only dreamed of London,
and had had fifty-five years of dreaming. She had read of great functions, and
seen pictures of some of them in the illustrated papers. She had loyally
endeavored to follow at a distance the doings of her Majesty, -- she always
spoke of Queen Victoria reverentially as "her Majesty," -- she
rejoiced when a prince or a princess was born or christened or married, and
believed that a "drawing-room" was the most awe-inspiring, brilliant,
and important function in the civilized world, scarcely second to Parliament.
London -- no one but herself or an elderly gentlewoman of her type could have
told any one the nature of her thoughts of London.
Let, therefore, those
of vivid imagination make an effort to depict to themselves the effect produced
upon her mind by Tembarom's casually suggesting at breakfast one morning that
he thought it might be rather a good "stunt" for them to run up to
London. By mere good fortune she escaped dropping the egg she had just taken
from the egg-stand.
"London!" she
said. "Oh!"
"Pearson thinks it
would be a first-rate idea," he explained. "I guess he thinks that if
he can get me into the swell clothing stores he can fix me up as I ought to be
fixed, if I+'m not going to disgrace him. I should hate to disgrace Pearson.
Then he can see his girl, too, and I want him to see his girl."
"Is -- Pearson --
engaged?" she asked; but the thought which was repeating itself aloud to
her was "London! London!"
"He calls it
`keeping company,' or `walking out,' " Tembarom answered. "She's a
nice girl, and he's dead stuck on her. Will you go with me, Miss Alicia?"
"Dear Mr. Temple
Barholm," she fluttered, "to visit London would be a privilege I
never dreamed it would be my great fortune to enjoy -- never."
"Good
business!" he ejaculated delightedly. "That's luck for me. It gave me
the blues -- what I saw of it. But if you are with me, I+'ll bet it+'ll be as
different as afternoon tea was after I got hold of you. When shall we start?
To-morrow?"
Her sixteen-year-old
blush repeated itself.
"I feel so sorry.
It seems almost undignified to mention it, but -- I fear I should not look
smart enough for London. My wardrobe is so very limited. I must+n't," she
added with a sweet effort at humor, "do the new Mr. Temple Barholm
discredit by looking unfashionable."
He was more delighted
than before.
"Say," he
broke out, "I+'ll tell you what we+'ll do: we+'ll go together and buy
everything `suitable' in sight. The pair of us+'ll come back here as suitable
as Burrill and Pearson. We+'ll paint the town red."
He actually meant it.
He was like a boy with a new game. His sense of the dreariness of London had
disappeared. He knew what it would be like with Miss Alicia as a companion. He
had really seen nothing of the place himself, and he would find out every
darned thing worth looking at, and take her to see it -- theaters, shops, every
show in town. When they left the breakfast-table it was agreed upon that they
would make the journey the following day.
He did not openly refer
to the fact that among the plans for their round of festivities he had laid out
for himself the attending to one or two practical points. He was going to see
Palford, and he had made an appointment with a celebrated nerve specialist. He
did not discuss this for several reasons. One of them was that his summing up
of Miss Alicia was that she had had trouble enough to think over all her little
life, and the thing for a fellow to do for her, if he liked her, was to give
her a good time and make her feel as if she was at a picnic right straight
along -- not let her even hear of a darned thing that might worry her. He had
said comparatively little to her about Strangeways. His first mention of his
condition had obviously made her somewhat nervous, though she had been full of
kindly interest. She was in private not sorry that it was felt better that she
should not disturb the patient by a visit to his room. The abnormality of his
condition seemed just slightly alarming to her.
"But, oh, how
good, how charitable, you are!" she had murmured.
"Good," he
answered, the devout admiration of her tone rather puzzling him. "It ain't
that. I just want to see the thing through. I dropped into it by accident, and
then I dropped into this by accident, and that made it as easy as falling off a
log. I believe he+'s going to get well sometime. I guess I kind of like him
because he holds on to me so and believes I+'m just It. Maybe it+'s because
I+'m stuck on myself."
His visit to
Strangeways was longer than usual that afternoon. He explained the situation to
him so that he understood it sufficiently not to seem alarmed by it. This was
one of the advances Tembarom had noticed recently, that he was less easily
terrified, and seemed occasionally to see facts in their proper relation to one
another. Sometimes the experiments tried on him were successful, sometimes they
were not, but he never resented them.
"You are trying to
help me to remember," he said once. "I think you will sometime."
"Sure I
will," said Tembarom. "You+'re better every day."
Pearson was to remain
in charge of him until toward the end of the London visit. Then he was to run
up for a couple of days, leaving in his place a young footman to whom the
invalid had become accustomed.
The visit to London was
to Miss Alicia a period of enraptured delirium. The beautiful hotel in which
she was established, the afternoons at the Tower, the National Gallery, the
British Museum, the evenings at the play, during which one saw the most
brilliant and distinguished actors, the mornings in the shops, attended as
though one were a person of fortune, what could be said of them? And the sacred
day on which she saw her Majesty drive slowly by, glittering helmets, splendid
uniforms, waving plumes, and clanking swords accompanying and guarding her, and
gentlemen standing still with their hats off, and everybody looking after her
with that natural touch of awe which royalty properly inspires! Miss Alicia's
heart beat rapidly in her breast, and she involuntarily made a curtsey as the
great lady in mourning drove by. She lost no shade of any flavor of ecstatic
pleasure in anything, and was to Tembarom, who knew nothing about shades and
flavors, indeed a touching and endearing thing.
He had never got so
much out of anything. If Ann had just been there, well, that would have been
the limit. Ann was on her way to America now, and she would+n't write to him or
let him write to her. He had to make a fair trial of it. He could find out only
in that way, she said. It was not to be denied that the youth and longing in
him gave him some half-hours to face which made him shut himself up in his room
and stare hard at the wall, folding his arms tightly as he tilted his chair.
There arrived a day
when one of the most exalted shops in Bond Street was invaded by an American
young man of a bearing the peculiarities of which were subtly combined with a
remotely suggested air of knowing that if he could find what he wanted, there
was no doubt as to his power to get it. What he wanted was not usual, and was
explained with a frankness which might have seemed unsophisticated, but,
singularly, did not. He wanted to have a private talk with some feminine power
in charge, and she must be some one who knew exactly what ladies ought to have.
Being shown into a
room, such a feminine power was brought to him and placed at his service. She
was a middle-aged person, wearing beautifully fitted garments and having an
observant eye and a dignified suavity of manner. She looked the young American
over with a swift inclusion of all possibilities. He was by this time wearing
extremely well-fitting garments himself, but she was at once aware that his
tailored perfection was a new thing to him.
He went to his point
without apologetic explanation.
"You know all the
things any kind of a lady ought to have," he said -- "all the things
that would make any one feel comfortable and as if they+'d got plenty? Useful
things as well as ornamental ones?"
"Yes, sir,"
she replied, with rising interest. "I have been in the establishment
thirty years."
"Good
business," Tembarom replied. Already he felt relieved. "I+'ve got a
relation, a little old lady, and I want her to fix herself out just as she
ought to be fixed. Now, what I+'m afraid of is that she won't get everything
she ought to unless I manage it for her somehow beforehand. She's got into a
habit of -- well, economizing. Now the time 's past for that, and I want her to
get everything a woman like you would know she really wants, so that she could
look her best, living in a big country house, with a relation that thinks a lot
of her."
He paused a second or
so, and then went further, fixing a clear and astonishingly shrewd eye upon the
head of the department listening to him.
"I found out this
was a high-class place," he explained. "I made sure of that before I
came in. In a place that was second or third class there might be people who+'d
think they+'d caught a `sucker' that would take anything that was unloaded on
to him, because he did+n't know. The things are for Miss Temple Barholm, and
she does know. I shall ask her to come here herself to-morrow morning, and I
want you to take care of her, and show her the best you+'ve got that+'s
suitable." He seemed to like the word; he repeated it -- "Suitable,"
and quickly restrained a sudden, unexplainable, wide smile.
The attending lady's
name was Mrs. Mellish. Thirty years' experience had taught her many lessons.
She was a hard woman and a sharp one, but beneath her sharp hardness lay a
suppressed sense of the perfect in taste. To have a customer with unchecked
resources put into her hands to do her best by was an inspiring incident. A
quiver of enlightenment had crossed her countenance when she had heard the name
of Temple Barholm. She had a newspaper knowledge of the odd Temple Barholm
story. This was the next of kin who had blacked boots in New York, and the
obvious probability that he was a fool, if it had taken the form of a hope, had
been promptly nipped in the bud. The type from which he was furthest removed
was that of the fortune-intoxicated young man who could be obsequiously
flattered into buying anything which cost money enough.
"Not a thing+'s to
be unloaded on her that she does+n't like," he added, "and she+'s not
a girl that goes to pink teas. She+'s a -- a -- lady -- and not young -- and
used to quiet ways."
The evidently New York
word "unload" revealed him to his hearer as by a flash, though she
had never heard it before.
"We have exactly
the things which will be suitable, sir," she said. "I think I quite
understand." Tembarom smiled again, and, thanking her, went away still
smiling, because he knew Miss Alicia was safe.
There were of course
difficulties in the way of persuading Miss Alicia that her duty lay in the
direction of spending mornings in the most sumptuous of Bond Street shops,
ordering for herself an entire wardrobe on a basis of unlimited resources.
Tembarom was called upon to employ the most adroitly subtle reasoning, entirely
founded on his "claim" and her affectionate willingness to give him
pleasure.
He really made love to
her in the way a joyful young fellow can make love to his mother or his nicest
aunt. He made her feel that she counted for so much in his scheme of enjoyment
that to do as he asked would be to add a glow to it.
"And they won't
spoil you," he said. "The Mellish woman that+'s the boss has promised
that. I would+n't have you spoiled for a farm," he added heartily.
And he spoke the truth.
If he had been told that he was cherishing her type as though it were a
priceless bit of old Saxe, he would have stared blankly and made a jocular
remark. But it was exactly this which he actually clung to and adored. He even
had a second private interview with Mrs. Mellish, and asked her to "keep
her as much like she was" as was possible.
Stimulated by the
suppressed touch of artistic fervor, Mrs. Mellish guessed at something even
before her client arrived; but the moment she entered the showroom all was
revealed to her at once. The very hint of flush and tremor in Miss Alicia's
manner was an assistance. Surrounded by a small and extremely select court
composed of Mrs. Mellish and two low-voiced, deft- handed assistants, it was
with a fine little effort that Miss Alicia restrained herself from exterior
suggestion of her feeling that there was something almost impious in thinking
of possessing the exquisite stuffs and shades displayed to her in flowing
beauty on every side. Such linens and batistes and laces, such delicate, faint
grays and lavenders and soft-falling blacks! If she had been capable of
approaching the thought, such luxury might even have hinted at guilty splendor.
Mrs. Mellish became
possessed of an "idea." To create the costume of an exquisite,
early-Victorian old lady in a play done for the most fashionable and popular
actor manager of the most "drawing-room" of West End theaters, where
one saw royalty in the royal box, with bouquets on every side, the orchestra
breaking off in the middle of a strain to play "God Save the Queen,"
and the audience standing up as the royal party came in -- that was her idea.
She carried it out, steering Miss Alicia with finished tact through the shoals
and rapids of her timidities. And the result was wonderful; color, -- or,
rather, shades, -- textures, and forms were made subservient by real genius.
Miss Alicia -- as she was turned out when the wardrobe was complete -- might
have been an elderly little duchess of sweet and modest good taste in the dress
of forty years earlier. It took time, but some of the things were prepared as
though by magic, and the night the first boxes were delivered at the hotel Miss
Alicia, on going to bed, in kneeling down to her devotions prayed fervently
that she might not be "led astray by fleshly desires," and that her
gratitude might be acceptable, and not stained by a too great joy "in the
things which corrupt."
The very next day
occurred Rose. She was the young person to whom Pearson was engaged, and it
appeared that if Miss Alicia would make up her mind to oblige Mr. Temple
Barholm by allowing the girl to come to her as lady's-maid, even if only
temporarily, she would be doing a most kind and charitable thing. She was a
very nice, well-behaved girl, and unfortunately she had felt herself forced to
leave her place because her mistress's husband was not at all a nice man. He
had shown himself so far from nice that Pearson had been most unhappy, and Rose
had been compelled to give notice, though she had no other situation in
prospect and her mother was dependent on her. This was without doubt not Mr.
Temple Barholm's exact phrasing of the story, but it was what Miss Alicia
gathered, and what moved her deeply. It was so cruel and so sad! That wicked
man! That poor girl! She had never had a lady's-maid, and might be rather at a
loss at first, but it was only like Mr. Temple Barholm's kind heart to suggest
such a way of helping the girl and poor Pearson.
So occurred Rose, a
pretty creature whose blue eyes suppressed grateful tears as she took Miss
Alicia's instructions during their first interview. And Pearson arrived the
same night, and, waiting upon Tembarom, stood before him, and with perfect
respect, choked.
"Might I thank
you, if you please, sir," he began, recovering himself -- "might I
thank you and say how grateful -- Rose and me, sir -- " and choked again.
"I told you it
would be all right," answered Tembarom. "It is all right. I wish I
was fixed like you are, Pearson."
When the Countess of
Mallowe called, Rose had just dressed Miss Alicia for the afternoon in one of
the most perfect of the evolutions of Mrs. Mellish's idea. It was a definite
creation, as even Lady Mallowe detected the moment her eyes fell upon it. Its hue
was dull, soft gray, and how it managed to concede points and elude suggestions
of modes interred, and yet remain what it did remain, and accord perfectly with
the side ringlets and the lace cap of Mechlin, only dressmaking genius could
have explained. The mere wearing of it gave Miss Alicia a support and courage
which she could scarcely believe to be her own. When the cards of Lady Mallowe
and Lady Joan Fayre were brought up to her, she was absolutely not really
frightened; a little nervous for a moment, perhaps, but frightened, no. A few
weeks of relief and ease, of cheery consideration, of perfectly good treatment
and good food and good clothes, had begun a rebuilding of the actual cells of
her.
Lady Mallowe entered
alone. She was a handsome person, and astonishingly young when considered as
the mother of a daughter of twenty-seven. She wore a white veil, and looked
pink through it. She swept into the room, and shook hands with Miss Alicia with
delicate warmth.
"We do not really
know each other at all," she said. "It is disgraceful how little
relatives see of one another."
The disgrace, if
measured by the extent of the relationship, was not immense. Perhaps this
thought flickered across Miss Alicia's mind among a number of other things. She
had heard "dear papa" on Lady Mallowe, and, howsoever lacking in
graces, the vicar of Roweroft had not lacked an acrid shrewdness. Miss Alicia's
sensitively self-accusing soul shrank before a hasty realization of the fact
that if he had been present when the cards were brought up, he would, on
glancing over them through his spectacles, have jerked out immediately:
"What does the woman want? She's come to get something." Miss Alicia
wished she had not been so immediately beset by this mental vision.
Lady Mallowe had come
for something. She had come to be amiable to Miss Temple Barholm and to
establish relations with her.
"Joan should have
been here to meet me," she explained. "Her dressmaker is keeping her,
of course. She will be so annoyed. She wanted very much to come with me."
It was further revealed
that she might arrive at any moment, which gave Miss Alicia an opportunity to
express, with pretty grace, the hope that she would, and her trust that she was
quite well.
"She is always
well," Lady Mallowe returned. "And she is of course as interested as
we all are in this romantic thing. It is perfectly delicious, like a
three-volumed novel."
"It is
romantic," said Miss Alicia, wondering how much her visitor knew or
thought she knew, and what circumstances would present themselves to her as
delicious.
"Of course one has
heard only the usual talk one always hears when everybody is chattering about a
thing," Lady Mallowe replied, with a propitiating smile. "No one
really knows what is true and what is+n't. But it is nice to notice that all
the gossip speaks so well of him. No one seems to pretend that he is anything
but extremely nice himself, notwithstanding his disadvantages."
She kept a fine hazel
eye, surrounded by a line which artistically represented itself as black
lashes, steadily resting on Miss Alicia as she said the last words.
"He is," said
Miss Alicia, with gentle firmness, "nicer than I had ever imagined any
young man could be -- far nicer."
Lady Mallowe's glance
round the luxurious private sitting- room and over the perfect "idea"
of Mrs. Mellish was so swift as to be almost imperceptible.
"How
delightful!" she said. "He must be unusually agreeable, or you would
not have consented to stay and take care of him."
"I cannot tell you
how happy I am to have been asked to stay with him, Lady Mallowe," Miss
Alicia replied, the gentle firmness becoming a soft dignity.
"Which of course
shows all the more how attractive he must be. And in view of the past lack of
advantages, what a help you can be to him! It is quite wonderful for him to
have a relative at hand who is an Englishwoman and familiar with things he will
feel he must learn."
A perhaps singular
truth is that but for the unmistakable nature of the surroundings she quickly
took in the significance of, and but for the perfection of the carrying out of
Mrs. Mellish's delightful idea, it is more than probable that her ladyship's
manner of approaching Miss Alicia and certain subjects on which she desired
enlightenment would have been much more direct and much less propitiatory.
Extraordinary as it was, "the creature" -- she thought of Tembarom as
"the creature" -- had plainly been so pleased with the chance of
being properly coached that he had put everything, so to speak, in the little
old woman's hands. She had got a hold upon him. It was quite likely that to
regard her as a definite factor would only be the part of the merest
discretion. She was evidently quite in love with him in her early-Victorian,
spinster way. One had to be prudent with women like that who had got hold of a
male creature for the first time in their lives, and were almost unaware of
their own power. Their very unconsciousness made them a dangerous influence.
With a masterly review
of these facts in her mind Lady Mallowe went on with a fluent and pleasant
talk, through the medium of which she managed to convey a large number of
things Miss Alicia was far from being clever enough to realize she was talking
about. She lightly waved wings of suggestion across the scene, she dropped
infinitesimal seeds in passing, she left faint echoes behind her -- the kind of
echoes one would find oneself listening to and trying to hear as definitely
formed sounds. She had been balancing herself on a precarious platform of rank
and title, unsupported by any sordid foundation of a solid nature, through a
lifetime spent in London. She had learned to catch fiercely at straws of
chance, and bitterly to regret the floating past of the slightest, which had
made of her a finished product of her kind. She talked lightly, and was
sometimes almost witty. To her hearer she seemed to know every brilliant
personage and to be familiar with every dazzling thing. She knew well what
social habits and customs meant, what their value, or lack of value, was. There
were customs, she implied skilfully, so established by time that it was
impossible to ignore them. Relationships, for instance, stood for so much that
was fine in England that one was sometimes quite touched by the
far-reachingness of family loyalty. The head of the house of a great estate
represented a certain power in the matter of upholding the dignity of his
possessions, of caring for his tenantry, of standing for proper hospitality and
friendly family feeling. It was quite beautiful as one often saw it. Throughout
the talk there were several references to Joan, who really must come in
shortly, which were very interesting to Miss Alicia. Lady Joan, Miss Alicia
heard casually, was a great beauty. Her perfection and her extreme cleverness
had made her perhaps a trifle difficile. She had not done -- Lady Mallowe put
it with a lightness of phrasing which was delicacy itself -- what she might
have done, with every exalted advantage, so many times. She had a profound
nature. Here Lady Mallowe waved away, as it were, a ghost of a sigh. Since Miss
Temple Barholm was a relative, she had no doubt heard of the unfortunate, the
very sad incident which her mother sometimes feared prejudiced the girl even
yet.
"You mean -- poor
Jem!" broke forth involuntarily from Miss Alicia's lips. Lady Mallowe
stared a little.
"Do you call him
that?" she asked. "Did you know him, then?"
"I loved
him," answered Miss Alicia, winking her eyes to keep back the moisture in
them, "though it was only when he was a little boy."
"Oh," said
Lady Mallowe, with a sudden, singular softness, "I must tell Joan
that."
Lady Joan had not
appeared even after they had had tea and her mother went away, but somehow Miss
Alicia had reached a vaguely yearning feeling for her and wished very much the
dressmaker had released her. She was quite stirred when it revealed itself
almost at the last moment that in a few weeks both she and Lady Mallowe were to
pay a visit at no great distance from Temple Barholm itself, and that her
ladyship would certainly arrange to drive over to continue her delightful
acquaintance and to see the beautiful old place again.
"In any case one
must, even if he lived in lonely state, pay one's respects to the head of the
house. The truth is, of course, one is extremely anxious to meet him, and it is
charming to know that one is not merely invading the privacy of a
bachelor," Lady Mallowe put it.
"She+'ll come for
you," Little Ann had soberly remarked.
Tembarom remembered the
look in her quiet, unresentful blue eyes when he came in to dinner and Miss
Alicia related to him the events of the afternoon.
THE spring, when they
traveled back to the north, was so perceptibly nearer that the fugitive soft
days strayed in advance at intervals that were briefer. They chose one for
their journey, and its clear sunshine and hints at faint greenness were so
exhilarating to Miss Alicia that she was a companion to make any journey an
affair to rank with holidays and adventures. The strange luxury of traveling in
a reserved first-class carriage, of being made timid by no sense of unfitness
of dress or luggage, would have filled her with grateful rapture: but Rose.
Journeying with Pearson a few coaches behind, appeared at the carriage window
at every important station to say, "Is there anything I may do for you,
ma'am?" And there really never was anything she could do, because Mr.
Temple Barholm remembered everything which could make her comfort perfect. In
the moods of one who searches the prospect for suggestions as to pleasure he
can give to himself by delighting a dear child, he had found and bought for her
a most elegant little dressing- bag, with the neatest of plain-gold fittings
beautifully initialed. It reposed upon the cushioned seat near her, and made
her heart beat every time she caught sight of it anew. How wonderful it would
be if poor dear, darling mama could look down and see everything and really
know what happiness had been vouchsafed to her unworthy child!
Having a vivid
recollection of the journey made with Mr. Palford, Tembarom felt that his whole
world had changed for him. The landscape had altered its aspect. Miss Alicia
pointed out bits of freshening grass, was sure of the breaking of brown
leaf-buds, and more than once breathlessly suspected a primrose in a sheltered
hedge corner. A country-bred woman, with country-bred keenness of eye and a
country-bred sense of the seasons' change, she saw so much that he had never
known that she began to make him see also. Bare trees would be thick-leaved
nesting-places, hedges would be white with hawthorn, and hold blue eggs and
chirps and songs. Skylarks would spring out of the fields and soar into the
sky, dropping crystal chains of joyous trills. The cottage gardens would be
full of flowers, there would be poppies gleaming scarlet in the corn, and in
buttercup-time all the green grass would be a sheet of shining gold.
"When it all
happens I shall be like a little East-Sider taken for a day in the country. I
shall be asking questions at every step," Tembarom said. "Temple
Barholm must be pretty fine then."
"It is so
lovely," said Miss Alicia, turning to him almost solemnly, "that
sometimes it makes one really lose one's breath."
He looked out of the
window with sudden wistfulness.
"I wish Ann --
" he began and then, seeing the repressed question in her eyes, made up
his mind.
He told her about
Little Ann. He did not use very many words, but she knew a great deal when he
had finished. And her spinster soul was thrilled. Neither she nor poor Emily
had ever had an admirer, and it was not considered refined for unsought females
to discuss "such subjects." Domestic delirium over the joy of an
engagement in families in which daughters were a drug she had seen. It was
indeed inevitable that there should be more rejoicing over one Miss Timson who
had strayed from the fold into the haven of marriage than over the ninety-nine
Misses Timson who remained behind. But she had never known intimately any one
who was in love -- really in love. Mr. Temple Barholm must be. When he spoke of
Little Ann he flushed shyly and his eyes looked so touching and nice. His voice
sounded different, and though of course his odd New York expressions were
always rather puzzling, she felt as though she saw things she had had no
previous knowledge of -- things which thrilled her.
"She must be a
very -- very nice girl," she ventured at length. "I am afraid I have
never been into old Mrs. Hutchinson's cottage. She is quite comfortably off in
her way, and does not need parish care. I wish I had seen Miss
Hutchinson."
"I wish she had
seen you," was Tembarom's answer.
Miss Alicia reflected.
"She must be very
clever to have such -- sensible views," she remarked.
If he had remained in
New York, and there had been no question of his inheriting Temple Barholm, the
marriage would have been most suitable. But however "superior" she
might be, a vision of old Mrs. Hutchinson's granddaughter as the wife of Mr.
Temple Barholm, and of noisy old Mr. Hutchinson as his father-in-law was a
staggering thing.
"You think they
were sensible?" asked Tembarom. "Well, she never did anything that
was+n't. So I guess they were. And what she says goes. I wanted you to know,
anyhow. I would+n't like you not to know. I+'m too fond of you, Miss
Alicia." And he put his hand round her neat glove and squeezed it. The
tears of course came into her tender eyes. Emotion of any sort always expressed
itself in her in this early-Victorian manner.
"This Lady Joan
girl," he said suddenly not long afterward, "is+n't she the kind that
I+'m to get used to -- the kind in the pictorial magazine Ann talked about? I
bought one at the news-stand at the depot before we started. I wanted to get on
to the pictures and see what they did to me."
He found the paper
among his belongings and regarded it with the expression of a serious explorer.
It opened at a page of illustrations of slim goddesses in court dresses. By
actual measurement, if regarded according to scale, each was about ten feet
high; but their long lines, combining themselves with court trains, waving
plumes, and falling veils, produced an awe-inspiring effect. Tembarom gazed at
them in absorbed silence.
"Is she something
like any of these?" he inquired finally.
Miss Alicia looked
through her glasses.
"Far more
beautiful, I believe," she answered. "These are only fashion-plates,
and I have heard that she is a most striking girl."
"A beaut' from
Beautsville!" he said. "So that+'s what I+'m up against! I wonder how
much use that kind of a girl would have for me."
He gave a good deal of
attention to the paper before he laid it aside. As she watched him, Miss Alicia
became gradually aware of the existence of a certain hint of determined
squareness in his boyish jaw. It was perhaps not much more than a hint, but it
really was there, though she had not noticed it before. In fact, it usually hid
itself behind his slangy youthfulness and his readiness for any good cheer.
One may as well admit
that it sustained him during his novitiate and aided him to pass through it
without ignominy or disaster. He was strengthened also by a private resolve to
bear himself in such a manner as would at least do decent credit to Little Ann
and her superior knowledge. With the curious eyes of servants, villagers, and
secretly outraged neighborhood upon him, he was shrewd enough to know that he
might easily become a perennial fount of grotesque anecdote, to be used as a
legitimate source of entertainment in cottages over the consumption of beans
and bacon, as well as at great houses when dinner-table talk threatened to
become dull if not enlivened by some spice. He would not have thought of this or
been disturbed by it but for Ann. She knew, and he was not going to let her be
met on her return from America with what he called "a lot of funny
dope" about him.
"No girl would
like it," he said to himself. "And the way she said she `cared too
much' just put it up to me to see that the fellow she cares for does+n't let
himself get laughed at."
Though he still
continued to be jocular on subjects which to his valet seemed almost sacred,
Pearson was relieved to find that his employer gradually gave himself into his
hands in a manner quite amenable. In the touching way in which nine out of ten
nice, domesticated American males obey the behests of the women they are fond
of, he had followed Ann's directions to the letter. Guided by the adept
Pearson, he had gone to the best places in London and purchased the correct
things, returning to Temple Barholm with a wardrobe to which any gentleman
might turn at any moment without a question.
"He+'s got good
shoulders, though he does slouch a bit," Pearson said to Rose. "And a
gentleman's shoulders are more than half the battle."
What Tembarom himself
felt cheered by was the certainty that if Ann saw him walking about the park or
the village, or driving out with Miss Alicia in the big landau, or taking her
in to dinner every evening, or even going to church with her, she would not
have occasion to flush at sight of him.
The going to church was
one of the duties of his position he found out. Miss Alicia "put him
on" to that. It seemed that he had to present himself to the villagers
"as an example." If the Temple Barholm pews were empty, the
villagers, not being incited to devotional exercise by his exalted presence,
would feel at liberty to remain at home, and in the irreligious undress of
shirt-sleeves sit and smoke their pipes, or, worse still, gather at "the
Hare and Hounds" and drink beer. Also, it would not be "at all
proper" not to go to church.
Pearson produced a
special cut of costume for this ceremony, and Tembarom walked with Miss Alicia
across the park to the square-towered Norman church.
In a position of
dignity the Temple Barholm pews overlooked the congregation. There was the
great square pew for the family, with two others for servants. Footmen and
house- maids gazed reverentially at prayer-books. Pearson, making every
preparation respectfully to declare himself a "miserable sinner" when
the proper moment arrived, could scarcely restrain a rapid side glance as the
correctly cut and fitted and entirely "suitable" work of his hands
opened the pew-door for Miss Alicia, followed her in, and took his place.
Let not the fact that
he had never been to church before be counted against him. There was nothing
very extraordinary in the fact. He had felt no antipathy to church-going, but
he had not by chance fallen under proselyting influence, and it had certainly
never occurred to him that he had any place among the well-dressed,
comfortable-looking people he had seen flocking into places of worship in New
York. As far as religious observances were concerned, he was an unadulterated
heathen, and was all the more to be congratulated on being a heathen of genial
tendencies.
The very large pew,
under the stone floor of which his ancestors had slept undisturbedly for
centuries, interested him greatly. A recumbent marble crusader in armor, with
feet crossed in the customary manner, fitted into a sort of niche in one side
of the wall. There were carved tablets and many inscriptions in Latin
wheresoever one glanced. The place was like a room. A heavy, round table, on
which lay prayer-books, Bibles, and hymn-books, occupied the middle. About it
were arranged beautiful old chairs, with hassocks to kneel on. Toward a
specially imposing chair with arms Miss Alicia directed him with a glance. It
was apparently his place. He was going to sit down when he saw Miss Alicia
gently push forward a hassock with her foot, and kneel on it, covering her face
with her hands as she bent her head. He hastily drew forth his hassock and
followed her example.
That was it, was it? It
was+n't only a matter of listening to a sermon; you had to do things. He had
better watch out and see that he did+n't miss anything. She did+n't know it was
his first time, and it might worry her to the limit if he did+n't put it over
all right. One of the things he had noticed in her was her fear of attracting
attention by failing to do exactly the "proper thing." If he made a
fool of himself by kneeling down when he ought to stand up, or lying down when
he ought to sit, she+'d get hot all over, thinking what the villagers or the
other people would say. Well, Ann had+n't wanted him to look different from
other fellows or to make breaks. He+'d look out from start to finish. He
directed a watchful eye at Miss Alicia through his fingers. She remained
kneeling a few moments, and then very quietly got up. He rose with her, and
took his big chair when she sat down. He breathed more freely when they had got
that far. That was the first round.
It was not a large
church, but a gray and solemn impression of dignity brooded over it. It was dim
with light, which fell through stained-glass memorial windows set deep in the
thick stone walls. The silence which reigned throughout its spaces seemed to
Tembarom of a new kind, different from the silence of the big house. The
occasional subdued rustle of turned prayer-book leaves seemed to accentuate it;
the most careful movement could not conceal itself; a slight cough was a
startling thing. The way, Tembarom thought, they could get things dead-still in
English places.
The chimes, which had
been ringing their last summons to the tardy, slackened their final warning
notes, became still lower, stopped. There was a slight stir in the benches
occupied by the infant school. It suggested that something new was going to
happen. From some unseen place came the sound of singing voices -- boyish
voices and the voices of men. Tembarom involuntarily turned his head. Out of
the unseen place came a procession in white robes. Great Scott! every one was
standing up! He must stand up, too. The boys and men in white garments filed
into their seats. An elderly man, also in white robes, separated himself from
them, and, going into his special place, kneeled down. Then he rose and began
to read:
"When the wicked
man turneth away from his wickedness -- "
Tembarom took the open
book which Miss Alicia had very was plain sailing, -- then he seemed to lose
his place. Miss Alicia turned a leaf. He turned one also.
"Dearly beloved
brethren -- "
There you were. This
was once more plain sailing. He was kneeling again, everybody was kneeling. Where
was the hassock? He went down upon his knees, Hoping Miss Alicia had not seen
that he was+n't going to kneel at all. Then when the minister said
"Amen," the congregation said it, too, and he came in too late, so
that his voice sounded out alone. He must watch that. Then the minister knelt,
and all the people prayed aloud with him. With the book before him he managed
to get in after the first few words; but he was not ready with the responses,
and in the middle of them everybody stood up again. And then the organ played,
and every one sang. He could+n't sing, anyhow, and he knew he could+n't catch
on to the kind of thing they were doing. He hoped Miss Alicia would+n't mind
his standing up and holding his book and doing nothing. He could not help
seeing that eyes continually turned, toward him. They+'d notice every darned
break he made, and Miss Alicia would know they did. He felt quite hot more than
once. He watched Miss Alicia like a hawk; he sat down and listened to reading,
he stood up and listened to singing; he kneeled, he tried to chime in with
"Amens" and to keep up with Miss Alicia's bending of head and knee.
But the creed, with its sudden turn toward the altar, caught him unawares, he
lost himself wholly in the psalms, the collects left him in deep water,
hopeless of ever finding his place again, and the litany baffled him, when he
was beginning to feel safe by changing from "miserable sinners" to
"Spare us Good Lord and We beseech thee to hear us." If he could just
have have found the place he would have been all right, but an honest anxiety
to be right excited him, and the fear of embarrassing Miss Alicia by going
wrong made the morning a strenuous thing. He was so relieved to find he might
sit still when the sermon began that he gave the minister an attention which
might have marked him, to the chance beholder, as a religious enthusiast.
By the time the service
had come to an end the stately peace of the place had seemed to sink into his
being and become part of himself. The voice of the minister bestowing his
blessing the voices of the white-clothed choir floating up into the vaulted
roof, stirred him to a remote pleasure. He liked it, or he knew he would like
it when he knew what to do. The filing out of the choristers, the silent final
prayer, the soft rustle of people rising gently from their knees, somehow
actually moved him by its suggestion of something before unknown. He was a
heathen still, but a heathen vaguely stirred.
He was very quiet as he
walked home across the park with Miss Alicia.
"How did you enjoy
the sermon?" she asked with much sweetness.
"I+'m not used to
sermons, but it seemed all right to me," he answered. "What I+'ve got
to get on to is knowing when to stand up and when to sit down. I was+n't much
of a winner at it this morning. I guess you noticed that.
But his outward bearing
had been much more composed than his inward anxiety had allowed him to believe.
His hesitations had not produced the noticeable effect he had feared.
"Do you mean you
are not quite familiar with the service? she said. Poor dear boy! he had
perhaps not been able to go to church regularly at all.
"I+'m not familiar
with any service," he answered without prejudice. "I never went to
church before."
She slightly started
and then smiled.
"Oh, you mean you
have never been to the Church of England," she said.
Then he saw that, if he
told her the exact truth, she would be frightened and shocked. She would not
know what to say or what to think. To her unsophisticated mind only murderers
and thieves and criminals never went to church. She just did+n't know. Why
should she? So he smiled also.
"No, I+'ve never
been to the Church of England," he said.
THE country was
discreetly conservative in its social attitude. The gulf between it and the new
owner of Temple Barholm was too wide and deep to be crossed without effort
combined with immense mental agility. It was on the whole, much easier not to
begin a thing at all than to begin it and find one must hastily search about
for not too noticeable methods of ending it. A few unimportant, tentative calls
were made, and several ladies who had remained unaware of Miss Alicia during
her first benefactor's time drove over to see what she was like and perhaps by
chance hear something of interest. One or two of them who saw Tembarom went
away puzzled and amazed. He did not drop his h's, which they had of course
expected, and he was well dressed, and not bad-looking; but it was frequently
impossible to understand what he was talking about, he used such odd phrases.
He seemed good natured enough, and his way with little old Miss Temple Barholm
was really quite nice, queer as it was. It was queer because he was attentive
to her in a manner in which young men were not usually attentive to totally insignificant,
elderly dependents.
Tembarom derived an
extremely diluted pleasure from the visits. The few persons he saw reminded him
in varying degrees of Mr. Palford. They had not before seen anything like his
species, and they did not know what to do with him. He also did not know what
to do with them. A certain inelasticity frustrated him at the outset. When, in
obedience to Miss Alicia's instructions, he had returned the visits, he felt he
had not gone far.
Serious application
enabled him to find his way through the church service, and he accompanied Miss
Alicia to church with great regularity. He began to take down the books from
the library shelves and look them over gravely. The days gradually ceased to
appear so long, but he had a great deal of time on his hands, and he tried to
find ways of filling it. He wondered if Ann would be pleased if he learned
things out of books.
When he tentatively
approached the subject of literature with Miss Alicia, she glowed at the
delightful prospect of his reading aloud to her in the evenings --
"reading improving things like history and the poets."
"Let+'s take a
hack at it some night," he said pleasantly.
The more a fellow knew,
the better it was for him, he supposed; but he wondered, if anything happened
and he went back to New York, how much "improving things" and poetry
would help a man in doing business.
The first evening they
began with Gray's "Elegy," and Miss Alicia felt that it did not
exhilarate him; she was also obliged to admit that he did not read it very
well. But she felt sure he would improve. Personally she was touchingly happy.
The sweetly domestic picture of the situation, she sitting by the fire with her
knitting and he reading aloud, moved and delighted her. The next evening she
suggested Tennyson's "Maud." He was not as much stirred by it as she
had hoped. He took a somewhat humorous view of it.
"He had it pretty
bad, had+n't he?" he said of the desperate lover.
"Oh, if only you
could once have heard Sims Reeves sing `Come into the Garden, Maud'!" she
sighed. "A kind friend once took me to hear him, and I have never, never
forgotten it."
But Mr. Temple Barholm
notably did not belong to the atmosphere of impassioned tenors.
On still another
evening they tried Shakspere. Miss Alicia felt that a foundation of Shakspere
would be "improving" indeed. They began with "Hamlet."
He found play-reading
difficult and Shaksperian language baffling, but he made his way with
determination until he reached a point where he suddenly grew quite red and
stopped.
"Say, have you
read this?" he inquired after his hesitation.
"The plays of
Shakspere are a part of every young lady's education," she answered;
"but I am afraid I am not at all a Shaksperian scholar."
"A young lady's
education?" he repeated. "Gee whizz!" he added softly after a
pause.
He glanced over a page
or so hastily, and then laid the book down.
"Say," he
suggested, with an evasive air, "let+'s go over that `Maud' one again.
It+'s -- well, it+'s easier to read aloud."
The crude awkwardness
of his manner suddenly made Miss Alicia herself flush and drop a stitch in her
knitting. How dreadful of her not to have thought of that!
"The Elizabethan
age was, I fear, a rather coarse one in some respects. Even history
acknowledges that Queen Elizabeth herself used profane language." She
faltered and coughed a little apologetic cough as she picked up her stitch
again.
"I bet Ann+'s never
seen inside Shakspere," said Tembarom. Before reading aloud in the future
he gave some previous personal attention to the poem or subject decided upon.
It may be at once frankly admitted that when he read aloud it was more for Miss
Alicia's delectation than for his own. He saw how much she enjoyed the
situation.
His effect of frankness
and constant boyish talk was so inseparable from her idea of him that she found
it a puzzling thing to realize that she gradually began to feel aware of a
certain remote reserve in him, or what might perhaps be better described as a
habit of silence upon certain subjects. She felt it marked in the case of
Strangeways. She surmised that he saw Strangeways often and spent a good deal
of time with him, but he spoke of him rarely, and she never knew exactly what
hours were given to him. Sometimes she imagined he found him a greater
responsibility than he had expected. Several times when she believed that he
had spent part of a morning or afternoon in his room, he was more silent than
usual and looked puzzled and thoughtful. She observed, as Mr. Palford had, that
the picture-gallery, with its portraits of his ancestors, had an attraction. A
certain rainy day he asked her to go with him and look them over. It was
inevitable that she should soon wander to the portrait of Miles Hugo and remain
standing before it. Tembarom followed, and stood by her side in silence until
her sadness broke its bounds with a pathetic sigh.
"Was he very like
him?" he asked.
She made an unconscious,
startled movement. For the moment she had forgotten his presence, and she had
not really expected him to remember.
"I mean Jem,"
he answered her surprised look. "How was he like him? Was there -- "
he hesitated and looked really interested -- "was he like him in any
particular thing?"
"Yes," she
said, turning to the portrait of Miles Hugo again. "They both had those
handsome, drooping eyes, with the lashes coming together at the corners. There
is something very fascinating about them, is+n't there? I used to notice it so
much in dear little Jem. You see how marked they are in Miles Hugo."
"Yes,"
Tembarom answered. "A fellow who looked that way at a girl when he made
love to her would get a strangleholt. She would+n't forget him soon."
"It strikes you in
that way, too?" said Miss Alicia, shyly. "I used to wonder if it was
-- not quite nice of me to think of it. But it did seem that if any one did
look at one like that -- " Maidenly shyness overcame her. "Poor Lady
Joan!" she sighed.
"There's a sort of
cleft in his chin, though it+'s a good, square chin," he suggested.
"And that smile of his -- Were Jem's -- ?"
"Yes, they were.
The likeness was quite odd sometimes -- quite."
"Those are things
that would+n't be likely to change much when he grew up," Tembarom said,
drawing a little closer to the picture. "Poor Jem! He was up against it
hard and plenty. He had it hardest. This chap only died."
There was no mistaking
his sympathy. He asked so many questions that they sat down and talked instead
of going through the gallery. He was interested in the detail of all that had
occurred after the ghastly moment when Jem had risen from the card-table and
stood looking around, like some baited dying animal, at the circle of cruel
faces drawing in about him. How soon had he left London? Where had he gone
first? How had he been killed? He had been buried with others beneath a fall of
earth and stones. Having heard this much, Tembarom saw he could not ask more
questions. Miss Alicia became pale, and her hands trembled. She could not bear
to discuss details so harrowing
"Say, I ought+n't
to let you talk about that," he broke out, and he patted her hand and made
her get up and finish their walk about the gallery. He held her elbow in his
own odd, nice way as he guided her, and the things he said, and the things he
pretended to think or not to understand, were so amusing that in a short time
he had made her laugh. She knew him well enough by this time to be aware that
he was intentionally obliging her to forget what it only did her harm to
remember. That was his practical way of looking at it.
"Getting a grouch
on or being sorry for what you can't help cuts no ice," he sometimes said.
"When it does, me for getting up at daybreak and keeping at it! But it
does+n't, you bet your life on that."
She could see that he
had really wanted to hear about Jem, but he knew it was bad for her to recall
things, and he would not allow her to dwell on them, just as she knew he would
not allow himself to dwell on little Miss Hutchinson, remotely placed among the
joys of his beloved New York.
Two other incidents
besides the visit to Miles Hugo afterward marked that day when Miss Alicia
looked back on it. The first was his unfolding to her his plans for the house-
party, which was characteristic of his habit of thinking things over and
deciding them before he talked about them.
"If I+'m going to
try the thing out, as Ann says I must," he began when they had gone back
to the library after lunch, "I+'ve got to get going. I+'m not seeing any
of those Pictorial girls, and I guess I+'ve got to see some."
"You will be
invited to dine at places," said Miss Alicia, -- "presently,"
she added bravely, in fact, with an air of greater conviction than she felt.
"If it+'s not the
law that they+'ve got to invite me or go to jail," said Tembarom, "I
don't blame 'em for not doing it if they+'re not stuck on me. And they+'re not;
and it+'s natural. But I+'ve got to get in my fine work, or my year+'ll be over
before I+'ve `found out for myself,' as Ann called it. There+'s where I+'m at,
Miss Alicia -- and I+'ve been thinking of Lady Joan and her mother. You said
you thought they+'d come and stay here if they were properly asked."
"I think they
would," answered Miss Alicia with her usual delicacy. "I thought I
gathered from Lady Mallowe that, as she was to be in the neighborhood, she
would like to see you and Temple Barholm, which she greatly admires."
"If you'll tell me
what to do, I+'ll get her here to stay awhile," he said, "and Lady
Joan with her. You+'d have to show me how to write to ask them; but perhaps
you+'d write yourself."
"They will be at
Asshawe Holt next week," said Miss Alicia, "and we could go and call
on them together. We might write to them in London before they leave."
"We+'ll do
it," answered Tembarom. His manner was that of a practical young man
attacking matter-of-fact detail. "From what I hear, Lady Joan would
satisfy even Ann. They say she+'s the best-looker on the slate. If I see her
every day I shall have seen the blue-ribbon winner. Then if she+'s here,
perhaps others of her sort+'ll come, too; and they+'ll have to see me whether
they like it or not -- and I shall see them. Good Lord!" he added
seriously, "I+'d let 'em swarm all over me and bite me all summer if it
would fix Ann."
He stood up, with his
hands thrust deep in his pockets, and looked down at the floor.
"I wish she knew
T. T. like T. T. knows himself," he said. It was quite wistful.
It was so wistful and
so boyish that Miss Alicia was thrilled as he often thrilled her.
"She ought to be a
very happy girl," she exclaimed.
"She's going to
be," he answered, "sure as you're alive. But whatever she does, is
right, and this is as right as every thing else. So it just goes."
They wrote their
letters at once, and sent them off by the afternoon post. The letter Miss Alicia
composed, and which Tembarom copied, he read and reread, with visions of Jim
Bowles and Julius looking over his shoulder. If they picked it up on Broadway,
with his name signed to it, and read it, they+'d throw a fit over it, laughing.
But he supposed she knew what you ought to write.
It had not, indeed, the
masculine touch. When Lady Mallowe read it, she laughed several times. She knew
quite well that he had not known what to say, and, allowing Miss Alicia to
instruct him, had followed her instructions to the letter. But she did not show
the letter to Joan, who was difficult enough to manage without being given such
material to comment upon.
The letters had just
been sent to the post when a visitor was announced -- Captain Palliser.
Tembarom remembered the name, and recalled also certain points connected with
him. He was the one who was a promoter of schemes -- "One of the smooth,
clever ones that get up companies," Little Ann had said.
That in a well-bred and
not too pronounced way he looked smooth and clever might be admitted. His
effect was that of height, finished slenderness of build, and extremely
well-cut garments. He was no longer young, and he had smooth, thin hair and a
languidly observant gray eye.
"I have been
staying at Detchworth Grange," he explained when he had shaken hands with
the new Temple Barholm and Miss Alicia. "It gave me an excellent
opportunity to come and pay my respects."
There was a hint of
uncertainty in the observant gray eye. The fact was that he realized in the space
of five minutes that he knew his ground even less than he had supposed he did.
He had not spent his week at Detchworth Grange without making many quiet
investigations, but he had found out nothing whatever. The new man was an
ignoramus, but no one had yet seemed to think him exactly a fool. He was not
excited by the new grandeurs of his position and he was not ashamed of himself.
Captain Palliser wondered if he was perhaps sharp -- one of those New Yorkers
shrewd even to light- fingeredness in clever scheming. Stories of a newly
created method of business dealing involving an air of candor and almost
primitive good nature -- an American method -- had attracted Captain Palliser's
attention for some time. A certain Yankee rawness of manner played a part as a
factor, a crudity which would throw a man off guard if he did not recognize it.
The person who employed the method was of philosophical non-combativeness. The
New York phrase was that "He jollied a man along." Immense schemes
had been carried through in that way. Men in London, in England, were not
sufficiently light of touch in their jocularity. He wondered if perhaps this
young fellow, with his ready laugh and rather loose-jointed, casual way of
carrying himself, was of this dangerous new school.
What, however, could he
scheme for, being the owner of Temple Barholm's money? It may be mentioned at
once that Captain Palliser's past had been such as had fixed him in the belief
that every one was scheming for something. People with money wanted more or were
privately arranging schemes to prevent other schemers from getting any shade
the better of them. Débutantes with shy eyes and slim figures had their little
plans to engineer delicately. Sometimes they were larger plans than the
uninitiated would have suspected as existing in the brains of creatures in
their 'teens, sometimes they were mere fantastic little ideas connected with
dashing young men or innocent dances which must be secured or lovely young
rivals who must be evaded. Young men had also deft things to do -- people to
see or not to see, reasons for themselves being seen or avoiding observation.
As years increased, reasons for schemes became more numerous and amazingly more
varied. Women with daughters, with sons, with husbands, found in each relationship
a necessity for active, if quiet, manœuvering. Women like Lady Mallowe -- good
heaven! by what schemes did not that woman live and have her being -- and her
daughter's -- from day to day! Without money, without a friend who was an atom
more to be relied on than she would have been herself if an acquaintance had
needed her aid, her outwardly well-to-do and fashionable existence was a
hand-to- hand fight. No wonder she had turned a still rather brilliant eye upon
Sir Moses Monaldini, the great Israelite financier. All of these types passed
rapidly before his mental vision as he talked to the American Temple Barholm.
What could he want, by chance? He must want something, and it would be discreet
to find out what it chanced to be.
If it was social success,
he would be better off in London, where in these days you could get a good run
for your money and could swing yourself up from one rung of the ladder to
another if you paid some one to show you how. He himself could show him how. A
youngster who had lived the beastly hard life he had lived would be likely to
find exhilaration in many things not difficult to purchase. It was an odd
thing, by the way, the fancy he had taken to the little early-Victorian
spinster. It was not quite natural. It perhaps denoted tendencies -- or lack of
tendencies -- it would also be well to consider. Palliser was a sufficiently
finished product himself to be struck greatly by the artistic perfection of
Miss Alicia, and to wonder how much the new man understood it.
He did not talk to him
about schemes. He talked to him of New York, which he had never seen and hoped
sometime shortly to visit. The information he gained was not of the kind he
most desired, but it edified him. Tembarom's knowledge of high finance was a
street lad's knowledge of it, and he himself knew its limitations and probable
unreliability. Such of his facts as rested upon the foundation of experience
did not include multimillionaires and their resources.
Captain Palliser passed
lightly to Temple Barholm and its neighborhood. He knew places and names, and
had been to Detchworth more than once. He had never visited Temple Barholm, and
his interest suggested that he would like to walk through the gardens. Tembarom
took him out, and they strolled about for some time. Even an alert observer
would not have suspected the fact that as they strolled, Tembarom slouching a
trifle and with his hands in his pockets, Captain Palliser bearing himself with
languid distinction, each man was summing up the other and considering
seriously how far and in what manner he could be counted as an asset.
"You have+n't been
to Detchworth yet?" Palliser inquired.
"No, not
yet," answered Tembarom. The Granthams were of those who had not yet
called.
"It+'s an
agreeable house. The Granthams are agreeable people."
"Are there any
young people in the family?" Tembarom asked.
"Young pople? Male
or female?" Palliser smilingly put it. Suddenly it occurred to him that
this might give him a sort of lead.
"Girls," said
Tembarom, crudely -- "just plain girls."
Palliser laughed. Here
it was, perhaps.
"They are not
exactly `plain' girls, though they are not beauties. There are four Misses
Grantham. Lucy is the prettiest. Amabel is quite tremendous at tennis."
"Are they
ladies?" inquired Tembarom.
Captain Palliser turned
and involuntarily stared at him. What was the fellow getting at?
"I+'m afraid I
don't quite understand," he said.
The new Temple Barholm
looked quite serious. He did not, amazing to relate, look like a fool even when
he gave forth his extraordinary question. It was his almost business-like
seriousness which saved him.
"I mean, do you
call them Lady Lucy and Lady Amabel?" he answered.
If he had been younger,
less hardened, or less finished, Captain Palliser would have laughed outright.
But he answered without self-revelation.
"Oh, I see. You
were asking whether the family is a titled one. No; it is a good old name,
quite old, in fact, but no title goes with the estate."
"Who are the titled
people about here?" Tembarom asked, quite unabashed.
"The Earl of
Pevensy at Pevensy Park, the Duke of Stone at Stone Hover, Lord Hambrough at
Doone. Doone is in the next county, just over the border."
"Have they all got
daughters?"
Captain Palliser found
it expedient to clear his throat before speaking.
"Lord Pevensy has
daughters, so has the duke. Lord Hambrough has three sons."
"How many
daughters are there -- in a bunch?" Mr. Temple Barholm suggested
liberally.
There Captain Palliser
felt it safe to allow himself to smile, as though taking it with a sense of
humor.
" `In a bunch' is
an awfully good way of putting it," he said. "It happens to apply
perhaps rather unfortunately well; both families are much poorer than they
should be, and daughters must be provided for. Each has four. `In a bunch'
there are eight: Lady Alice, Lady Edith, Lady Ethel, and Lady Celia at Stone
Hover; Lady Beatrice, Lady Gwynedd, Lady Honora, and Lady Gwendolen at Pevensy
Park. And not a fortune among them, poor girls!"
"It+'s not the
money that matters so much," said the astounding foreigner, "it+'s
the titles."
Captain Palliser
stopped short in the garden path for a moment. He could scarcely believe his
ears. The crude grotesqueness of it so far got the better of him that if he had
not coughed he would have betrayed himself.
"I+'ve had a
confounded cold lately," he said. "Excuse me; I must get it
over."
He turned a little
aside and coughed energetically.
After watching him a
few seconds Tembarom slipped two fingers into his waistcoat pocket and produced
a small tube of tablets.
"Take two of
these," he said as soon as the cough stopped. "I always carry it
about with me. It's a New York thing called `G. Destroyer.' G stands for
grippe."
Palliser took it.
"Thanks. With
water? No? Just dissolve in the mouth. Thanks awfully." And he took two,
with tears still standing in his eyes.
"Don't taste bad,
do they?" Mr. Temple Barholm remarked encouragingly.
"Not at all. I
think I shall be all right now! I just needed the relief. I have been trying to
restrain it."
"That's a
mistake," said Tembarom. They strolled on a pace or so, and he began
again, as though he did not mean to let the subject drop. "It+'s the
titles," he said, "and the kind. How many of them are
good-lookers?"
Palliser reflected a
moment, as though making mental choice.
"Lady Alice and
Lady Celia are rather plain," he said, "and both of them are
invalidish. Lady Ethel is tall and has handsome eyes, but Lady Edith is really
the beauty of the family. She rides and dances well and has a charming
color."
"And the other
ones," Tembaron suggested as he paused -- "Lady Beatrice and Lady
Gwynedd and Lady Honora and Lady Gwendolen."
"You remember
their names well," Palliser remarked with a half-laugh.
"Oh, I shall
remember them all right," Tembarom answered. "I earned twenty-five
per in New York by getting names down fine."
"The Talchesters
are really all rather taking. Talchester is Lord Pevensy's family name,"
Palliser explained. "They are girls who have pretty little noses and
bright complexions and eyes. Lady Gwynedd and Lady Honora both have quite
fascinating dimples."
"Dimples!"
exclaimed his companion. "Good business."
"Do you like
dimples particularly?" Palliser inquired with an impartial air.
"I+'d always make
a bee-line for a dimple," replied Mr. Temple Barholm. "Clear the way
when I start."
This was New York
phrasing, and was plainly humorous; but there was something more than humor in
his eye and smile -- something hinting distantly at recollection.
"You+'ll find them
at Pevensy Park," said Palliser.
"What about Lady
Joan Fayre?" was the next inquiry.
Palliser's side glance
at him was observant indeed. He asked himself how much the man could know.
Taking the past into consideration, Lady Joan might turn out to be a subject
requiring delicate handling. It was not the easiest thing in the world to talk
at all freely to a person with whom one desired to keep on good terms, about a
young woman supposed still to cherish a tragic passion for the dead man who
ought to stand at the present moment in the person's, figuratively speaking,
extremely ill-fitting shoes.
"Lady Joan has
been from her first season an undeniable beauty," he replied.
"She and the old
lady are going to stay at a place called Asshawe Holt. I think they+'re going
next week," Tembarom said.
"The old
lady?" repeated Captain Palliser.
"I mean her
mother. The one that+'s the Countess of Mallowe."
"Have you met Lady
Mallowe?" Palliser inquired with a not wholly repressed smile. A vision of
Lady Mallowe over- hearing their conversation arose before him.
"No, I have+n't.
What+'s she like?"
"She is not the
early- or mid-Victorian old lady," was Palliser's reply. "She wears
Gainsborough hats, and looks a quite possible eight and thirty. She is a
handsome person herself."
He was not aware that
the term "old lady" was, among Americans of the class of Mrs. Bowse's
boarders, a sort of generic term signifying almost anything maternal which had
passed thirty.
Tembarom proceeded.
"After they get
through at the Asshawe Holt place, I+'ve asked them to come here."
"Indeed,"
said Palliser, with an inward start. The man evidently did not know what other people
did. After all, why should he? He had been selling something or other in the
streets of New York when the thing happened, and he knew nothing of London.
"The countess
called on Miss Alicia when we were in London," he heard next. "She
said we were relations."
"You are -- as we
are. The connection is rather distant, but it is near enough to form a sort of
link."
"I+'ve wanted to
see Lady Joan," explained Tembarom.
"From what I+'ve
heard, I should say she was one of the `Lady's Pictorial' kind."
"I am afraid --
" Palliser's voice was slightly unsteady for the moment -- "I have
not studied the type sufficiently to know. The `Pictorial' is so exclusively a
women's periodical."
His companion laughed.
"Well, I+'ve only
looked through it once myself just to find out. Some way I always think of Lady
Joan as if she was like one of those Beaut's from Beautsville, with trains as
long as parlor-cars and feathers in their heads -- dressed to go to see the
queen. I guess she+'s been presented at court," he added.
"Yes, she has been
presented."
"Do they let 'em
go more than once?" he asked with casual curiosity.
"Confound this
cough!" exclaimed Captain Palliser, and he broke forth again.
"Take another
G," said Tembarom, producing his tube. "Say, just take the bottle and
keep it in your pocket."
When the brief paroxysm
was over and they moved on again, Palliser was looking an odd thing or so in
the face. "I always think of Lady Joan" was one of them. "Always"
seemed to go rather far. How often and why had he "always thought"?
The fellow was incredible. Did his sharp, boyish face and his slouch conceal a
colossal, vulgar, young ambition? There was not much concealment about it,
Heaven knew. And as he so evidently was not aware of the facts, how would they
affect him when he discovered them? And though Lady Mallowe was a woman not in
the least distressed or hampered by shades of delicacy and scruple, she surely
was astute enough to realize that even this bounder's dullness might be
awakened to realize that there was more than a touch of obvious indecency in
bringing the girl to the house of the man she had tragically loved, and manœuvering
to work her into it as the wife of the man who, monstrously unfit as he was,
had taken his place. Captain Palliser knew well that the pressing of the
relationship had meant only one thing. And how, in the name of the Furies! had
she dragged Lady Joan into the scheme with her?
It was as unbelievable
as was the new Temple Barholm him self. And how unconcerned the fellow looked!
Perhaps the man he had supplanted was no more to him than a scarcely remembered
name, if he was as much as that. Then Tembarom, pacing slowly by his side,
hands in pockets, eyes on the walk, spoke:
"Did you ever see
Jem Temple Barholm?" he asked.
It was like a
thunderbolt. He said it as though he were merely carrying his previous remarks
on to their natural conclusion; but Palliser felt himself so suddenly
unadjusted, so to speak, that he palpably hesitated.
"Did you?"
his companion repeated.
"I knew him
well," was the answer made as soon as readjustment was possible.
"Remember just how
he looked?"
"Perfectly. He was
a striking fellow. Women always said he had fascinating eyes."
"Sort of slant
downward on the outside corners -- and black eyelashes sorter sweeping
together?"
Palliser turned with a
movement of surprise.
"How did you know?
It was just that odd sort of thing."
"Miss Alicia told
me. And there+'s a picture in the gallery that+'s like him."
Captain Palliser felt
as embarrassed as Miss Alicia had felt, but it was for a different reason. She
had felt awkward because she had feared she had touched on a delicate subject.
Palliser was embarrassed because he was entirely thrown out of all his
calculations. He felt for the moment that there was no calculating at all, no
security in preparing paths. You never know where they would lead. Here had he
been actually alarmed in secret! And the oaf stood before him undisturbedly
opening up the subject himself.
"For a fellow like
that to lose a girl as he lost Lady Joan as pretty tough," the oaf said.
"By gee! it was tough!"
He knew it all -- the
whole thing, scandal, tragically broken marriage, everything. And knowing it,
he was laying his Yankee plans for getting the girl to Temple Barholm to look
her over. It was of a grossness one sometimes heard of in men of his kind, and
yet it seemed in its casualness to out- leap any little scheme of the sort he
had so far looked on at.
"Lady Joan felt it
immensely," he said.
A footman was to be
seen moving toward them, evidently bearing a message. Tea was served in the
drawing-room, and he had come to announce the fact.
They went back to the
house, and Miss Alicia filled cups for them and presided over the splendid tray
with a persuasive suggestion in the matter of hot or cold things which made it
easy to lead up to any subject. She was the best of unobtrusive hostesses.
Palliser talked of his
visit at Detchworth, which had been shortened because he had gone to "fit
in" and remain until a large but uncertain party turned up. It had turned
up earlier than had been anticipated, and of course he could only delicately
slip away.
"I am sorry it has
happened, however," he said, "not only because one does not wish to
leave Detchworth, but because I shall miss Lady Mallowe and Lady Joan, who are
to be at Asshawe Holt next week. I particularly wanted to see them."
Miss Alicia glanced at
Tembarom to see what he would do. He spoke before he could catch her glance.
"Say," he
suggested, "why don't you bring your grip over here and stay? I wish you
would."
"A grip means a
Gladstone bag," Miss Alicia murmured in a rapid undertone.
Palliser replied with
appreciative courtesy. Things were going extremely well.
"That+'s awfully
kind of you," he answered. "I should like it tremendously. Nothing
better. You are giving me a delightful opportunity. Thank you, thank you. If I
may turn up on Thursday I shall be delighted."
There was satisfaction
in this at least in the observant gray eye when he went away.
DINNER at Detchworth
Grange was most amusing that evening. One of the chief reasons -- in fact, it
would not be too venturesome to say the chief reason -- for Captain Palliser's
frequent presence in very good country houses was that he had a way of making
things amusing. His relation of anecdotes, of people and things, was
distinguished by a manner which subtly declined to range itself on the side of
vulgar gossip. Quietly and with a fine casualness he conveyed the whole picture
of the new order at Temple Barholm. He did it with wonderfully light touches,
and yet the whole thing was to be seen -- the little old maid in her exquisite
clothes, her unmistakable stamp of timid good breeding, her protecting
adoration combined with bewilderment; the long, lean, not altogether
ill-looking New York bounder, with his slight slouch, his dangerously
unsophisticated-looking face, and his American jocularity of slang phrase.
"He+'s of a class
I know nothing about. I own he puzzled me a trifle at first," Palliser
said with his cool smile. "I+'m not sure that I+'ve `got on to him'
altogether yet. That+'s an expressive New York phrase of his own. But when we
were strolling about together, he made revelations apparently without being in
the least aware that they were revelations. He was unbelievable. My fear was
that he would not go on."
"But he did go
on?" asked Amabel. "One must hear something of the revelations."
Then was given in the
best possible form the little drama of the talk in the garden. No shade of Mr.
Temple Barholm's characteristics was lost. Palliser gave occasionally an
English attempt at the reproduction of his nasal twang, but it was only a touch
and not sufficiently persisted in to become undignified.
"I can't do
it," he said. "None of us can really do it. When English actors try
it on the stage, it is not in the least the real thing. They only drawl through
their noses, and it is more than that."
The people of
Detchworth Grange were not noisy people, but their laughter was unrestrained
before the recital was finished. Nobody had gone so far as either to fear or to
hope for anything as undiluted in its nature as this was.
"Then he won't
give us a chance, the least chance," cried Lucy and Amabel almost in
unison. "We are out of the running."
"You won't get
even a look in -- because you are not `ladies,' " said their brother.
"Poor Jem Temple
Barholm! What a different thing it would have been if we had had him for a
neighbor!" Mr. Grantham fretted.
"We should have
had Lady Joan Fayre as well," said his wife.
"At least she's a
gentlewoman as well as a `lady,' " Mr. Grantham said. "She would not
have become so bitter if that hideous thing had not occurred."
They wondered if the
new man knew anything about Jem. Palliser had not reached that part of his
revelation when the laughter had broken into it. He told it forthwith, and the
laughter was overcome by a sort of dismayed disgust. This did not accord with
the rumors of an almost "nice" good nature.
"There+'s a vulgar
horridness about it," said Lucy.
"What price Lady
Mallowe!" said the son. "I+'ll bet a sovereign she began it."
"She did,"
remarked Palliser; "but I think one may leave Mr. Temple Barholm safely to
Lady Joan." Mr. Grantham laughed as one who knew something of Lady Joan.
"There+'s an
Americanism which I did+n't learn from him," Palliser added, "and I
remembered it when he was talking her over. It+'s this: when you dispose of a
person finally and forever, you `wipe up the earth with him.' Lady Joan will
`wipe up the earth' with your new neighbor."
There was a little
shout of laughter. "Wipe up the earth" was entirely new to everybody,
though even the country in England was at this time by no means wholly ignorant
of American slang.
This led to so many
other things both mirth-provoking and serious, even sometimes very serious
indeed, that the entire evening at Detchworth was filled with talk of Temple
Barholm. Very naturally the talk did not end by confining itself to one
household. In due time Captain Palliser's little sketches were known in divers
places, and it became a habit to discuss what had happened, and what might
possibly happen in the future. There were those who went to the length of
calling on the new man because they wanted to see him face to face. People
heard new things every few days, but no one realized that it was vaguely
through Palliser that there developed a general idea that, crude and
self-revealing as he was, there lurked behind the outward candor of the
intruder a hint of over-sharpness of the American kind. There seemed no
necessity for him to lay schemes beyond those he had betrayed in his inquiries
about "ladies," but somehow it became a fixed idea that he was
capable of doing shady things if at any time the temptation arose. That was
really what his boyish casualness meant. That in truth was Palliser's final
secret conclusion. And he wanted very much to find out why exactly little old
Miss Temple Barholm had been taken up. If the man wanted introductions, he
could have contrived to pick up a smart and enterprising unprofessional
chaperon in London who would have done for him what Miss Temple Barholm would
never presume to attempt. And yet he seemed to have chosen her deliberately. He
had set her literally at the head of his house. And Palliser, having heard a
vague rumor that he had actually settled a decent income upon her, had made
adroit inquiries and found it was true.
It was. To arrange the
matter had been one of his reasons for going to see Mr. Palford during their
stay in London.
"I wanted to fix
you -- fix you safe," he said when he told Miss Alicia about it. "I
guess no one can take it away from you, whatever old thing happens."
"What could happen,
dear Mr. Temple Barholm?" said Miss Alicia in the midst of tears of
gratitude and tremulous joy. "You are so young and strong and --
everything! Don't even speak of such a thing in jest. What could happen?"
"Anything can
happen," he answered, "just anything. Happening 's the one thing you
can't bet on. If I was betting, I+'d put my money on the thing I was sure
could+n't happen. Look at this Temple Barholm song and dance! Look at T. T. as
he was half strangling in the blizzard up at Harlem and thanking his stars
little Munsberg did+n't kick him out of his confectionery store less than a
year ago! So long as I+'m all right, you+'re all right. But I wanted you fixed,
anyhow."
He paused and looked at
her questioningly for a moment. He wanted to say something and he was not sure
he ought. His reverence for her little finenesses and reserves increased
instead of wearing away. He was always finding out new things about her.
"Say," he
broke forth almost impetuously after his hesitation, "I wish you would+n't
call me Mr. Temple Barholm."
"D-do you?"
she fluttered. "But what could I call you?"
"Well," he
answered, reddening a shade or so, "I+'d give a house and lot if you could
just call me Tem."
"But it would
sound so unbecoming, so familiar," she protested.
"That's just what
I+'m asking for," he said -- "some one to be familiar with. I+'m the
familiar kind. That+'s what+'s the matter with me. I+'d be familiar with
Pearson, but he would+n't let me. I+'d frighten him half to death. He+'d think
that he was+n't doing his duty and earning his wages, and that somehow he'd get
fired some day without a character."
He drew nearer to her
and coaxed.
"Could+n't you do
it?" he asked almost as though he were asking a favor of a girl.
"Just Tem? I believe that would come easier to you than T. T. I get fonder
and fonder of you every day, Miss Alicia, honest Injun. And I+'d be so grateful
to you if you+'d just be that unbecomingly familiar."
He looked honestly in
earnest; and if he grew fonder and fonder of her, she without doubt had, in the
face of everything, given her whole heart to him.
"Might I call you
Temple -- to begin with?" she asked. "It touches me so to think of
your asking me. I will begin at once. Thank you -- Temple," with a faint
gasp. "I might try the other a little later."
It was only a few
evenings later that he told her about the flats in Harlem. He had sent to New
York for a large bundle of newspapers, and when he opened them he read aloud an
advertisement, and showed her a picture of a large building given up entirely
to "flats."
He had realized from
the first that New York life had a singular attraction for her. The unrelieved
dullness of her life -- those few years of youth in which she had stifled vague
longings for the joys experienced by other girls; the years of middle age spent
in the dreary effort to be "submissive to the will of God," which,
honestly translated, signified submission to the exactions and domestic
tyrannies of "dear papa" and others like him -- had left her with her
capacities for pleasure as freshly sensitive as a child's. The smallest change
in the routine of existence thrilled her with excitement. Tembarom's casual
references to his strenuous boyhood caused her eyes to widen with eagerness to
hear more. Having seen this, he found keen delight in telling her stories of
New York life -- stories of himself or of other lads who had been his
companions. She would drop her work and gaze at him almost with bated breath.
He was an excellent raconteur when he talked of the things he knew well. He had
an unconscious habit of springing from his seat and acting his scenes as he
depicted them, laughing and using, street-boy phrasing:
"It+'s just like a
tale," Miss Alicia would breathe, enraptured as he jumped from one story
to another. "It's exactly like a wonderful tale."
She learned to know the
New York streets when they blazed with heat, when they were hard with frozen
snow, when they were sloppy with melting slush or bright with springtime
sunshine and spring winds blowing, with pretty women hurrying about in
beflowered spring hats and dresses and the exhilaration of the world-old
springtime joy. She found herself hurrying with them. She sometimes hung with
him and his companions on the railing outside dazzling restaurants where scores
of gay people ate rich food in the sight of their boyish ravenousness. She
darted in and out among horses and vehicles to find carriages after the theater
or opera, where everybody was dressed dazzlingly and diamonds glittered.
"Oh, how rich
everybody must have seemed to you -- how cruelly rich, poor little boy!"
"They looked rich,
right enough," he answered when she said it. "And there seemed a lot
of good things to eat all corralled in a few places. And you wished you could
be let loose inside. But I don't know as it seemed cruel. That was the way it
was, you know, and you could+n't help it. And there were places where they+'d
give away some of what was left. I tell you, we were in luck then."
There was some spirit
in his telling it all -- a spirit which had surely been with him through his
hardest days, a spirit of young mirth in rags -- which made her feel
subconsciously that the whole experience had, after all, been somehow of the
nature of life's high adventure. He had never been ill or heart-sick, and he
laughed when he talked of it, as though the remembrance was not a recalling of
disaster.
"Clemmin' or no
clemmin', I wish I+'d lived the loife tha+'s lived," Tummas Hibblethwaite
had said.
Her amazement would
indeed have been great if she had been told that she secretly shared his
feeling.
"It seems as if
somehow you had never been dull," was her method of expressing it.
"Dull! Holy cats!
no," he grinned. "There was+n't any time for being anything. You just
had to keep going."
She became in time
familiar with Mrs. Bowse's boarding- house and boarders. She knew Mrs. Peck and
Mr. Jakes and the young lady from the notion counter (those wonderful shops!).
Julius and Jem and the hall bedroom and the tilted chairs and cloud of smoke
she saw so often that she felt at home with them.
"Poor Mrs.
Bowse," she said, "must have been a most respectable, motherly,
hard-working creature. Really a nice person of her class." She could not
quite visualize the "parlor," but it must have been warm and
comfortable. And the pianola -- a piano which you could play without even
knowing your notes -- What a clever invention! America seemed full of the most
wonderfully clever things.
Tembarom was actually
uplifted in soul when he discovered that she laid transparent little plans for
leading him into talk about New York. She wanted him to talk about it, and the
Lord knows he wanted to talk about himself. He had been afraid at first. She
might have hated it, as Palford did, and it would have hurt him somehow if she
had+n't understood. But she did. Without quite realizing the fact, she was
beginning to love it, to wish she had seen it. Her Somerset vicarage
imagination did not allow of such leaps as would be implied by the daring wish
that sometime she might see it.
But Tembarom's
imagination was more athletic.
"Jinks! would+n't
it be fine to take her there! The lark in London would+n't be ace high to
it."
The Hutchinsons were
not New Yorkers, but they had been part of the atmosphere of Mrs. Bowse's. Mr.
Hutchinson would of course be rather a forward and pushing man to be obliged to
meet, but Little Ann! She did so like Little Ann! And the dear boy did so want,
in his heart of hearts, to talk about her at times. She did not know whether,
in the circumstances, she ought to encourage him; but he was so dear, and
looked so much dearer when he even said "Little Ann," that she could
not help occasionally leading him gently toward the subject.
When he opened the
newspapers and found the advertisements of the flats, she saw the engaging,
half-awkward humorousness come into his eyes.
"Here+'s one that
would do all right," he said -- "four rooms and a bath, eleventh
floor, thirty-five dollars a month."
He spread the newspaper
on the table and rested on his elbow. gazing at it for a few minutes wholly
absorbed. Then he looked up at her and smiled.
"There+'s a plan
of the rooms," he said. "Would you like to look at it? Shall I bring
your chair up to the table while we go over it together?"
He brought the chair,
and side by side they went over it thoroughly. To Miss Alicia it had all the
interest of a new kind of puzzle. He explained it in every detail. One of his
secrets had been that on several days when Galton's manner had made him hopeful
he had visited certain flat buildings and gone into their intricacies. He could
therefore describe with color their resources -- the janitor; the elevator; the
dumb-waiters to carry up domestic supplies and carry down ashes and refuse; the
refrigerator; the unlimited supply of hot and cold water, the heating plan; the
astonishing little kitchen, with stationary wash-tubs; the telephone, if you
could afford it, -- all the conveniences which to Miss Alicia, accustomed to
the habits of Roweroft Vicarage, where you lugged cans of water up-stairs and
down if you took a bath or even washed your face, seemed luxuries appertaining
only to the rich and great.
"How convenient!
How wonderful! Dear me! Dear me!" she said again and again, quite flushed
with excitement. "It is like a fairy-story. And it+'s not big at all, is
it?"
"You could get
most of it into this," he answered, exulting. "You could get all of
it into that big white-and gold parlor."
"The white
saloon?"
He showed his teeth.
"I guess I ought
to remember to call it that," he said, "but it always makes me think
of Kid MacMurphy's on Fourth Avenue. He kept what was called a saloon, and he'd
had it painted white."
"Did you know
him?" Miss Alicia asked.
"Know him! Gee!
no! I did+n't fly as high as that. He+'d have thought me pretty fresh if I+'d
acted like I knew him. He thought he was one of the Four Hundred. He+'d been a
prize-fighter. He was the fellow that knocked out Kid Wilkens in four
rounds." He broke off and laughed at himself. "Hear me talk to you about
a tough like that!" he ended, and he gave her hand the little apologetic,
protective pat which always made her heart beat because it was so
"nice."
He drew her back to the
advertisements, and drew such interesting pictures of what the lives of two people
-- mother and son or father and daughter or a young married couple who did+n't
want to put on style -- might be in the tiny compartments, that their
excitement mounted again.
This could be a
bedroom, that could be a bedroom, that could be the living-room, and if you put
a bit of bright carpet on the hallway and hung up a picture or so, it would
look first- rate. He even went into the matter of measurements, which made it
more like putting a puzzle together than ever, and their relief when they found
they could fit a piece of furniture he called "a lounge" into a
certain corner was a thing of flushing delight. The "lounge," she
found, was a sort of cot with springs. You could buy them for three dollars,
and when you put on a mattress and covered it with a "spread," you
could sit on it in the daytime and sleep on it at night, if you had to.
From measurements he
went into calculations about the cost of things. He had seen unpainted wooden
tables you could put mahogany stain on, and they+'d look all you+'d want. He+'d
seen a splendid little rocking-chair in Second Avenue for five dollars, one of
the padded kind that ladies like. He had seen an arm-chair for a man that was
only seven; but there might+n't be room for both, and you+'d have to have the
rocking-chair. He had once asked the price of a lot of plates and cups and
saucers with roses on them, and you could get them for six; and you did+n't
need a stove because there was the range.
He had once heard
Little Ann talking to Mrs. Bowse about the price of frying-pans and kettles,
and they seemed to cost next to nothing. He+'d looked into store windows and
noticed the prices of groceries and vegetables and things like that -- sugar,
for instance; two people would+n't use much sugar in a week -- and they would+n't
need a ton of tea or flour or coffee. If a fellow had a mother or sister or
wife who had a head and knew about things, you could "put it over" on
mighty little, and have a splendid time together, too. You+'d even be able to
work in a cheap seat in a theater every now and then. He laughed and flushed as
he thought of it.
Miss Alicia had never
had a doll's house. Rowcroft Vicarage did not run to dolls and their
belongings. Her thwarted longing for a doll's house had a sort of parallel in
her similarly thwarted longing for "a little boy."
And here was her doll's
house so long, so long unpossessed! It was like that, this absorbed contriving
and fitting of furniture into corners. She also flushed and laughed. Her eyes
were so brightly eager and her cheeks so pink that she looked quite girlish
under her lace cap.
"How pretty and
cozy it might be made, how dear!" she exclaimed. "And one would be so
high up on the eleventh floor, that one would feel like a bird in a nest."
His face lighted. He
seemed to like the idea tremendously.
"Why, that's
so," he laughed. "That idea suits me down to the ground. A bird in a
nest. But there+'d have to be two. One would be lonely. Say, Miss Alicia, how
would you like to live in a place like that?"
"I am sure any one
would like it -- if they had some dear relative with them."
He loved her "dear
relative," loved it. He knew how much it meant of what had lain hidden
unacknowledged, even unknown to her, through a lifetime in her early-Victorian
spinster breast.
"Let+'s go to New
York and rent one and live in it together. Would you come?" he said, and
though he laughed, he was not jocular in the usual way. "Would you, if we
waked up and found this Temple Barholm thing was a dream?"
Something in his
manner, she did not know what, puzzled her a little.
"But if it were a
dream, you would be quite poor again," she said, smiling.
"No, I would+n't.
I+'d get Galton to give me back the page. He+'d do it quick -- quick," he
said, still with a laugh. "Being poor 's nothing, anyhow. We+'d have the
time of our lives. We+'d be two birds in a nest. You can look out those
eleventh- story windows 'way over to the Bronx, and get bits of the river. And
perhaps after a while Ann would do -- like she said, and we+'d be three birds."
"Oh!" she
sighed ecstatically. "How beautiful it would be! We should be a little
family!"
"So we
should," he exulted. "Think of T. T. with a family!" He drew his
paper of calculations toward him again. "Let+'s make believe we+'re going
to do it, and work out what it would cost -- for three. You know about
housekeeping, don't you? Let's write down a list."
If he had warmed to his
work before, he warmed still more after this. Miss Alicia was drawn into it
again, and followed his fanciful plans with a new fervor. They were like two
children who had played at make-believe until they had lost sight of
commonplace realities.
Miss Alicia had lived
among small economies and could be of great assistance to him. They made lists
and added up lines of figures until the fine, huge room and its thousands of
volumes melted away. In the great hall, guarded by warriors in armor, the
powdered heads of the waiting footmen drooped and nodded while the prices of
pounds of butter and sugar and the value of potatoes and flour and nutmegs were
balanced with a hectic joy, and the relative significance of dollars and cents
and shillings and half-crowns and five-cent pieces caused Miss Alicia a mild
delirium.
By the time that she
had established the facts that a shilling was something like twenty-five cents,
a dollar was four and twopence, and twenty-five dollars was something over five
pounds, it was past midnight.
They heard the clock
strike the half-hour, and stopped to stare at each other.
Tembarom got up with
yet another laugh.
"Say, I must+n't
keep you up all night," he said. "But have+n't we had a fine time --
have+n't we? I feel as if I+'d been there."
They had been there so
entirely that Miss Alicia brought herself back with difficulty.
"I can scarcely
believe that we have not," she said. "I feel as if I did+n't like to
leave it. It was so delightful." She glanced about her. "The room
looks huge," she said -- "almost too huge to live in."
"Doesn't it?"
he answered. "Now you know how I feel." He gathered his scraps of
paper together with a feeling touch. "I did+n't want to come back myself.
When I get a bit of a grouch I shall jerk these out and go back there
again."
"Oh, do let me go
with you!" she said. "I have so enjoyed it."
"You shall go
whenever you like," he said. "We'll keep it up for a sort of game on
rainy days. How much is a dollar, Miss Alicia?"
"Four and
twopence. And sugar is six cents a pound."
"Go to the
head," he answered. "Right again."
The opened roll of
newspapers was lying on the table near her. They were copies of The Earth, and
the date of one of them by merest chance caught her eye.
"How odd!"
she said. "Those are old papers. Did you notice? Is it a mistake? This one
is dated -- " She leaned forward, and her eye caught a word in a
head-line.
"The
Klondike," she read. "There+'s something in it about the
Klondike." He put his hand out and drew the papers away.
"Don't you read
that," he said. "I don't want you to go to bed and dream about the
Klondike. You+'ve got to dream about the flat in Harlem."
"Yes," she
answered. "I must+n't think about sad things. The flat in Harlem is quite
happy. But it startled me to see that word."
"I only sent for
them -- because I happened to want to look something up," he explained.
"How much is a pound, Miss Alicia?"
"Four dollars and
eighty-six cents," she replied, recovering herself.
"Go up head again.
You+'re going to stay there."
When she gave him her
hand on their parting for the night he held it a moment. A subtle combination
of things made him do it. The calculations, the measurements, the nest from
which one could look out over the Bronx, were prevailing elements in its
make-up. Ann had been in each room of the Harlem flat, and she always vaguely
reminded him of Ann.
"We are relations,
ain't we?" he asked.
"I am sure we
often seem quite near relations -- Temple." She added the name with very
pretty kindness.
"We+'re not
distant ones any more, anyhow," he said. "Are we near enough -- would
you let me kiss you good night, Miss Alicia?"
An emotional flush ran
up to her cap ribbons
"Indeed, my dear
boy -- indeed, yes."
Holding her hand with a
chivalric, if slightly awkward, courtesy, he bent, and kissed her cheek. It was
a hearty, affectionately grateful young kiss, which, while it was for herself,
remotely included Ann.
"It's the first
time I+'ve ever said good night to any one like that," he said.
"Thank you for letting me."
He patted her hand
again before releasing it. She went up-stairs blushing and feeling rather as
though she had been proposed to, and yet, spinster though she was, somehow
quite understanding about the nest and Ann.
LADY Mallowe and her
daughter did not pay their visit to Asshawe Holt, the absolute, though not
openly referred to, fact being that they had not been invited. The visit in
question had merely floated in the air as a delicate suggestion made by her
ladyship in her letter to Mrs. Asshe Shaw, to the effect that she and Joan were
going to stay at Temple Barholm, the visit to Asshawe they had partly arranged
some time ago might now be fitted in.
The partial arrangement
itself, Mrs. Asshe Shaw remarked to her eldest daughter when she received the
suggesting note, was so partial as to require slight consideration, since it
had been made "by the woman herself, who would push herself and her
daughter into any house in England if a back door were left open." In the civilly
phrased letter she received in answer to her own, Lady Mallowe read between the
lines the point of view taken, and writhed secretly, as she had been made to
writhe scores of times in the course of her career. It had happened so often,
indeed, that it might have been imagined that she had become used to it; but
the woman who acted as maid to herself and Joan always knew when "she had
tried to get in somewhere" and failed.
The note of explanation
sent immediately to Miss Alicia was at once adroit and amiable. They had
unfortunately been detained in London a day or two past the date fixed for
their visit to Asshawe, and Lady Mallowe would not allow Mrs. Asshe Shawe, who
had so many guests, to be inconvenienced by their arriving late and perhaps
disarranging her plans. So if it was quite convenient, they would come to
Temple Barholm a week earlier; but not, of course, if that would be the least
upsetting.
When they arrived,
Tembarom himself was in London. He had suddenly found he was obliged to go. The
business which called him was something which could not be put off. He expected
to return at once. It was made very easy for him when he made his excuses to
Palliser, who suggested that he might even find himself returning by the same
train with his guests, which would give him opportunities. If he was detained,
Miss Alicia could take charge of the situation. They would quite understand
when she explained. Captain Palliser foresaw for himself some quiet
entertainment in his own meeting with the visitors. Lady Mallowe always
provided a certain order of amusement for him, and no man alive objected to
finding interest and even a certain excitement in the society of Lady Joan. It
was her chief characteristic that she inspired in a man a vague, even if slightly
irritated, desire to please her in some degree. To lead her on to talk in her
sometimes brilliant, always heartlessly unsparing, fashion, perhaps to smile
her shade of a bitter smile, gave a man something to do, especially if he was
bored. Palliser anticipated a possible chance of repeating the dialogue of
"the ladies," not, however, going into the Jem Temple Barholm part of
it. When one finds a man whose idle life has generated in him the curiosity
which is usually called feminine, it frequently occupies him more actively than
he is aware or will admit.
A fashionable male
gossip is a curious development. Palliser was, upon the whole, not aware that
he had an intense interest in finding out the exact reason why Lady Mallowe had
not failed utterly in any attempt to drag her daughter to this particular
place, to be flung headlong, so to speak, at this special man. Lady Mallowe one
could run and read, but Lady Joan was in this instance unexplainable. And as
she never deigned the slightest concealment, the story of the dialogue would no
doubt cause her to show her hand. She must have a hand, and it must be one
worth seeing.
It was not he, however,
who could either guess or understand. The following would have been his summing
up of her: "Flaringly handsome girl, brought up by her mother to one end.
Bad temper to begin with. Girl who might, if she lost her head, get into some
frightful mess. Meets a fascinating devil in the first season. A regular Romeo
and Juliet passion blazes up -- all for love and the world well lost. All
London looking on. Lady Mallowe frantic and furious. Suddenly the fascinating
devil ruined for life, done for. Bolts, gets killed. Lady Mallowe triumphant.
Girl dragged about afterward like a beautiful young demon in chains. Refuses
all sorts of things. Behaves infernally. Nobody knows anything else."
Nobody did know; Lady
Mallowe herself did not. From the first year in which Joan had looked at her
with child consciousness she had felt that there was antagonism in the deeps of
her eyes. No mother likes to recognize such a thing, and Lady Mallowe was a
particularly vain woman. The child was going to be an undeniable beauty, and
she ought to adore the mother who was to arrange her future. Instead of which,
she plainly disliked her. By the time she was three years old, the antagonism
had become defiance and rebellion. Lady Mallowe could not even indulge herself
in the satisfaction of showing her embryo beauty off, and thus preparing a
reputation for her. She was not cross or tearful, but she had the temper of a
little devil. She would not be shown off. She hated it, and her bearing
dangerously suggested that she hated her handsome young mother. No effects
could be produced with her.
Before she was four the
antagonism was mutual, and it increased with years. The child was of a
passionate nature, and had been born intensely all her mother was not, and
intensely not all her mother was. A throw-back to some high-spirited and
fiercely honest ancestor created in her a fury at the sight of mean falsities
and dishonors. Before she was old enough to know the exact cause of her rage
she was shaken by it. She thought she had a bad temper, and was bad enough to
hate her own mother without being able to help it. As she grew older she found
out that she was not really so bad as she had thought, though she was obliged
to concede that nothing palliative could be said about the temper. It had been
violent from the first, and she had lived in an atmosphere which infuriated it.
She did not suppose such a thing could be controlled. It sometimes frightened
her. Had not the old Marquis of Norborough been celebrated through his entire
life for his furies? Was there not a hushed-up rumor that he had once thrown a
decanter at his wife, and so nearly killed her that people had been asking one
another in whispers if a peer of the realm could be hanged. He had been born
that way, so had she. Her school-room days had been a horror to her, and also a
terror, because she had often almost flung ink-bottles and heavy rulers at her
silly, lying governesses, and once had dug a pair of scissors into one sneaking
old maid fool's arm when she had made her "see red" by her ignoble
trickeries. Perhaps she would be hanged some day herself. She once prayed for a
week that she might be made better tempered, -- not that she believed in
prayer, -- and of course nothing came of it.
Every year she lived
she raged more furiously at the tricks she saw played by her mother and every
one who surrounded her; the very servants were greater liars and pilferers than
any other servants. Her mother was always trying to get things from people
which they did not want to give her. She would carry off slights and snubs as
though they were actual tributes, if she could gain her end. The girl knew what
the meaning of her own future would be. Since she definitely disliked her
daughter, Lady Mallowe did not mince matters when they were alone. She had no
money, she was extremely good looking, she had a certain number of years in
which to fight for her own hand among the new débutantes who were presented
every season. Her first season over, the next season other girls would be
fresher than she was, and newer to the men who were worth marrying. Men like
novelty. After her second season the débutantes would seem fresher still by
contrast. Then people would begin to say, "She was presented four or five
years ago." After that it would be all struggle, -- every season it would
be worse. It would become awful. Unmarried women over thirty-five would speak
of her as though they had been in the nursery together. Married girls with a
child or so would treat her as though she were a maiden aunt. She knew what was
before her. Beggary stared them both in the face if she did not make the most
of her looks and waste no time. And Joan knew it was all true, and that worse,
far worse things were true also. She would be obliged to spend a long life with
her mother in cheap lodgings, a faded, penniless, unmarried woman, railed at,
taunted, sneered at, forced to be part of humiliating tricks played to enable
them to get into debt and then to avoid paying what they owed. Had she not seen
one horrible old woman of their own rank who was an example of what poverty
might bring one to, an old harpy who tried to queen it over her landlady in an actual
back street, and was by turns fawned upon and disgustingly "your
ladyshiped" or outrageously insulted by her landlady?
Then that first season!
Dear, dear God! that first season when she met Jem! She was not nineteen, and
the facile world pretended to be at her feet, and the sun shone as though
London were in Italy, and the park was marvelous with flowers, and there were
such dances and such laughter!
And it was all so young
-- and she met Jem! It was at a garden-party at a lovely old house on the river,
a place with celebrated gardens which would always come back to her memory as a
riot of roses. The frocks of the people on the lawn looked as though they were
made of the petals of flowers, and a mad little haunting waltz was being played
by the band, and there under a great copper birch on the green velvet turf near
her stood Jem, looking at her with dark, liquid, slanting eyes! They were only
a few feet from each other, -- and he looked, and she looked, and the haunting,
mad little waltz played on, and it was as though they had been standing there
since the world began, and nothing else was true.
Afterward nothing
mattered to either of them. Lady Mallowe herself ceased to count. Now and then
the world stops for two people in this unearthly fashion. At such times, as far
as such a pair are concerned, causes and effects cease. Her bad temper fled,
and she knew she would never feel its furious lash again.
With Jem looking at her
with his glowing, drooping eyes, there would be no reason for rage and shame.
She confessed the temper to him and told of her terror of it; he confessed to
her his fondness for high play, and they held each other's hands, not with
sentimental youthful lightness, but with the strong clasp of sworn comrades,
and promised on honor that they would stand by each other every hour of their
lives against their worst selves.
They would have kept
the pact. Neither was a slight or dishonest creature. The phase of life through
which they passed is not a new one, but it is not often so nearly an omnipotent
power as was their three-months' dream.
It lasted only that
length of time. Then came the end of the world. Joan did not look fresh in her
second season, and before it was over men were rather afraid of her. Because
she was so young the freshness returned to her cheek, but it never came back to
her eyes.
What exactly had
happened, or what she thought, it was impossible to know. She had delicate,
black brows, and between them appeared two delicate, fierce lines. Her eyes
were of a purplish-gray, "the color of thunder," a snubbed admirer
had once said. Between their black lashes they were more deeply
thunder-colored. Her life with her mother was a thing not to be spoken of. To
the desperate girl's agony of rebellion against the horror of fate Lady
Mallowe's taunts and beratings were devilish. There was a certain boudoir in
the house in Hill Street which was to Joan like the question chamber of the
Inquisition. Shut up in it together, the two went through scenes which in their
cruelty would have done credit to the Middle Ages. Lady Mallowe always locked
the door to prevent the unexpected entrance of a servant, but servants managed
to hover about it, because her ladyship frequently forgot caution so far as to
raise her voice at times, as ladies are not supposed to do.
"We fight,"
Joan said with a short, horrible laugh one morning -- "we fight like cats
and dogs. No, like two cats. A cat-and-dog fight is more quickly over. Some day
we shall scratch each other's eyes out."
"Have you no shame?"
her mother cried.
"I am burning with
it. I am like St. Lawrence on his gridiron. `Turn me over on the other side,'
" she quoted.
This was when she had
behaved so abominably to the Duke of Merthshire that he had actually withdrawn
his more than half-finished proposal. That which she hated more than all else
was the God she had prayed to when she asked she might be helped to control her
temper.
She had not believed in
Him at the time, but because she was frightened after she had stuck the
scissors into Fraulein she had tried the appeal as an experiment. The night
after she met Jem, when she went to her room in Hill Street for the night, she
knelt down and prayed because she suddenly did believe. Since there was Jem in
the world, there must be the other somewhere.
As day followed day,
her faith grew with her love. She told Jem about it, and they agreed to say a
prayer together at the same hour every night. The big young man thought her
piety beautiful, and his voice was unsteady as they talked. But she told him
that she was not pious, but impious.
"I want to be made
good," she said. "I have been bad all my life. I was a bad child, I
have been a bad girl; but now I must be good."
On the night after the
tragic card-party she went to her room and kneeled down in a new spirit. She
knelt, but not to cover her face, she knelt with throat strained and her fierce
young face thrown back and upward.
Her hands were clenched
to fists and flung out and shaken at the ceiling. She said things so awful that
her own blood shuddered as she uttered them. But she could not -- in her mad
helplessness -- make them awful enough. She flung herself on the carpet at
last, her arms outstretched like a creature crucified face downward on the
cross.
"I believed in
You!" she gasped. "The first moment you gave me a reason I believed.
I did! I did! We both said our prayer to You every night, like children. And
you+'ve done this -- this -- this!" And she beat with her fists upon the
floor.
Several years had
passed since that night, and no living being knew what she carried in her soul.
If she had a soul, she said to herself, it was black -- black. But she had
none. Neither had Jem had one; when the earth and stones had fallen upon him it
had been the end, as it would have been if he had been a beetle.
This was the guest who
was coming to the house where Miles Hugo smiled from his frame in the
picture-gallery -- the house which would to-day have been Jem's if T. Tembarom
had not inherited it.
Tembarom returned some
twenty-four hours after Miss Alicia had received his visitors for him. He had
been "going into" absorbing things in London. His thoughts during his
northward journey were puzzled and discouraged ones. He sat in the corner of
the railway carriage and stared out of the window without seeing the springtime
changes in the flying landscape.
The price he would have
given for a talk with Ann would not have been easy to compute. Her head, her
level little head, and her way of seeing into things and picking out facts
without being rattled by what did+n't really count, would have been worth
anything. The day itself was a discouraging one, with heavy threatenings of
rain which did not fall.
The low clouds were
piles of dark-purple gray, and when the sun tried to send lances of ominous
yellow light through them, strange and lurid effects were produced, and the
heavy purple- gray masses rolled together again. He wondered why he did not
hear low rumblings of thunder.
He went to his room at
once when he reached home. He was late, and Pearson told him that the ladies
were dressing for dinner. Pearson was in waiting with everything in readiness
for the rapid performance of his duties. Tembarom had learned to allow himself
to be waited upon. He had, in fact, done this for the satisfying of Pearson,
whose respectful unhappiness would otherwise have been manifest despite his
efforts to conceal it. He dressed quickly and asked some questions about
Strangeways. Otherwise Pearson thought he seemed preoccupied. He only made one
slight joke.
"You+'d be a
first-rate dresser for a quick-change artist, Pearson," he remarked.
On his way to the
drawing-room he deflected from the direct path, turning aside for a moment to
the picture-gallery because for a reason of his own he wanted to take a look at
Miles Hugo. He took a look at Miles Hugo oftener than Miss Alicia knew.
The gallery was dim and
gloomy enough, now closing in in the purple-gray twilight. He walked through it
without glancing at the pictures until he came to the tall boy in the satin and
lace of Charles II period. He paused there only for a short time, but he stood
quite near the portrait, and looked hard at the handsome face.
"Gee!" he
exclaimed under his breath, "it+'s queer, gee!"
Then he turned suddenly
round toward one of the big windows. He turned because he had been startled by
a sound, a movement. Some one was standing before the window. For a second's
space the figure seemed as though it was almost one with the purple-gray clouds
that were its background. It was a tall young woman, and her dress was of a
thin material of exactly their color -- dark-gray and purple at once. The
wearer held her head high and haughtily. She had a beautiful, stormy face, and
the slender, black brows were drawn together by a frown. Tembarom had never
seen a girl as handsome and disdainful. He had, indeed, never been looked at as
she looked at him when she moved slightly forward.
He knew who it was. It
was the Lady Joan girl, and the sudden sight of her momentarily
"rattled" him.
"You quite gave me
a jolt," he said awkwardly, and knowing that he said it like a
"mutt." "I did+n't know any one was in the gallery."
"What are you
doing here?" she asked. She spoke to him as though she were addressing an
intruding servant. There was emphasis on the word "you."
Her intention was so
evident that it increased his feeling of being "rattled." To find
himself confronting deliberate ill nature of a superior and finished kind was
like being spoken to in a foreign language.
"I -- I+'m T.
Tembarom," he answered, not able to keep himself from staring because she
was such a "winner" as to looks.
"T.
Tembarom?" she repeated slowly, and her tone made him at once see what a
fool he had been to say it.
"I forgot,"
he half laughed. "I ought to have said I+'m Temple Barholm."
"Oh!" was her
sole comment. She actually stood still and looked him up and down.
She knew perfectly well
who he was, and she knew perfectly well that no palliative view could possibly
be taken by any well- bred person of her bearing toward him. He was her host.
She had come, a guest, to his house to eat his bread and salt, and the
commonest decency demanded that she should conduct herself with civility. But
she cared nothing for the commonest, or the most uncommon, decency. She was
thinking of other things. As she had stood before the window she had felt that
her soul had never been so black as it was when she turned away from Miles
Hugo's portrait -- never, never. She wanted to hurt people. Perhaps Nero had
felt as she did and was not so hideous as he seemed.
The man's tailor had
put him into proper clothes, and his features were respectable enough, but
nothing on earth could make him anything but what he so palpably was. She had
seen that much across the gallery as she had watched him staring at Miles Hugo.
"I should
think," she said, dropping the words slowly again, "that you would
often forget that you are Temple Barholm."
"You're right
there," he answered. "I can't nail myself down to it. It seems like a
sort of joke."
She looked him over
again.
"It is a
joke," she said.
It was as though she
had slapped him in the face, though she said it so quietly. He knew he had
received the slap, and that, as it was a woman, he could not slap back. It was
a sort of surprise to her that he did not giggle nervously and turn red and
shuffle his feet in impotent misery. He kept quite still a moment or so and
looked at her, though not as she had looked at him. She wondered if he was so
thick-skinned that he did not feel anything at all.
"That+'s so,"
he admitted. "That+'s so." Then he actually smiled at her. "I
don't know how to behave myself, you see," he said. "You+'re Lady
Joan Fayre, ain't you? I+'m mighty glad to see you. Happy to make your acquaintance,
Lady Joan."
He took her hand and
shook it with friendly vigor before she knew what he was going to do.
"I+'ll bet a
dollar dinner 's ready," he added, "and Burrill+'s waiting. It scares
me to death to keep Burrill waiting. He+'s got no use for me, anyhow. Let's go
and pacify him."
He did not lead the way
or drag her by the arm, as it seemed to her quite probable that he might, as
costermongers do on Hampstead Heath. He knew enough to let her pass first
through the door; and when Lady Mallowe looked up to see her enter the
drawing-room, he was behind her. To her ladyship's amazement and relief, they
came in, so to speak, together. She had been spared the trying moment of
assisting at the ceremony of their presentation to each other.
IN a certain sense she
had been dragged to the place by her mother. Lady Mallowe had many resources,
and above all she knew how to weary her into resistlessness which was almost
indifference. There had been several shameless little scenes in the locked boudoir.
But though she had been dragged, she had come with an intention. She knew what
she would find herself being forced to submit to if the intruder were not
disposed of at the outset, and if the manœuvering began which would bring him
to London. He would appear at her elbow here and there and at every corner,
probably unaware that he was being made an offensive puppet by the astute
cleverness against which she could not defend herself, unless she made actual
scenes in drawing-rooms, at dinner-tables, in the very streets themselves.
Gifted as Lady Mallowe was in fine and light- handed dealing of her cards in
any game, her stakes at this special juncture were seriously high. Joan knew
what they were, and that she was in a mood touched with desperation. The defenselessly
new and ignorant Temple Barholm was to her mind a direct intervention of
Providence, and it was only Joan herself who could rob her of the benefits and
reliefs he could provide. With regard to Lady Joan, though Palliser's quoted
New Yorkism, "wipe up the earth," was unknown to her, the process she
had in mind when she left London for Lancashire would have been well covered by
it. As in feudal days she might have ordered the right hand of a creature such
as this to be struck off, forgetting that he was a man, so was she capable
to-day of inflicting upon him any hurt which might sweep him out of her way.
She had not been a tender hearted girl, and in these years she was absolutely
callous. The fellow being what he was, she had not the resources she might have
called upon if he had been a gentleman. He would not understand the chills and
slights of good manners. In the country he would be easier to manage than in
town, especially if attacked in his first timidity before his new grandeurs.
His big house no doubt frightened him, his servants, the people who were of a
class of which he knew nothing. When Palliser told his story she saw new
openings. He would stand in servile awe of her and of others like her. He would
be afraid of her, to begin with, and she could make him more so.
But though she had come
to alarm him so that he would be put to absolute flight, she had also come for
another reason. She had never seen Temple Barholm, and she had discovered
before they had known each other a week that it was Jem's secret passion. He
had loved it with a slighted and lonely child's romantic longing; he had
dreamed of it as boy and man, knowing that it must some time be his own, his
home, and yet prevented by his uncle's attitude toward him from daring to act
as though he remembered the fact. Old Mr. Temple Barholm's special humor had
been that of a man guarding against presumption.
Jem had not intended to
presume, but he had been snubbed with relentless cruelty even for boyish
expressions of admiration. And he had hid his feeling in his heart until he
poured it out to Joan. To-day it would have been his. Together, together, they
would have lived in it and loved every stone of it, every leaf on every great
tree, every wild daffodil nodding in the green grass. Most people, God be
thanked! can forget. The wise ones train themselves beyond all else to
forgetting.
Joan had been a
luckless, ill-brought-up, passionate child and girl. In her Mayfair nursery she
had been as little trained as a young savage. Since her black hour she had
forgotten nothing, allowed herself no palliating moments. Her brief dream of
young joy had been the one real thing in her life. She absolutely had lain
awake at night and reconstructed the horror of Jem's death, had lived it over
again, writhing in agony on her bed, and madly feeling that by so doing she was
holding her love close to her life.
And the man who stood
in the place Jem had longed for, the man who sat at the head of his table, was
this "thing!" That was what she felt him to be, and every hurt she
could do him, every humiliation which should write large before him his
presumption and grotesque unfitness, would be a blow struck for Jem, who could
never strike a blow for himself again. It was all senseless, but she had not want
to reason. Fate had not reasoned in her behalf. She watched Tembarom under her
lids at the dinner-table.
He had not wriggled or
shuffled when she spoke to him in the gallery; he did neither now, and made no
obvious efforts to seem unembarrassed. He used his knife and fork in odd ways,
and he was plainly not used to being waited upon. More than once she saw the
servants restrain smiles. She addressed no remarks to him herself, and answered
with chill indifference such things as he said to her. If conversation had
flagged between him and Mr. Palford because the solicitor did not know how to
talk to him, it did not even reach the point of flagging with her, because she
would not talk and did not allow it to begin. Lady Mallowe, sick with
annoyance, was quite brilliant. She drew out Miss Alicia by detailed
reminiscences of a visit paid to Rowlton Hall years before. The vicar had dined
at the hall while she had been there. She remembered perfectly his charm of
manner and powerful originality of mind, she said sweetly. He had spoken with
such affection of his "little Alicia," who was such a help to him in
his parish work.
"I thought he was
speaking of a little girl at first," she said smilingly, "but it soon
revealed itself that `little Alicia' was only his caressing diminutive."
A certain widening of
Miss Alicia's fascinated eye, which could not remove itself from her face,
caused her to quail slightly.
"He was of course
a man of great force of character and -- and expression," she added.
"I remember thinking at the time that his eloquent frankness of phrase
might perhaps seem even severe to frivolous creatures like myself. A really
remarkable personality."
"His
sermons," faltered Miss Alicia, as a refuge, "were indeed remarkable.
I am sure he must greatly have enjoyed his conversations with you. I am afraid
there were very few clever women in the neighborhood of Rowlton."
Casting a bitter side
glance on her silent daughter, Lady Mallowe lightly seized upon New York as a
subject. She knew so much of it from delightful New Yorkers. London was full of
delightful New Yorkers. She would like beyond everything to spend a winter in
New York. She understood that the season there was in the winter and that it
was most brilliant. Mr. Temple Barholm must tell them about it.
"Yes," said
Lady Joan, looking at him through narrowed lids, "Mr. Temple Barholm ought
to tell us about it."
She wanted to hear what
he would say, to see how he would try to get out of the difficulty or flounder
staggeringly through it. Her mother knew in an instant that her own speech had
been a stupid blunder. She had put the man into exactly the position Joan would
enjoy seeing him in. But he was+n't in a position, it appeared.
"What is the
season, anyhow?" he said. "You+'ve got one on me when you talk about
seasons."
"In London,"
Miss Alicia explained courageously, "it is the time when her Majesty is at
Buckingham Palace, and when the drawing-rooms are held, and Parliament sits,
and people come up to town and give balls."
She wished that Lady
Mallowe had not made her remark just at this time. She knew that the quietly
moving servants were listening, and that their civilly averted eyes had seen
Captain Palliser smile and Lady Joan's curious look, and that the whole
incident would form entertainment for their supper- table.
"I guess they have
it in the winter in New York, then, if that+'s it," he said.
"There+'s no Buckingham Palace there, and no drawing-rooms, and Congress
sits in Washington. But New York takes it out in suppers at Sherry's and
Delmonico's and theaters and receptions. Miss Alicia knows how I used to go to
them when I was a little fellow, don't you, Miss Alicia?" he added,
smiling at her across the table.
"You have told
me," she answered. She noticed that Burrill and the footmen stood at
attention in their places.
"I used to stand
outside in the snow and look in through the windows at the people having a good
time," he said. "Us kids that were selling newspapers used to try to
fill ourselves up with choosing whose plate we+'d take if we could get at it.
Beefsteak and French fried potatoes were the favorites, and hot oyster stews.
We were so all-fired hungry!"
"How
pathetic!" exclaimed Lady Mallowe. "And how interesting, now that it
is all over!"
She knew that her manner
was gushing, and Joan's slight side glance of subtle appreciation of the fact
exasperated her almost beyond endurance. What could one do, what could one talk
about, without involving oneself in difficulties out of which one's hasty
retreat could be effected only by gushing? Taking into consideration the
awkwardness of the whole situation and seeing Joan's temper and attitude, if
there had not been so much at stake she would have received a summoning
telegram from London the next day and taken flight. But she had been forced to
hold her ground before in places she detested or where she was not wanted, and
she must hold it again until she had found out the worst or the best. And,
great heaven! how Joan was conducting herself, with that slow, quiet insultingness
of tone and look, the wicked, silent insolence of bearing which no man was able
to stand, however admiringly he began! The Duke of Merthshire had turned his
back upon it even after all the world had known his intentions, even after the
newspapers had prematurely announced the engagement and she herself had been
convinced that he could not possibly retreat. She had worked desperately that
season, she had fawned on and petted newspaper people, and stooped to little
things no one but herself could have invented and which no one but herself knew
of. And never had Joan been so superb; her beauty had seemed at its most
brilliant height. The match would have been magnificent; but he could not stand
her, and would not. Why, indeed, should any man? She glanced at her across the
table. A beauty, of course; but she was thinner, and her eyes had a hungry
fierceness in them, and the two delicate, straight lines between her black
brows were deepening.
And there were no dukes
on the horizon. Merthshire had married almost at once, and all the others were
too young or had wives already. If this man would take her, she might feel
herself lucky. Temple Barholm and seventy thousand a year were not to be
trifled with by a girl who had made herself unpopular and who was twenty-six.
And for her own luck the moment had come just before it was too late -- a
second marriage, wealth, the end of the hideous struggle. Joan was the obstacle
in her path, and she must be forced out of it. She glanced quickly at Tembarom.
He was trying to talk to Joan now. He was trying to please her. She evidently
had a fascination for him. He looked at her in a curious way when she was not
looking at him. It was a way different from that of other men whom she had
watched as they furtively stared. It had struck her that he could not take his
eyes away. That was because he had never before been on speaking terms with a
woman of beauty and rank.
Joan herself knew that
he was trying to please her, and she was asking herself how long he would have
the courage and presumption to keep it up. He could scarcely be enjoying it.
He was not enjoying it,
but he kept it up. He wanted to be friends with her for more reasons than one.
No one had ever remained long at enmity with him. He had "got over" a
good many people in the course of his career, as he had "got over"
Joseph Hutchinson. This had always been accomplished because he presented no
surface at which arrows could be thrown. She was the hardest proposition he had
ever come up against, he was thinking; but if he did+n't let himself be fool
enough to break loose and get mad, she+'d not hate him so much after a while.
She would begin to understand that it was+n't his fault; then perhaps he could
get her to make friends. In fact, if she had been able to read his thoughts,
there is no certainty as to how far her temper might have carried her. But she
could see him only as a sharp-faced, common American of the shop-boy class,
sitting at the head of Jem Temple Barholm's table, in his chair.
As they passed through
the hall to go to the drawing-room after the meal was over, she saw a neat,
pale young man speaking to Burrill and heard a few of his rather anxiously
uttered words.
"The orders were
that he was always to be told when Mr. Strangeways was like this, under all
circumstances. I can't quiet him, Mr. Burrill. He says he must see him at
once."
Burrill walked back
stiffly to the dining-room.
"It won't trouble
him much to be disturbed at his wine," he muttered before going. "He
does+n't know hock from port."
When the message was
delivered to him, Tembarom excused himself with simple lack of ceremony.
"I+'ll be back
directly," he said to Palliser. "Those are good cigars." And he
left the room without going into the matter further.
Palliser took one of
the good cigars, and in taking it exchanged a glance with Burrill which
distantly conveyed the suggestion that perhaps he had better remain for a
moment or so. Captain Palliser's knowledge of interesting detail was obtained
"by chance here and there," he sometimes explained, but it was always
obtained with a light and casual air.
"I am not
sure," he remarked as he took the light Burrill held for him and touched
the end of his cigar -- "I am not quite sure that I know exactly who Mr.
Strangeways is."
"He+'s the
gentleman, sir, that Mr. Temple Barholm brought over from New York,"
replied Burrill with a stolidity clearly expressive of distaste.
"Indeed, from New
York! Why does+n't one see him?"
"He's not in a
condition to see people, sir," said Burrill, and Palliser's slightly
lifted eyebrow seeming to express a good deal, he added a sentence, "He+'s
not all there, sir."
"From New York,
and not all there. What seems to be the matter?" Palliser asked quietly.
"Odd idea to bring a lunatic all the way from America. There must be
asylums there."
"Us servants have
orders to keep out of the way," Burrill said with sterner stolidity.
"He's so nervous that the sight of strangers does him harm. I may say that
questions are not encouraged."
"Then I must not
ask any more," said Captain Palliser. "I did not know I was edging on
to a mystery."
"I was+n't aware
that I was myself, sir," Burrill remarked, "until I asked something
quite ordinary of Pearson, who is Mr. Temple Barholm's valet, and it was not
what he said, but what he did+n't, that showed me where I stood."
"A mystery is an
interesting thing to have in a house," said Captain Palliser without
enthusiasm. He smoked his cigar as though he was enjoying its aroma, and even
from his first remark he had managed not to seem to be really quite addressing
himself to Burrill. He was certainly not talking to him in the ordinary way;
his air was rather that of a gentleman overhearing casual remarks in which he
was only vaguely interested. Before Burrill left the room, however, and he left
it under the impression that he had said no more than civility demanded,
Captain Palliser had reached the point of being able to deduce a number of
things from what he, like Pearson, had not said.
THE man who in all
England was most deeply submerged in deadly boredom was, the old Duke of Stone
said with wearied finality, himself. He had been a sinful young man of finished
taste in 1820; he had cultivated these tastes, which were for literature and
art and divers other things, in the most richly alluring foreign capitals until
finding himself becoming an equally sinful and finished elderly man, he had decided
to marry. After the birth of her four daughters, his wife had died and left
them on his hands. Developing at that time a tendency to rheumatic gout and a
daily increasing realization of the fact that the resources of a poor dukedom
may be hopelessly depleted by an expensive youth passed brilliantly in Vienna,
Paris, Berlin, and London, when it was endurable, he found it expedient to give
up what he considered the necessities of life and to face existence in the
country in England. It is not imperative that one should enter into detail.
There was much, and it covered years during which his four daughters grew up
and he "grew down," as he called it. If his temper had originally
been a bad one, it would doubtless have become unbearable; as he had been born an
amiable person, he merely sank into the boredom which threatens extinction. His
girls bored him, his neighbors bored him, Stone Hover bored him, Lancashire
bored him, England had always bored him except at abnormal moments.
"I read a great
deal, I walk when I can," this he wrote once to a friend in Rome.
"When I am too stiff with rheumatic gout, I drive myself about in a pony
chaise and feel like an aunt in a Bath chair. I have so far escaped the actual
chair itself. It perpetually rains here, I may mention, so I don't get out
often. You who gallop on white roads in the sunshine and hear Italian voices
and vowels, figure to yourself your friend trundling through damp, lead-colored
Lancashire lanes and being addressed in the Lancashire dialect. But so am I
driven by necessity that I listen to it gratefully. I want to hear village news
from villagers. I have become a gossip. It is a wonderful thing to be a gossip.
It assists one to get through one's declining years. Do not wait so long as I
did before becoming one. Begin in your roseate middle age."
An attack of gout more
severe than usual had confined him to his room for some time after the arrival
of the new owner of Temple Barholm. He had, in fact, been so far indisposed
that a week or two had passed before he had heard of him. His favorite nurse
had been chosen by him, because she was a comfortable village woman whom he had
taught to lay aside her proper awe and talk to him about her own affairs and
her neighbors when he was in the mood to listen. She spoke the broadest
possible dialect, -- he liked dialect, having learned much in his youth from
mellow-eyed Neapolitan and Tuscan girls, -- and she had never been near a
hospital, but had been trained by the bedsides of her children and neighbors.
"If I were a
writing person, she would become literature, impinging upon Miss Mitford's
tales of `Our Village,' Miss Austen's varieties, and the young Bronte woman's
`Wuthering Heights.' Mon Dieu! what a resource it would be to be a writing
person!" he wrote to the Roman friend.
To his daughters he
said:
"She brings back
my tenderest youth. When she pokes the fire in the twilight and lumbers about
the room, making me comfortable, I lie in my bed and watch the flames dancing
on the ceiling and feel as if I were six and had the measles. She tucks me in,
my dears -- she tucks me in, I assure you. Sometimes I feel it quite possible
that she will bend over and kiss me."
She had tucked him in
luxuriously in his arm-chair by the fire on the first day of his convalescence,
and as she gave him his tray, with his beef tea and toast, he saw that she
contained anecdotal information of interest which tactful encouragement would
cause to flow.
"Now that I am
well enough to be entertained, Braddle," he said, "tell me what has
been happening."
"A graidely lot,
yore Grace," she answered; "but not so much i' Stone Hover as i'
Temple Barholm. He+'s coom!"
Then the duke vaguely
recalled rumors he had heard sometime before his indisposition.
"The new Mr.
Temple Barholm? He's an American, is+n't he? The lost heir who had to be sought
for high and low -- principally low, I understand."
The beef tea was
excellently savory, the fire was warm, and relief from two weeks of pain left a
sort of Nirvana of peace. Rarely had the duke passed a more delightfully
entertaining morning. There was a richness in the Temple Barholm situation, as
described in detail by Mrs. Braddle, which filled him with delight. His regret
that he was not a writing person intensified itself. Americans had not appeared
upon the horizon in Miss Mitford's time, or in Miss Austen's, or in the
Brontes' the type not having entirely detached itself from that of the red
Indian. It struck him, however, that Miss Austen might have done the best work
with this affair if she had survived beyond her period. Her finely demure and
sly sense of humor would have seen and seized upon its opportunities. Stark
moorland life had not encouraged humor in the Brontes, and village patronage
had not roused in Miss Mitford a sense of ironic contrasts. Yes, Jane Austen
would have done it best.
That the story should
be related by Mrs. Braddle gave it extraordinary flavor. No man or woman of his
own class could have given such a recounting, or revealed so many facets of
this jewel of entertainment. He and those like him could have seen the thing
only from their own amused, outraged, bewildered, or cynically disgusted point
of view. Mrs. Braddle saw it as the villagers saw it -- excited, curious,
secretly hopeful of undue lavishness from "a chap as had nivver had brass
before an' wants to chuck it away for brag's sake," or somewhat alarmed at
the possible neglecting of customs and privileges by a person ignorant of
memorial benefactions. She saw it as the servants saw it -- secretly disdainful,
outwardly respectful, waiting to discover whether the sacrifice of professional
distinction would be balanced by liberties permitted and lavishness of
remuneration and largess. She saw it also from her own point of view -- that of
a respectable cottage dweller whose great-great-grandfather had been born in a
black-and- white timbered house in a green lane, and who knew what were
"gentry ways" and what nature of being could never even remotely
approach the assumption of them. She had seen Tembarom more than once, and
summed him up by no means ill-naturedly.
"He+'s not such a
bad-lookin' chap. He is na short-legged or turn-up-nosed, an' that+'s summat.
He con stride along, an' he looks healthy enow for aw he+'s thin. A thin chap
nivver looks as common as a fat un. If he wur pudgy, it ud be a lot more agen
him."
"I think,
perhaps," amiably remarked the duke, sipping his beef tea, "that you
had better not call him a `chap,' Braddle. The late Mr. Temple Barholm was
never referred to as a `chap' exactly, was he?"
Mrs. Braddle gave vent
to a sort of internal-sounding chuckle. She had not meant to be impertinent,
and she knew her charge was aware that she had not, and that he was neither
being lofty or severe with her.
"Eh, I+'d 'a'
loiked to ha' heard somebody do it when he was nigh," she said.
"Happen I+'d better be moindin' ma P's an' Q's a bit more. But that+'s
what this un is, yore Grace. He+'s a `chap' out an' out. An' theer+'s some as
is sayin' he+'s not a bad sort of a chap either. There+'s lots o' funny stories
about him i' Temple Barholm village. He goes in to th' cottages now an' then,
an' though a fool could see he does na know his place, nor other people's,
he+'s downreet open-handed. An' he maks foak laugh. He took a lot o' New York
papers wi' big pictures in 'em to little Tummas Hibblethwaite. An' wot does tha
think he did one rainy day? He walks in to the owd Dibdens' cottage, an' sits
down betwixt 'em as they sit one each side o' th' f're, an' he tells 'em
they've got to cheer him up a bit becos he+'s got nought to do. An' he shows
'em th' picter-papers, too, an' tells 'em about New York, an' he ends up wi'
singin' 'em a comic song. They was frightened out o' their wits at first, but
somehow he got over 'em, an' made 'em laugh their owd heads nigh off."
Her charge laid his
spoon down, and his shrewd, lined face assumed a new expression of interest.
"Did he! Did he,
indeed!" he exclaimed. "Good Lord! what an exhilarating person! I
must go and see him. Perhaps he'd make me laugh my `owd head nigh off.' What a
sensation!"
There was really
immense color in the anecdotes and in the side views accompanying them; the
routing out of her obscurity of the isolated, dependent spinster relative, for
instance. Delicious! The man was either desperate with loneliness or he was one
of the rough-diamond benefactors favored by novelists, in which latter case he
would not be so entertaining. Pure self-interest caused the Duke of Stone quite
unreservedly to hope that he was anguished by the unaccustomedness of his
surroundings, and was ready to pour himself forth to any one who would listen.
There would be originality in such a situation, and one could draw forth
revelations worth forming an audience to. He himself had thought that the
volte-face such circumstances demanded would surely leave a man staring at
things foreign enough to bore him. This, indeed, had been one of his cherished
theories; but the only man he had ever encountered who had become a sort of
millionaire between one day and another had been an appalling Yorkshire man,
who had had some extraordinary luck with diamond-mines in South Africa, and he
had been simply drunk with exhilaration and the delight of spending money with
both hands, while he figuratively slapped on the back persons who six weeks
before would have kicked him for doing it.
This man did not appear
to be excited. The duke mentally rocked with gleeful appreciation of certain
things Mrs. Braddle detailed. She gave, of course, Burrill's version of the
brief interview outside the dining-room door when Miss Alicia's status in the
household had been made clear to him. But the duke, being a man endowed with a
subtle sense of shades, was wholly enlightened as to the inner meaning of
Burrill's master.
"Now, that was
good," he said to himself, almost chuckling. "By the Lord! the man
might have been a gentleman."
When to all this was
added the story of the friend or poor relative, or what not, who was supposed
to be "not quoite reet i' th' yed," and was taken care of like a
prince, in complete isolation, attended by a valet, visited and cheered up by
his benefactor, he felt that a boon had indeed been bestowed upon him. It was a
nineteenth century "Mysteries of Udolpho" in embryo, though too
greatly diluted by the fact that though the stranger was seen by no one, the
new Temple Barholm made no secret of him.
If he had only made a
secret of him, the whole thing would have been complete. There was of course in
the situation a discouraging suggestion that Temple Barholm might turn out to
be merely the ordinary noble character bestowing boons.
"I will burn a
little candle to the Virgin and offer up prayers that he may not. That sort of
thing would have no cachet whatever, and would only depress me," thought
his still sufficiently sinful Grace.
"When, Braddle, do
you think I shall be able to take a drive again?" he asked his nurse.
Braddle was not
prepared to say upon her own responsibility, but the doctor would tell him when
he came in that afternoon.
"I feel
astonishingly well, considering the sharpness of the attack," her patient
said. "Our little talk has quite stimulated me. When I go out," --
there was a gleam in the eye he raised to hers, -- "I am going to call at
Temple Barholm."
"I knowed tha
would," she commented with maternal familiarity. "I dunnot believe
tha could keep away."
And through the rest of
the morning, as he sat and gazed into the fire, she observed that he several
times chuckled gently and rubbed his delicate, chill, swollen knuckled hands
together.
A few weeks later there
were some warm days, and his Grace chose to go out in his pony carriage. Much
as he detested the suggestion of "the aunt in the Bath chair," he had
decided that he found the low, informal vehicle more entertaining than a more
imposing one, and the desperation of his desire to be entertained can be
comprehended only by those who have known its parallel. If he was not in some
way amused, he found himself whirling, with rheumatic gout and seventy years,
among recollections of vivid pictures better hung in galleries with closed
doors. It was always possible to stop the pony carriage to look at views --
bits of landscape caught at by vision through trees or under their spreading
branches, or at the end of little green-hedged lanes apparently adorned with
cottages, or farm- houses with ricks and barn-yards and pig-pens designed for
the benefit of Morland and other painters of rusticity. He could also slacken
the pony's pace and draw up by roadsides where solitary men sat by piles of
stone, which they broke at leisure with hammers as though they were cracking
nuts. He had spent many an agreeable half-hour in talk with a road- mender who
could be led into conversation and was left elated by an extra shilling. As in
years long past he had sat under chestnut-trees in the Apennines and shared the
black bread and sour wine of a peasant, so in these days he frequently would
have been glad to sit under a hedge and eat bread and cheese with a good fellow
who did not know him and whose summing up of the domestic habits and needs of
"th' workin' mon" or the amiabilities or degeneracies of the gentry
would be expressed, figuratively speaking, in thoughts and words of one
syllable. The pony, however, could not take him very far afield, and one could
not lunch on the grass with a stone-breaker well within reach of one's own
castle without an air of eccentricity which he no more chose to assume than he
would have chosen to wear long hair and a flowing necktie. Also, rheumatic gout
had not hovered about the days in the Apennines. He did not, it might be
remarked, desire to enter into conversation with his humble fellow-man from
altruistic motives. He did it because there was always a chance more or less
that he would be amused. He might hear of little tragedies or comedies, -- he
much preferred the comedies, -- and he often learned new words or phrases of
dialect interestingly allied to pure Anglo- Saxon. When this last occurred, he
entered them in a note- book he kept in his library. He sometimes pretended to
him self that he was going to write a book on dialects; but he knew that he was
a dilettante sort of creature and would really never do it. The pretense,
however, was a sort of asset. In dire moments during rains or foggy weather
when he felt twinges and had read till his head ached, he had wished that he
had not eaten all his cake at the first course of life's feast, that he had
formed a habit or so which might have survived and helped him to eke out even
an easy-chair existence through the last courses. He did not find consolation
in the use of the palliative adjective as applied to himself. A neatly cynical
sense of humor prevented it. He knew he had always been an entirely selfish man
and that he was entirely selfish still, and was not revoltingly fretful and
domineering only because he was constitutionally unirritable.
He was, however,
amiably obstinate, and was accustomed to getting his own way in most things. On
this day of his outing he insisted on driving himself in the face of arguments
to the contrary. He was so fixed in his intention that his daughters and Mrs. Braddle
were obliged to admit themselves overpowered.
"Nonsense!
Nonsense!" he protested when they besought him to allow himself to be
driven by a groom. "The pony is a fat thing only suited to a Bath chair.
He does not need driving. He does+n't go when he is driven. He frequently lies
down and puts his cheek on his hand and goes to sleep, and I am obliged to wait
until he wakes up."
"But, papa,
dear," Lady Edith said, "your poor hands are not very strong. And he
might run away and kill you. Please do be reasonable!"
"My dear
girl," he answered, "if he runs, I shall run after him and kill him
when I catch him. George," he called to the groom holding the plump pony's
head, "tell her ladyship what this little beast's name is."
"The Indolent
Apprentice, your Grace," the groom answered, touching his hat and
suppressing a grin.
"I called him that
a month ago," said the duke. "Hogarth would have depicted all sorts
of evil ends for him. Three weeks since, when I was in bed being fed by Braddle
with a spoon, I could have outrun him myself. Let George follow me on a horse
if you like, but he must keep out of my sight. Half a mile behind will
do."
He got into the phaëton,
concealing his twinges with determination, and drove down the avenue with a
fine air, sitting erect and smiling. Indoor existence had become unendurable,
and the spring was filling the woods.
"I love the
spring," he murmured to himself. "I am sentimental about it. I love
sentimentality, in myself, when I am quite alone. If I had been a writing
person, I should have made verses every year in April and sent them to
magazines -- and they would have been returned to me."
The Indolent Apprentice
was, it is true, fat, though comely, and he was also entirely deserving of his
name. Like his Grace of Stone, however, he had seen other and livelier days,
and now and then he was beset by recollections. He was still a rather high,
though slow, stepper -- the latter from fixed preference. He had once stepped
fast, as well as with a spirited gait. During his master's indisposition he had
stood in his loose box and professed such harmlessness that he had not been
annoyed by being taken out for exercise as regularly as he might have been. He
had champed his oats and listened to the repartee of the stable-boys, and he
had, perhaps, felt the coming of the spring when the cuckoo insisted upon it
with thrilling mellowness across the green sweeps of the park land. Sometimes
it made him sentimental, as it made his master, sometimes it made him stamp his
small hoofs restlessly in his straw and want to go out. He did not intend, when
he was taken out, to emulate the Industrious Apprentice by hastening his pace
unduly and raising false hopes for the future, but he sniffed in the air the
moist green of leafage and damp moss, massed with yellow primroses cuddling in
it as though for warmth, and he thought of other fresh scents and the feel of
the road under a pony's feet.
Therefore, when he
found himself out in the world again, he shook his head now and then and even tossed
it with the recurring sensations of a pony who was a mere boy and still slight
in the waist.
"You feel it too,
do you?" said the duke. "I won't remind you of your years."
The drive from Stone
Hover to the village of Temple Barholm was an easy one, of many charms of
leaf-arched lanes and green- edged road. The duke had always had a partiality
for it, and he took it this morning. He would probably have taken it in any
case, but Mrs. Braddle's anecdotes had been floating through his mind when he
set forth and perhaps inclined him in its direction.
The groom was a young
man of three and twenty, and he felt the spring also. The horse he rode was a
handsome animal, and he himself was not devoid of a healthy young man's good
looks. He knew his belted livery was becoming to him, and when on horseback he
prided himself on what he considered an almost military bearing. Sarah Hibson,
farmer Hibson's dimple-chinned and saucy-eyed daughter, had been "carryin'
on a good bit" with a soldier who was a smart, well-set-up, impudent
fellow, and it was the manifest duty of any other young fellow who had
considered himself to be "walking out with her" to look after his
charges. His Grace had been most particular about George's keeping far enough
behind him; and as half a mile had been mentioned as near enough, certainly one
was absolved from the necessity of keeping in sight. Why should not one turn
into the lane which ended at Hibson's farm- yard, and drop into the dairy, and
"have it out wi' Sarah?"
Dimpled chins and saucy
eyes, and bare, dimpled arms and hands patting butter while heads are tossed in
coquettishly alluring defiance, made even "having it out" an
attractive and memory-obscuring process. Sarah was a plump and sparkling imp of
prettiness, and knew the power of every sly glance and every dimple and every
golden freckle she possessed. George did not know it so well, and in ten
minutes had lost his head and entirely forgotten even the half-mile behind.
He was lover-like, he
was masterful, he brought the spring with him; he "carried on," as
Sarah put it, until he had actually out-distanced the soldier, and had her in
his arms, kissing her as she laughed and prettily struggled.
"Shame o' tha face
I Shame o' tha face, George!" she scolded and dimpled and blushed.
"Wilt tha be done now? Wilt tha be done? I+'ll call mother."
And at that very moment
mother came without being called, running, red of face, heavy-footed, and
panting, with her cap all on one side.
"Th' duke+'s run
away! Th' duke+'s run away!" she shouted. "Jo seed him. Pony got
freetened at summat -- an' what art doin' here, George Bind? Get o' thy horse
an' gallop. If he+'s killed, tha 'rt a ruined man."
. . . . . . . . .
There was an odd turn
of chance in it, the duke thought afterward. Though friskier than usual, the
Indolent Apprentice had behaved perfectly well until they neared the gates of
Temple Barholm, which chanced to be open because a cart had just passed through.
And it was not the cart's fault, for the Indolent Apprentice regarded it with
friendly interest. It happened, however, that perhaps being absorbed in the
cart, which might have been drawn by a friend or even a distant relative, the
Indolent Apprentice was horribly startled by a large rabbit which leaped out of
the hedge almost under his nose, and, worse still, was followed the next
instant by another rabbit even larger and more sudden and unexpected in its
movements. The Indolent Apprentice snorted, pawed, whirled, dashed through the
open gateway, -- the duke's hands were even less strong than his daughter had
thought, -- and galloped, head in air and bit between teeth, up the avenue, the
low carriage rocking from side to side.
"Damn! Damn!"
cried the duke, rocking also. "Oh, damn! I shall be killed in a runaway
perambulator!"
And ridiculous as it
was, things surged through his brain, and once, though he laughed at himself
bitterly afterward, he gasped "Ah, Heloise;" as he almost whirled
over a jagged tree-stump; gallop and gallop and gallop, off the road and
through trees, and back again on to the sward, and gallop and gallop and jerk
and jolt and jerk, and he was nearing the house, and a long-legged young man
ran down the steps, pushing aside footmen, and was ahead of the drunken little
beast of a pony, and caught him just as the phaëton overturned and shot his
grace safely though not comfortably in a heap upon the grass.
It was of course no
trifle of a shock, but its victim's sensations gave him strong reason to hope,
as he rolled over, that no bones were broken. The following servants were on
the spot almost at once, and took the pony's head.
The young man helped
the duke to his feet and dusted him with masterly dexterity. He did not know he
was dusting a duke, and he would not have cared if he had.
"Hello," he
said, "you+'re not hurt. I can see that. Thank the Lord! I don't believe
you+'ve got a scratch."
His grace felt a shade
shaky, and he was slightly pale, but he smiled in a way which had been
celebrated forty years earlier, and the charm of which had survived even
rheumatic gout.
"Thank you. I+'m
not hurt in the least. I am the Duke of Stone. This is+n't really a call. It
is+n't my custom to arrive in this way. May I address you as my preserver, Mr.
Temple Barholm?"
UPON the terrace, when
he was led up the steps, stood a most perfect little elderly lady in a state of
agitation much greater than his own or his rescuer's. It was an agitation as
perfect in its femininity as she herself was. It expressed its kind tremors in
the fashion which belonged to the puce silk dress and fine bits of collar and
undersleeve the belated gracefulness of which caused her to present herself to
him rather as a figure cut neatly from a book of the styles he had admired in
his young manhood. It was of course Miss Alicia, who having, with Tembarom,
seen the galloping pony from a window, had followed him when he darted from the
room.
She came forward,
looking pale with charming solicitude.
"I do so hope you
are not hurt," she exclaimed. "It really seemed that only divine
Providence could prevent a terrible accident."
"I am afraid that
it was more grotesque than terrible," he answered a shade breathlessly
"Let me make you
acquainted with the Duke of Stone, Miss Alicia," Tembarom said in the
formula of Mrs. Bowse's boarders on state occasions of introduction.
"Duke, let me make you acquainted, sir, with my -- relation -- Miss Alicia
Temple Barholm."
The duke's bow had a
remote suggestion of almost including a kissed hand in its gallant courtesy.
Not, however, that Early Victorian ladies had been accustomed to the kissing of
hands; but at the period when he had best known the type he had daily bent over
white fingers in Continental capitals.
"A glass of
wine," Miss Alicia implored. "Pray let me give you a glass of wine. I
am sure you need it very much."
He was taken into the
library and made to sit in a most comfortable easy-chair. Miss Alicia fluttered
about him with sympathy still delicately tinged with alarm. How long, how long,
it had been since he had been fluttered over! Nearly forty years. Ladies did
not flutter now, and he remembered that it was no longer the fashion to call
them "ladies." Only the lower-middle classes spoke of "ladies."
But he found himself mentally using the word again as he watched Miss Alicia.
It had been
"ladies" who had fluttered and been anxious about a man in this quite
pretty way.
He could scarcely
remove his eyes from her as he sipped his wine. She felt his escape
"providential," and murmured such devout little phrases concerning it
that he was almost consoled for the grotesque inward vision of himself as an
aged peer of the realm tumbling out of a baby-carriage and rolled over on the
grass at the feet of a man on whom later he had meant to make, in proper state,
a formal call. She put her hand to her side, smiling half apologetically.
"My heart beats
quite fast yet," she said. Whereupon a quaintly novel thing took place, at
the sight of which the duke barely escaped opening his eyes very wide indeed.
The American Temple Barholm put his arm about her in the most casual and
informally accustomed way, and led her to a chair, and put her in it, so to
speak.
"Say," he
announced with affectionate authority, "you sit down right away. It's you
that needs a glass of wine, and I+'m going to give it to you."
The relations between
the two were evidently on a basis not common in England even among people who
were attached one another. There was a spontaneous, every-day air of natural,
protective petting about it, as though the fellow was fond of her in his crude
fashion, and meant to take care of her. He was fond of her, and the duke
perceived it with elation, and also understood. He might be the ordinary
bestower of boons, but the protective curve of his arm included other things.
In the blank dullness of his unaccustomed splendors he had somehow encountered
this fine, delicately preserved little relic of other days, and had seized on
her and made her his own.
I have not seen
anything as delightful as Miss Temple Barholm for many a year," the duke
said when Miss Alicia was called from the room and left them together.
"Ain't she
great?" was Tembarom's reply. "She+'s just great."
"It's an exquisite
survival of type," said the duke. "She belongs to my time, not
yours," he added, realizing that "survival of type" might not
clearly convey itself.
"Well, she belongs
to mine now," answered Tembarom. "I would+n't lose her for a
farm."
"The voice, the
phrases, the carriage might survive, -- they do in remote neighborhoods, I
suppose -- but the dress is quite delightfully incredible. It is a work of
art," the duke went on. She had seemed too good to be true. Her clothes,
however, had certainly not been dug out of a wardrobe of forty years ago.
"When I went to
talk to the head woman in the shop in Bond Street I fixed it with 'em hard and
fast that she was not to spoil her. They were to keep her like she was. She+'s
like her little cap, you know, and her little mantles and tippets. She's like
them," exclaimed Tembarom
Did he see that? What
an odd feature in a man of his sort! And how thoroughly New Yorkish it was that
he should march into a fashionable shop and see that he got what he wanted and
the worth of his money! There had been no rashness in the hope that the
unexplored treasure might be a rich one. The man's simplicity was an actual
complexity. He had a boyish eye and a grin, but there was a business-like line
about his mouth which was strong enough to have been hard if it had not been
good-natured.
"That was
confoundedly clever of you," his grace commented heartily --
"confoundedly. I should never have had the wit to think of it myself, or
the courage to do it if I had. Shop-women make me shy."
"Oh, well, I just
put it up to them," Tembarom answered easily.
"I believe,"
cautiously translated the duke, "that you mean that you made them feel
that they alone were responsible."
"Yes, I do,"
assented Tembarom, the grin slightly in evidence. "Put it up to them+'s
the short way of saying it."
"Would you mind my
writing that down?" said the duke. "I have a fad for dialects and new
phrases." He hastily scribbled the words in a tablet that he took from his
pocket. "Do you like living in England?" he asked in course of time.
"I should like it
if I+'d been born here," was the answer.
"I see, I
see."
"If it had not
been for finding Miss Alicia, and that I made a promise I+'d stay for a year,
anyhow, I+'d have broken loose at the end of the first week and worked my
passage back if I had+n't had enough in my clothes to pay for it." He
laughed, but it was not real laughter. There was a thing behind it. The situation
was more edifying than one could have hoped. "I made a promise, and I+'m
going to stick it out," he said.
He was going to stick
it out because he had promised to endure for a year Temple Barholm and an
income of seventy thousand pounds! The duke gazed at him as at a fond dream
realized.
"I+'ve nothing to
do," Tembarom added.
"Neither have
I," replied the Duke of Stone.
"But you+'re used
to it, and I+'m not. I+'m used to working 'steen hours a day, and dropping into
bed as tired as a dog, but ready to sleep like one and get up rested."
"I used to play
twenty hours a day once," answered the duke, "but I did+n't get up
rested. That's probably why I have gout and rheumatism combined. Tell me how
you worked, and I will tell you how I played."
It was worth while
taking this tone with him. It had been worth while taking it with the
chestnut-gathering peasants in the Apennines, sometimes even with a
stone-breaker by an English roadside. And this one was of a type more unique
and distinctive than any other -- a fellow who, with the blood of Saxon kings
and Norman nobles in his veins, had known nothing but the street life of the
crudest city in the world, who spoke a sort of argot, who knew no parallels of
the things which surrounded him in the ancient home he had inherited and in
which he stood apart, a sort of semi-sophisticated savage. The duke applied
himself with grace and finished ability to drawing him out. The questions he
asked were all seemingly those of a man of the world charmingly interested in
the superior knowledge of a foreigner of varied experience. His method was one
which engaged the interest of Tembarom himself. He did not know that he was not
only questioned, but, so to speak, delicately cross-examined and that before
the end of the interview the Duke of Stone knew more of him, his past existence
and present sentiments, than even Miss Alicia knew after their long and
intimate evening talks. The duke, however, had the advantage of being a man and
of cherishing vivid recollections of the days of his youth, which, unlike as it
had been to that of Tembarom, furnished a degree of solid foundation upon which
go to build conjecture.
"A young man of
his age," his grace reflected astutely, "has always just fallen out
of love, is falling into it, or desires vaguely to do so. Ten years later there
would perhaps be blank spaces, lean years during which he was not in love at
all; but at his particular period there must be a young woman somewhere. I
wonder if she is employed in one of the department stores he spoke of, and how
soon he hopes to present her to us. His conversation has revealed so far, to
use his own rich simile, `neither hide nor hair' of her."
On his own part, he was
as ready to answer questions as to ask them. In fact, he led Tembarom on to
asking.
"I will tell you
how I played" had been meant. He made a human document of the history he
enlarged, he brilliantly diverged, he included, he made pictures, and found
Tembarom's point of view or lack of it gave spice and humor to relations he had
thought himself tired of. To tell familiar anecdotes of courts and kings to a
man who had never quite believed that such things were realities, who almost
found them humorous when they were casually spoken of, was edification indeed.
The novel charm lay in the fact that his class in his country did not include
them as possibilities. Peasants in other countries, plowmen, shopkeepers,
laborers in England -- all these at least they knew of, and counted them in as
factors in the lives of the rich and great; but this dear young man -- !
"What's a crown
like? I'd like to see one. How much do you guess such a thing would cost -- in
dollars?"
"Did not Miss
Temple Barholm take you to see the regalia in the Tower of London? I am quite
shocked," said the duke. He was, in fact, a trifle disappointed. With the
puce dress and undersleeves and little fringes she ought certainly to have
rushed with her pupil to that seat of historical instruction on their first
morning in London, immediately after breakfasting on toast and bacon and
marmalade and eggs.
"She meant me to
go, but somehow it was put off. She almost cried on our journey home when she
suddenly remembered that we+'d forgotten it, after all."
"I am sure she
said it was a wasted opportunity," suggested his grace.
"Yes, that was
what hit her so hard. She+'d never been to London before, and you could+n't
make her believe she could ever get there again, and she said it was ungrateful
to Providence to waste an opportunity. She+'s always mighty anxious to be
grateful to Providence, bless her!"
"She regards you
as Providence," remarked the duke, enraptured. With a touch here and
there, the touch of a master, he had gathered the whole little story of Miss
Alicia, and had found it of a whimsical exquisiteness and humor.
"She+'s a lot too
good to me," answered Tembarom. "I guess women as nice as her are
always a lot too good to men. She+'s a kind of little old angel. What makes me
mad is to think of the fellows that did+n't get busy and marry her thirty- five
years ago."
"Were there -- er
-- many of 'em?" the duke inquired.
"Thousands of 'em,
though most of 'em never saw her. I suppose you never saw her then. If you had,
you might have done it."
The duke, sitting with
an elbow on each arm of his chair, put the tips of his fine, gouty fingers
together and smiled with a far-reaching inclusion of possibilities.
"So I might,"
he said; "so I might. My loss entirely -- my abominable loss."
They had reached this
point of the argument when the carriage from Stone Hover arrived. It was a
stately barouche the coachman and footman of which equally with its big horses
seemed to have hastened to an extent which suggested almost panting
breathlessness. It contained Lady Edith and Lady Celia, both pale, and greatly
agitated by the news which had brought them horrified from Stone Hover without
a moment's delay.
They both ascended in
haste and swept in such alarmed anxiety up the terrace steps and through the
hall to their father's side that they had barely a polite gasp for Miss Alicia
and scarcely saw Tembarom at all.
"Dear Papa!"
they cried when he revealed himself in his chair in the library intact and
smiling. "How wicked of you, dear! How you have frightened us!"
"I begged you to
be good, dearest," said Lady Edith, almost in tears. "Where was
George? You must dismiss him at once. Really -- really -- "
"He was half a
mile away, obeying my orders," said the duke. "A groom cannot be
dismissed for obeying orders. It is the pony who must be dismissed, to my great
regret; or else we must overfeed him until he is even fatter than he is and
cannot run away."
Were his arms and legs
and his ribs and collar-bones and head quite right? Was he sure that he had not
received any internal injury when he fell out of the pony-carriage? They could
scarcely be convinced, and as they hung over and stroked and patted him,
Tembarom stood aside and watched them with interest. They were the girls he had
to please Ann by "getting next to," giving himself a chance to fall
in love with them, so that she+'d know whether they were his kind or not. They
were nice-looking, and had a way of speaking that sounded rather swell, but
they were+n't ace high to a little slim, red- headed thing that looked at you
like a baby and pulled your heart up into your throat.
"Don't poke me any
more, dear children. I am quite, quite sound," he heard the duke say.
"In Mr. Temple Barholm you behold the preserver of your parent. Filial
piety is making you behave with shocking ingratitude."
They turned to Tembarom
at once with a pretty outburst of apologies and thanks. Lady Celia was+n't, it
is true, "a looker," with her narrow shoulders and rather long nose,
but she had an air of breeding, and the charming color of which Palliser had
spoken, returning to Lady Edith's cheeks, illuminated her greatly.
They both were very
polite and made many agreeably grateful speeches, but in the eyes of both there
lurked a shade of anxiety which they hoped to be able to conceal. Their father
watched them with a wicked pleasure. He realized clearly their well-behaved
desire to do and say exactly the right thing and bear themselves in exactly the
right manner, and also their awful uncertainty before an entirely unknown
quantity. Almost any other kind of young man suddenly uplifted by strange
fortune they might have known some parallel for, but a newsboy of New York! All
the New Yorkers they had met or heard of had been so rich and grand as to make
them feel themselves, by contrast, mere country paupers, quite shivering with
poverty and huddling for protection in their barely clean rags, so what was
there to go on? But how dreadful not to be quite right, precisely right, in
one's approach -- quite familiar enough, and yet not a shade too familiar,
which of course would appear condescending! And be it said the delicacy of the
situation was added to by the fact that they had heard something of Captain
Palliser's extraordinary little story about his determination to know "ladies."
Really, if Willocks the butcher's boy had inherited Temple Barholm, it would
have been easier to know where one stood in the matter of being civil and
agreeable to him. First Lady Edith, made perhaps bold by the suggestion of
physical advantage bestowed by the color, talked to him to the very best of her
ability; and when she felt herself fearfully flagging, Lady Celia took him up
and did her very well-conducted best. Neither she nor her sister were brilliant
talkers at any time, and limited by the absence of any common familiar topic,
effort was necessary. The neighborhood he did not know; London he was barely
aware of; social functions it would be an impertinence to bring in; games he
did not play; sport he had scarcely heard of. You were confined to America, and
if you knew next to nothing of American life, there you were.
Tembarom saw it all, --
he was sharp enough for that, -- and his habit of being jocular and wholly
unashamed saved him from the misery of awkwardness that Willocks would have been
sure to have writhed under. His casual frankness, however, for a moment
embarrassed Lady Edith to the bitterest extremity. When you are trying your
utmost to make a queer person oblivious to the fact that his world is one
unknown to you, it is difficult to know where do you stand when he says:
"It's mighty hard
to talk to a man who does+n't know a thing that belongs to the kind of world
you+'ve spent your life in, ain't it? But don't you mind me a minute. I+'m glad
to be talked to anyhow by people like you. When I don't catch on, I+'ll just
ask. No man was ever electrocuted for not knowing, and that+'s just where I am.
I don't know, and I+'m glad to be told. Now, there+'s one thing. Burrill said
`Your Ladyship' to you, I heard him. Ought I to say it, er ought+n't I?"
"Oh, no," she
answered, but somehow without distaste in the momentary stare he had startled
her into; "Burrill is -- "
"He+'s a
servant," he aided encouragingly. "Well, I+'ve never been a butler,
but I+'ve been somebody's servant all my life, and mighty glad of the chance.
This is the first time I+'ve been out of a job."
What nice teeth he had!
What a queer, candid, unresentful creature! What a good sort of smile! And how
odd that it was he who was putting her more at her ease by the mere way in
which he was saying this almost alarming thing! By the time he had ended, it
was not alarming at all, and she had caught her breath again.
She was actually sorry
when the door opened and Lady Joan Fayre came in, followed almost immediately
by Lady Mallowe and Captain Palliser, who appeared to have just returned from a
walk and heard the news.
Lady Mallowe was most
sympathetic. Why not, indeed? The Duke of Stone was a delightful, cynical
creature, and Stone Hover was, despite its ducal poverty, a desirable place to
be invited to, if you could manage it. Her ladyship's method of fluttering was
not like Miss Alicia's, its character being wholly modern; but she fluttered,
nevertheless. The duke, who knew all about her, received her amiabilities with
appreciative smiles, but it was the splendidly handsome, hungry-eyed young
woman with the line between her black brows who engaged his attention. On the
alert, as he always was, for a situation, he detected one at once when he saw
his American address her. She did not address him, and scarcely deigned a reply
when he spoke to her. When he spoke to others, she conducted herself as though
he were not in the room, so obviously did she choose to ignore his existence.
Such a bearing toward one's host had indeed the charm of being an interesting
novelty. And what a beauty she was, with her lovely, ferocious eyes and the
small, black head poised on the exquisite long throat, which was on the verge
of becoming a trifle too thin! Then as in a flash he recalled between one
breath and another the quite fiendish episode of poor Jem Temple Barholm -- and
she was the girl!
Then he became almost
excited in his interest. He saw it all. As he had himself argued must be the
case, this poor fellow was in love. But it was not with a lady in the New York
department stores; it was with a young woman who would evidently disdain to
wipe her feet upon him. How thrilling! As Lady Mallowe and Palliser and the
others chattered, he watched him, observing his manner. He stood the handsome
creature's steadily persistent rudeness very well; he made no effort to push
into the talk when she coolly held him out of it. He waited without external
uneasiness or spasmodic smiles. If he could do that despite the inevitable fact
that he must feel his position uncomfortable, he was possessed of fiber. That
alone would make him worth cultivating. And if there were persons who were to
be made uncomfortable, why not cut in and circumvent the beauty somewhat and
give her a trifle of unease? It was with the light and adroit touch of
accustomedness to all orders of little situations that his grace took the
matter in hand, with a shade, also, of amiable malice. He drew Tembarom
adroitly into the center of things; he knew how to lead him to make easily the
odd, frank remarks which were sufficiently novel to suggest that he was
actually entertaining. He beautifully edged Lady Joan out of her position. She
could not behave ill to him, he was far too old, he said to himself, leaving
out the fact that a Duke of Stone is a too respectable personage to be quite
waved aside.
Tembarom began to enjoy
himself a little more. Lady Celia and Lady Edith began to enjoy themselves a
little more also. Lady Mallowe was filled with admiring delight. Captain
Palliser took in the situation, and asked himself questions about it. On her
part, Miss Alicia was restored to the happiness any lack of appreciation of her
"dear boy" touchingly disturbed. In circumstances such as these he
appeared to the advantage which in a brief period would surely reveal his
wonderful qualities. She clung so to his "wonderful qualities"
because in all the three-volumed novels of her youth the hero, debarred from
early advantages and raised by the turn of fortune's wheel to splendor, was
transformed at once into a being of the highest accomplishments and the most
polished breeding, and ended in the third volume a creature before whom
emperors paled. And how more than charmingly cordial his grace's manner was
when he left them!
"To-morrow,"
he said, "if my daughters do not discover that I have injured some more
than vital organ, I shall call to proffer my thanks with the most immense
formality. I shall get out of the carriage in the manner customary in
respectable neighborhoods, not roll out at your feet. Afterward you will, I
hope, come and dine with us. I am devoured by a desire to become more familiar
with The Earth."
IT was Lady Mallowe who
perceived the moment when he became the fashion. The Duke of Stone called with
the immense formality he had described, and his visit was neither brief nor
dull. A little later Tembarom with his guests dined at Stone Hover, and the dinner
was further removed from dullness than any one of numerous past dinners always
noted for being the most agreeable the neighborhood afforded. The duke managed
his guest as an impresario might have managed his tenor, though this was done
with subtly concealed methods. He had indeed a novelty to offer which had been
discussed with much uncertainty of point of view. He presented it to an only
languidly entertained neighborhood as a trouvaille of his own choice. Here was
drama, here was atmosphere, here was charm verging in its character upon the
occult. You would not see it if you were not a collector of such values.
"Nobody will be
likely to see him as he is unless he is pointed out to them," was what he
said to his daughters. "But being bored to death, -- we are all bored, --
once adroitly assisted to suspect him of being alluring, most of them will
spring upon him and clasp him to their wearied breasts. I have+n't the least
idea what will happen afterward. I shall in fact await the result with interest."
Being told Palliser's
story of the "Ladies," he listened, holding the tips of his fingers
together, and wearing an expression of deep interest slightly baffled in its
nature. It was Lady Edith who related the anecdote to him.
"Now," he
said, "it would be very curious and complicating if that were true; but I
don't believe it is. Palliser, of course, likes to tell a good story. I shall
be able to discover in time whether it is true or not; but at present I don't
believe it."
Following the dinner
party at Stone Hover came many others. All the well-known carriages began to
roll up the avenue to Temple Barholm. The Temple Barholm carriages also began
to roll down the avenue and between the stone griffins on their way to festive
gatherings of varied order. Burrill and the footmen ventured to reconsider
their early plans for giving warning. It was+n't so bad if the country was
going to take him up.
"Do you see what
is happening?" Lady Mallowe said to Joan. "The man is becoming
actually popular."
"He is popular as
a turn at a music hall is," answered Joan. "He will be dropped as he
was taken up."
"There+'s
something about him they like, and he represents what everybody most wants. For
God's sake! Joan, don't behave like a fool this time. The case is more
desperate. There is nothing else -- nothing."
"There never
was," said Joan, "and I know the desperateness of the case. How long
are you going to stay here?"
"I am going to
stay for some time. They are not conventional people. It can be managed very well.
We are relatives."
"Will you
stay," inquired Joan in a low voice, "until they ask you to remove
yourself?"
Lady Mallowe smiled an
agreeably subtle smile.
"Not quite
that," she answered. "Miss Alicia would never have the courage to
suggest it. It takes courage and sophistication to do that sort of thing. Mr.
Temple Barholm evidently wants us to remain. He will be willing to make as much
of the relationship as we choose to let him."
"Do you choose to
let him make as much of it as will establish us here for weeks -- or
months?" Joan asked, her low voice shaking a little.
"That will depend
entirely upon circumstances. It will, in fact, depend entirely upon you,"
said Lady Mallowe, her lips setting themselves into a straight, thin line.
For an appreciable
moment Joan was silent; but after it she lost her head and whirled about.
"I shall go
away," she cried.
"Where?"
asked Lady Mallowe.
"Back to
London."
"How much money
have you?" asked her mother. She knew she had none. She was always sufficiently
shrewd to see that she had none. If the girl had had a pound a week of her own,
her mother had always realized that she would have been unmanageable. After the
Jem Temple Barholm affair she would have been capable of going to live alone in
slums. As it was, she knew enough to be aware that she was too handsome to walk
out into Piccadilly without a penny in her pocket; so it had been just possible
to keep her indoors.
"How much money
have you?" she repeated quietly. This was the way in which their
unbearable scenes began -- the scenes which the servants passing the doors
paused to listen to in the hope that her ladyship would forget that raised
voices may be heard by the discreet outsider.
"How much money
have you?" she said again.
Joan looked at her;
this time it was for about five seconds. She turned her back on her and walked
out of the room. Shortly afterward Lady Mallowe saw her walking down the avenue
in the rain, which was beginning to fall.
She had left the house
because she dared not stay in it. Once out in the park, she folded her long
purple cloak about her and pulled her soft purple felt hat down over her brows,
walking swiftly under the big trees without knowing where she intended to go
before she returned. She liked the rain, she liked the heavy clouds; she wore
her dark purples because she felt a fantastic, secret comfort in calling them
her mourning -- her mourning which she would wear forevermore.
No one could know so
well as herself how desperate from her own point of view the case was. She had
long known that her mother would not hesitate for a moment before any chance of
a second marriage which would totally exclude her daughter from her existence.
Why should she, after all, Joan thought? They had always been antagonists. The
moment of chance had been looming on the horizon for months. Sir Moses
Monaldini had hovered about fitfully and evidently doubtfully at first, more
certainly and frequently of late, but always with a clearly objecting eye cast
askance upon herself. With determination and desire to establish a social
certainty, astute enough not to care specially for young beauty and exactions
he did not purpose to submit to, and keen enough to see the advantage of a
handsome woman with bitter reason to value what was offered to her in the form
of a luxurious future, Sir Moses was moving toward action, though with proper
caution. He would have no penniless daughters hanging about scowling and
sneering. None of that for him. And the ripest apple upon the topmost bow in the
highest wind would not drop more readily to his feet than her mother would,
Joan knew with sharp and shared burnings.
As the rain fell, she
walked in her purple cloak, unpaid for, and her purple hat, for which they had
been dunned with threatening insults, and knew that she did not own and could
not earn a penny. She could not dig, and to beg she was ashamed, and all the
more horribly because she had been a beggar of the meaner order all her life.
It made her sick to think of the perpetual visits they had made where they were
not wanted, of the times when they had been politely bundled out of places, of
the methods which had been used to induce shopkeepers to let them run up bills.
For years her mother and she had been walking advertisements of smart shops
because both were handsome, wore clothes well, and carried them where they
would be seen and talked about. Now this would be all over, since it had been
Lady Mallowe who had managed all details. Thrown upon her own resources, Joan
would have none of them, even though she must walk in rags. Her education had
prepared her for only one thing -- to marry well, if luck were on her side. It
had never been on her side. If she had never met Jem, she would have married
somebody, since that would have been better than the inevitable last slide into
an aging life spent in cheap lodgings with her mother. But Jem had been the
beginning and the end.
She bit her lips as she
walked, and suddenly tears swept down her cheeks and dripped on to the purple
cloth folded over her breast.
"And he sits in
Jem's place! And every day what common, foolish stare will follow me!" she
said.
He sat, it was true, in
the place Jem Temple Barholm would have occupied if he had been a living man,
and he looked at her a good deal. Perhaps he sometimes unconsciously stared
because she made him think of many things. But if she had been in a state of mind
admitting of judicial fairness, she would have been obliged to own that it was
not quite a foolish stare. Absorbed, abstracted, perhaps, but it was not
foolish. Sometimes, on the contrary, it was searching and keen.
Of course he was doing
his best to please her. Of all the "Ladies," it seemed evident that
he was most attracted by her. He tried to talk to her despite her unending
rebuffs, he followed her about and endeavored to interest her, he presented a
hide-bound unsensitiveness when she did her worst. Perhaps he did not even know
that she was being icily rude. He was plainly "making up to her"
after the manner of his class. He was perhaps playing the part of the patient
adorer who melted by noble long-suffering in novels distinguished by heroes of humble
origin.
She had reached the
village when the rain changed its mind, and without warning began to pour down
as if the black cloud passing overhead had suddenly opened. She was wondering
if she would not turn in somewhere for shelter until the worst was over when a
door opened and Tembarom ran out with an umbrella.
"Come in to the
Hibblethwaites cottage, Lady Joan," he said. "This will be over
directly."
He did not
affectionately hustle her in by the arm as he would have hustled in Miss
Alicia, but he closely guarded her with the umbrella until he guided her
inside.
"Thank you,"
she said.
The first object she
became aware of was a thin face with pointed chin and ferret eyes peering at
her round the end of a sofa, then a sharp voice.
"Tak' off her
cloak an' shake th' rain off it in th' wash 'us'," it said. "Mother
an' Aunt Susan's out. Let him unbutton it fer thee."
"I can unbutton it
myself, thank you," said Lady Joan. Tembarom took it when she had
unbuttoned it. He took it from her shoulders before she had time to stop him.
Then he walked into the tiny "wash 'us" and shook it thoroughly. He
came back and hung it on a chair before the fire.
Tummas was leaning back
in his pillows and gazing at her. "I know tha name," he said.
"He towd me," with a jerk of the head toward Tembarom.
"Did he?"
replied Lady Joan without interest.
A flaringly illustrated
New York paper was spread out upon his sofa. He pushed it aside and pulled the
shabby atlas to ward him. It fell open at a map of North America as if through
long habit.
"Sit thee
down," he ordered.
Tembarom had stood
watching them both.
"I guess you+'d
better not do that," he suggested to Tummas.
"Why not?"
said the boy, sharply. "She+'s th' wench he was goin' to marry. It's th'
same as if he'd married her. If she wur his widder, she+'d want to talk about
him. Widders allus wants to talk. Why should+n't she? Women+'s women. He+'d ha'
wanted to talk about her."
"Who is
`he'?" asked Joan with stiff lips.
"The Temple
Barholm as' 'd be here if he was na."
Joan turned to
Tembarom.
"Do you come here
to talk to this boy about him?" she said. "How dare you!"
Tummas's eyes snapped;
his voice snapped also.
"He knew next to
nowt about him till I towd him," he said. "Then he came to ax me
things an' foind out more. He knows as much as I do now. Us sits here an' talks
him over."
Lady Joan still
addressed Tembarom.
"What interest can
you have in the man who ought to be in your place?" she asked. "What
possible interest?"
"Well," he answered
awkwardly, "because he ought to be, I suppose. Ain't that reason
enough?"
He had never had to
deal with women who hated him and who were angry and he did not know exactly
what to say. He had known very few women, and he had always been good- natured
with them and won their liking in some measure. Also, there was in his attitude
toward this particular woman a baffled feeling that he could not make her
understand him. She would always think of him as an enemy and believe he meant
things he did not mean. If he had been born and educated in her world, he could
have used her own language; but he could use only his own, and there were so
many things he must not say for a time at least.
"Do you not
realize," she said, "that you are presuming upon your position --
that you and this boy are taking liberties?"
Tummas broke in wholly
without compunction.
"I+'ve taken
liberties aw my loife," he stated, "an' I+'m goin' to tak' 'em till I
dee. They+'re th' on'y things I can tak', lyin' here crippled, an' I+'m goin'
to tak' 'em."
"Stop that,
Tummas!" said Tembarom with friendly authority. "She does+n't catch
on, and you don't catch on, either. You+'re both of you 'way off. Stop
it!"
"I thought happen
she could tell me things I did+n't know," protested Tummas, throwing
himself back on his pillows. "If she conna, she conna, an' if she wunnot,
she wunnot. Get out wi' thee!" he said to Joan. "I dunnot want thee
about th' place."
"Say," said
Tembarom, "shut up!"
"I am going,"
said Lady Joan and turned to open the door.
The rain was descending
in torrents, but she passed swiftly out into its deluge walking as rapidly as
she could. She thought she cared nothing about the rain, but it dashed in her
face and eyes, taking her breath away, and she had need of breath when her
heart was beating with such fierceness.
"If she wur his
widder," the boy had said.
Even chance could not
let her alone at one of her worst moments. She walked faster and faster because
she was afraid Tembarom would follow her, and in a few minutes she heard him
splashing behind her, and then he was at her side, holding the umbrella over
her head.
"You+'re a good
walker," he said, "but I+'m a sprinter. I trained running after
street cars and catching the `L' in New York."
She had so restrained
her miserable hysteric impulse to break down and utterly humiliate herself
under the unexpected blow of the episode in the cottage that she had had no
breath, to spare when she left the room, and her hurried effort to escape had
left her so much less that she did not speak.
"I+'ll tell you
something," he went on. "He+'s a little freak, but you can't blame
him much. Don't be mad at him. He+'s never moved from that corner since he was
born, I guess, and he+'s got nothing to do or to think of but just hearing
what+'s happening outside. He+'s sort of crazy curious, and when he gets hold
of a thing that suits him he just holds on to it till the last bell
rings."
She said nothing
whatever, and he paused a moment because he wanted to think over the best way
to say the next thing.
"Mr. James Temple
Barholm" -- he ventured it with more delicacy of desire not to seem to
"take liberties" than she would have credited him with -- "saw
his mother sitting with him in her arms at the cottage door a week or so after
he was born. He stopped at the gate and talked to her about him, and he left
him a sovereign. He's got it now. It seems a fortune to him. He's made a sort
of idol of him. That's why he talks like he does. I would+n't let it make me
mad if I were you."
He did not know that
she could not have answered him if she would, that she felt that if he did not
stop she might fling herself down upon the wet heather and wail aloud.
"You don't like
me," he began after they had walked a few steps farther. "You don't
like me."
This was actually
better. It choked back the sobs rising in her throat. The stupid shock of it,
his tasteless foolishness, helped her by its very folly to a sort of defense
against the disastrous wave of emotion she might not have been able to control.
She gathered herself together.
"It must be an
unusual experience," she answered.
"Well, it is --
sort of," he said, but in a manner curiously free from fatuous swagger.
"I+'ve had luck that way. I guess it+'s been because I+'d got to make
friends so as I could earn a living. It seems sort of queer to know that some
one+'s got a grouch against me that -- that I can't get away with."
She looked up the
avenue to see how much farther they must walk together, since she was not
"a sprinter" and could not get away from him. She thought she caught
a glimpse through the trees of a dog-cart driven by a groom, and hoped she had
not mistaken and that it was driving in their direction.
"It must,
indeed," she said, "though I am not sure I quite understand what a
grouch is."
"When you+'ve got
a grouch against a fellow," he explained impersonally, "you want to
get at him. You want to make him feel like a mutt; and a mutt's the worst kind
of a fool. You+'ve got one against me."
She looked before her
between narrowed lids and faintly smiled -- the most disagreeable smile she was
capable of. And yet for some too extraordinary reason he went on. But she had
seen men go on before this when all the odds were against them. Sometimes their
madness took them this way.
"I knew there was
a lot against me when I came here," he persisted. "I should have been
a fool if I had+n't. I knew when you came that I was up against a pretty hard
proposition; but I thought perhaps if I got busy and showed you -- you+'ve got
to show a person -- "
"Showed me
what?" she asked contemptuously.
"Showed you --
well -- me," he tried to explain.
"You!"
"And that I wanted
to be friends," he added candidly.
Was the man mad? Did he
realize nothing? Was he too thick of skin even to see?
"Friends! You and
I?" The words ought to have scorched him, pachyderm though he was.
"I thought you+'d
give me a chance -- a sort of chance -- "
She stopped short on
the avenue.
"You did?"
She had not been
mistaken. The dog-cart had rounded the far-off curve and was coming toward
them. And the man went on talking.
"You+'ve felt
every minute that I was in a place that did+n't belong to me. You know that if
the man that it did belong to was here, you+'d be here with him. You felt as if
I+'d robbed him of it -- and I+'d robbed you. It was your home -- yours. You
hated me too much to think of anything else. Suppose -- suppose there was a way
I could give it back to you -- make it your home again."
His voice dropped and
was rather unsteady. The fool, the gross, brutal, vulgar, hopeless fool! He
thought this was the way to approach her, to lead her to listen to his proposal
of marriage! Not for a second did she guess that they were talking at cross
purposes. She did not know that as he kept himself steady under her
contemptuousness he was thinking that Ann would have to own that he had been up
against it hard and plenty while the thing was going on.
"I+'m always up
against it when I+'m talking to you," he said. "You get me rattled.
There+'s things I want to talk about and ask you. Suppose you give me a chance,
and let us start out by being sort of friends."
"I am staying in
your house," she answered in a deadly voice, "and I cannot go away
because my mother will not let me. You can force yourself upon me, if you
choose, because I cannot help it; but understand once for all that I will not
give you your ridiculous chance. And I will not utter one word to you when I
can avoid it."
He was silent for a
moment and seemed to be thinking rather deeply. She realized now that he saw
the nearing dog- cart.
"You won't. Then
it+'s up to me," he said. Then with a change of tone, he added,
"I+'ll stop the cart and tell the man to drive you to the house. I+'m not
going to force myself on you, as you call it. It+'d be no use. Perhaps it'll
come all right in the end."
He made a sign to the
groom, who hastened his horse's pace and drew up when he reached them.
"Take this lady
back to the house," he said.
The groom, who was a
new arrival, began to prepare to get down and give up his place.
"You need+n't do
that," said Tembarom.
"Won't you get up
and take the reins, sir?" the man asked uncertainly.
"No. I can't
drive. You+'ll have to do it. I+'ll walk."
And to the groom's
amazement, they left him standing under the trees looking after them.
"It+'s up to
me," he was saying. "The whole durned thing+'s up to me."
THE neighborhood of
Temple Barholm was not, upon the whole, a brilliant one. Indeed, it had been
frankly designated by the casual guest as dull. The country was beautiful
enough, and several rather large estates lay within reach of one another, but
their owners were neither very rich nor especially notable personages. They were
of extremely good old blood, and were of established respectability. None of
them, however, was given to entertaining house parties made up of the smart and
dazzlingly sinful world of fashion said by moralists to be composed entirely of
young and mature beauties, male and female, capable of supplying at any moment
enlivening detail for the divorce court -- glittering beings whose wardrobes
were astonishing and whose conversations were composed wholly of brilliant
paradox and sparkling repartee.
Most of the residents
took their sober season in London, the men of the family returning gladly to
their pheasants, the women not regretfully to their gardens and tennis, because
their successes in town had not been particularly delirious. The guests who
came to them were generally as respectable and law- abiding as themselves, and
introduced no iconoclastic diversions. For the greater portion of the year, in
fact, diners out were of the neighborhood and met the neighborhood, and were
reduced to discussing neighborhood topics, which was not, on the whole, a
fevered joy. The Duke of Stone was, perhaps, the one man who might have
furnished topics. Privately it was believed, and in part known, that he at
least had had a brilliant, if not wholly unreprehensible, past. He might have
introduced en- livening elements from London, even from Paris, Vienna, Berlin,
and Rome; but the sobering influence of years of rheumatic gout and a not
entirely sufficing income prevented activities, and his opinions of his social
surroundings were vaguely guessed to be those of a not too lenient critic.
"I do not know
anything technical or scientific about ditch- water," he had expressed
himself in the bosom of his family. "I never analyzed it, but analyzers, I
gather, consider it dull. If anything could be duller than ditch-water, I
should say it was Stone Hover and its surrounding neighborhood." He had
also remarked at another time: "If our society could be enriched by some
of the characters who form the house parties and seem, in fact, integral parts
of all country society in modern problem or even unproblem novels, how happy
one might be, how edified and amused! A wicked lady or so of high, or extremely
low, rank, of immense beauty and corruscating brilliancy; a lovely creature,
male or female, whom she is bent upon undoing -- "
"Dear papa!"
protested Lady Celia.
"Reproach me,
dearest. Reproach me as severely as you please. It inspires me. It makes me
feel like a wicked, dangerous man, and I have not felt like one for many years.
Such persons as I describe form the charm of existence, I assure you. A
ruthless adventuress with any kind of good looks would be the making of us.
Several of them, of different types, a handsome villain, and a few victims
unknowing of their fate, would cause life to flow by like a peaceful
stream."
Lady Edith laughed an
unseemly little laugh -- unseemly, since filial regret at paternal obliquity
should have restrained it.
"Papa, you are
quite horrible," she said. "You ought not to make y our few daughters
laugh at improper things."
"I would make my
daughters laugh at anything so long as I must doom them to Stone Hover -- and
Lady Pevensy and Mrs. Stoughton and the rector, if one may mention names,"
he answered. "To see you laugh revives me by reminding me that once I was
considered a witty person -- quite so. Some centuries ago, however; about the
time when things were being rebuilt after the flood."
In such circumstances
it cannot be found amazing that a situation such as Temple Barholm presented
should provide rich food for conversation, supposition, argument, and humorous
comment.
T. Tembarom himself,
after the duke had established him, furnished an unlimited source of interest.
His household became a perennial fount of quiet discussion. Lady Mallowe and
her daughter were the members of it who met with the most attention. They
appeared to have become members of it rather than visitors. Her ladyship had
plainly elected to extend her stay even beyond the period to which a fond
relative might feel entitled to hospitality. She had been known to extend
visits before with great cleverness, but this one assumed an established
aspect. She was not going away, the neighborhood decided, until she had
achieved that which she had come to accomplish. The present unconventional
atmosphere of the place naturally supported her. And how probable it seemed,
taking into consideration Captain Palliser's story, that Mr. Temple Barholm
wished her to stay. Lady Joan would be obliged to stay also, if her mother
intended that she should. But the poor American -- there were some expressions
of sympathy, though the situation was greatly added to by the feature -- the
poor American was being treated by Lady Joan as only she could treat a man. It
was worth inviting the whole party to dinner or tea or lunch merely to see the
two together. The manner in which she managed to ignore him and be scathing to
him without apparently infringing a law of civility, and the number of laws she
sometimes chose to sweep aside when it was her mood to do so, were
extraordinary. If she had not been a beauty, with a sort of mystic charm for
the male creature, surely he would have broken his chains. But he did not. What
was he going to do in the end? What was she going to do? What was Lady Mallowe
going to do if there was no end at all? He was not as unhappy-looking a lover
as one might have expected, they said. He kept up his spirits wonderfully. Perhaps
she was not always as icily indifferent to him as she chose to appear in
public. Temple Barholm was a great estate, and Sir Moses Monaldini had been
mentioned by rumor. Of course there would be something rather strange and
tragic in it if she came to Temple Barholm as its mistress in such singular
circumstances. But he certainly did not look depressed or discouraged. So they
talked it over as they looked on.
"How they gossip!
How delightfully they gossip!" said the duke. "But it is such a
perfect subject. They have never been so enthralled before. Dear young man! how
grateful we ought to be for him!"
One of the most
discussed features of the case was the duke's own cultivation of the central
figure. There was an actual oddity about it. He drove from Stone Hover to
Temple Barholm repeatedly. He invited Tembarom to the castle and had long talks
with him -- long, comfortable talks in secluded, delightful rooms or under
great trees on a lawn. He wanted to hear anecdotes of his past, to draw him on
to giving his points of view. When he spoke of him to his daughters, he called
him "T. Tembarom," but the slight derision of his earlier tone
modified itself.
"That delightful
young man will shortly become my closest intimate," he said. "He not
only keeps up my spirits, but he opens up vistas. Vistas after a man's
seventy-second birthday! At times I could clasp him to my breast."
"I like him first
rate," Tembarom said to Miss Alicia. "I liked him the minute he got
up laughing like an old sport when he fell out of the pony carriage."
As he became more
intimate with him, he liked him still better. Obscured though it was by airy,
elderly persiflage, he began to come upon a background of stability and points
of view wholly to be relied on in his new acquaintance. It had evolved itself
out of long and varied experience, with the aid of brilliant mentality. The old
peer's reasons were always logical. He laughed at most things, but at a few he
did not laugh at all. After several of the long conversations Tembarom began to
say to himself that this seemed like a man you need not be afraid to talk
things over with -- things you did+n't want to speak of to everybody.
"Seems to
me," he said thoughtfully to Miss Alicia, "he's an old fellow you
could tie to. I+'ve got on to one thing when I+'ve listened to him: he talks
all he wants to and laughs a lot, but he never gives himself away. He would+n't
give another fellow away either if he said he would+n't. He knows how not
to."
There was an afternoon
on which during a drive they took together the duke was enlightened as to
several points which had given him cause for reflection, among others the story
beloved of Captain Palliser and his audiences.
"I guess you+'ve
known a good many women," T. Tembarom remarked on this occasion after a
few minutes of thought. "Living all over the world as you+'ve done, you+'d
be likely to come across a whole raft of them one time and another."
"A whole raft of
them, one time and another," agreed the duke. "Yes."
"You+'ve liked
them, have+n't you?"
"Immensely.
Sometimes a trifle disastrously. Find me a more absolutely interesting object
in the universe than a woman -- any woman -- and I will devote the remainder of
my declining years to the study of it," answered his grace.
He said it with a
decision which made T. Tembarom turn to look at him, and after his look decide
to proceed.
"Have you ever
known a bit of a slim thing" -- he made an odd embracing gesture with his
arm -- "the size that you could pick up with one hand and set on your knee
as if she was a child" -- the duke remained still, knowing this was only
the beginning and pricking up his ears as he took a rapid kaleidoscopic view of
all the "Ladies" in the neighborhood, and as hastily waved them aside
-- "a bit of a thing that some way seems to mean it all to you -- and
moves the world?" The conclusion was one which brought the incongruous
touch of maturity into his face.
"Not one of the
`Ladies,' " the duke was mentally summing the matter up. "Certainly
not Lady Joan, after all. Not, I think, even the young person in the department
store."
He leaned back in his
corner the better to inspect his companion directly.
"You have, I
see," he replied quietly. "Once I myself did." (He had cried
out, "Ah! Heloise!" though he had laughed at himself when he seemed
facing his ridiculous tragedy.)
"Yes,"
confessed T. Tembarom. "I met her at the boarding- house where I lived.
Her father was a Lancashire man and an inventor. I guess you+'ve heard of him;
his name is Joseph Hutchinson."
The whole country had
heard of him; more countries, indeed, than one had heard. He was the man who
was going to make his fortune in America because T. Tembarom had stood by him
in his extremity. He would make a fortune in America and another in England and
possibly several others on the Continent. He had learned to read in the village
school, and the girl was his daughter.
"Yes,"
replied the duke.
"I don't know
whether the one you knew had that quiet little way of seeing right straight
into a thing, and making you see it, too," said Tembarom.
"She had,"
answerd the duke, and an odd expression wavered in his eyes because he was
looking backward across forty years which seemed a hundred.
"That+'s what I
meant by moving the world," T. Tembarom went on. "You know she+'s
right, and you+'ve got to do what she says, if you love her."
"And you always
do," said the duke -- " always and forever. There are very few. They
are the elect."
T. Tembarom took it
gravely.
"I said to her
once that there was+n't more than one of her in the world because there
could+n't be enough to make two of that kind. I was+n't joshing either; I meant
it. It's her quiet little voice and her quiet, babyfied eyes that get you where
you can't move. And it+'s something else you don't know anything about. It+'s
her never doing anything for herself, but just doing it because it+'s the right
thing for you."
The duke's chin had
sunk a little on his breast, and looking back across the hundred years, he
forgot for a moment where he was. The one he remembered had been another man's
wife, a little angel brought up in a convent by white-souled nuns, passed over
by her people to an elderly vaurien of great magnificence, and she had sent the
strong, laughing, impassioned young English peer away before it was too late,
and with the young, young eyes of her looking upward at him in that way which
saw "straight into a thing" and with that quiet little voice. So long
ago! So long ago!
"Ah!
Heloise!" he sighed unconsciously.
"What did you
say?" asked T. Tembarom. The duke came back.
"I was thinking of
the time when I was nine and twenty," he answered. "It was not
yesterday nor even the day before. The one I knew died when she was
twenty-four."
"Died!" said
Tembarom. "Good Lord!" He dropped his head and even changed color.
"A fellow can't get on to a thing like that. It seems as if it could+n't
happen. Suppose -- " he caught his breath hard and then pulled himself up
-- "Nothing could happen to her before she knew that I+'ve proved what I
said -- just proved it, and done every single thing she told me to do."
"I am sure you
have," the duke said.
"It+'s because of
that I began to say this." Tembarom spoke hurriedly that he might thrust
away the sudden dark thought. "You're a man, and I+'m a man; far away
ahead of me as you are, you+'re a man, too. I was crazy to get her to marry me
and come here with me, and she would+n't."
The duke's eyes lighted
anew.
"She had her
reasons," he said.
"She laid 'em out
as if she'd been my mother instead of a little red-headed angel that you wanted
to snatch up and crush up to you so she could+n't breathe. She did+n't waste a
word. She just told me what I was up against. She'd lived in the village with
her grandmother, and she knew. She said I+'d got to come and find out for
myself what no one else could teach me. She told me about the kind of girls
I+'d see -- beauties that were different from anything I+'d ever seen before.
And it was up to me to see all of them -- the best of them."
"Ladies?"
interjected the duke gently.
"Yes. With titles
like those in novels, she said, and clothes like those in the Ladies'
Pictorial. The kind of girls, she said, that would make her look like a
housemaid. Housemaid be darned!" he exclaimed, suddenly growing hot.
"I+'ve seen the whole lot of them; I+'ve done my darndest to get next, and
there+'s not one -- " he stopped short. "Why should any of them look
at me, anyhow?" he added suddenly.
"That was not her
point," remarked the duke. "She wanted you to look at them, and you
have looked." T. Tembarom's eagerness was inspiring to behold.
"I have, have+n't
I?" he cried. "That was what I wanted to ask you. I+'ve done as she
said. I have+n't shirked a thing. I+'ve followed them around when I knew they had+n't
any use on earth for me. Some of them have handed me the lemon pretty straight.
Why should+n't they? But I don't believe she knew how tough it might be for a
fellow sometimes."
"No, she did
not," the duke said. "Also she probably did not know that in ancient
days of chivalry ladies sent forth their knights to bear buffeting for their
sakes in proof of fealty. Rise up, Sir Knight!" This last phrase of course
T. Tembarom did not know the poetic significance of.
To his hearer
Palliser's story became an amusing thing, read in the light of this most
delicious frankness. It was Palliser himself who played the fool, and not T.
Tembarom, who had simply known what he wanted, and had, with businesslike
directness, applied himself to finding a method of obtaining it. The young
women he gave his time to must be "Ladies" because Miss Hutchinson
had required it from him. The female flower of the noble houses had been passed
in review before him to practise upon, so to speak. The handsomer they were, the
more dangerously charming, the better Miss Hutchinson would be pleased. And he
had been regarded as a presumptuous aspirant. It was a situation for a comedy.
But the "Ladies" would not enjoy it if they were told. It was also
not the Duke of Stone who would tell them. They could not in the least
understand the subtlety of the comedy in which they had unconsciously taken
part. Ann Hutchinson's grandmother curtsied to them in her stiff old way when
they passed. Ann Hutchinson had gone to the village school and been presented
with prizes for needlework and good behavior. But what a girl she must be, the
slim bit of a thing with a red head! What a clear-headed and firm little
person!
In courts he had
learned to wear a composed countenance when he was prompted to smile, and he
wore one now. He enjoyed the society of T. Tembarom increasingly every hour. He
provided him with every joy.
Their drive was a long
one, and they talked a good deal. They talked of the Hutchinsons, of the
invention, of the business "deals" Tembarom had entered into at the
outset, and of their tremendously encouraging result. It was not mere rumor
that Hutchinson would end by being a rich man. The girl would be an heiress.
How complex her position would be! And being of the elect who unknowingly bear
with them the power that "moves the world," how would she affect
Temple Barholm and its surrounding neighborhood?
"I wish to God she
was here now!" exclaimed Tembarom, suddenly.
It had been an
interesting talk, but now and then the duke had wondered if, as it went on, his
companion was as wholly at his ease as was usual with him. An occasional shade
of absorption in his expression, as if he were thinking of two things at once
despite himself, a hint of restlessness, revealed themselves occasionally. Was
there something more he was speculating on the possibility of saying, something
more to tell or explain? If there was, let him take his time. His audience, at
all events, was possessed of perceptions. This somewhat abrupt exclamation
might open the way.
"That is easily
understood, my dear fellow," replied the duke.
"There+'s times
when you want a little thing like that just to talk things over with, just to
ask, because you -- you're dead sure she+'d never lose her head and give
herself away without knowing she was doing it. She could just keep still and
let the waves roll over her and be standing there ready and quiet when the tide
had passed. It+'s the keeping your mouth shut that+'s so hard for most people,
the not saying a darned thing, whatever happens, till just the right
time."
"Women cannot
often do it," said the duke. "Very few men can."
"You+'re
right," Tembarom answered, and there was a trifle of anxiety in his tone.
"There+'s women,
just the best kind, that you dare+n't tell a big thing to. Not that they+'d
mean to give it away, -- perhaps they would+n't know when they did it, -- but
they+'d feel so anxious they+'d get -- they+'d get -- "
"Rattled,"
put in the duke, and knew who he was thinking of. He saw Miss Alicia's
delicate, timid face as he spoke.
T. Tembarom laughed.
"That+'s just
it," he answered. "They would+n't go back on you for worlds, but --
well, you have to be careful with them."
"He+'s got
something on his mind," mentally commented the duke. "He wonders if
he will tell it to me."
"And there+'s
times when you+'d give half you+'ve got to be able to talk a thing out and put
it up to some one else for a while. I could do it with her. That+'s why I said
I wish to God that she was here."
"You have learned
to know how to keep still," the duke said. "So have I. We learned it
in different schools, but we have both learned."
As he was saying the
words, he thought he was going to hear something; when he had finished saying
them he knew that he would without a doubt. T. Tembarom made a quick move in
his seat; he lost a shade of color and cleared his throat as he bent forward, casting
a glance at the backs of the coachman and footman on the high seat above them.
"Can those fellows
hear me?" he asked.
"No," the
duke answered; "if you speak as you are speaking now."
"You are the
biggest man about here," the young man went on. "You stand for
everything that English people care for, and you were born knowing all the
things I don't. I+'ve been carrying a big load for quite a while, and I guess
I+'m not big enough to handle it alone, perhaps. Anyhow, I want to be sure I+'m
not making fool mistakes. The worst of it is that I+'ve got to keep still if
I+'m right, and I+'ve got to keep still if I+'m wrong. I+'ve got to keep still,
anyhow."
"I learned to hold
my tongue in places where, if I had not held it, I might have plunged nations
into bloodshed," the duke said. "Tell me all you choose."
As a result of which,
by the time their drive had ended and they returned to Stone Hover, he had told
him, and, the duke sat in his corner of the carriage with an unusual light in
his eyes and a flush of somewhat excited color on his cheek.
"You+'re a queer
fellow, T. Tembarom," he said when they parted in the drawing-room after
taking tea. "You exhilarate me. You make me laugh. If I were an emotional
person, you would at moments make me cry. There+'s an affecting up- rightness
about you. You+'re rather a fine fellow too, 'pon my life." Putting a
waxen, gout-knuckled old hand on his shoulder, and giving him a friendly push
which was half a pat, he added, "You are, by God!"
And after his guest had
left him, the duke stood for some minutes gazing into the fire with a
complicated smile and the air of a man who finds himself quaintly enriched.
"I have had
ambitions in the course of my existence -- several of them," he said,
"but even in over-vaulting moments never have I aspired to such an
altitude as this -- to be, as it were, part of a melodrama. One feels that one
scarcely deserves it."
MR. Temple Barholm
seems in better spirits," Lady Mallowe said to Captain Palliser as they walked
on the terrace in the starlight dusk after dinner.
Captain Palliser took
his cigar from his mouth and looked at the glowing end of it.
"Has it struck you
that he has been in low spirits?" he inquired speculatively. "One
does not usually connect him with depression."
"Certainly not
with depression. He+'s an extraordinary creature. One would think he would
perish from lack of the air he is used to breathing -- New York air."
"He is not
perishing. He+'s too shrewd," returned Palliser. "He may+n't exactly
like all this, but he+'s getting something out of it."
"He is not getting
much of what he evidently wants most. I am out of all patience," said Lady
Mallowe.
Her acquaintance with
Palliser had lasted through a number of years. They argued most matters from
the same basis of reasoning. They were at times almost candid with each other.
It may be acknowledged, however, that of the two Lady Mallowe was the more
inclined to verge on self-revelation. This was of course because she was the
less clever and had more temper. Her temper, she had, now and then, owned
bitterly to herself, had played her tricks. Captain Palliser's temper never did
this. It was Lady Mallowe's temper which spoke now, but she did not in the
least mind his knowing that Joan was exasperating her beyond endurance. He knew
the whole situation well enough to be aware of it without speech on her part.
He had watched similar situations several times before.
"Her manner toward
him is, to resort to New York colloquialisms, `the limit,' " Palliser said
quietly. "Is it your idea that his less good spirits have been due to Lady
Joan's ingenuities? They are ingenious, you know."
"They are
devilish," exclaimed her mother. "She treads him in the mire and
sails about professing to be conducting herself flawlessly. She is too clever
for me," she added with bitterness.
Palliser laughed
softly.
"But very often
you have been too clever for her," he suggested. "For my part, I
don't quite see how you got her here.
Lady Mallowe became not
almost, but entirely, candid.
"Upon the whole, I
don't quite know myself. I believe she really came for some mysterious reason
of her own."
"That is rather my
impression," said Palliser. "She has got something up her sleeve, and
so has he."
"He!" Lady
Mallowe quite ejaculated the word. "She always has. That+'s her abominable
secretive way. But he! T. Tembarom with something up his sleeve! One can't
imagine it."
"Almost everybody
has. I found that out long years ago," said Palliser, looking at his cigar
end again as if consulting it. "Since I arrived at the conclusion, I
always take it for granted, and look out for it. I+'ve become rather clever in
following such things up, and I have taken an unusual interest in T. Tembarom
from the first."
Lady Mallowe turned her
handsome face, much softened by an enwreathing gauze scarf, toward him
anxiously.
"Do you think his
depression, or whatever it is, means Joan?" she asked.
"If he is
depressed by her, you need not be discouraged," smiled Palliser. "The
time to lose hope would be when, despite her ingenuities, he became entirely
cheerful. But," he added after a moment of pause, "I have an idea
there is some other little thing."
"Do you suppose
that some young woman he has left behind in New York is demanding her
rights?" said Lady Mallowe, with annoyance. "That is exactly the kind
of thing Joan would like to hear, and so entirely natural. Some shop-girl or
other.
"Quite natural, as
you say; but he would scarcely be running up to London and consulting Scotland
Yard about her," Palliser answered.
"Scotland
Yard!" ejaculated his companion. "How in the world did you find that
out?"
Captain Palliser did
not explain how he had done it. Presumably his knowledge was due to the
adroitness of the system of "following such things up."
"Scotland Yard has
also come to him," he went on. "Did you chance to see a red-faced
person who spent a morning with him last week?"
"He looked like a
butcher, and I thought he might be one of his friends," Lady Mallowe said.
"I recognized the
man. He is an extremely clever detective, much respected for his resources in
the matter of following clues which are so attenuated as to be scarcely clues at
all."
"Clues have no
connection with Joan," said Lady Mallowe, still more annoyed. "All
London knows her miserable story."
"Have you --
" Captain Palliser's tone was thoughtful, -- "has any one ever seen
Mr. Strangeways?"
"No. Can you
imagine anything more absurdly romantic? A creature without a memory, shut up
in a remote wing of a palace like this, as if he were the Man with the Iron
Mask. Romance is not quite compatible with T. Tembarom."
"It is so
incongruous that it has entertained me to think it over a good deal,"
remarked Palliser. "He leaves everything to one's imagination. All one
knows is that he is+n't a relative; that he is+n't mad, but only too nervous to
see or be seen. Queer situation. I+'ve found there is always a reason for
things; the queerer they are, the more sure it is that there+'s a reason. What
is the reason Strangeways is kept here, and where would a detective come in?
Just on general principles I+'m rather going into the situation. There's a
reason, and it would be amusing to find it out. Don't you think so?"
He spoke casually, and
Lady Mallowe's answer was casual, though she knew from experience that he was
not as casual as he chose to seem. He was clever enough always to have certain
reasons of his own which formulated themselves into interests large and small.
He knew things about people which were useful. Sometimes quite small things
were useful. He was always well behaved, and no one had ever accused him of
bringing pressure to bear; but it was often possible for him to sell things or
buy things or bring about things in circumstances which would have presented
difficulties to other people. Lady Mallowe knew from long experience all about
the exigencies of cases when "needs must," and she was not critical.
Temple Barholm as the estate of a distant relative and T. Tembarom as its owner
were not assets to deal with indifferently. When a man made a respectable
living out of people who could be persuaded to let you make investments for
them, it was not an unbusinesslike idea to be in the position to advise an
individual strongly.
"It's quite
natural that you should feel an interest," she answered. "But the
romantic stranger is too romantic, though I will own Scotland Yard is a little
odd."
"Yes, that is
exactly what I thought," said Palliser.
He had in fact thought
a good deal and followed the thing up in a quiet, amateur way, though with
annoyingly little result. Occasionally he had felt rather a fool for his pains
because he had been led to so few facts of importance and had found himself so
often confronted by T. Tembarom's entirely frank grin. His own mental attitude
was not a complex one. Lady Mallowe's summing up had been correct enough on the
whole. Temple Barholm ought to be a substantial asset, regarded in its connection
with its present owner. Little dealings in stocks -- sometimes rather large
ones when luck was with him -- had brought desirable returns to Captain
Palliser throughout a number of years. Just now he was taking an interest in a
somewhat imposing scheme, or what might prove an imposing one if it were
managed properly and presented to the right persons. If T. Tembarom had been
sufficiently lured by the spirit of speculation to plunge into old Hutchinson's
affair, as he evidently had done, he was plainly of the temperament attracted
by the game of chance. There had been no reason but that of temperament which
could have led him to invest. He had found himself suddenly a moneyed man and
had liked the game. Never having so much as heard of Little Ann Hutchinson,
Captain Palliser not unnaturally argued after this wise. There seemed no valid
reason why, if a vague invention had allured, a less vague scheme, managed in a
more businesslike manner, should not. This Mexican silver and copper mine was a
dazzling thing to talk about. He could go into details. He had, in fact,
allowed a good deal of detail to trail through his conversation at times. It
had not been difficult to accomplish this in his talks with Lady Mallowe in his
host's presence. Lady Mallowe was always ready to talk of mines, gold, silver,
or copper. It happened at times that one could manage to secure a few shares
without the actual payment of money. There were little hospitalities or social
amiabilities now and then which might be regarded as value received. So she had
made it easy for Captain Palliser to talk, and T. Tembarom had heard much which
would have been of interest to the kind of young man he appeared to be.
Sometimes he had listened absorbedly, and on a few occasions he had asked a few
questions which laid him curiously bare in his rôle of speculator. If he had no
practical knowledge of the ways and means of great mining companies, he at
least professed none. At all events, if there was any little matter he
preferred to keep to himself, there was no harm in making oneself familiar with
its aspect and significance. A man's arguments, so far as he himself is
concerned, assume the character with which his own choice of adjectives and
adverbs labels them. That is, if he labels them. The most astute do not.
Captain Palliser did not. He dealt merely with reasoning processes which were
applicable to the subject in hand, whatsoever its nature. He was a practical
man of the world -- a gentleman, of course. It was necessary to adjust matters
without romantic hair-splitting. It was all by the way.
T. Tembarom had at the
outset seemed to present, so to speak, no surface. Palliser had soon ceased to
be at all sure that his social ambitions were to be relied on as a lever.
Besides which, when the old Duke of Stone took delighted possession of him,
dined with him, drove with him, sat and gossiped with him by the hour, there
was not much one could offer him. Strangeways had at first meant only
eccentricity. A little later he had occasionally faintly stirred curiosity, and
perhaps the fact that Burrill enjoyed him as a grievance and a mystery had
stimulated the stirring. The veriest chance had led him to find himself
regarding the opening up of possible vistas.
From a certain window
in a certain wing of the house a much-praised view was to be seen. Nothing was
more natural than that on the occasion of a curious sunset Palliser should, in
coming from his room, decide to take a look at it. As he passed through a
corridor Pearson came out of a room near him.
"How is Mr.
Strangeways to-day?" Palliser asked.
"Not quite so
well, I am afraid, sir," was the answer.
"Sorry to hear
it," replied Palliser, and passed on.
On his return he walked
somewhat slowly down the corridor. As he turned into it he thought he heard the
murmur of voices. One was that of T. Tembarom, and he was evidently using
argument. It sounded as if he were persuading some one to agree with him, and
the persuasion was earnest. He was not arguing with Pearson or a housemaid. Why
was he arguing with his pensioner? His voice was as low as it was eager, and
the other man's replies were not to be heard. Only just after Palliser had
passed the door there broke out an appeal which was a sort of cry.
"No! My God, no!
Don't send me away! Don't send me away!"
One could not, even if
so inclined, stand and listen near a door while servants might chance to be
wandering about. Palliser went on his way with a sense of having been slightly
startled.
"He wants to get
rid of him, and the fellow is giving him trouble," he said to himself.
"That voice is not American. Not in the least." It set him thinking
and observing. When Tembarom wore the look which was not a look of depression,
but of something more puzzling, he thought that he could guess at its reason.
By the time he talked with Lady Mallowe he had gone much further than he chose
to let her know.
THE popularity of
Captain Palliser's story of the "Ladies" had been great at the
outset, but with the passage of time it had oddly waned. This had resulted from
the story's ceasing to develop itself, as the simplest intelligence might have
anticipated, by means of the only person capable of its proper development. The
person in question was of course T. Tembarom. Expectations, amusing
expectations, of him had been raised, and he had singularly failed in the
fulfilling of them. The neighborhood had, so to speak, stood upon tiptoe, --
the feminine portion of it, at least, -- looking over shoulders to get the
first glimpses of what would inevitably take place.
As weeks flew by, the
standing on tiptoe became a thing of the past. The whole thing flattened out most
disappointingly. No attack whatever was made upon the "Ladies." That
the Duke of Stone had immensely taken up Mr. Temple Barholm had of course
resulted in his being accepted in such a manner as gave him many opportunities
to encounter one and all. He appeared at dinners, teas, and garden parties.
Miss Alicia, whom he had in some occult manner impressed upon people until they
found themselves actually paying a sort of court to her, was always his
companion.
"One realizes one
cannot possibly leave her out of anything," had been said. "He has
somehow established her as if she were his mother or his aunt -- or his
interpreter. And such clothes, my dear, one does+n't behold. Worth and Paquin
and Doucet must go sleepless for weeks to invent them. They are without a flaw
in shade or line or texture." Which was true, because Mrs. Mellish of the
Bond Street shop had become quite obsessed by her idea and committed
extravagances Miss Alicia offered up contrite prayer to atone for, while
Tembarom, simply chortling in his glee, signed checks to pay for their
exquisite embodiment. That he was not reluctant to avail himself of social
opportunities was made manifest by the fact that he never refused an
invitation. He appeared upon any spot to which hospitality bade him, and
unashamedly placed himself on record as a neophyte upon almost all occasions.
His well-cut clothes began in time to wear more the air of garments belonging
to him, but his hat made itself remarked by its trick of getting pushed back on
his head or tilted on side, and his New York voice and accent rang out sharp
and finely nasal in the midst of low-pitched, throaty, or mellow English
enunciations. He talked a good deal at times because he found himself talked to
by people who either wanted to draw him out or genuinely wished to hear the
things he would be likely to say.
That the hero of
Palliser's story should so comport himself as to provide either diversion or
cause for haughty displeasure would have been only a natural outcome of his
ambitions. In a brief period of time, however, every young woman who might have
expected to find herself an object of such ambitions realized that his methods
of approach and attack were not marked by the usual characteristics of
aspirants of his class. He evidently desired to see and be seen. He presented
himself, as it were, for inspection and consideration, but while he was
attentive, he did not press attentions upon any one. He did not make advances
in the ordinary sense of the word. He never essayed flattering or even admiring
remarks. He said queer things at which one often could not help but laugh, but
he somehow wore no air of saying them with the intention of offering them as
witticisms which might be regarded as allurements. He did not ogle, he did not
simper or shuffle about nervously and turn red or pale, as eager and awkward
youths have a habit of doing under the stress of unrequited admiration. In the
presence of a certain slightingness of treatment, which he at the outset met
with not infrequently, he conducted himself with a detached good nature which
seemed to take but small account of attitudes less unoffending than his own.
When the slightingness disappeared from sheer lack of anything to slight, he
did not change his manner in any degree.
"He is not in the
least forward," Beatrice Talchester said, the time arriving when she and
her sisters occasionally talked him over with their special friends, the
Granthams, "and he is not forever under one's feet, as the pushing sort
usually is. Do you remember those rich people from the place they called Troy
-- the ones who took Burnaby for a year -- and the awful eldest son who
perpetually invented excuses for calling, bringing books and ridiculous
things?"
"This one never
makes an excuse," Amabel Grantham put in.
"But he never
declines an invitation. There is no doubt that he wants to see people,"
said Lady Honora, with the pretty little nose and the dimples. She had ceased
to turn up the pretty little nose, and she showed a dimple as she added:
"Gwynedd is tremendously taken with him. She is teaching him to play
croquet. They spend hours together."
"He+'s beginning
to play a pretty good game," said Gwynedd. "He+'s not stupid, at all
events."
"I believe you are
the first choice, if he is really choosing," Amabel Grantham decided.
"I should like to ask you a question."
"Ask it, by all
means," said Gwynedd.
"Does he ever ask
you to show him how to hold his mallet, and then do idiotic things, such as
managing to touch your hand?"
"Never," was
Gwynedd's answer. "The young man from Troy used to do it, and then beg
pardon and turn red."
"I don't
understand him, or I don't understand Captain Palliser's story," Amabel
Grantham argued. "Lucy and I are quite out of the running, but I honestly
believe that he takes as much notice of us as he does of any of you. If he has
intentions, he `does+n't act the part,' which is pure New York of the first
water."
"He said, however,
that the things that mattered were not only titles, but looks. He asked how
many of us were `lookers.' Don't be modest, Amabel. Neither you nor Lucy are
out of the running," Beatrice amiably suggested.
"Ladies
first," commented Amabel, pertly. There was no objection to being
supported in one's suspicion that, after all, one was a "looker."
"There may be a
sort of explanation," Honora put the idea forward somewhat thoughtfully.
"Captain Palliser insists that he is much shrewder than he seems. Perhaps
he is cautious, and is looking us all over before he commits himself."
"He is a Temple
Barholm, after all," said Gwynedd, with boldness. "He+'s rather good
looking. He has the nicest white teeth and the most cheering grin I ever saw,
and he+'s as `rich as grease is,' as I heard a housemaid say one day. I+'m
getting quite resigned to his voice, or it is improving, I don't know which. If
he only knew the mere A B C of ordinary people like ourselves, and he committed
himself to me, I would+n't lay my hand on my heart and say that one might not
think him over."
"I told you she
was tremendously taken with him," said her sister. "It+'s come to
this."
"But," said
Lady Gwynedd, "he is not going to commit himself to any of us, incredible
as it may seem. The one person he stares at sometimes is Joan Fayre, and he
only looks at her as if he were curious and would+n't object to finding out why
she treats him so outrageously. He is+n't annoyed; he's only curious."
"He+'s been adored
by salesladies in New York," said Honora, "and he can't understand
it."
"He+'s been
liked," Amabel Grantham summed him up. "He+'s a likable thing. He+'s
even rather a dear. I+'ve begun to like him myself."
"I hear you are
learning to play croquet," the Duke of Stone remarked to him a day or so
later. "How do you like it?"
"Lady Gwynedd
Talchester is teaching me," Tembarom answered. "I+'d learn to iron
shirt-waists if she would give me lessons. She+'s one of the two that have
dimples," he added, reflection in his tone. "I guess that+'ll count.
Should+n't you think it would?"
"Miss
Hutchinson?" queried the duke.
Tembarom nodded.
"Yes, it+'s always
her," he answered without a ray of humor. "I just want to stack 'em
up.
"You are doing
it," the duke replied with a slightly twisted mouth. There were, in fact,
moments when he might have fallen into fits of laughter while Tembarom was
seriousness itself. "I must, however, call your attention to the fact that
there is sometimes in your manner a hint of a businesslike pursuit of a fixed
object which you must beware of. The Lady Gwynedds might not enjoy the
situation if they began to suspect. If they decided to flout you, -- `to throw
you down,' I ought to say -- where would little Miss Hutchinson be?"
Tembarom looked
startled and disturbed.
"Say," he
exclaimed, "do I ever look that way? I must do better than that. Anyhow,
it ain't all put on. I+'m doing my stunt, of course, but I like them. They+'re
mighty nice to me when you consider what they+'re up against. And those two with
the dimples, -- Lady Gwynned and Lady Honora, are just peaches. Any fellow
might" -- he stopped and looked serious again -- "That+'s why they+'d
count," he added.
They were having one of
their odd long talks under a particularly splendid copper beech which provided
the sheltered out-of-door corner his grace liked best. When they took their
seats together in this retreat, it was mysteriously understood that they were
settling themselves down to enjoyment of their own, and must not be disturbed.
"When I am
comfortable and entertained," Moffat, the house steward, had quoted his
master as saying, "you may mention it if the castle is in flames; but do
not annoy me with excitement and flurry. Ring the bell in the courtyard, and
call up the servants to pass buckets; but until the lawn catches fire, I must
insist on being left alone."
"What dear papa
talks to him about, and what he talks about to dear papa," Lady Celia had
more than once murmured in her gently remote, high-nosed way, "I cannot
possibly imagine. Sometimes when I have passed them on my way to the croquet
lawn I have really seen them both look as absorbed as people in a play. Of
course it is very good for papa. It has had quite a marked effect on his
digestion. But is+n't it odd!"
"I wish,"
Lady Edith remarked almost wistfully, "that I could get on better with him
myself conversationally. But I don't know what to talk about, and it makes me
nervous."
Their father, on the
contrary, found in him unique resources, and this afternoon it occurred to him
that he had never so far heard him express himself freely on the subject of
Palliser. If led to do so, he would probably reveal that he had views of
Captain Palliser of which he might not have been suspected, and the manner in
which they would unfold themselves would more than probably be illuminating.
The duke was, in fact, serenely sure that he required neither warning nor
advice, and he had no intention of offering either. He wanted to hear the
views.
"Do you
know," he said as he stirred his tea, "I+'ve been thinking about
Palliser, and it has occurred to me more than once that I should like to hear
just how he strikes you?"
"What I got on to
first was how I struck him," answered Tembarom, with a reasonable air.
"That was dead easy."
There was no hint of
any vaunt of superior shrewdness. His was merely the level-toned manner of an
observer of facts in detail.
"He has given you
an opportunity of seeing a good deal of him," the duke added. "What
do you gather from him -- unless he has made up his mind that you shall not
gather anything at all?"
"A fellow like
that could+n't fix it that way, however much he wanted to," Tembarom
answered again reasonably. "Just his trying to do it would give him
away."
"You mean you have
gathered things?"
"Oh, I+'ve gathered
enough, though I did+n't go after it. It hung on the bushes. Anyhow, it seemed
to me that way. I guess you run up against that kind everywhere. There+'s
stacks of them in New York -- different shapes and sizes."
"If you met a man
of his particular shape and size in New York, how would you describe him?"
the duke asked.
"I should never
have met him when I was there. He would+n't have come my way He+'d have been on
Wall Street, doing high-class bucket-shop business, or he+'d have had a swell
office selling copper-mines -- any old kind of mine that+'s going to make ten
million a minute, the sort of deal he+'s in now. If he+'d been the kind I might
have run up against," he added with deliberation, "he would+n't have
been as well dressed or as well spoken. He+'d have been either flashy or down
at heel. You+'d have called him a crook."
The duke seemed pleased
with his tea as, after having sipped it, he put it down on the table at his
side.
"A crook?" he
repeated. "I wonder if that word is altogether American?"
"It+'s not
complimentary, but you asked me," said Tembarom. "But I don't believe
you asked me because you thought I was+n't on to him."
"Frankly speaking,
no," answered the duke. "Does he talk to you about the mammoth mines
and the rubber forests?"
"Say, that+'s
where he wins out with me," Tembarom replied admiringly. "He gets in
such fine work that I switch him on to it whenever I want cheering up. It makes
me sorter forget things that worry me just to see a man act the part right up
to the top notch the way he does it. The very way his clothes fit, the style
he's got his hair brushed, and that swell, careless lounge of his, are half of
the make-up. You see, most of us could+n't mistake him for anything else but
just what he looks like -- a gentleman visiting round among his friends and a
million miles from wanting to butt in with business. The thing that first got
me interested was watching how he slid in the sort of guff he wanted you to get
worked up about and think over. Why, if I+'d been what I look like to him,
he+'d have had my pile long ago, and he would+n't be loafing round here any
more."
"What do you think
you look like to him?" his host inquired.
"I look as if I+'d
eat out of his hand," Tembarom answered, quite unbiased by any touch of
wounded vanity. "Why should+n't I? And I+'m not trying to wake him up,
either. I like to look that way to him and to his sort. It gives me a chance to
watch and get wise to things. He's a high-school education in himself. I like
to hear him talk. I asked him to come and stay at the house so that I could
hear him talk."
"Did he introduce
the mammoth mines in his first call?" the duke inquired.
"Oh, I don't mean
that kind of talk. I did+n't know how much good I was going to get out of him
at first. But he was the kind I had+n't known, and it seemed like he was part
of the whole thing -- like the girls with title that Ann said I must get next
to. And an easy way of getting next to the man kind was to let him come and
stay. He wanted to, all right. I guess that+'s the way he lives when he+'s down
on his luck, getting invited to stay at places. Like Lady Mallowe," he
added, quite without prejudice.
"You do sum them
up, don't you?" smiled the duke.
"Well, I don't see
how I could help it," he said impartially. "They+'re printed in
sixty-four point black-face, seems to me."
"What is
that?" the duke inquired with interest. He thought it might be a new and
desirable bit of slang. "I don't know that one."
"Biggest type
there is," grinned Tembarom. "It+'s the kind that+'s used for
head-lines. That's newspaper-office talk."
"Ah, technical, I
see. What, by the way, is the smallest lettering called?" his grace
followed up.
"Brilliant,"
answered Tembarom.
"You,"
remarked the duke, "are not printed in sixty-four- point black-face so far
as they are concerned. You are not even brilliant. They don't find themselves
able to sum you up. That fact is one of my recreations."
"I'll tell you
why," Tembarom explained with his clearly unprejudiced air. "There+'s
nothing much about me to sum up, anyhow. I+'m too sort of plain sailing and
ordinary. I+'m not making for anywhere they+'d think I+'d want to go. I+'m not
hiding anything they+'d be sure I+'d want to hide."
"By the Lord!
you+'re not!" exclaimed the duke.
"When I first came
here, every one of them had a fool idea I+'d want to pretend I+'d never set
eyes on a newsboy or a boot- black, and that I could+n't find my way in New
York when I got off Fifth Avenue. I used to see them thinking they+'d got to
look as if they believed it, if they wanted to keep next. When I just let out
and showed I did+n't care a darn and had+n't sense enough to know that it
mattered, it nearly made them throw a fit. They had to turn round and fix their
faces all over again and act like it was `interesting.' That+'s what Lady
Mallowe calls it. She says it+'s so `interesting!' "
"It is,"
commented the duke.
"Well, you know
that, but she does+n't. Not on your life! I guess it makes her about sick to
think of it and have to play that it+'s just what you+'d want all your men
friends to have done. Now, Palliser -- " he paused and grinned again. He
was sitting in a most casual attitude, his hands clasped round one up-raised
knee, which he nursed, balancing himself. It was a position of informal ease
which had an air of assisting enjoyable reflection.
"Yes, Palliser?
Don't let us neglect Palliser," his host encouraged him.
"He+'s in a worse
mix-up than the rest because he+'s got more to lose. If he could work this
mammoth-mine song and dance with the right people, there+'d be money enough in
it to put him on Easy Street. That+'s where he+'s aiming for. The company+'s
just where it has to have a boost. It+'s just got to. If it does+n't, there+'ll
be a bust up that may end in fitting out a high-toned promoter or so in a
striped yellow-and-black Jersey suit and set him to breaking rocks or playing
with oakum. I+'ll tell you, poor old Palliser gets the Willies sometimes after
he+'s read his mail. He turns the color of écru baby Irish. That+'s a kind of
lace I got a dressmaker to tell me about when I wrote up receptions and dances
for the Sunday Earth. Ecru baby Irish -- that+'s Palliser's color after he+'s
read his letters."
"I dare say the fellow+'s
in a devil of a mess, if the truth were known," the duke said.
"And here's `T.
T.,' hand-made and hand-painted for the part of the kind of sucker he
wants." T. Tembarom's manner was almost sympathetic in its appreciation.
"I can tell you I+'m having a real good time with Palliser. It looked like
I+'d just dropped from heaven when he first saw me. If he+'d been the praying
kind, I+'d have been just the sort he+'d have prayed for when he said his
`Now-I-lay-me's' before he went to bed. There was+n't a chance in a hundred
that I was+n't a fool that had his head swelled so that he+'d swallow any
darned thing if you handed it to him smooth enough. First time he called he
asked me a lot of questions about New York business. That was pretty smart of
him. He wanted to find out, sort of careless, how much I knew -- or how
little."
The duke was leaning
back luxuriously in his chair and gazing at him as he might have gazed at the
work of an old master of which each line and shade was of absorbing interest.
"I can see
him," he said. "I can see him."
"He found out I
knew nothing," Tembarom continued. "And what was to hinder him trying
to teach me something, by gee! Nothing on top of the green earth. I was there,
waiting with my mouth open, it seemed like."
"And he has tried
-- in his best manner?" said his grace.
"What he hasn't
tried would+n't be worthy trying," Tembarom answered cheerfully.
"Sometimes it seems like a shame to waste it. I+'ve got so I know how to
start him when he does+n't know I+'m doing it. I tell you, he+'s fine.
Gentlemanly -- that+'s his way, you know. High-toned friend that just happens
to know of a good thing and thinks enough of you in a sort of reserved way to
feel like it+'s a pity not to give you a chance to come in on the ground floor,
if you+'ve got the sense to see the favor he's friendly enough to do you. It's
such a favor that it+'d just disgust a man if you could possibly turn it down.
But of course you+'re to take it or leave it. It+'s not to his interest to push
it. Lord, no! Whatever you did his way is that he+'d not condescend to say a
darned word. High- toned silence, that+'s all."
The Duke of Stone was
chuckling very softly. His chuckles rather broke his words when he spoke.
"By -- by --
Jove!" he said. "You -- you do see it, don't you? You do see
it."
Tembarom nursed his
knee comfortably.
"Why," he
said, "it+'s what keeps me up. You know a lot more about me than any one
else does, but there's a whole raft of things I think about that I could+n't
hang round any man's neck. If I tried to hang them round yours, you+'d know
that I would be having a hell of a time here, if I+'d let myself think too
much. If I did+n't see it, as you call it, if I did+n't see so many things, I
might begin to get sorry for myself. There was a pause of a second.
"Gee!" he said, "Gee! this not hearing a thing about Ann! --
"
"Good Lord! my
dear fellow," the duke said hastily, "I know. I know."
Tembarom turned and
looked at him.
"You+'ve been
there," he remarked. "You+'ve been there, I bet."
"Yes, I+'ve been
there," answered the duke. "I+'ve been there -- and come back. But
while it+'s going on -- you have just described it. A man can have a hell of a
time."
"He can,"
Tembarom admitted unreservedly. "He+'s got to keep going to stand it.
Well, Strangeways gives me some work to do. And I+'ve got Palliser. He+'s a
little sunbeam."
A man-servant
approaching to suggest a possible need of hot tea started at hearing his grace
break into a sudden and plainly involuntary crow of glee. He had not heard that
one before either. Palliser as a little sunbeam brightening the pathway of T.
Tembarom, was, in the particular existing circumstances, all that could be
desired of fine humor. It somewhat recalled the situation of the "Ladies"
of the noble houses of Pevensy, Talchester, and Stone unconsciously passing in
review for the satisfaction of little Miss Hutchinson. Tembarom laughed a
little himself, but he went on with a sort of seriousness:
"There+'s one
thing sure enough. I+'ve got on to it by listening and working out what he
would do by what he does+n't know he says. If he could put the screws on me in
any way, he would+n't hold back. It+'d be all quite polite and gentlemanly, but
he+'d do it all the samee. And he+'s dead-sure that everybody+'s got something
they+'d like to hide -- or get. That+'s what he works things out from."
"Does he think you
have something to hide -- or get?" the duke inquired rather quickly.
"He's sure of it.
But he does+n't know yet whether it+'s get or hide. He noses about. Pearson's
seen him. He asks questions and plays he ain't doing it and ain't interested,
anyhow."
"He does+n't like
you, he does+n't like you," the duke said rather thoughtfully. "He
has a way of conveying that you are far more subtle than you choose to look. He
is given to enlarging on the fact that an air of entire frankness is one of the
chief assets of certain promoters of huge American schemes."
Tembarom smiled the
smile of recognition.
"Yes," he
said, "it looks like that+'s a long way round, does+n't it? But it+'s not
far to T. T. when you want to hitch on the connection. Anyhow, that's the way
he means it to look. If ever I was suspected of being in any mix-up, everybody
would remember he+'d said that."
"It+'s very
amusin'," said the duke. "It+'s very amusin'."
They had become even
greater friends and intimates by this time than the already astonished
neighborhood suspected them of being. That they spent much time together in an
amazing degree of familiarity was the talk of the country, in fact, one of the
most frequent resources of conversation. Everybody endeavored to find reason
for the situation, but none had been presented which seemed of sufficiently
logical convincingness. The duke was eccentric, of course. That was easy to hit
upon. He was amiably perverse and good-humoredly cynical. He was of course
immensely amused by the incongruity of the acquaintance. This being the case,
why exactly he had never before chosen for himself a companion equally out of
the picture it was not easy to explain. There were plow-boys or clerks out of
provincial shops who would surely have been quite as incongruous when
surrounded by ducal splendors. He might have got a young man from Liverpool or
Blackburn who would have known as little of polite society as Mr. Temple
Barholm; there were few, of course, who could know less. But he had never shown
the faintest desire to seek one out. Palliser, it is true, suggested it was
Tembarom's "cheek" which stood him in good stead. The young man from
behind the counter in a Liverpool or Blackburn shop would probably have been
frightened to death and afraid to open his mouth in self- revelation, whereas
Temple Barholm was so entirely a bounder that he did not know he was one, and
was ready to make an ass of himself to any extent. The frankest statement of
the situation, if any one had so chosen to put it, would have been that he was
regarded as a sort of court fool without cap or bells.
No one was aware of the
odd confidences which passed between the weirdly dissimilar pair. No one
guessed that the old peer sat and listened to stories of a red-headed,
slim-bodied girl in a dingy New York boarding-house, that he liked them
sufficiently to encourage their telling, that he had made a mental picture of a
certain look in a pair of maternally yearning and fearfully convincing round
young eyes, that he knew the burnished fullness and glow of the red hair until
he could imagine the feeling of its texture and abundant warmth in the hand.
And this subject was only one of many. And of others they talked with interest,
doubt, argument, speculation, holding a living thrill.
The tap of croquet
mallets sounded hollow and clear from the sunken lawn below the mass of shrubs
between them and the players as the duke repeated.
"It+'s hugely
amusin'," dropping his "g," which was not one of his usual
affectations.
"Confound
it!" he said next, wrinkling the thin, fine skin round his eyes in a
speculative smile, "I wish I had had a son of my own just like you."
All of Tembarom's white
teeth revealed themselves.
"I+'d have liked
to have been in it," he replied, "but I should+n't have been like
me."
"Yes, you
would." The duke put the tips of his fingers delicately together.
"You are of the kind which in all circumstances is like itself." He
looked about him, taking in the turreted, majestic age and mass of the castle.
"You would have been born here. You would have learned to ride your pony
down the avenue. You would have gone to Eton and to Oxford. I don't think you
would have learned much, but you would have been decidedly edifying and
companionable. You would have had a sense of humor which would have made you
popular in society and at court. A young fellow who makes those people laugh
holds success in his hand. They want to be made to laugh as much as I do. Good
God! how they are obliged to be bored and behave decently under it! You would
have seen and known more things to be humorous about than you know now. I don't
think you would have been a fool about women, but some of them would have been
fools about you, because you+'ve got a way. I had one myself. It+'s all the
more dangerous because it+'s possibility suggesting without being sentimental.
A friendly young fellow always suggests possibilities without being aware of
it.
"Would I have been
Lord Temple Temple Barholm or something of that sort?" Tembarom asked.
"You would have
been the Marquis of Belcarey," the duke replied, looking him over
thoughtfully, "and your name would probably have been Hugh Lawrence
Gilbert Henry Charles Adelbert, or words to that effect."
"A regular
six-shooter," said Tembarom.
The duke was following
it up with absorption in his eyes.
"You+'d have gone
into the Guards, perhaps," he said, "and drill would have made you
carry yourself better. You+'re a good height. You+'d have been a well-set-up
fellow. I should have been rather proud of you. I can see you riding to the
palace with the rest of them, sabres and chains clanking and glittering and
helmet with plumes streaming. By Jove! I don't wonder at the effect they have
on nursery-maids. On a sunny morning in spring they suggest knights in a
fairytale."
"I should have
liked it all right if I had+n't been born in Brooklyn," grinned Tembarom.
"But that starts you out in a different way. Do you think, if I+'d been
born the Marquis of Bel -- what+'s his name -- I should have been on to Palliser's
little song and dance, and had as much fun out of it?"
"On my soul, I
believe you would," the duke answered. "Brooklyn or Stone Hover
Castle, I+'m hanged if you would+n't have been you."
AFTER this came a
pause. Each man sat thinking his own thoughts, which, while marked with
difference in form, were doubtless subtly alike in the line they followed.
During the silence T. Tembarom looked out at the late afternoon shadows
lengthening themselves in darkening velvet across the lawns.
At last he said:
"I never told you
that I+'ve been reading some of the 'steen thousand books in the library. I
started it about a month ago. And somehow they've got me going."
The slightly lifted
eyebrows of his host did not express surprise so much as questioning interest.
This man, at least, had discovered that one need find no cause for astonishment
in any discovery that he had been doing a thing for some time for some reason
or through some prompting of his own, and had said nothing whatever about it
until he was what he called "good and ready." When he was "good
and ready" he usually revealed himself to the duke, but he was not equally
expansive with others.
"No, you have not
mentioned it," his grace answered, and laughed a little. "You
frequently fail to mention things. When first we knew each other I used to
wonder if you were naturally a secretive fellow; but you are not. You always
have a reason for your silences."
"It took about ten
years to kick that into me -- ten good years, I should say." T. Tembarom
looked as if he were looking backward at many episodes as he said it.
"Naturally, I guess, I must have been an innocent, blab-mouthed kid. I
meant no harm, but I just did+n't know. Sometimes it looks as if just not
knowing is about the worst disease you can be troubled with But if you don't
get killed first, you find out in time that what you+'ve got to hold on to hard
and fast is the trick of `saying nothing and sawing wood.' "
The duke took out his
memorandum-book and began to write hastily. T. Tembarom was quite accustomed to
this. He even repeated his axiom for him.
"Say nothing and
saw wood," he said. "It+'s worth writing down. It means `shut your
mouth and keep on working.' "
"Thank you,"
said the duke. "It is worth writing down. Thank you."
"I did not talk
about the books because I wanted to get used to them before I began to
talk," Tembarom explained. "I wanted to get somewhere. I+'d never
read a book through in my life before. Never wanted to. Never had one and never
had time. When night came, I was dog-tired and dog-ready to drop down and
sleep."
Here was a situation of
interest. A young man of odd, direct shrewdness, who had never read a book
through in his existence, had plunged suddenly into the extraordinarily varied
literary resources of the Temple Barholm library. If he had been a fool or a
genius one might have guessed at the impression made on him; being T. Tembarom,
one speculated with secret elation. The primitiveness he might reveal, the
profundities he might touch the surface of, the unexpected ends he might reach,
suggested the opening of vistas.
"I have often
thought that if books attracted you the library would help you to get through a
good many of the hundred and thirty-six hours a day you+'ve spoken of, and get
through them pretty decently," commented the duke.
"That+'s what+'s
happened," Tembarom answered. "There not so many now. I can cut 'em
off in chunks."
"How did it
begin?"
He listened with much
pleasure while Tembarom told him how it had begun and how it had gone on.
"I+'d been having
a pretty bad time one day. Strangeways had been worse -- a darned sight worse
-- just when I thought he was better. I+'d been trying to help him to think
straight; and suddenly I made a break, somehow, and must have touched exactly
the wrong spring. It seemed as if I set him nearly crazy. I had to leave him to
Pearson right away,. Then it poured rain steady for about eight hours, and I
could+n't get out and `take a walk.' Then I went wandering into the picture-
gallery and found Lady Joan there, looking at Miles Hugo. And she ordered me
out, or blamed near it."
"You are standing
a good deal," said the duke.
"Yes, I am -- but
so is she." He set his hard young jaw and nursed his knee, staring once
more at the velvet shadows. "The girl in the book I picked up -- " he
began.
"The first
book?" his host inquired.
Tembarom nodded.
"The very first. I
was smoking my pipe at night, after every one else had gone to bed, and I got
up and began to wander about and stare at the names of the things on the
shelves. I was thinking over a whole raft of things -- a whole raft of them --
and I did+n't know I was doing it, until something made me stop and read a name
again. It was a book called `Good-by, Sweetheart, Good-by,' and it hit me straight.
I wondered what it was about, and I wondered where old Temple Barholm had
fished up a thing like that. I never heard he was that kind."
"He was a
cantankerous old brute," said the Duke of Stone with candor, "but he
chanced to be an omnivorous novel- reader. Nothing was too sentimental for him
in his later years."
"I took the thing
out and read it," Tembarom went on, uneasily, the emotion of his first
novel-reading stirring him as he talked. "It kept me up half the night,
and I had+n't finished it then. I wanted to know the end."
"Benisons upon the
books of which one wants to know the end!" the duke murmured.
Tembarom's interest had
plainly not terminated with "the end." Its freshness made it easily
revived. There was a hint of emotional indignation in his relation of the plot.
"It was about a
couple of fools who were dead stuck on each other -- dead. There was no mistake
about that. It was all real. But what do they do but work up a fool quarrel
about nothing, and break away from each other. There was a lot of stuff about
pride. Pride be damned! How+'s a man going to be proud and put on airs when he
loves a woman? How's a woman going to be proud and stick out about things when
she loves a man? At least, that+'s the way it hit me."
"That+'s the way
it hit me -- once," remarked his grace.
"There is only
once," said Tembarom, doggedly.
"Occasionally,"
said his host. "Occasionally."
Tembarom knew what he
meant.
"The fellow went
away, and neither of them would give in. It+'s queer how real it was when you
read it. You were right there looking on, and swallowing hard every few minutes
-- though you were as mad as hops. The girl began to die -- slow -- and lay
there day after day, longing for him to come back, and knowing he would+n't. At
the very end, when there was scarcely a breath left in her, a young fellow who
was crazy about her himself, and always had been, put out after the hard-headed
fool to bring him to her anyhow. The girl had about given in then. And she lay
and waited hour after hour, and the youngster came back by himself. He
could+n't bring the man he+'d gone after. He found him getting married to a
nice girl he did+n't really care a darn for. He+'d sort of set his teeth and
done it -- just because he was all in and down and out, and a fool. The girl
just dropped her head back on the pillow and lay there, dead! What do you think
of that?" quite fiercely. "I guess it was sentimental all right, but
it got you by the throat."
" `Good-bye,
Sweetheart, Good-bye,' " his grace quoted. "First-class title. We are
all sentimental. And that was the first, was it?"
"Yes, but it
was+n't the last. I began to read the others. I+'ve been reading them ever
since. I tell you, for a fellow that knows nothing it+'s an easy way of finding
out a lot of things. You find out what different kinds of people there are, and
what different kinds of ways. If you+'ve lived in one place, and been up
against nothing but earning your living, you think that+'s all there is of it
-- that it+'s the whole thing. But it is+n't, by gee!" His air became
thoughtful. "I+'ve begun to kind of get on to what all this means" --
glancing about him -- "to you people; and how a fellow like T. T. must
look to you. I+'ve always sort of guessed, but reading a few dozen novels has
helped me to see why it+'s that way. I+'ve yelled right out laughing over it
many a time. That fellow called Thackeray -- I can't read his things right
straight through -- but he+'s an eye-opener."
"You have tried
nothing but novels?" his enthralled hearer inquired.
"Not yet. I shall
come to the others in time. I+'m sort of hungry for these things about people.
It+'s the ways they+'re different that gets me going. There was one that
stirred me all up -- but it was+n't like that first one. It was about a
man" -- he spoke slowly, as if searching for words and parallels --
"well, I guess he was one of the early savages here. It read as if they
were like the first Indians in America, only stronger and fiercer. When Palford
was explaining things to me he+'d jerk in every now and then something about
`coming over with the Conqueror' or being here `before the Conqueror.' I
did+n't know what it meant. I found out in this book I+'m telling about. It
gave me the whole thing so that you saw it. Here was this little country, with
no one in it but these first savage fellows it'd always belonged to. They
thought it was the world." There was a humorous sense of illumination in
his half-laugh. "It was their New York, by jings," he put in.
"Their little old New York that they+'d never been outside of! And then
first one lot slams in, and then another, and another, and tries to take it
from them. Julius Cæsar was the first Mr. Buttinski; and they fought like hell.
They were fighters from Fightersville, anyhow. They fought each others took
each other's castles and lands and wives and jewelry -- just any old thing they
wanted. The only jails were private ones meant for their particular friends.
And a man was hung only when one of his neighbors got mad enough at him, and
then he had to catch him first and run the risk of being strung up himself, or
have his head chopped off and stuck up on a spike somewhere for ornament. But
fight! Good Lord! They were at it day and night. Did it for fun, just like
folks go to the show. They did+n't know what fear was. Never heard of it.
They+'d go about shouting and bragging and swaggering, with their heads hanging
half off. And the one in this book was the bulliest fighter of the lot. I guess
I don't know how to pronounce his name. It began with H."
"Was it Hereward
the Wake, by chance?" exclaimed his auditor. "Hereward the Last of
the English?"
"That+'s the
man," cried Tembarom.
"An engaging
ruffian and thief and murderer, and a touching one also," commented the
duke. "You liked him?" He really wanted to know.
"I like the way he
went after what he wanted to get, and the way he fought for his bit of England.
By gee! When he went rushing into a fight, shouting and boasting and swinging
his sword, I got hot in the collar. It was his England. What was old Bill doing
there anyhow, darn him! Those chaps made him swim in their blood before they
let him put the thing over. Good business! I+'m glad they gave him all that was
coming to him -- hot and strong."
His sharp face had
reddened and his voice rose high and nasal. There was a look of roused blood in
him.
"Are you a fighter
from Fightersville?" the duke asked, far from unstirred himself. These
things had become myths to most people, but here was Broadway in the midst of
them unconsciously suggesting that it might not have done ill in the matter of
swinging "Brain-Biter" itself. The modern entity slipped back again
through the lengthened links of bygone centuries -- back until it became T.
Tembarom once more -- casual though shrewd; ready and jocular. His eyes resumed
their dry New York humor of expression as they fixed themselves on his wholly
modern questioner.
"I'll fight,"
he said, "for what I+'ve got to fight for, but not for a darned thing
else. Not a darned thing."
"But you would
fight," smiled the duke, grimly. "Did you happen to remember that
blood like that has come down to you? It was some drop of it which made you
`hot in the collar' over that engaging savage roaring and slashing about him
for his `bit of England.' "
Tembarom seemed to
think it out interestedly.
"No, I did
not," he answered. "But I guess that's so. I guess it+'s so. Great
Jakes! Think of me perhaps being sort of kin to fellows just like that. Some
way, you could+n't help liking him. He was always making big breaks and
bellowing out `The Wake! The Wake!' in season and out of season; but the way he
got there -- just got there!"
He was oddly in sympathy
with "the early savages here," and as understandingly put himself
into their places as he had put himself into Galton's. His New York
comprehension of their berserker furies was apparently without limit. Strong
partizan as he was of the last of the English, however, he admitted that
William of Normandy had "got in some good work, though it was+n't
square."
"He was a big
man," he ended. "If he had+n't been the kind he was I don't know how
I should have stood it when the Hereward fellow knelt down before him, and put
his hands between his and swore to be his man. That+'s the way the book said
it. I tell you that must have been tough -- tough as hell!"
From "Good-bye,
Sweetheart" to "Hereward the Last of the English" was a far cry,
but he had gathered a curious collection of ideas by the way, and with
characteristic everyday reasoning had linked them to his own experiences.
"The women in the
Hereward book made me think of Lady Joan," he remarked, suddenly.
"Torfreda?"
the duke asked.
He nodded quite
seriously.
"She had ways that
reminded me of her, and I kept thinking they must both have had the same look
in their eyes -- sort of fierce and hungry. Torfreda had black hair and was a
winner as to looks; but people were afraid of her and called her a witch.
Hereward went mad over her and she went mad over him. That part of it was 'way
out of sight, it was so fine. She helped him with his fights and told him what
to do, and tried to keep him from drinking and bragging. Whatever he did, she
never stopped being crazy about him. She mended his men's clothes, and took
care of their wounds, and lived in the forest with him when he was driven
out."
"That sounds
rather like Miss Hutchinson," his host suggested, "though the
parallel between a Harlem flat and an English forest in the eleventh century is
not exact."
"I thought that,
too," Tembarom admitted. "Ann would have done the same things, but
she+'d have done them in her way. If that fellow had taken his wife's advice,
he would+n't have ended with his head sticking on a spear."
"Another lady, if
I remember rightly," said the duke.
"He left her, the
fool!" Tembarom answered. "And there+'s where I could+n't get away
from seeing Lady Joan; Jem Temple Barholm did+n't go off with another woman,
but what Torfreda went through, this one has gone through, and she+'s going
through it yet. She can't dress herself in sackcloth, and cut off her hair, and
hide herself away with a bunch of nuns, as the other one did. She has to stay
and stick it out, however bad it is. That+'s a darned sight worse. The day
after I+'d finished the book, I could+n't keep my eyes off her. I tried to stop
it, but it was no use. I kept hearing that Torfreda one screaming out, `Lost!
Lost! Lost!' It was all in her face."
"But, my good fellow,"
protested the duke, despite feeling a touch of the thrill again,
"unfortunately, she would not suspect you of looking at her because you
were recalling Torfreda and Hereward the Wake. Men stare at her for another
reason."
"That's what I
know about half as well again as I know anything else," answered Tembarom.
He added, with a deliberation holding its own meaning, "That's what I+'m
coming to."
The duke waited. What
was it he was coming to?
"Reading that
novel put me wise to things in a new way. She's been wiping her feet on me hard
for a good while, and I sort of made up my mind I+'d got to let her until I was
sure where I was. I won't say I did+n't mind it, but I could stand it. But that
night she caught me looking at her, the way she looked back at me made me see
all of a sudden that it would be easier for her if I told her straight that she
was mistaken."
"That she is
mistaken in thinking -- ?"
"What she does
think. She would+n't have thought it if the old lady had+n't been driving her
mad by hammering it in. She+'d have hated me all right, and I don't blame her
when I think of how poor Jem was treated; but she would+n't have thought that
every time I tried to be decent and friendly to her I was butting in and making
a sick fool of myself. She+'s got to stay where her mother keeps her, and
she+'s got to listen to her. Oh, hell! She+'s got to be told!"
The duke set the tips
of his fingers together.
"How would you do
it?" he inquired.
"Just
straight," replied T. Tembarom. "There's no other way."
From the old worldling
broke forth an involuntary low laugh, which was a sort of cackle. So this was
what he was coming to.
"I cannot think of
any devious method," he said, "which would make it less than a
delicate thing to do. A beautiful young woman, whose host you are, has flouted
you furiously for weeks, under the impression that you are offensively in love
with her. You propose to tell her that her judgment has betrayed her, and that,
as you say, `There+'s nothing doing.' "
"Not a darned
thing, and never has been," said T. Tembarom. He looked quite grave and
not at all embarrassed. He plainly did not see it as a situation to be regarded
with humor.
"If she will
listen -- " the duke began.
"Oh, she'll
listen," put in Tembarom. "I'll make her."
His was a
self-contradicting countenance, the duke reflected, as he took him in with a
somewhat long look. One did not usually see a face built up of boyishness and
maturity, simpleness which was baffling, and a good nature which could be hard.
At the moment, it was both of these last at one and the same time.
"I know something
of Lady Joan and I know something of you," he said, "but I don't
exactly foresee what will happen. I will not say that I should not like to be
present."
"There+'ll be
nobody present but just me and her," Tembarom answered.
THE visits of Lady
Mallowe and Captain Palliser had had their features. Neither of the pair had
come to one of the most imposing "places" in Lancashire to live a
life of hermit-like seclusion and dullness. They had arrived with the intention
of availing themselves of all such opportunities for entertainment as could be
guided in their direction by the deftness of experience. As a result, there had
been hospitalities at Temple Barholm such as it had not beheld during the last
generation at least. T. Tembarom had looked on, an interested spectator, as
these festivities had been adroitly arranged and managed for him. He had not,
however, in the least resented acting as a sort of figurehead in the position
of sponsor and host.
"They think I
don't know I+'m not doing it all myself," was his easy mental summing-up.
"They+'ve got the idea that I+'m pleased because I believe I+'m It. But
that+'s all to the merry. It+'s what I+'ve set my mind on having going on here,
and I could+n't have started it as well myself. I should+n't have known how.
They+'re teaching me. All I hope is that Ann's grandmother is keeping
tab."
"Do you and Rose
know old Mrs. Hutchinson?" he had inquired of Pearson the night before the
talk with the duke.
"Well, not to say
exactly know her, sir, but everybody knows of her. She is a most remarkable old
person, sir." Then, after watching his face for a moment or so, he added
tentatively, "Would you perhaps wish us to make her acquaintance for --
for any reason?"
Tembarom thought the
matter over speculatively. He had learned that his first liking for Pearson had
been founded upon a rock. He was always to be trusted to understand, and also
to apply a quite unusual intelligence to such matters as he became aware of
without having been told about them.
"What I+'d like
would be for her to hear that there+'s plenty doing at Temple Barholm; that
people are coming and going all the time; and that there+'s ladies to burn --
and most of them lookers, at that," was his answer.
How Pearson had
discovered the exotic subtleties of his master's situation and mental attitude
toward it, only those of his class and gifted with his occult powers could
explain in detail. The fact exists that Pearson did know an immense number of
things his employer had not mentioned to him, and held them locked in his bosom
in honored security, like a little gentleman. He made his reply with a polite
conviction which carried weight.
"It would not be
necessary for either Rose or me to make old Mrs. Hutchinson's acquaintance with
a view to informing her of anything which occurs on the estate or in the
village, sir," he remarked. "Mrs. Hutchinson knows more of things
than any one ever tells her. She sits in her cottage there, and she just knows
things and sees through people in a way that+'d be almost unearthly, if she
was+n't a good old person, and so respectable that there+'s those that touches
their hats to her as if she belonged to the gentry. She+'s got a blue eye, sir
-- "
"Has she?"
exclaimed Tembarom.
"Yes, sir. As blue
as a baby's, sir, and as clear, though she+'s past eighty. And they tell me
there+'s a quiet, steady look in it that ill-doers downright quail before.
It+'s as if she was a kind of judge that sentenced them without speaking. They
can't stand it. Oh, sir! you can depend upon old Mrs. Hutchinson as to who+'s
been here, and even what they+'ve thought about it. The village just flocks to
her to tell her the news and get advice about things. She+'d know."
It was as a result of
this that on his return from Stone Hover he dismissed the carriage at the gates
and walked through them to make a visit in the village. Old Mrs. Hutchinson,
sitting knitting in her chair behind the abnormally flourishing fuchsias,
geraniums, and campanula carpaticas in her cottage- window, looked between the
banked-up flower-pots to see that Mr. Temple Barholm had opened her wicket-gate
and was walking up the clean bricked path to her front door. When he knocked
she called out in the broad Lancashire she had always spoken, "Coom
in!" When he entered he took off his hat and looked at her, friendly but
hesitant, and with the expression of a young man who has not quite made up his
mind as to what he is about to encounter.
"I+'m Temple
Temple Barholm, Mrs. Hutchinson," he announced.
"I know
that," she answered. "Not that tha looks loike th' Temple Barholms,
but I+'ve been watchin' thee walk an' drive past here ever since tha coom to
th' place."
She watched him
steadily with an astonishingly limpid pair of old eyes. They were old and young
at the same time; old because they held deeps of wisdom, young because they
were so alive and full of question.
"I don't know
whether I ought to have come to see you or not," he said.
"Well, tha 'st
coom," she replied, going on with her knitting. "Sit thee doun and
have a bit of a chat."
"Say!" he
broke out. "Ain't you going to shake hands with me?" He held his hand
out impetuously. He knew he was all right if she+'d shake hands.
"Theer+'s nowt
agen that surely," she answered, with a shrewd bit of a smile. She gave
him her hand. "If I was na stiff in my legs, it+'s my place to get up an'
mak' thee a curtsey, but th' rheumatics has no respect even for th' lord o' th
manor."
"If you got up and
made me a curtsey," Tembarom said, "I should throw a fit. Say, Mrs.
Hutchinson, I bet you know that as well as I do."
The shrewd bit of a
smile lighted her eyes as well as twinkled about her mouth.
"Sit thee
doun," she said again.
So he sat down and
looked at her as straight as she looked at him.
"Tha+'d give a
good bit," she said presently, over her flashing needles, "to know
how much Little Ann+'s tow+'d me about thee."
"I+'d give a lot
to know how much it+'d be square to ask you to tell me about her," he gave
back to her, hesitating yet eager.
"What does tha
mean by square?" she demanded.
"I mean `fair.'
Can I talk to you about her at all? I promised I+'d stick it out here and do as
she said. She told me she was+n't going to write to me or let her father write.
I+'ve promised, and I+'m not going to fall down when I+'ve said a thing."
"So tha coom to
see her grandmother?"
He reddened, but held
his head up.
"I+'m not going to
ask her grandmother a thing she does+n't want me to be told. But I+'ve been up
against it pretty hard lately. I read some things in the New York papers about
her father and his invention, and about her traveling round with him and
helping him with his business."
"In Germany they
wur," she put in, forgetting herself. "They+'re havin' big doin's
over th' invention. What Joe 'u'd do wi'out th' lass I canna tell. She+'s doin'
every bit o' th' managin' an' contrivin' wi' them furriners -- but he'll never
know it. She+'s got a chap to travel wi' him as can talk aw th' languages under
th' sun."
Her face flushed and
she stopped herself sharply
"I+'m talkin'
about her to thee!" she said. "I would na ha' believed o'
mysen'."
He got up from his
chair.
"I guess I
ought+n't to have come," he said, restlessly. "But you have+n't told
me more than I got here and there in the papers. That was what started me. It
was like watching her. I could hear her talking and see the way she was doing
things till it drove me half crazy. All of a sudden, I just got wild and made
up my mind I+'d come here. I+'ve wanted to do it many a time, but I+'ve kept
away."
"Tha showed sense
i' doin' that," remarked Mrs. Hutchinson. "She+'d not ha' thowt well
o' thee if tha+'d coom runnin' to her grandmother every day or so. What she
likes about thee is as she thinks tha+'s got a strong backbone o' thy
own."
She looked up at him
over her knitting, looked straight into his eyes, and there was that in her own
which made him redden and feel his pulse quicken. It was actually something
which even remotely suggested that she was not -- in the deeps of her strong
old mind -- as wholly unswerving as her words might imply. It was something
more subtle than words. She was not keeping him wholly in the dark when she
said "What she likes about thee." If Ann said things like that to
her, he was pretty well off.
"Happen a look at
a lass+'s grandmother -- when tha conna get at th' lass hersen -- is a bit o'
comfort," she added. "But don't tha go walkin' by here to look in at
th' window too often. She would na think well o' that either."
"Say! There+'s one
thing I+'m going to get off my chest before I go," he announced,
"just one thing. She can go where she likes and do what she likes, but
I+'m going to marry her when she's done it -- unless something knocks me on the
head and finishes me. I+'m going to marry her."
"Tha art, art
tha?" laconically; but her eyes were still on his, and the something in
their depths by no means diminished.
"I+'m keeping up
my end here, and it+'s no slouch of a job, but I+'m not forgetting what she
promised for one minute! And I+'m not forgetting what her promise means,"
he said obstinately.
"Tha 'd like me to
tell her that?" she said.
"If she does+n't
know it, you telling her would+n't cut any ice," was his reply. "I+'m
saying it because I want you to know it, and because it does me good to say it
out loud. I+'m going to marry her."
"That+'s for her
and thee to settle," she commented, impersonally.
"It is
settled," he answered. "There's no way out of it. Will you shake
hands with me again before I go?"
"Aye," she
consented, "I will."
When she took his hand
she held it a minute. Her own was warm, and there was no limpness about it. The
secret which had seemed to conceal itself behind her eyes had some difficulty
in keeping itself wholly in the background.
"She knows aw tha'
does," she said coolly, as if she were not suddenly revealing immensities.
"She knows who cooms an' who goes, an' what they think o' thee, an' how
tha gets on wi' 'em. Now get thee gone, lad, an' dunnot tha coom back till her
or me sends for thee."
Within an hour of this
time the afternoon post brought to Lady Mallowe a letter which she read with an
expression in which her daughter recognized relief. It was in fact a letter for
which she had waited with anxiety, and the invitation it contained was a
tribute to her social skill at its highest water mark. In her less heroic
moments, she had felt doubts of receiving it, which had caused shudders to run
the entire length of her spine.
"I+'m going to
Broome Haughton," she announced to Joan.
"When?" Joan
inquired.
"At the end of the
week. I am invited for a fortnight."
"Am I going?"
Joan asked.
"No. You will go
to London to meet some friends who are coming over from Paris."
Joan knew that comment
was unnecessary. Both she and her mother were on intimate terms with these
hypothetical friends who so frequently turned up from Paris or elsewhere when
it was necessary that she should suddenly go back to London and live in squalid
seclusion in the unopened house, with a charwoman to provide her with underdone
or burnt chops, and eggs at eighteen a shilling, while the shutters of the
front rooms were closed, and dusty desolation reigned. She knew every detail of
the melancholy squalor of it, the dragging hours, the nights of lying awake
listening to the occasional passing of belated cabs, or the squeaks and
nibbling of mice in the old walls.
"If you had
conducted yourself sensibly you need not have gone," continued her mother.
"I could have made an excuse and left you here. You would at least have
been sure of good food and decent comforts."
"After your visit,
are we to return here?" was Lady Joan's sole reply.
"Don't look at me
like that," said Lady Mallowe. "I thought the country would freshen
your color at least; but you are going off more every day. You look like the
Witch of Endor sometimes."
Joan smiled faintly.
This was the brandishing of an old weapon, and she understood all its
significance. It meant that the time for opportunities was slipping past her
like the waters of a rapid river.
"I do not know what
will happen when I leave Broome Haughton," her mother added, a note of
rasped uncertainty in her voice. "We may be obliged to come here for a
short time, or we may go abroad."
"If I refuse to
come, would you let me starve to death in Piers Street?" Joan inquired.
Lady Mallowe looked her
over, feeling a sort of frenzy at the sight of her. In truth, the future was a
hideous thing to contemplate if no rescue at all was in sight. It would be
worse for her than for Joan, because Joan did not care what happened or did not
happen, and she cared desperately. She had indeed arrived at a maddening
moment.
"Yes," she
snapped, fiercely.
And when Joan faintly
smiled again she understood why women of the lower orders beat one another
until policemen interfere. She knew perfectly well that the girl had somehow
found out that Sir Moses Monaldini was to be at Broome Haughton, and that when
he left there he was going abroad. She knew also that she had not been able to
conceal that his indifference had of late given her some ghastly hours, and
that her play for this lagging invitation had been a frantically bold one. That
the most ingenious efforts and devices had ended in success only after such
delay made it all the more necessary that no straw must remain unseized on.
"I can wear some
of your things, with a little alteration," she said. "Rose will do it
for me. Hats and gloves and ornaments do not require altering. I shall need
things you will not need in London. Where are your keys?"
Lady Joan rose and got
them for her. She even flushed slightly. They were often obliged to borrow each
other's possessions, but for a moment she felt herself moved by a sort of hard
pity.
"We are like rats
in a trap," she remarked. "I hope you will get out."
"If I do, you will
be left inside. Get out yourself! Get out yourself!" said Lady Mallowe in
a fierce whisper.
Her regrets at the
necessity of their leaving Temple Barholm were expressed with fluent
touchingness at the dinner- table. The visit had been so delightful. Mr. Temple
Barholm and Miss Alicia had been so kind. The loveliness of the whole dear
place had so embraced them that they felt as if they were leaving a home
instead of ending a delightful visit. It was extraordinary what an effect the
house had on one. It was as if one had lived in it always -- and always would.
So few places gave one the same feeling. They should both look forward --
greedy as it seemed -- to being allowed some time to come again. She had
decided from the first that it was not necessary to go to any extreme of
caution or subtlety with her host and Miss Alicia. Her method of paving the way
for future visits was perhaps more than a shade too elaborate. She felt,
however, that it sufficed. For the most part, Lady Joan sat with lids dropped
over her burning eyes. She tried to force herself not to listen. This was the
kind of thing which made her sick with humiliation. Howsoever rudimentary these
people were, they could not fail to comprehend that a foothold in the house was
being bid for. They should at least see that she did not join in the bidding.
Her own visit had been filled with feelings at war with one another. There had
been hours too many in which she would have been glad -- even with the dingy
horrors of the closed town house before her -- to have flown from the hundred
things which called out to her on every side. In the long-past three months of
happiness, Jem had described them all to her -- the rooms, gardens, pleached
walks, pictures, the very furniture itself. She could enter no room, walk in no
spot she did not seem to know, and passionately love in spite of herself. She
loved them so much that there were times when she yearned to stay in the place
at any cost, and others when she could not endure the misery it woke in her --
the pure misery. Now it was over for the time being, and she was facing
something new. There were endless varieties of wretchedness. She had been
watching her mother for some months, and had understood her varying moods of
temporary elation or prolonged anxiety. Each one had meant some phase of the
episode of Sir Moses Monaldini. The people who lived at Broome Haughton were
enormously rich Hebrews, who were related to him. They had taken the beautiful
old country-seat and were filling it with huge parties of their friends. The
party which Lady Mallowe was to join would no doubt offer opportunities of the
most desirable kind. Among this special class of people she was a great
success. Her amazingly achieved toilettes, her ripe good looks, her air of
belonging to the great world, impressed themselves immensely.
T. Tembarom thought he
never had seen Lady Joan look as handsome as she looked to-night. The color on
her cheek burned, her eyes had a driven loneliness in them. She had a
wonderfully beautiful mouth, and its curve drooped in a new way. He wished Ann
could get her in a corner and sit down and talk sense to her. He remembered
what he had said to the duke. Perhaps this was the time. If she was going away,
and her mother meant to drag her back again when she was ready, it would make
it easier for her to leave the place knowing she need not hate to come back.
But the duke was+n't making any miss hit when he said it would+n't be easy. She
was not like Ann, who would feel some pity for the biggest fool on earth if she
had to throw him down hard. Lady Joan would feel neither compunctions nor
relentings. He knew the way she could look at a fellow. If he could+n't make
her understand what he was aiming at, they would both be worse off than they
would be if he left things as they were. But -- the hard line showed itself
about his mouth -- he was+n't going to leave things as they were.
As they passed through
the hall after dinner, Lady Mallowe glanced at a side-table on which lay some
letters arrived by the late post. An imposing envelope was on the top of the
rest. Joan saw her face light as she took it up.
"I think this is
from Broome Haughton," she said. "If you will excuse me, I will go
into the library and read it. It may require answering at once."
She turned hot and
cold, poor woman, and went away, so that she might be free from the disaster of
an audience if anything had gone wrong. It would be better to be alone even if
things had gone right. The letter was from Sir Moses Monaldini. Grotesque and
ignoble as it naturally strikes the uninitiated as seeming, the situation had
its touch of hideous pathos. She had fought for her own hand for years; she
could not dig, and to beg she was not ashamed; but a time had come when even
the most adroit begging began to bore people. They saw through it, and then
there resulted strained relations, slight stiffness of manner, even in the most
useful and amiable persons, lack of desire to be hospitable, or even
condescendingly generous. Cold shoulders were turned, there were ominous
threatenings of icy backs presenting themselves. The very tradesmen had found
this out, and could not be persuaded that the advertisement furnished by the
fact that two beautiful women of fashion ate, drank, and wore the articles
which formed the items in their unpaid bills, was sufficient return for the
outlay of capital required. Even Mrs. Mellish, when graciously approached by
the "relative of Miss Temple Barholm, whose perfect wardrobe you
supplied," had listened to all seductions with a civil eye fixed unmovedly
and had referred to the "rules of the establishment." Nearer and
nearer the edge of the abyss the years had pushed them, and now if something
did not happen -- something -- something -- even the increasingly shabby small
house in town would become a thing of the past. And what then? Could any one
wonder she said to herself that she could have beaten Joan furiously. It would
not matter to any one else if they dropped out of the world into squalid
oblivion -- oh, she knew that -- she knew that with bitter certainty! -- but
oh, how it would matter to them! -- at least to herself. It was all very well
for Mudie's to pour forth streams of sentimental novels preaching the horrors
of girls marrying for money, but what were you to do -- what in heaven's name
were you to do? So, feeling terrified enough actually to offer up a prayer, she
took the imposingly addressed letter into the library.
The men had come into
the drawing-room when she returned. As she entered, Joan did not glance up from
the book she was reading, but at the first sound of her voice she knew what had
occurred.
"I was obliged to
dash off a note to Broome Haughton so that it would be ready for the early
post," Lady Mallowe said. She was at her best. Palliser saw that some
years had slipped from her shoulders. The moment which relieves or even
promises to relieve fears does astonishing things. Tembarom wondered whether
she had had good news, and Miss Alicia thought that her evening dress was more
becoming than any she had ever seen her wear before. Her brilliant air of
social ease returned to her, and she began to talk fluently of what was being
done in London, and to touch lightly upon the possibility of taking part in
great functions. For some time she had rather evaded talk of the future.
Palliser had known that the future had seemed to be closing in upon her, and
leaving her staring at a high blank wall. Persons whose fortunate names had
ceased to fall easily from her lips appeared again upon the horizon. Miss
Alicia was impressed anew with the feeling that she had known every brilliant
or important personage in the big world of social London; that she had taken
part in every dazzling event. Tembarom somehow realized that she had been
afraid of something or other, and was for some reason not afraid any more. Such
a change, whatsoever the reason for it, ought to have had some effect on her
daughter. Surely she would share her luck, if luck had come to her.
But Lady Joan sat apart
and kept her eyes upon her book. This was one of the things she often chose to
do, in spite of her mother's indignant protest.
"I came here
because you brought me," she would answer. "I did not come to be
entertaining or polite."
She was reading this
evening. She heard every word of Lady Mallowe's agreeable and slightly excited
conversation. She did not know exactly what had happened; but she knew that it
was something which had buoyed her up with a hopefulness which exhilarated her
almost too much -- as an extra glass of wine might have done. Once or twice she
even lost her head a little and was a trifle swaggering. T. Tembarom would not
recognize the slip, but Joan saw Palliser's faint smile without looking up from
her book. He observed shades in taste and bearing. Before her own future Joan
saw the blank wall of stone building itself higher and higher. If Sir Moses had
capitulated, she would be counted out. With what degree of boldness could a
mother cast her penniless daughter on the world? What unendurable provision
make for her? Dare they offer a pound a week and send her to live in the slums
until she chose to marry some Hebrew friend of her step- father's? That she
knew would be the final alternative. A cruel little smile touched her lips, as
she reviewed the number of things she could not do to earn her living. She
could not take in sewing or washing, and there was nothing she could teach.
Starvation or marriage. The wall built itself higher and yet higher. What a
hideous thing it was for a penniless girl to be brought up merely to be a
beauty, and in consequence supposably a great lady. And yet if she was born to
a certain rank and had height and figure, a lovely mouth, a delicate nose,
unusual eyes and lashes, to train her to be a dressmaker or a housemaid would
be a stupid investment of capital. If nothing tragic interfered and the right
man wanted such a girl, she had been trained to please him. But tragic things
had happened, and before her grew the wall while she pretended to read her
book.
T. Tembarom was coming
toward her. She had heard Palliser suggest a game of billiards.
"Will you come and
play billiards with us?" Tembarom asked. "Palliser says you play
splendidly."
"She plays
brilliantly," put in Lady Mallowe. "Come, Joan."
"No, thank
you," she answered. "Let me stay here and read."
Lady Mallowe protested.
She tried an air of playful maternal reproach because she was in good spirits.
Joan saw Palliser smiling quietly, and there was that in his smile which suggested
to her that he was thinking her an obstinate fool.
"You had better
show Temple Barholm what you can do," he remarked. "This will be your
last chance, as you leave so soon. You ought never let a last chance slip by. I
never do."
Tembarom stood still
and looked down at her from his good height. He did not know what Palliser's
speech meant, but an instinct made him feel that it somehow held an ugly, quiet
taunt.
"What I would like
to do," was the unspoken crudity which passed through his mind, "would
be to swat him on the mouth. He+'s getting at her just when she ought to be let
alone."
"Would you like it
better to stay here and read?" he inquired.
"Much better, if
you please," was her reply.
"Then that
goes," he answered, and left her.
He swept the others out
of the room with a good-natured promptness which put an end to argument. When
he said of anything "Then that goes," it usually did so.
WHEN she was alone Joan
sat and gazed not at her wall but at the pictures that came back to her out of
a part of her life which seemed to have been lived centuries ago. They were the
pictures that came back continually without being called, the clearness of
which always startled her afresh. Sometimes she thought they sprang up to add
to her torment, but sometimes it seemed as if they came to save her from
herself -- her mad, wicked self. After all, there were moments when to know
that she had been the girl whose eighteen-year-old heart had leaped so when she
turned and met Jem's eyes, as he stood gazing at her under the beech-tree, was
something to cling to. She had been that girl and Jem had been -- Jem. And she
had been the girl who had joined him in that young, ardent vow that they would
say the same prayers at the same hour each night together. Ah! how young it had
been -- how young! Her throat strained itself because sobs rose in it, and her
eyes were hot with the swell of tears.
She could hear voices
and laughter and the click of balls from the billiard-room. Her mother and
Palliser laughed the most, but she knew the sound of her mother's voice would
cease soon, because she would come back to her. She knew she would not leave
her long, and she knew the kind of scene they would pass through together when
she returned. The old things would be said, the old arguments used, but a new
one would be added. It was a pleasant thing to wait here, knowing that it was
coming, and that for all her fierce pride and fierce spirit she had no defense.
It was at once horrible and ridiculous that she must sit and listen -- and
stare at the growing wall. It was as she caught her breath against the choking
swell of tears that she heard Lady Mallowe returning. She came in with an
actual sweep across the room. Her society air had fled, and she was unadornedly
furious when she stopped before Joan's chair. For a few seconds she actually
glared; then she broke forth in a suppressed undertone:
"Come into the
billiard-room. I command it!"
Joan lifted her eyes
from her book. Her voice was as low as her mother's, but steadier.
"No," she
answered.
"Is this conduct
to continue? Is it?" Lady Mallowe panted.
"Yes," said
Joan, and laid her book on the table near her. There was nothing else to say.
Words made things worse.
Lady Mallowe had lost
her head, but she still spoke in the suppressed voice.
"You shall behave
yourself!" she cried, under her breath, and actually made a passionate
half-start toward her. "You violent-natured virago! The very look on your
face is enough to drive one mad!"
"I know I am violent-natured,"
said Joan. "But don't you think it wise to remember that you cannot make
the kind of scene here that you can in your own house? We are a bad- tempered
pair, and we behave rather like fishwives when we are in a rage. But when we are
guests in other people's houses -- "
Lady Mallowe's temper
was as elemental as any Billingsgate could provide.
"You think you can
take advantage of that!" she said. "Don't trust yourself too far. Do
you imagine that just when all might go well for me I will allow you to spoil
everything?"
"How can I spoil
everything?"
"By behaving as
you have been behaving since we came here -- refusing to make a home for
yourself; by hanging round my neck so that it will appear that any one who
takes me must take you also."
"There are
servants outside," Joan warned her.
"You shall not
stop me!" cried Lady Mallowe.
"You cannot stop
yourself," said Joan. "That is the worst of it. It is bad enough when
we stand and hiss at each other in a stage whisper; but when you lose control
over yourself and raise your voice -- "
"I came in here to
tell you that this is your last chance. I shall never give you another. Do you
know how old you are?"
"I shall soon be
twenty-seven," Joan answered. "I wish I were a hundred. Then it would
all be over."
"But it will not
be over for years and years and years," her mother flung back at her.
"Have you forgotten that the very rags you wear are not paid for?"
"No, I have not
forgotten." The scene was working itself up on the old lines, as Joan had
known it would. Her mother never failed to say the same things, every time such
a scene took place.
"You will get no
more such rags -- paid or unpaid for. What do you expect to do? You don't know
how to work, and if you did no decent woman would employ you. You are too
good-looking and too bad-tempered."
Joan knew she was
perfectly right. Knowing it, she remained silent, and her silence added to her
mother's helpless rage. She moved a step nearer to her and flung the javelin
which she always knew would strike deep.
"You have made
yourself a laughing-stock for all London for years. You are mad about a man who
disgraced and ruined himself."
She saw the javelin
quiver as it struck; but Joan's voice as it answered her had a quality of low
and deadly steadiness.
"You have said
that a thousand times, and you will say it another thousand -- though you know
the story was a lie and was proved to be one."
Lady Mallowe knew her
way thoroughly.
"Who remembers the
denials? What the world remembers is that Jem Temple Barholm was stamped as a
cheat and a trickster. No one has time to remember the other thing. He is dead
-- dead! When a man+'s dead it+'s too late."
She was desperate
enough to drive her javelin home deeper than she had ever chanced to drive it
before. The truth -- the awful truth she uttered shook Joan from head to foot.
She sprang up and stood before her in heart-wrung fury.
"Oh! You are a
hideously cruel woman!" she cried. "They say even tigers care for
their young! But you -- you can say that to me. `When a man+'s dead, it+'s too
late.' "
"It is too late --
it is too late!" Lady Mallowe persisted. Why had not she struck this note
before? It was breaking her will: "I would say anything to bring you to
your senses."
Joan began to move
restlessly to and fro.
"Oh, what a fool I
am!" she exclaimed. "As if you could understand -- as if you could
care!"
Struggle as she might
to be defiant, she was breaking, Lady Mallowe repeated to herself. She followed
her as a hunter might have followed a young leopardess with a wound in its
flank.
"I came here
because it is your last chance. Palliser knew what he was saying when he made a
joke of it just now. He knew it was+n't a joke. You might have been the Duchess
of Merthshire; you might have been Lady St. Maur, with a husband with millions.
And here you are. You know what+'s before you -- when I am out of the
trap."
Joan laughed. It was a
wild little laugh, and she felt there was no sense in it.
"I might apply for
a place in Miss Alicia's Home for Decayed Gentlewomen," she said.
Lady Mallowe nodded her
head fiercely.
"Apply, then.
There will be no place for you in the home I am going to live in," she
retorted.
Joan ceased moving
about. She was about to hear the one argument that was new.
"You may as well
tell me," she said, wearily.
"I have had a
letter from Sir Moses Monaldini. He is to be at Broome Haughton. He is going
there purposely to meet me. What he writes can mean only one thing. He means to
ask me to marry him. I+'m your mother, and I+'m nearly twenty years older than
you; but you see that I+'m out of the trap first."
"I knew you would
be," answered Joan.
"He detests
you," Lady Mallowe went on. "He will not hear of your living with us
-- or even near us. He says you are old enough to take care of yourself. Take
my advice. I am doing you a good turn in giving it. This New York newsboy is
mad over you. If he had+n't been we should have been bundled out of the house
before this. He never has spoken to a lady before in his life, and he feels as
if you were a goddess. Go into the billiard-room this instant, and do all a
woman can. Go!" And she actually stamped her foot on the carpet.
Joan's thunder-colored
eyes seemed to grow larger as she stared at her. Her breast lifted itself, and
her face slowly turned pale. Perhaps -- she thought it wildly -- people
sometimes did die of feelings like this.
"He would crawl at
your feet," her mother went on, pursuing what she felt sure was her
advantage. She was so sure of it that she added words only a fool or a woman
half hysteric with rage would have added. "You might live in the very
house you would have lived in with Jem Temple Barholm, on the income he could
have given you."
She saw the crassness
of her blunder the next moment. If she had had an advantage, she had lost it.
Wickedly, without a touch of mirth, Joan laughed in her face.
"Jem's house and
Jem's money -- and the New York newsboy in his shoes," she flung at her.
"T. Tembarom to live with until one lay down on one's deathbed. T.
Tembarom!"
Suddenly, something was
giving way in her, Lady Mallowe thought again. Joan slipped into a chair and
dropped her head and hidden face on the table.
"Oh! Mother!
Mother!" she ended. "Oh! Jem! Jem!"
Was she sobbing or
trying to choke sobbing back? There was no time to be lost. Her mother had
never known a scene to end in this way before.
"Crying!"
there was absolute spite in her voice. "That shows you know what you are
in for, at all events. But I+'ve said my last word. What does it matter to me,
after all? You+'re in the trap. I+'m not. Get out as best you can. I+'ve done
with you."
She turned her back and
went out of the room -- as she had come into it -- with a sweep Joan would have
smiled at as rather vulgar if she had seen it. As a child in the nursery, she
had often seen that her ladyship was vulgar.
But she did not see the
sweep because her face was hidden. Something in her had broken this time, as
her mother had felt. That bitter, sordid truth, driven home as it had been, had
done it. Who had time to remember denials, or lies proved to be lies? Nobody in
the world. Who had time to give to the defense of a dead man? There was not
time enough to give to living ones. It was true -- true! When a man is dead, it
is too late. The wall had built itself until it reached her sky; but it was not
the wall she bent her head and sobbed over. It was that suddenly she had seen
again Jem's face as he had stood with slow-growing pallor, and looked round at
the ring of eyes which stared at him; Jem's face as he strode by her without a
glance and went out of the room. She forgot everything else on earth. She
forgot where she was. She was eighteen again, and she sobbed in her arms as
eighteen sobs when its heart is torn from it.
"Oh Jem!
Jem!" she cried. "If you were only in the same world with me! If you
were just in the same world!"
She had forgotten all
else, indeed. She forgot too long. She did not know how long. It seemed that no
more than a few minutes had passed before she was without warning struck with
the shock of feeling that some one was in the room with her, standing near her,
looking at her. She had been mad not to remember that exactly this thing would
be sure to happen, by some abominable chance. Her movement as she rose was
almost violent, she could not hold herself still, and her face was horribly wet
with shameless, unconcealable tears. Shameless she felt them -- indecent -- a
sort of nudity of the soul. If it had been a servant who had intruded, or if it
had been Palliser it would have been intolerable enough. But it was T. Tembarom
who confronted her with his common face, moved mysteriously by some feeling she
resented even more than she resented his presence. He was too grossly ignorant
to know that a man of breeding, having entered by chance, would have turned and
gone away, professing not to have seen. He seemed to think -- the dolt! -- that
he must make some apology.
"Say! Lady
Joan!" he began. "I beg your pardon. I did+n't want to butt in."
"Then go
away," she commanded. "Instantly -- instantly!"
She knew he must see
that she spoke almost through her teeth in her effort to control her sobbing
breath. But he made no move toward leaving her. He even drew nearer, looking at
her in a sort of meditative, obstinate way.
"N-no," he
replied, deliberately. "I guess -- I won't."
"You won't?"
Lady Joan repeated after him. "Then I will."
He made a stride
forward and laid his hand on her arm.
"No. Not on your
life. You won't, either -- if I can help it. And you're going to let me help
it."
Almost any one but
herself -- any one, at least, who did not resent his very existence -- would
have felt the drop in his voice which suddenly struck the note of boyish, friendly
appeal in the last sentence. "You're going to let me," he repeated.
She stood looking down
at the daring, unconscious hand on her arm.
"I suppose,"
she said, with cutting slowness, "that you do not even know that you are
insolent. Take your hand away," in arrogant command.
He removed it with an
unabashed half-smile.
"I beg your
pardon," he said. "I did+n't even know I put it there. It was a break
-- but I wanted to keep you."
That he not only wanted
to keep her, but intended to do so was apparent. His air was neither rough nor
brutal, but he had ingeniously placed himself in the outlet between the big
table and the way to the door. He put his hands in his pockets in his vulgar,
unconscious way, and watched her.
"Say, Lady
Joan!" he broke forth, in the frank outburst of a man who wants to get
something over. "I should be a fool if I did+n't see that you+'re up
against it -- hard! What+'s the matter?" His voice dropped again.
There was something in
the drop this time which -- perhaps because of her recent emotion -- sounded to
her almost as if he were asking the question with the protecting sympathy of
the tone one would use in speaking to a child. How dare he! But it came home to
her that Jem had once said "What+'s the matter?" to her in the same
way.
"Do you think it
likely that I should confide in you?" she said, and inwardly quaked at the
memory as she said it.
"No," he
answered, considering the matter gravely. "It's not likely -- the way
things look to you now. But if you knew me better perhaps it would be
likely."
"I once explained
to you that I do not intend to know you better," she gave answer.
He nodded acquiescently.
"Yes. I got on to
that. And it+'s because it+'s up to me that I came out here to tell you
something I want you to know before you go away. I+'m going to confide in
you."
"Cannot even you
see that I am not in the mood to accept confidences?" she exclaimed.
"Yes, I can. But
you+'re going to accept this one," steadily. "No," as she made a
swift movement, "I+'m not going to clear the way till I+'ve done."
"I insist!"
she cried. "If you were -- "
He put out his hand,
but not to touch her.
"I know what
you+'re going to say. If I were a gentleman -- Well, I+'m not laying claim to
that -- but I+'m a sort of a man, anyhow, though you may+n't think it. And
you're going to listen."
She began to stare at
him. It was not the ridiculous boyish drop in his voice which arrested her
attention. It was a fantastic, incongruous, wholly different thing. He had
suddenly dropped his slouch and stood upright. Did he realize that he had slung
his words at her as if they were an order given with the ring of authority?
"I+'ve not bucked
against anything you+'ve said or done since you+'ve been here," he went
on, speaking fast and grimly. "I did+n't mean to. I had my reasons. There
were things that I+'d have given a good deal to say to you and ask you about,
but you would+n't let me. You would+n't give me a chance to square things for
you -- if they could be squared. You threw me down every time I tried!"
He was too wildly
incomprehensible with his changes from humanness to folly. Remembering what he
had attempted to say on the day he had followed her in the avenue, she was
inflamed again.
"What in the name
of New York slang does that mean?" she demanded.
"Never mind New
York," he answered, cool as well as grim. "A fellow that+'s learned
slang in the streets has learned something else as well. He+'s learned to keep
his eyes open. He+'s on to a way of seeing things. And what I+'ve seen is that
you're so doggone miserable that -- that you're almost down and out."
This time she spoke to
him in the voice with the quality of deadliness in it which she had used to her
mother.
"Do you think that
because you are in your own house you can be as intrusively insulting as you
choose?" she said.
"No, I
don't," he answered. "What I think is quite different. I think that
if a man has a house of his own, and there+'s any one in big trouble under the
roof of it -- a woman most of all -- he+'s a cheap skate if he don't get busy
and try to help -- just plain, straight help."
He saw in her eyes all
her concentrated disdain of him, but he went on, still obstinate and cool and
grim.
"I guess `help' is
too big a word just yet. That may come later, and it may+n't. What I+'m going
to try at now is making it easier for you -- just easier."
Her contemptuous
gesture registered no impression on him as he paused a moment and looked
fixedly at her.
"You just hate me,
don't you?" It was a mere statement which could+n't have been more
impersonal to himself if he had been made of wood. "That's all right. I
seem like a low- down intruder to you. Well, that's all right, too. But what
ain't all right is what your mother has set you on to thinking about me. You+'d
never have thought it yourself. You+'d have known better."
"What,"
fiercely, "is that?"
"That I+'m mutt
enough to have a mash on you."
The common slangy
crassness of it was a kind of shock. She caught her breath and merely stared at
him. But he was not staring at her; he was simply looking straight into her
face, and it amazingly flashed upon her that the extraordinary words were so
entirely unembarrassed and direct that they were actually not offensive.
He was merely telling
her something in his own way, not caring the least about his own effect, but
absolutely determined that she should hear and understand it.
Her caught breath ended
in something which was like a half- laugh. His queer, sharp, incomprehensible
face, his queer, unmoved voice were too extraordinarily unlike anything she had
ever seen or heard before.
"I don't want to
be brash -- and what I want to say may seem kind of that way to you. But it
ain't. Anyhow, I guess it+'ll relieve your mind. Lady Joan, you+'re a looker --
you+'re a beaut from Beautville. If I were your kind, and things were
different, I+'d be crazy about you -- crazy! But I+'m not your kind -- and
things are different." He drew a step nearer still to her in his
intentness. "They+'re this different. Why, Lady Joan! I+'m dead stuck on
another girl!"
She caught her breath
again, leaning forward.
"Another --
!"
"She says she+'s
not a lady; she threw me down just because all this darned money came to
me," he hastened on, and suddenly he was imperturbable no longer, but
flushed and boyish, and more of New York than ever. "She's a little bit of
a quiet thing and she drops her h's, but gee -- ! You+'re a looker -- you+'re a
queen and she+'s not. But Little Ann Hutchinson -- Why, Lady Joan, as far as
this boy+'s concerned" -- and he oddly touched himself on the breast --
"she makes you look like thirty cents."
Joan quickly sat down
on the chair she had just left. She rested an elbow on the table and shaded her
face with her hand. She was not laughing; she scarcely knew what she was doing
or feeling.
"You are in love
with Ann Hutchinson," she said, in a low voice.
"Am I?" he
answered hotly. "Well, I should smile!" He disdained to say more.
Then she began to know
what she felt. There came back to her in flashes scenes from the past weeks in
which she had done her worst by him; in which she had swept him aside, loathed
him, set her feet on him, used the devices of an ingenious demon to discomfit
and show him at his poorest and least ready. And he had not been giving a
thought to the thing for which she had striven to punish him. And he plainly
did not even hate her. His mind was clear, as water is clear. He had come back
to her this evening to do her a good turn -- a good turn. Knowing what she was
capable of in the way of arrogance and villainous temper, he had determined to
do her -- in spite of herself -- a good turn.
"I don't
understand you," she faltered.
"I know you don't.
But it+'s only because I+'m so dead easy to understand. There+'s nothing to
find out. I+'m just friendly -- friendly -- that+'s all."
"You would have
been friends with me!" she exclaimed. "You would have told me, and I
would+n't let you! Oh!" with an impulsive flinging out of her hand to him,
"you good -- good fellow!"
"Good be
darned!" he answered, taking the hand at once.
"You are good to
tell me! I have behaved like a devil to you. But oh! if you only knew!"
His face became mature
again; but he took a most informal seat on the edge of the table near her.
"I do know -- part
of it. That+'s why I+'ve been trying to be friends with you all the time."
He said his next words deliberately. "If I was the woman Jem Temple
Barholm had loved would+n't it have driven me mad to see another man in his
place -- and remember what was done to him. I never even saw him, but, good
God!" -- she saw his hand clench itself -- "when I think of it I want
to kill somebody! I want to kill half a dozen. Why did+n't they know it
could+n't be true of a fellow like that!"
She sat up stiffly and
watched him.
"Do -- you -- feel
like that -- about him?"
"Do I!"
red-hotly. "There were men there that knew him! There were women there
that knew him! Why was+n't there just one to stand by him? A man that+'s been
square all his life does+n't turn into a card-sharp in a night. Damn fools! I
beg your pardon," hastily. And then, as hastily again: "No, I mean
it. Damn fools!"
"Oh!" she
gasped, just once.
Her passionate eyes
were suddenly blinded with tears. She caught at his clenched hand and dragged
it to her, letting her face drop on it and crying like a child.
The way he took her
utter breaking down was just like him and like no one else. He put the other
hand on her shoulder and spoke to her exactly as he had spoken to Miss Alicia
on that first afternoon.
"Don't you mind
me, Lady Joan," he said. "Don't you mind me a bit. I+'ll turn my
back. I+'ll go into the billiard- room and keep them playing until you get away
up-stairs. Now we understand each other, it+'ll be better for both of us."
"No, don't go!
Don't!" she begged. "It is so wonderful to find some one who sees the
cruelty of it." She spoke fast and passionately. "No one would listen
to any defense of him. My mother simply raved when I said what you are
saying."
"Do you want"
-- he put it to her with a curious comprehending of her emotion -- "to
talk about him? Would it do you good?"
"Yes! Yes! I have
never talked to any one. There has been no one to listen."
"Talk all you
want," he answered, with immense gentleness. "I+'m here."
"I can't
understand it even now, but he would not see me!" she broke out. "I
was half mad. I wrote, and he would not answer. I went to his chambers when I
heard he was going to leave England. I went to beg him to take me with him,
married or unmarried. I would have gone on my knees to him. He was gone! Oh,
why? Why?
"You did+n't think
he'd gone because he did+n't love you?" he put it to her quite literally
and unsentimentally. "You knew better than that?"
"How could I be
sure of anything! When he left the room that awful night he would not look at
me! He would not look at me!"
"Since I+'ve been
here I+'ve been reading a lot of novels, and I+'ve found out a lot of things
about fellows that are not the common, practical kind. Now, he was+n't. He+'d
lived pretty much like a fellow in a novel, I guess. What's struck me about
that sort is that they think they have to make noble sacrifices, and they+'ll
just walk all over a woman because they won't do anything to hurt her. There+'s
not a bit of sense in it, but that was what he was doing. He believed he was
doing the square thing by you -- and you may bet your life it hurt him like
hell. I beg your pardon -- but that+'s the word -- just plain hell."
"I was only a
girl. He was like iron. He went away alone. He was killed, and when he was dead
the truth was told."
"That+'s what
I+'ve remembered" -- quite slowly -- "every time I+'ve looked at you.
By gee! I+'d have stood anything from a woman that had suffered as much as
that."
It made her cry -- his
genuineness -- and she did not care in the least that the tears streamed down
her cheeks. How he had stood things! How he had borne, in that odd,
unimpressive way, insolence and arrogance for which she ought to have been
beaten and blackballed by decent society! She could scarcely bear it.
"Oh! to think it
should have been you," she wept, "just you who understood!"
"Well," he
answered speculatively, "I might+n't have understood as well if it had+n't
been for Ann. By jings! I used to lie awake at night sometimes thinking
`supposing it had been Ann and me!' I+'d sort of work it out as it might have
happened in New York -- at the office of the Sunday Earth. Supposing some
fellow that+'d had a grouch against me had managed it so that Galton thought
I+'d been getting away with money that did+n't belong to me -- fixing up my
expense account, or worse. And Galton would+n't listen to what I said, and
fired me; and I could+n't get a job anywhere else because I was down and out
for good. And nobody would listen. And I was killed without clearing myself.
And Little Ann was left to stand it -- Little Ann! Old Hutchinson would+n't
listen, I know that. And it would be all shut up burning in her big little
heart -- burning. And T. T. dead, and not a word to say for himself.
Jehoshaphat!" -- taking out his handkerchief and touching his forehead --
"it used to make the cold sweat start out on me. It+'s doing it now. Ann
and me might have been Jem and you. That+'s why I understood."
He put out his hand and
caught hers and frankly squeezed it -- squeezed it hard; and the unconventional
clutch was a wonderful thing to her.
"It+'s all right
now, ain't it?" he said. "We+'ve got it straightened out. You'll not
be afraid to come back here if your mother wants you to." He stopped for a
moment and then went on with something of hesitation: "We don't want to
talk about your mother. We can't. But I understand her, too. Folks are
different from each other in their ways. She+'s different from you. I+'ll --
I+'ll straighten it out with her if you like."
"Nothing will need
straightening out after I tell her that you are going to marry Little Ann
Hutchinson," said Joan, with a half-smile. "And that you were engaged
to her before you saw me."
"Well, that does
sort of finish things up, does+n't it?" said T. Tembarom.
He looked at her so
speculatively for a moment after this that she wondered whether he had
something more to say. He had.
"There+'s
something I want to ask you," he ventured.
"Ask
anything."
"Do you know any
one -- just any one -- who has a photo -- just any old photo -- of Jem Temple
Barholm?"
She was rather puzzled.
"Yes. I know a
woman who has worn one for nearly eight years. Do you want to see it?"
"I+'d give a good
deal to," was his answer.
She took a flat locket
from her dress and handed it to him.
"Women don't wear
lockets in these days." He could barely hear her voice because it was so
low. "But I+'ve never taken it off. I want him near my heart. It+'s
Jem!"
He held it on the palm
of his hand and stood under the light, studying it as if he wanted to be sure
he would+n't forget it.
"It+'s -- sorter
like that picture of Miles Hugo, ain't it?" he suggested.
"Yes. People
always said so. That was why you found me in the picture-gallery the first time
we met."
"I knew that was
the reason -- and I knew I+'d made a break when I butted in," he answered.
Then, still looking at the photograph, "You+'d know this face again most
anywhere you saw it, I guess."
"There are no
faces like it anywhere," said Joan.
"I guess that+'s
so," he replied. "And it+'s one that would+n't change much either.
Thank you, Lady Joan."
He handed back the
picture, and she put out her hand again.
"I think I+'ll go
to my room now," she said. "You+'ve done a strange thing to me.
You+'ve taken nearly all the hatred and bitterness out of my heart. I shall
want to come back here whether my mother comes or not -- I shall want to."
"The sooner the
quicker," he said. "And so long as I+'m here I+'ll be ready and
waiting."
"Don't go
away," she said softly. "I shall need you."
"Isn't that great?"
he cried, flushing delightedly. "Isn't it just great that we've got things
straightened so that you can say that. Gee! This is a queer old world! There+'s
such a lot to do in it, and so few hours in the day. Seems like there ain't
time to stop long enough to hate anybody and keep a grouch on. A fellow's got
to keep hustling not to miss the things worth while."
The liking in her eyes
was actually wistful.
"That+'s your way
of thinking, is+n't it?" she said. "Teach it to me if you can. I wish
you could. Good-night." She hesitated a second. "God bless you!"
she added, quite suddenly -- almost fantastic as the words sounded to her. That
she, Joan Fayre, should be calling down devout benisons on the head of T.
Tembarom -- T. Tembarom!
Her mother was in her
room when she reached it. She had come up early to look over her possessions --
and Joan's -- before she began her packing. The bed, the chairs, and tables were
spread with evening, morning, and walking-dresses, and the millinery collected
from their combined wardrobes. She was examining anxiously a lace appliqued and
embroidered white coat, and turned a slightly flushed face toward the opening
door.
"I am going over
your things as well as my own," she said. "I shall take what I can
use. You will require nothing in London. You will require nothing anywhere in
future. What is the matter?" she said sharply, as she saw her daughter's
face.
Joan came forward feeling
it a strange thing that she was not in the mood to fight -- to lash out and be
glad to do it.
"Captain Palliser
told me as I came up that Mr. Temple Barholm had been talking to you," her
mother went on. "He heard you having some sort of scene as he passed the
door. As you have made your decision, of course I know I need+n't hope that
anything has happened."
"What has happened
has nothing to do with my decision. He was+n't waiting for that," Joan
answered her. "We were both entirely mistaken, Mother."
"What are you
talking about?" cried Lady Mallowe, but she temporarily laid the white
coat on a chair. "What do you mean by mistaken?"
"He does+n't want
me -- he never did," Joan answered again. A shadow of a smile hovered over
her face, and there was no derision in it, only a warming recollection of his
earnestness when he had said the words she quoted: "He is what they call
in New York `dead stuck on another girl.' "
Lady Mallowe sat down
on the chair that held the white coat, and she did not push the coat aside.
"He told you that
in his vulgar slang!" she gasped it out. "You -- you ought to have
struck him dead with your answer."
"Except poor Jem
Temple Barholm," was the amazing reply she received, "he is the only
friend I ever had in my life."
IT was business of
serious importance which was to bring Captain Palliser's visit to a close. He
explained it perfectly to Miss Alicia a day or so after Lady Mallowe and her
daughter left them. He had lately been most amiable in his manner toward Miss
Alicia, and had given her much valuable information about companies and stocks.
He rather unexpectedly found it imperative that he should go to London and
Berlin to "see people" -- dealers in great financial schemes who were
deeply interested in solid business speculations, such as his own, which were
fundamentally different from all others in the impeccable firmness of their
foundations.
"I suppose he will
be very rich some day," Miss Alicia remarked the first morning she and T.
Tembarom took their breakfast alone together after his departure. "It
would frighten me to think of having as much money as he seems likely to have
quite soon."
"It would scare me
to death," said Tembarom. She knew he was making a sort of joke, but she
thought the point of it was her tremor at the thought of great fortune.
"He seemed to
think that it would be an excellent thing for you to invest in -- I+'m not sure
whether it was the India Rubber Tree Company, or the mahogany forests or the
copper mines that have so much gold and silver mixed in them that it will pay
for the expense of the digging -- "she went on.
"I guess it was
the whole lot," put in Tembarom.
"Perhaps it was.
They are all going to make everybody so rich that it is quite bewildering. He
is very clever in business matters. And so kind. He even said that if I really
wished it he might be able to invest my income for me and actually treble it in
a year. But of course I told him that my income was your generous gift to me,
and that it was far more than sufficient for my needs."
Tembarom put down his
coffee-cup so suddenly to look at her that she was fearful that she had
appeared to do Captain Palliser some vague injustice.
"I am sure he
meant to be most obliging, dear," she explained. "I was really quite
touched. He said most sympathetically and delicately that when women were
unmarried, and unaccustomed to investment, sometimes a business man could be of
use to them. He forgot" -- affectionately -- "that I had you."
Tembarom regarded her with
tender curiosity. She often opened up vistas for him as he himself opened them
for the Duke of Stone.
"If you had+n't
had me, would you have let him treble your income in a year?" he asked.
Her expression was that
of a soft, woodland rabbit or a trusting spinster dove.
"Well, of course,
if one were quite alone in the world and had only a small income, it would be
nice to have it wonderfully added to in such a short time," she answered.
"But it was his friendly solicitude which touched me. I have not been
accustomed to such interested delicacy on the part of -- of gentlemen."
Her hesitance before the last word being the result of training, which had made
her feel that it was a little bold for "ladies" to refer quite openly
to "gentlemen."
"You sometimes
read in the newspapers," said Tembarom, buttering his toast, "about
ladies who are all alone in the world with a little income, but they+'re not
often left alone with it long. It+'s like you said -- you+'ve got me; but if
the time ever comes when you have+n't got me just you make a dead-sure thing of
it that you don't let any solicitous business gentleman treble your income in a
year. If it+'s an income that comes to more than five cents, don't you hand it
over to be made into fifteen. Five cents is a heap better -- just plain
five."
"Temple!"
gasped Miss Alicia. "You -- you surely cannot mean that you do not think
Captain Palliser is -- sincere!"
Tembarom laughed
outright, his most hilarious and comforting laugh. He had no intention of
enlightening her in such a manner as would lead her at once to behold pictures
of him as the possible victim of appalling catastrophes. He liked her too well
as she was.
"Sincere?" he
said. "He+'s sincere down to the ground -- in what he's reaching after.
But he's not going to treble your income, nor mine. If he ever makes that offer
again, you just tell him I+'m interested, and that I'll talk it over with
him."
"I could not help
saying to him that I did+n't think you could want any more money when you had
so much," she added, "but he said one never knew what might happen.
He was greatly interested when I told him you had once said the very same thing
yourself."
Their breakfast was at
an end, and he got up, laughing again, as he came to her end of the table and
put his arm around her shoulders in the unconventional young caress she adored
him for.
"It+'s nice to be
by ourselves again for a while," he said. "Let us go for a walk
together. Put on the little bonnet and dress that are the color of a mouse.
Those little duds just get me. You look so pretty in them."
The sixteen-year-old
blush ran up to the roots of her gray side-ringlets. Just imagine his
remembering the color of her dress and bonnet, and thinking that anything could
make her look pretty! She was overwhelmed with innocent and grateful confusion.
There really was no one else in the least like him.
"You do look well,
ma'am," Rose said, when she helped her to dress. "You+'ve got such a
nice color, and that tiny bit of old rose Mrs. Mellish put in the bonnet does
bring it out."
"I wonder if it is
wrong of me to be so pleased," Miss Alicia thought. "I must make it a
subject of prayer, and ask to be aided to conquer a haughty and vain-glorious
spirit."
She was pathetically
serious, having been trained to a view of the Great First Cause as figuratively
embodied in the image of a gigantic, irascible, omnipotent old gentleman,
especially wrought to fury by feminine follies connected with becoming
headgear.
"It has sometimes
even seemed to me that our Heavenly Father has a special objection to
ladies," she had once timorously confessed to Tembarom. "I suppose it
is because we are so much weaker than men, and so much more given to vanity and
petty vices."
He had caught her in
his arms and actually hugged her that time. Their intimacy had reached the
point where the affectionate outburst did not alarm her.
"Say!" he had
laughed. "It+'s not the men who are going to have the biggest pull with
the authorities when folks try to get into the place where things are evened
up. What I+'m going to work my passage with is a list of the few `ladies' I+'ve
known. You and Ann will be at the head of it. I shall just slide it in at the
box-office window and say, `Just look over this, will you? These were friends
of mine, and they were mighty good to me. I guess if they did+n't turn me down,
you need+n't. I know they+'re in here. Reserved seats. I+'m not expecting to be
put with them but if I+'m allowed to hang around where they are that+'ll be
heaven enough for me."'
"I know you don't
mean to be irreverent, dear Temple," she gasped. "I am quite sure you
don't! It is -- it is only your American way of expressing your kind thoughts.
And of course" -- quite hastily -- "the Almighty must understand
Americans -- as he made so many." And half frightened though she was, she
patted his arm with the warmth of comfort in her soul and moisture in her eyes.
Somehow or other, he was always so comforting.
He held her arm as they
took their walk. She had become used to that also, and no longer thought it
odd. It was only one of the ways he had of making her feel that she was being
taken care of. They had not been able to have many walks together since the
arrival of the visitors, and this occasion was at once a cause of relief and
inward rejoicing. The entire truth was that she had not been altogether happy
about him of late. Sometimes, when he was not talking and saying amusing New
York things which made people laugh, he seemed almost to forget where he was
and to be thinking of something which baffled and tried him. The way in which
he pulled himself together when he realized that any one was looking at him
was, to her mind, the most disturbing feature of his fits of abstraction. It
suggested that if he really had a trouble it was a private one on which he
would not like her to intrude. Naturally, her adoring eyes watched him oftener
than he knew. and she tried to find plausible and not too painful reasons for
his mood. He always made light of his unaccustomedness to his new life but
perhaps it made him feel more unrestful than he would admit.
As they walked through
the park and the village, her heart was greatly warmed by the way in which each
person they met greeted him. They greeted no one else in the same way, and yet
it was difficult to explain what the difference was. They liked him -- really
liked him, though how he had overcome their natural distrust of his newsboy and
bootblack record no one but himself knew. In fact, she had reason to believe
that even he himself did not know -- had indeed never asked himself. They had
gradually begun to like him, though none of them had ever accused him of being
a gentleman according to their own acceptance of the word. Every man touched
his cap or forehead with a friendly grin which spread itself the instant he
caught sight of him. Grin and salute were synchronous. It was as if there were
some extremely human joke between them. Miss Alicia had delightedly remembered
a remark the Duke of Stone had made to her on his return from one of their long
drives
"He is the most
popular man in the county," he had chuckled. "If war broke out and he
were in the army, he could raise a regiment at his own gates which would follow
him wheresoever he chose to lead it -- if it were into hottest Hades."
Tembarom was rather
silent during the first part of their walk and when he spoke it was of Captain
Palliser.
"He's a fellow
that's got lots of curiosity. I guess he's asked you more questions than he+'s
asked me," he began at last, and he looked at her interestedly, though she
was not aware of it.
"I thought --
" she hesitated slightly because she did not wish to be critical --
"I sometimes thought he asked me too many."
"What was he
trying to get on to mostly?"
"He asked so many
things about you and your life in New York -- but more, I think, about you and
Mr. Strangeways. He was really quite persistent once or twice about poor Mr
Strangeways."
"What did he ask?"
"He asked if I had
seen him, and if you had preferred that I should not. He calls him your
Mystery, and thinks your keeping him here is so extraordinary."
"I guess it is --
the way he+'d look at it," Tembarom dropped in.
"He was so anxious
to find out what he looked like. He asked how old he was and how tall, and
whether he was quite mad or only a little, and where you picked him up, and
when, and what reason you gave for not putting him in some respectable asylum.
I could only say that I really knew nothing about him, and that I had+n't seen
him because he had a dread of strangers and I was a little timid."
She hesitated again.
"I wonder,"
she said, still hesitating even after her pause, I wonder if I ought to mention
a rather rude thing I saw him do twice?"
"Yes, you
ought," Tembarom answered promptly; "I+'ve a reason for wanting to
know."
"It was such a
singular thing to do -- in the circumstances," she went on obediently.
"He knew, as we all know, that Mr. Strangeways must not be disturbed. One
afternoon I saw him walk slowly backward and forward before the west room
window. He had something in his hand and kept looking up. That was what first
attracted my attention -- his queer way of looking up. Quite suddenly he threw
something which rattled on the panes of glass -- it sounded like gravel or
small pebbles. I could+n't help believing he thought Mr. Strangeways would be
startled into coming to the window."
Tembarom cleared his
throat.
"He did that
twice," he said. "Pearson caught him at it, though Palliser did+n't
know he did. He'd have done it three times, or more than that, perhaps, but I
casually mentioned in the smoking-room one night that some curious fool of a
gardener- boy had thrown some stones and frightened Strangeways, and that
Pearson and I were watching for him, and that if I caught him I was going to
knock his block off -- bing! He did+n't do it again. Darned fool! What does he
think he's after?"
"I am afraid he is
rather -- I hope it is not wrong to say so -- but he is rather given to gossip.
And I dare say that the temptation to find something quite new to talk about
was a great one. So few new things happen in the neighborhood, and as the duke
says, people are so bored -- and he is bored himself."
He+ll be more bored if
he tries it again when he comes back, remarked Tembarom.
Miss Alicia's surprised
expression made him laugh.
"Do you think he
will come back?" she exclaimed. "After such a long visit?"
"Oh, yes, he+'ll
come back. He+'ll come back as often as he can until he+'s got a chunk of my
income to treble -- or until I+'ve done with him."
"Until you+'ve
done with him, dear?" inquiringly.
Oh! well," --
casually -- "I+'ve a sort of idea that he may tell me something I+'d like
to know. I+'m not sure -- I+'m only guessing. But even if he knows it he won't
tell me until he gets good and ready and thinks I don't want to hear it. What
he thinks he+'s going to get at by prowling around is something he can get me in
the crack of the door with."
"Temple" --
imploringly -- "are you afraid he wishes to do you an injury?"
"No, I+'m not
afraid. I+'m just waiting to see him take a chance on it," and he gave her
arm an affectionate squeeze against his side. He was always immensely moved by
her little alarms for him. They reminded him, in a remote way, of Little Ann
coming down Mrs. Bowse's staircase bearing with her the tartan comforter.
How could any one --
how could any one want to do him an injury? she began to protest pathetically.
But he would not let her go on. He would not talk any more of Captain Palliser
or allow her to talk of him. Indeed, her secret fear was that he really knew
something he did not wish her to be troubled by, and perhaps thought he had
said too much. He began to make jokes and led her to other subjects. He asked
her to go to the Hibblethwaites' cottage and pay a visit to Tummas. He had
learned to understand his accepted privileges in making of cottage visits by
this time; and when he clicked any wicket-gate the door was open before he had
time to pass up the wicket-path. They called at several cottages, and he nodded
at the windows of others where faces appeared as he passed by.
They had a happy
morning together, and he took her back to Temple Barholm beaming, and
forgetting Captain Palliser's existence, for the time, at least. In the
afternoon they drove out together, and after dining they read the last copy of
the Sunday Earth, which had arrived that day. He found quite an interesting
paragraph about Mr. Hutchinson and the invention. Little Miss Hutchinson was
referred to most flatteringly by the writer, who almost inferred that she was
responsible not only for the inventor but for the invention itself. Miss Alicia
felt quite proud of knowing so prominent a character, and wondered what it
could be like to read about oneself in a newspaper.
About nine o'clock he
laid his sheet of the Earth down and spoke to her.
"I+'m going to ask
you to do me a favor," he said. I could+n't ask it if we were+n't alone
like this. I know you won't mind."
Of course she would+n't
mind. She was made happier by the mere idea of doing something for him.
"I+'m going to ask
you to go to your room rather early, he explained. "I want to try a sort
of stunt on Strangeways. I+'m going to bring him downstairs if he+'ll come.
I+'m not sure I can get him to do it; but he+'s been a heap better lately, and
perhaps I can."
"Is he so much
better as that?" she said. "Will it be safe?"
He looked as serious as
she had ever seen him look -- even a trifle more serious.
"I don't know how
much better he is," was his answer. "Sometimes you+'d think he was
almost all right. And then -- ! The doctor says that if he could get over being
afraid of leaving his room it would be a big thing for him. He wants him to go
to his place in London so that he can watch him.
"Do you think you
could persuade him to go?"
"I+'ve tried my
level best, but so far -- nothing doing."
He got up and stood
before the mantel, his back against it, his hands in his pockets.
"I+'ve found out
one thing," he said. "He+'s used to houses like this. Every now and
again he lets something out quite natural. He knew that the furniture in his
room was Jacobean -- that+'s what he called it -- and he knew it was fine
stuff. He would+n't have known that if he+'d been a piker. I+'m going to try if
he won't let out something else when he sees things here -- if he+'ll
come."
"You have such a
wonderfully reasoning mind, dear," said Miss Alicia, as she rose.
"You would have made a great detective, I+'m sure."
"If Ann had been
with him," he said, rather gloomily, "she+'d have caught on to a lot
more than I have. I don't feel very chesty about the way I+'ve managed
it."
Miss Alicia went
up-stairs shortly afterward, and half an hour later Tembarom told the footmen
in the hall that they might go to bed. The experiment he was going to make
demanded that the place should be cleared of any disturbing presence. He had
been thinking it over for some time past. He had sat in the private room of the
great nerve specialist in London and had talked it over with him. He had talked
of it with the duke on the lawn at Stone Hover. There had been a flush of color
in the older man's cheek-bones, and his eyes had, been alight as he took his
part in the discussion. He had added the touch of his own personality to it, as
always happened.
"We are having
some fine moments, my good fellow," he had said, rubbing his hands.
"This is extremely like the fourth act. I'd like to be sure what comes
next."
"I+'d like to be
sure myself," Tembarom answered. "It+'s as if a flash of lightning
came sometimes, and then things clouded up. And sometimes when I am trying
something out he+'ll get so excited that I dare+n't go on until I+'ve talked to
the doctor."
It was the excitement
he was dubious about to-night. It was not possible to be quite certain as to
the entire safety of the plan; but there might be a chance -- even a big chance
-- of wakening some cell from its deadened sleep. Sir Ormsby Gallo way had
talked to him a good deal about brain cells, and he had listened faithfully and
learned more than he could put into scientific English. Gradually, during the
past months, he had been coming upon strangely exciting hints of curious
possibilities. They had been mere hints at first, and had seemed almost absurd
in their unbelievableness. But each one had linked itself with another, and led
him on to further wondering and exploration. When Miss Alicia and Palliser had
seen that he looked absorbed and baffled, it had been because he had frequently
found himself, to use his own figures of speech, "mixed up to beat the
band." He had not known which way to turn; but he had gone on turning
because he could not escape from his own excited interest, and the inevitable
emotion roused by being caught in the whirl of a melodrama. That was what he+'d
dropped into -- a whacking big play. It had begun for him when Palford butted
in that night and told him he was a lost heir, with a fortune and an estate in
England; and the curtain had been jerking up and down ever since. But there had
been thrills in it, queer as it was. Something doing all the time, by gee!
He sat and smoked his
pipe and wished Ann were with him because he knew he was not as cool as he had
meant to be. He felt a certain tingling of excitement in his body; and this was
not the time to be excited. He waited for some minutes before he went up-stairs.
It was true that Strangeways had been much better lately. He had seemed to find
it easier to follow conversation. During the past few days, Tembarom had talked
to him in a matter-of-fact way about the house and its various belongings. He
had at last seemed to waken to an interest in the picture-gallery. Evidently he
knew something of picture-galleries and portraits, and found himself relieved
by his own clearness of thought when he talked of them.
"I feel
better," he said, two or three times. "Things seem clearer --
nearer."
"Good
business!" exclaimed Tembarom. "I told you it'd be that way. Let+'s
hold on to pictures. It won't be any time before you+'ll be remembering where
you+'ve seen some."
He had been secretly
rather strung up; but he had been very gradual in approaching his final
suggestion that some night, when everything was quiet, they might go and look
at the gallery together.
"What you need is
to get out of the way of wanting to stay in one place," he argued.
"The doctor says you+'ve got to have a change, and even going from one
room to another is a fine thing."
Strangeways had looked
at him anxiously for a few moments, even suspiciously, but his face had cleared
after the look. He drew himself up and passed his hand over his forehead.
"I believe --
perhaps he is right," he murmured.
"Sure he+'s
right!" said Tembarom. "He+'s the sort of chap who ought to know.
He+'s been made into a baronet for knowing. Sir Ormsby Galloway, by jings!
That+'s no slouch of a name. Oh, he knows, you bet your life!"
This morning when he
had seen him he had spoken of the plan again. The visitors had gone away; the
servants could be sent out of sight and hearing; they could go into the library
and smoke and he could look at the books. And then they could take a look at
the picture-gallery if he was+n't too tired. It would be a change anyhow.
To-night, as he went up
the huge staircase, Tembarom's calmness of being had not increased. He was
aware of a quickened pulse and of a slight dampness on his forehead. The dead
silence of the house added to the unusualness of things. He could not remember
ever having been so anxious before, except on the occasion when he had taken
his first day's "stuff" to Galton, and had stood watching him as he
read it. His forehead had grown damp then. But he showed no outward signs of
excitement when he entered the room and found Strangeways standing, perfectly
attired in evening dress.
Pearson, setting things
in order at the other side of the room, was taking note of him furtively over
his shoulder. Quite in the casual manner of the ordinary man, he had expressed
his intention of dressing for the evening, and Pearson had thanked his stars
for the fact that the necessary garments were at hand. From the first, he had
not infrequently asked for articles such as only the resources of a complete
masculine wardrobe could supply; and on one occasion he had suddenly wished to
dress for dinner, and the lame excuses it had been necessary to make had
disturbed him horribly instead of pacifying him. To explain that his condition
precluded the necessity of the usual appurtenances would have been out of the
question. He had been angry. What did Pearson mean? What was the matter? He had
said it over and over again, and then had sunk into a hopelessly bewildered
mood, and had sat huddled in his dressing-gown staring at the fire. Pearson had
been so harrowed by the situation that it had been his own idea to suggest to
his master that all possible requirements should be provided. There were occasions
when it appeared that the cloud over him lifted for a passing moment, and a
gleam of light recalled to him some familiar usage of his past. When he had
finished dressing, Pearson had been almost startled by the amount of effect
produced by the straight, correctly cut lines of black and white. The mere
change of clothes had suddenly changed the man himself -- had "done
something to him," Pearson put it. After his first glance at the mirror he
had straightened himself, as if recognizing the fault of his own carriage. When
he crossed the room it was with the action of a man who has been trained to
move well. The good looks, which had been almost hidden behind a veil of
uncertainty of expression and strained fearfulness, became obvious. He was
tall, and his lean limbs were splendidly hung together. His head was perfectly
set, and the bearing of his square shoulders was a soldierly thing. It was an
extraordinarily handsome man Tembarom and Pearson found themselves gazing at.
Each glanced involuntarily at the other.
"Now that+'s
first-rate! I+'m glad you feel like coming," Tembarom plunged in. He
did+n't intend to give him too much time to think.
"Thank you. It
will be a change, as you said," Strangeways answered. "One needs
change."
His deep eyes looked somewhat
deeper than usual, but his manner was that of any well-bred man doing an
accustomed thing. If he had been an ordinary guest in the house, and his host
had dropped into his room, he would have comported himself in exactly the same
way.
They went together down
the corridor as if they had passed down it together a dozen times before. On
the stairway Strangeways looked at the tapestries with the interest of a
familiarized intelligence.
"It is a beautiful
old place," he said, as they crossed the hall. "That armor was worn
by a crusader." He hesitated a moment when they entered the library, but
it was only for a moment. He went to the hearth and took the chair his host
offered him, and, lighting a cigar, sat smoking it. If T. Tembarom had chanced
to be a man of an analytical or metaphysical order of intellect he would have
found, during the past month, many things to lead him far in mental argument
concerning the weird wonder of the human mind -- of its power where its
possessor, the body, is concerned, its sometime closeness to the surface of
sentient being, its sometime remoteness. He would have known -- awed, marveling
at the blackness of the pit into which it can descend -- the unknown shades
that may enfold it and imprison its gropings. The old Duke of Stone had sat and
pondered many an hour over stories his favorite companion had related to him.
What curious and subtle processes had the queer fellow not been watching in the
closely guarded quiet of the room where the stranger had spent his days; the
strange thing cowering in its darkness; the ray of light piercing the cloud one
day and seeming lost again the next; the struggles the imprisoned thing made to
come forth -- to cry out that it was but immured, not wholly conquered, and
that some hour would arrive when it would fight its way through at last.
Tembarom had not entered into psychological research. He had been entirely
uncomplex in his attitude, sitting down before his problem as a besieger might
have sat down before a castle. The duke had sometimes wondered whether it was
not a good enough thing that he had been so simple about it, merely continuing
to believe the best with an unswerving obstinacy and lending a hand when he
could. A never flagging sympathy had kept him singularly alive to every chance,
and now and then he had illuminations which would have done credit to a
cleverer man, and which the duke had rubbed his hands over in half-amused,
half-touched elation. How he had kept his head level and held to his purpose!
T. Tembarom talked but
little as he sat in his big chair and smoked. Best let him alone and give him
time to get used to the newness, he thought. Nothing must happen that could
give him a jolt. Let things sort of sink into him, and perhaps they+'d set him
to thinking and lead him somewhere. Strangeways himself evidently did not want
talk. He never wanted it unless he was excited. He was not excited now, and had
settled down as if he was comfortable. Having finished one cigar he took
another, and began to smoke it much more slowly than he had smoked his first.
The slowness began to arrest Tembarom's attention. This was the smoking of a
man who was either growing sleepy or sinking into deep thought, becoming
oblivious to what he was doing. Sometimes he held the cigar absently between
his strong, fine fingers, seeming to forget it. Tembarom watched him do this
until he saw it go out, and its white ash drop on the rug at his feet. He did
not notice it, but sat sinking deeper and deeper into his own being, growing
more remote. What was going on under his absorbed stillness? Tembarom would not
have moved or spoken "for a block of Fifth Avenue," he said
internally. The dark eyes seemed to become darker until there was only a pin's
point of light to be seen in their pupils. It was as if he were looking at
something at a distance -- at a strangely long distance. Twice he turned his
head and appeared to look slowly round the room, but not as normal people look
-- as if it also was at the strange, long distance from him, and he were somewhere
outside its walls. It was an uncanny thing to be a spectator to.
"How dead still
the room is!" Tembarom found himself thinking.
It was "dead
still." And it was a queer deal sitting, not daring to move -- just
watching. Something was bound to happen, sure! What was it going to be?
Strangeways' cigar
dropped from his fingers and appeared to rouse him. He looked puzzled for a
moment, and then stooped quite naturally to pick it up.
"I forgot it
altogether. It+'s gone out," he remarked.
"Have another,"
suggested Tembarom, moving the box nearer to him.
"No, thank
you." He rose and crossed the room to the wall of book-shelves. And
Tembarom's eye was caught again by the fineness of movement and line the
evening clothes made manifest. "What a swell he looked when he moved about
like that! What a swell, by jings!"
He looked along the
line of shelves and presently took a book down and opened it. He turned over
its leaves until something arrested his attention, and then he fell to reading.
He read several minutes, while Tembarom watched him. The silence was broken by
his laughing a little.
"Listen to
this," he said, and began to read something in a language totally unknown
to his hearer. "A man who writes that sort of thing about a woman is an
old bounder, whether he+'s a poet or not. There+'s a small, biting spitefulness
about it that+'s cattish."
"Who did it?"
Tembarom inquired softly. It might be a good idea to lead him on.
"Horace. In spite
of his genius, he sometimes makes you feel he was rather a blackguard."
"Horace!" For
the moment T. Tembarom forgot himself. "I always heard he was a sort of Y.
M. C. A. old guy -- old Horace Greeley. The Tribune was no yellow journal when
he had it."
He was sorry he had
spoken the next moment. Strangeways looked puzzled.
"The
Tribune," he hesitated. "The Roman Tribune?"
"No, New York. He
started it -- old Horace did. But perhaps we+'re not talking of the same
man."
Strangeways hesitated
again.
"No, I think we're
not," he answered politely.
"I+'ve made a
break," thought Tembarom. "I ought to have kept my mouth shut. I must
try to switch him back."
Strangeways was looking
down at the back of the book he held in his hand.
"This one was the
Latin poet, Quintus Horatius Flaccus, 65 B. C. You know him," he said.
"Oh, that
one!" exclaimed Tembarom, as if with an air of immense relief. "What
a fool I was to forget! I+'m glad it+'s him. Will you go on reading and let me
hear some more? He+'s a winner from Winnersville -- that Horace is."
Perhaps it was a sort
of miracle, accomplished by his great desire to help the right thing to happen,
to stave off any shadow of the wrong thing. Whatsoever the reason, Strangeways
waited only a moment before turning to his book again. It seemed to be a link in
some chain slowly forming itself to drag him back from his wanderings. And T.
Tembarom, lightly sweating as a frightened horse will, sat smoking another pipe
and listening intently to "Satires" and "Lampoons," read
aloud in the Latin of 65 B. C.
"By gee!" he
said faithfully, at intervals, when he saw on the reader's face that the moment
was ripe. "He knew it all -- old Horace -- did+n't he?"
He had steered his
charge back. Things were coming along the line to him. He+'d learned Latin at
one of these big English schools. Boys always learned Latin, the duke had told
him. They just had to. Most of them hated it like thunder, and they used to be
caned when they did+n't recite it right. Perhaps if he went on he'd begin to
remember the school. A queer part of it was that he did not seem to notice that
he was not reading his own language.
He did not, in fact,
seem to remember anything in particular, but went on quite naturally for some
minutes. He had replaced Horace on the shelf and was on the point of taking
down another volume when he paused, as if recalling something else.
"Were+n't we going
to see the picture-gallery?" he inquired. "Is+n't it getting late? I
should like to see the portraits."
"No hurry,"
answered T. Tembarom. "I was just waiting till you were ready. But we+'ll
go right away, if you like."
They went without
further ceremony. As they walked through the hall and down the corridors side
by side, an imaginative person might have felt that perhaps the eyes of an
ancient darkling portrait or so looked down at the pair curiously: the long,
loosely built New Yorker rather slouching along by the soldierly, almost
romantic figure which, in a measure, suggested that others not unlike it might
have trod the same oaken floor; wearing ruff and doublet, or lace jabot and
sword. There was a far cry between the two, but they walked closely in friendly
union. When they entered the picture-gallery Strangeways paused a moment again,
and stood peering down its length. 407>
"It is very dimly
lighted. How can we see?" he said.
"I told Pearson to
leave it dim," Tembarom answered. "I wanted it just that way at
first."
He tried -- and
succeeded tolerably well -- to say it casually, as he led the way ahead of
them. He and the duke had not talked the scheme over for nothing. As his grace
had said, they had "worked the thing up." As they moved down the
gallery, the men and women in their frames looked like ghosts staring out to
see what was about to happen.
"We+'ll turn up
the lights after a while," T. Tembarom explained, still casually.
"There+'s a picture here I think a good deal of. I+'ve stood and looked at
it pretty often. It reminded me of some one the first day I set eyes on it; but
it was quite a time before I made up my mind who it was. It used to drive me
half dotty trying to think it out."
"Which one was
it?" asked Strangeways.
"We+'re coming to
it. I want to see if it reminds you of any one. And I want you to see it
sudden." "It+'s got to be sudden," he had said to the duke.
"If it+'s going to pan out, I believe it+'s got to be sudden."
"That+'s why I had the rest of 'em left dim. I told Pearson to leave a
lamp I could turn up quick," he said to Strangeways.
The lamp was on a table
near by and was shaded by a screen. He took it from the shadow and lifted it
suddenly, so that its full gleam fell upon the portrait of the handsome youth
with the lace collar and the dark, drooping eyes. It was done in a second, with
a dramatically unexpected swiftness. His heart jumped up and down.
"Who+'s
that?" he demanded, with abruptness so sharp- pitched that the gallery
echoed with the sound. "Who+'s that?"
He heard a hard, quick
gasp, a sound which was momentarily a little horrible, as if the man's soul was
being jerked out of his body's depths.
"Who is he?"
he cried again. "Tell me."
After the gasp,
Strangeways stood still and stared. His eyes were glued to the canvas, drops of
sweat came out on his forehead, and he was shuddering. He began to back away
with a look of gruesome struggle. He backed and backed, and stared and stared.
The gasp came twice again, and then his voice seemed to tear itself loose from
some power that was holding it back.
"Th -- at!"
he cried. "It is -- it -- is Miles Hugo!"
The last words were
almost a shout, and he shook as if he would have fallen. But T. Tembarom put
his hand on his shoulder and held him, breathing fast himself. Gee! if it
was+n't like a thing in a play!
"Page at the court
of Charles the Second," he rattled off. "Died of smallpox when he was
nineteen. Miles Hugo! Miles Hugo! You hold on to that for all your worth. And
hold on to me. I+'ll keep you steady. Say it again."
"Miles Hugo."
The poor majestic-looking fellow almost sobbed it. "Where am I? What is
the name of this place?"
"It+'s Temple
Barholm in the county of Lancashire, England. Hold on to that, too -- like
thunder!"
Strangeways held the
young man's arm with hands that clutched. He dragged at him. His nightmare held
him yet; Tembarom saw it, but flashes of light were blinding him.
"Who" -- he
pleaded in a shaking and hollow whisper -- "are you?"
Here was a stumper! By
jings! By jings! And not a minute to think it out. But the answer came all
right -- all right!
"My name+'s
Tembarom. T. Tembarom." And he grinned his splendid grin from sheer sense
of relief. "I+'m a New Yorker -- Brooklyn. I was just forked in here
anyhow. Don't you waste time thinking over me. You sit down here and do your
durndest with Miles Hugo."
TEMBAROM did not look
as though he had slept particularly well, Miss Alicia thought, when they met
the next morning; but when she asked him whether he had been disappointed in
his last night's experiment, he answered that he had not. The experiment had
come out all right, but Strangeways had been a good deal worked up, and had not
been able to sleep until daylight. Sir Ormsby Galloway was to arrive in the
afternoon, and he'd probably give him something quieting. Had the coming down
stairs seemed to help him to recall anything? Miss Alicia naturally inquired.
Tembarom thought it had. He drove to Stone Hover and spent the morning with the
duke; he even lunched with him. He returned in time to receive Sir Ormsby
Galloway, however, and until that great personage left, they were together in Mr.
Strangeways' rooms.
"I guess I shall
get him up to London to the place where Sir Ormsby wants him," he said
rather nervously, after dinner. "I+'m not going to miss any chances. If
he+'ll go, I can get him away quietly some time when I can fix it so there+'s
no one about to worry him."
She felt that he had no
inclination to go much into detail. He had never had the habit of entering into
the details connected with his strange charge. She believed it was because he
felt the subject too abnormal not to seem a little awesome to her sympathetic
timidity. She did not ask questions because she was afraid she could not ask
them intelligently. In fact, the knowledge that this unknown man was living
through his struggle with his lost past in the remote rooms of the west wing,
almost as though he were a secret prisoner, did seem a little awesome when one
awoke in the middle of the dark night and thought of it.
During the passage of
the next few weeks, Tembarom went up to London several times. Once he seemed called
there suddenly, as it was only during dinner that he told her he was going to
take a late train, and should leave the house after she had gone to bed. She
felt as though something important must have happened, and hoped it was nothing
disturbing.
When he had said that
Captain Palliser would return to visit them, her private impression, despite
his laugh, had been that it must surely be some time before this would occur.
But a little more than three weeks later he appeared, preceded only half an hour
by a telegram asking whether he might not spend a night with them on his way
farther north. He could not at all understand why the telegram, which he said
he had sent the day before, had been delayed.
A certain fatigued
haggardness in his countenance caused Miss Alicia to ask whether he had been
ill, and he admitted that he had at least not been well, as a result of long
and too hurried journeys, and the strenuousness of extended and profoundly
serious interviews with his capitalist and magnates.
"No man can
engineer gigantic schemes to success without feeling the reaction when his load
drops from his shoulders," he remarked.
"You+'ve carried
it quite through?" inquired Tembarom.
"We have set on
foot one of the largest, most substantially capitalized companies in the
European business world," Palliser replied, with the composure which is
almost indifference.
"Good!" said
Tembarom cheerfully.
He watched his guest a
good deal during the day. He was a bad color for a man who had just steered
clear of all shoals and reached the highest point of success. He had a haggard
eye as well as a haggard face. It was a terrified eye when its desperate
determination to hide its terrors dropped from it for an instant, as a veil
might drop. A certain restlessness was manifest in him, and he talked more than
usual. He was going to make a visit in Northumberland to an elderly lady of
great possessions. It was to be vaguely gathered that she was somewhat
interested in the great company -- the Cedric. She was a remarkable old person
who found a certain agreeable excitement in dabbling in stocks. She was rich
enough to be in a position to regard it as a sort of game, and he had been able
on several occasions to afford her entertainment. He would remain a few days,
and spend his time chiefly in telling her the details of the great scheme and
the manner in which they were to be developed.
"If she can play
with things that way, she+'ll be sure to want stock in it," Tembarom
remarked.
"If she does, she
must make up her mind quickly," Palliser smiled, "or she will not be
able to get it. It is not easy to lay one's hands on even now."
Tembarom thought of
certain speculators of entirely insignificant standing of whom he had chanced
to see and hear anecdotes in New York. Most of them were youths of obscure
origin who sold newspapers or blacked boots, or "swapped" articles
the value of which lay in the desire they could excite in other persons to
possess them. A popular method known as "bluff" was their most
trusted weapon, and even at twelve and fifteen years of age Tembarom had always
regarded it as singularly obvious. He always detested "bluff,"
whatsoever its disguise, and was rather mystified by its ingenious faith in
itself.
"He+'s got badly
stung," was his internal comment as he sucked at his pipe and smiled
urbanely at Palliser across the room as they sat together. "He+'s come
here with some sort of deal on that he knows he could+n't work with any one but
just such a fool as he thinks I am. I guess," he added in composed
reflectiveness, "I don't really know how big a fool I do look."
Whatsoever the deal
was, he would be likely to let it be known in time.
"He+'ll get it off
his chest if he+'s going away to-morrow," decided Tembarom. "If
there+'s anything he's found out, he+'ll use it. If it does+n't pan out as he
thinks it will he+'ll just float away to his old lady."
He gave Palliser every
chance, talking to him and encouraging him to talk, even asking him to let him
look over the prospectus of the new company and explain details to him, as he
was going to explain them to the old lady in Northumberland. He opened up
avenues; but for a time Palliser made no attempt to stroll down them. His walk
would be a stroll, Tembarom knew, being familiar with his methods. His aspect
would be that of a man but little concerned. He would be capable of a slightly
rude coldness if he felt that concern on his part was in any degree counted as
a factor. Tembarom was aware, among other things, that innocent persons would
feel that it was incumbent upon them to be very careful in their treatment of
him. He seemed to be thinking things over before he decided upon the
psychological moment at which he would begin, if he began. When a man had a
good deal to lose or to win, Tembarom realized that he would be likely to hold
back until he felt something like solid ground under him.
After Miss Alicia had
left them for the night, perhaps he felt, as a result of thinking the matter
over, that he had reached a foothold of a firmness at least somewhat to be
depended upon.
"What a change you
have made in that poor woman's life!" he said, walking to the side-table
and helping himself to a brandy and soda. "What a change!"
"It struck me that
a change was needed just about the time I dropped in," answered his host.
"All the
same," suggested Palliser, tolerantly, "you were immensely generous.
She was+n't entitled to expect it, you know."
"She did+n't
expect anything, not a darned thing," said Tembarom. "That was what
hit me."
Palliser smiled a cold,
amiable smile. His slim, neatly fitted person looked a little shrunken and less
straight than was its habit, and its slackness suggested itself as being part
of the harry and fatigue which made his face and eyes haggard under his pale,
smooth hair.
"Do you purpose to
provide for the future of all your indigent relatives even to the third and
fourth generation, my dear chap?" he inquired.
"I won't refuse
till I+'m asked, anyhow," was the answer.
"Asked!"
Palliser repeated. "I+'m one of them, you know, and Lady Mallowe is
another. There are lots of us, when we come out of our holes. If it+'s only a
matter of asking, we might all descend on you."
Tembarom, smiling,
wondered whether they had+n't descended already, and whether the descent had so
far been all that they had anticipated.
Palliser strolled down
his opened avenue with an incidental air which was entirely creditable to his
training of himself. T. Tembarom acknowledged that much.
"You are too
generous," said Palliser. "You are the sort of fellow who will always
need all he has, and more. The way you go among the villagers! You think you
merely slouch about and keep it quiet, but you don't. You+'ve set an example no
other landowner can expect to live up to, or intends to. It's too lavish. It+'s
pernicious, dear chap. I have heard all about the cottage you are doing over
for Pearson and his bride. You had better invest in the Cedric."
Tembarom wanted him to
go on, if there was anything in it. He made his face look as he knew Palliser
hoped it would look when the psychological moment came. Its expression was not
a deterrent; in fact, it had a character not unlikely to lead an eager man, or
one who was not as wholly experienced as he believed he was, to rush down a
steep hill into the sea, after the manner of the swine in the parable.
Heaven knew Palliser
did not mean to rush, and was not aware when the rush began; but he had reason
to be so much more eager than he professed to be that momentarily he swerved,
despite himself, and ceased to be casual.
"It is an enormous
opportunity," he said -- "timber lands in Mexico, you know. If you
had spent your life in England, you would realize that timber has become a
desperate necessity, and that the difficulties which exist in the way of
supplying the demand are almost insuperable. These forests are virtually
boundless, and the company which controls them -- "
"That+'s a good
spiel!" broke in Tembarom.
It sounded like the
crudely artless interruption of a person whose perceptions left much to be
desired. T. Tembarom knew what it sounded like. If Palliser lost his temper, he
would get over the ground faster, and he wanted him to get over the ground.
"I+'m afraid I
don't understand," he replied rather stiffly.
"There was a
fellow I knew in New York who used to sell type-writers, and he had a thing to
say he used to reel off when any one looked like a customer. He used to call it
his `spiel.' "
Palliser's quick glance
at him asked questions, and his stiffness did not relax itself.
"Is this New York
chaff?" he inquired coldly.
"No,"
Tembarom said. "You're not doing it for ten per. He was."
"No, not
exactly," said Palliser. "Neither would you be doing it for ten per if
you went into it." His voice changed. He became slightly haughty.
"Perhaps it was a mistake on my part to think you might care to connect
yourself with it. You have not, of course, been in the position to comprehend
such matters."
"If I was what I
look like, that 'd stir me up and make me feel bad," thought T. Tembarom,
with cheerful comprehension of this, at least. "I+'d have to rush in and
try to prove to him that I was as accustomed to big business as he is, and that
it did+n't rattle me. The way to do it that would come most natural would be to
show I was ready to buy as big a block of stock as any other fellow."
But the expression of
his face did not change. He only gave a half-awkward sort of laugh.
"I guess I can
learn," he said.
Palliser felt the
foothold become firmer. The bounder was interested, but, after a bounder's
fashion, was either nervous or imagined that a show of hesitation looked
shrewd. The slight hit made at his inexperience in investment had irritated him
and made him feel less cock-sure of himself. A slightly offended manner might
be the best weapon to rely upon.
"I thought you
might care to have the thing made clear to you," he continued
indifferently. "I meant to explain. You may take the chance or leave it,
as you like, of course. That is nothing to me at this stage of the game. But,
after all, we are as I said, relatives of a sort, and it is a gigantic
opportunity. Suppose we change the subject. Is that the Sunday Earth I see by
you on the table?" He leaned forward to take the paper, as though the
subject really were dropped; but, after a seemingly nervous suck or two at his
pipe, Tembarom came to his assistance. It would+n't do to let him quiet down
too much.
"I+'m no Van
Morganbilt," he said hesitatingly, "but I can see that it+'s a big
opportunity -- for some one else. Let's have a look over the prospectus
again."
Palliser paused in his
unconcerned opening of the copy of the Sunday Earth. His manner somewhat
disgustedly implied indecision as to whether it was worth while to allow
oneself to be dropped and taken up by turns.
"Do you really
mean that?" he asked with a certain chill of voice.
"Yes. I don't mind
trying to catch on to what+'s doing in any big scheme."
Palliser did not lay
aside his suggestion of cold semi-reluctance more readily than any man who knew
his business would have laid it aside. His manner at the outset was quite
perfect. His sole ineptitude lay in his feeling a too great confidence in the exact
quality of his companion's type, as he summed it up. He did not calculate on
the variations from all type sometimes provided by circumstances.
He produced his papers
without too obvious eagerness. He spread them upon the table, and coolly
examined them himself before beginning, his explanation. There was more to
explain to a foreigner and one unused to investment than there would be to a
man who was an Englishman and familiar with the methods of large companies, he
said. He went into technicalities, so to speak, and used rapidly and lightly
some imposing words and phrases, to which T. Tembarom listened attentively, but
without any special air of illumination. He dealt with statistics and the
resulting probabilities. He made apparent the existing condition of England's
inability to supply an enormous and unceasing demand for timber. He had
acquired divers excellent methods of stating his case to the party of the
second part.
"He made me feel
as if a fellow had better hold on to a box of matches like grim death, and that
the time was+n't out of sight when you+'d have to give fifty-seven dollars and
a half for a toothpick," Tembarom afterwards said to the duke.
What Tembarom was
thinking as he listened to him was that he was not getting over the ground with
much rapidity, and that it was time something was doing. He had not watched him
for weeks without learning divers of his idiosyncrasies.
"If he thought I
wanted to know what he thinks I+'d a heap rather not know, he+'d never tell
me," he speculated. "If he gets a bit hot in the collar, he may let
it out. Thing is to stir him up. He+'s lost his nerve a bit, and he+'ll get mad
pretty easy."
He went on smoking and
listening, and asking an unenlightened question now and then, in a manner which
was as far from being a deterrent as the largely unilluminated expression of
his face was.
"Of course money
is wanted," Palliser said at length. "Money is always wanted, and as
much when a scheme is a success as when it is+n't. Good names, with a certain
character, are wanted. The fact of your inheritance is known everywhere; and
the fact that you are an American is a sort of guaranty of shrewdness."
"Is it?" said
T. Tembarom. "Well," he added slowly, "I guess Americans are
pretty good business men."
Palliser thought that
this was evolving upon perfectly natural lines, as he had anticipated it would.
The fellow was flattered and pleased. You could always reach an American by
implying that he was one of those who specially illustrate enviable national
characteristics.
He went on in smooth,
casual laudation:
"No American takes
hold of a scheme of this sort until he knows jolly well what he+'s going to get
out of it. You were shrewd enough," he added significantly, "about
Hutchinson's affair. You `got in on the ground floor' there. That was New York
forethought, by Jove!"
Tembarom shuffled a
little in his chair, and grinned a faint, pleased grin.
"I+'m a man of the
world, my boy -- the business world," Palliser commented, hoping that he
concealed his extreme satisfaction. "I know New York, though I have+n't
lived there. I+'m only hoping to. Your air of ingenuous ignorance is the
cleverest thing about you," which agreeable implication of the fact that
he had been privately observant and impressed ought to have fetched the bounder
if anything would.
T. Tembarom's grin was
no longer faint, but spread itself. Palliser's first impression was that he had
"fetched" him. But when he answered, though the very crudeness of his
words seemed merely the result of his betrayal into utter tactlessness by
soothed vanity, there was something -- a shade of something -- not entirely
satisfactory in his face and nasal twang.
"Well, I
guess," he said, "New York did teach a fellow not to buy a gold brick
off every con man that came along."
Palliser was guilty of
a mere ghost of a start. Was there something in it, or was he only the gross,
blundering fool he had trusted to his being? He stared at him a moment, and saw
that there was something under the words and behind his professedly flattered
grin -- something which must be treated with a high hand.
"What do you
mean?" he exclaimed haughtily. "I don't like your tone. Do you take
me for what you call a `con man'?"
"Good Lord,
no!" answered Tembarom; and he looked straight at Palliser and spoke
slowly. "You're a gentleman, and you're paying me a visit. You could no
more try on a game to do me in my own house than -- well, than I could tell you
if I+'d got on to you if I saw you doing it. You're a gentleman."
Palliser glared back
into his infuriatingly candid eyes. He was a far cry from being a dullard
himself; he was sharp enough to "catch on" to the revelation that the
situation was not what he had thought it, the type was more complex than he had
dreamed. The chap had been playing a part; he had absolutely been
"jollying him along," after the New York fashion. He became pale with
humiliated rage, though he knew his only defense was to control himself and
profess not to see through the trick. Until he could use his big lever, he
added to himself.
"Oh, I see,"
he commented acridly. "I suppose you don't realize that your figures of
speech are unfortunate."
"That comes of New
York streets, too," Tembarom answered with deliberation. "But you
can't live as I+'ve lived and be dead easy -- not dead easy."
Palliser had left his
chair, and stood in contemptuous silence.
"You know how a
fellow hates to be thought dead easy" -- Tembarom actually went to the
insolent length of saying the words with a touch of cheerful confidingness --
"when he+'s not. And I+'m not. Have another drink."
There was a pause.
Palliser began to see, or thought he began to see, where he stood. He had come
to Temple Barholm because he had been driven into a corner and had a dangerous
fight before him. In anticipation of it he had been following a clue for some
time, though at the outset it had been one of incredible slightness. Only his
absolute faith in his theory that every man had something to gain or lose,
which he concealed discreetly, had led him to it. He held a card too valuable
to be used at the beginning of a game. Its power might have lasted a long time,
and proved an influence without limit. He forbore any mental reference to
blackmail; the word was absurd. One used what fell into one's hands. If
Tembarom had followed his lead with any degree of docility, he would have felt
it wiser to save his ammunition until further pressure was necessary. But
behind his ridiculous rawness, his foolish jocularity, and his professedly
candid good humor, had been hidden the Yankee trickster who was fool enough to
think he could play his game through. Well, he could not.
During the few moments'
pause he saw the situation as by a photographic flashlight. He leaned over the
table and supplied himself with a fresh brandy and soda from the tray of
siphons and decanters. He gave himself time to take the glass up in his hand.
"No," he
answered, "you are not `dead easy.' That+'s why I am going to broach
another subject to you."
Tembarom was refilling
his pipe.
"Go ahead,"
he said.
"Who, by the way,
is Mr. Strangeways?"
He was deliberate and
entirely unemotional. So was T. Tembarom when, with match applied to his
tobacco, he replied between puffs as he lighted it:
"You can search
me. You can search him, too, for that matter. He does+n't know who he is
himself."
"Bad luck for
him!" remarked Palliser, and allowed a slight pause again. After it he
added, "Did it ever strike you it might be good luck for somebody else?"
"Somebody
else?" Tembarom puffed more slowly, perhaps because his pipe was lighted.
Palliser took some
brandy in his soda.
"There are men,
you know," he suggested, "who can be spared by their relatives. I
have some myself, by Jove!" he added with a laugh. "You keep him
rather dark, don't you?"
"He does+n't like
to see people."
"Does he object to
people seeing him? I saw him once myself ."
"When you threw
the gravel at his window?"
Palliser stared
contemptuously.
"What are you
talking about? I did not throw stones at his window," he lied. "I+'m
not a school-boy."
"That+'s so,"
Tembarom admitted.
"I saw him,
nevertheless. And I can tell you he gave me rather a start."
"Why?"
Palliser half laughed
again. He did not mean to go too quickly; he would let the thing get on
Tembarom's nerves gradually.
"Well, I+'m hanged
if I did+n't take him for a man who is dead."
"Enough to give
any fellow a jolt," Tembarom admitted again.
"It gave me a
`jolt.' Good word, that. But it would give you a bigger one, my dear fellow, if
he was the man he looked like."
"Why?"
Tembarom asked laconically.
"He looked like
Jem Temple Barholm."
He saw Tembarom start.
There could be no denying it.
"You thought that?
Honest?" he said sharply, as if for a moment he had lost his head.
"You thought that?"
"Don't be nervous.
Perhaps I could+n't have sworn to it. I did not see him very close."
T. Tembarom puffed
rapidly at his pipe, and only ejaclated:
"Oh!"
"Of course he+'s
dead. If he was+n't," -- with a shrug of his shoulders, -- "Lady Joan
Fayre would be Lady Joan Temple Barholm, and the pair would be bringing up an
interesting family here." He looked about the room, and then, as if
suddenly recalling the fact, added, "By George! -- you+'d be selling
newspapers, or making them -- which was it? -- in New York!"
It was by no means
unpleasing to see that he had made his hit there. T. Tembarom swung about and
walked across the room with a suddenly perturbed expression.
"Say," he put
it to him, coming back, "are you in earnest, or are you just saying it to
give me a jolt?"
Palliser studied him.
The American sharpness was not always so keen as it sometimes seemed. His face
would have betrayed his uneasiness to the dullest onlooker.
"Have you any
objection to my seeing him in his own room?" Palliser inquired.
"It does him harm
to see people," Tembarom said, with nervous brusqueness. "It worries
him."
Palliser smiled a quiet
but far from agreeable smile. He enjoyed what he put into it.
"Quite so; best to
keep him quiet," he returned. "Do you know what my advice would be?
Put him in a comfortable sanatorium. A lot of stupid investigations would end
in nothing, of course, but they+'d be a frightful bore."
He thought it
extraordinarily stupid in T. Tembarom to come nearer to him with an anxious
eagerness entirely unconcealed, if he really knew what he was doing.
"Are you sure that
if you saw him close you+'d know, so that you could swear to him?" he
demanded
"You+'re extremely
nervous, are+n't you?" Palliser watched him with smiling coolness.
"Of course Jem Temple Barholm is dead; but I+'ve no doubt that if I saw
this man of yours, I could swear he had remained dead -- if I were asked."
"If you knew him
well, you could make me sure. You could swear one way or another. I want to be
sure," said Tembarom.
"So should I in
your place; could+n't be too sure. Well, since you ask me, I could swear. I
knew him well enough. He was one of my most intimate enemies. What do you say
to letting me see him?"
"I would if I
could," Tembarom replied, as if thinking it over. "I would if I
could."
Palliser treated him to
the far from pleasing smile again.
"But it+'s quite
impossible at present?" he suggested. "Excitement is not good for
him, and all that sort of thing. You want time to think it over."
Tembarom's slowly
uttered answer, spoken as if he were still considering the matter, was far from
being the one he had expected.
"I want time; but
that+'s not the reason you can't see him right now. You can't see him because
he's not here. He+'s gone."
Then it was Palliser
who started, taken totally unaware in a manner which disgusted him altogether.
He had to pull himself up.
"He+'s gone!"
he repeated. "You are quicker than I thought. You+'ve got him safely away,
have you? Well, I told you a comfortable sanatorium would be a good idea."
"Yes, you
did." T. Tembarom hesitated, seeming to be thinking it over again.
"That+'s so." He laid his pipe aside because it had gone out.
He suddenly sat down at
the table, putting his elbows on it and his face in his hands, with a harried
effect of wanting to think it over in a sort of withdrawal from his immediate
surroundings. This was as it should be. His Yankee readiness had deserted him
altogether.
"By Jove! you are
nervous!" Palliser commented. "It's not surprising, though. I can
sympathize with you." With a markedly casual air he himself sat down and
drew his documents toward him. "Let us talk of something else," he said.
He preferred to be casual and incidental, if he were allowed. It was always
better to suggest things and let them sink in until people saw the advantage of
considering them and you. To manage a business matter without open argument or
too frank a display of weapons was at once more comfortable and in better
taste.
"You are making a
great mistake in not going into this," he suggested amiably. "You
could go in now as you went into Hutchinson's affair, `on the ground floor.'
That+'s a good enough phrase, too. Twenty thousand pounds would make you a
million. You Americans understand nothing less than millions."
But T. Tembarom did not
take him up. He muttered in a worried way from behind his shading hands,
"We+'ll talk about that later."
"Why not talk
about it now, before anything can interfere?" Palliser persisted politely,
almost gently.
Tembarom sprang up,
restless and excited. He had plainly been planning fast in his temporary
seclusion.
"I+'m thinking of
what you said about Lady Joan," he burst forth. "Say, she+'s gone through
all this Jem Temple Barholm thing once; it about half killed her. If any one
raised false hopes for her, she+'d go through it all again. Once is enough for
any woman."
His effect at
professing heat and strong feeling made a spark of amusement show itself in
Palliser's eye. It struck him as being peculiarly American in its affectation
of sentiment and chivalry.
"I see," he
said. "It+'s Lady Joan you+'re disturbed about. You want to spare her
another shock, I see. You are a considerate fellow, as well as a man of
business."
"I don't want her
to begin to hope if -- "
"Very good taste
on your part." Palliser's polite approval was admirable, but he tapped
lightly on the paper after expressing it. "I don't want to seem to press
you about this, but don't you feel inclined to consider it? I can assure you
that an investment of this sort would be a good thing to depend on if the
unexpected happened. If you gave me your check now, it would be Cedric stock
to-morrow, and quite safe. Suppose you -- "
I -- I don't believe
you were right -- about what you thought." The sharp-featured face was
changing from pale to red. "You+'d have to be able to swear to it, anyhow,
and I don't believe you can." He looked at Palliser in eager and anxious
uncertainty. "If you could," he dragged out, "I should+n't have
a cheek-book. Where would you be then?"
"I should be in
comfortable circumstances, dear chap, and so would you if you gave me the money
to-night, while you possess a check-book. It would be only a sort of temporary
loan in any case, whatever turned up. The investment would quadruple itself.
But there is no time to be lost. Understand that."
T. Tembarom broke out
into a sort of boyish resentment.
"I don't believe
he did look like him, anyhow," he cried. "I believe it+'s all a
bluff." His crude-sounding young swagger had a touch of final desperation
in it as he turned on Palliser. "I+'m dead sure it+'s a bluff. What a fool
I was not to think of that! You want to bluff me into going into this Cedric
thing. You could no more swear he was like him than -- than I could."
The outright,
presumptuous, bold stripping bare of his phrases infuriated Palliser too
suddenly and too much. He stepped up to him and looked into his eyes.
"Bluff you, you
young bounder!" he flung out at him. "You+'re losing your head.
You+'re not in New York streets here. You are talking to a gentleman. No,"
he said furiously, "I could+n't swear that he was like him, but what I can
swear in any court of justice is that the man I saw at the window was Jem
Temple Barholm, and no other man on earth."
When he had said it, he
saw the astonishing dolt change his expression utterly again, as if in a flash.
He stood up, putting his hands in his pockets. His face changed, his voice
changed.
"Fine!" he
said. "First-rate! That's what I wanted to get on to."
AFTER this climax the
interview was not so long as it was interesting. Two men as far apart as the
poles, as remote from each other in mind and body, in training and education or
lack of it, in desires and intentions, in points of view and trend of being, as
nature and circumstances could make them, talked in a language foreign to each
other of a wildly strange thing. Palliser's arguments and points of aspect were
less unknown to T. Tembarom than his own were to Palliser. He had seen
something very like them before, though they had developed in different
surroundings and had been differently expressed. The colloquialism
"You+'re not doing that for your health" can be made to cover much
ground in the way of the stripping bare of motives for action. This was what,
in excellent and well-chosen English, Captain Palliser frankly said to his
host. Of nothing which T. Tembarom said to him in his own statement did he
believe one word or syllable. The statement in question was not long or
detailed. It was, of course, Palliser saw, a ridiculously impudent flinging
together of a farrago of nonsense, transparent in its effort beyond belief.
Before he had listened five minutes with the distinctly "nasty"
smile, he burst out laughing.
"That is a good
`spiel,' my dear chap," he said. "It's as good a `spiel' as your
typewriter friend used to rattle off when he thought he saw a customer; but
I+'m not a customer."
Tembarom looked at him
interestedly for about ten seconds. His hands were thrust into his trousers
pockets, as was his almost invariable custom. Absorption and speculation, even
emotion and excitement, were usually expressed in this unconventional manner.
"You don't believe
a darned word of it," was his sole observation.
"Not a darned
word," Palliser smiled. "You are trying a `bluff,' which does+n't do
credit to your usual sharpness. It's a bluff that is actually silly. It makes
you look like an ass."
"Well, it+'s
true," said Tembarom; "it+'s true."
Palliser laughed again.
"I only said it
made you look like an ass," he remarked. "I don't profess to
understand you altogether, because you are a new species. Your combination of
ignorance and sharpness is+n't easy to calculate on. But there is one thing I
have found out, and that is, that when you want to play a particular sharp
trick you are willing to let people take you for a fool. I+'ll own you+'ve
deceived me once or twice, even when I suspected you. I+'ve heard that+'s one
of the most successful methods used in the American business world. That's why
I only say you look like an ass. You are an ass in some respects; but you are
letting yourself look like one now for some shrewd end. You either think
you+'ll slip out of danger by it when I make this discovery public, or you
think you'll somehow trick me into keeping my mouth shut."
"I need+n't trick
you into keeping your mouth shut," Tembarom suggested. "There+'s a
straight way to do that, ain't there?" And he indelicately waved his hand
toward the documents pertaining to the Cedric Company.
It was stupid as well
as gross, in his hearer's opinion. If he had known what was good for him he
would have been clever enough to ignore the practical presentation of his case
made half an hour or so earlier.
"No, there is
not," Palliser replied, with serene mendacity. "No suggestion of that
sort has been made. My business proposition was given out on an entirely
different basis. You, of course, choose to put your personal construction upon
it."
"Gee whiz!"
ejaculated T. Tembarom. "I was 'way off, was+n't I?"
"I told you that
professing to be an ass would+n't be good enough in this case. Don't go on with
it," said Palliser, sharply.
"You+'re throwing
bouquets. Let a fellow be natural," said Tembarom.
"That is bluff,
too," Palliser replied more sharply still. "I am not taken in by it,
bold as it is. Ever since you came here, you have been playing this game. It
was your fool's grin and guffaw and pretense of good nature that first made me
suspect you of having something up your sleeve. You were too unembarrassed and
candid."
"So you began to
look out," Tembarom said, considering him curiously, "just because of
that." Then suddenly he laughed outright, the fool's guffaw.
It somehow gave
Palliser a sort of puzzled shock. It was so hearty that it remotely suggested
that he appeared more secure than seemed possible. He tried to reply to him
with a languid contempt of manner.
"You think you
have some tremendously sharp `deal' in your hand," he said, "but you
had better remember you are in England where facts are like sledge-hammers. You
can't dodge from under them as you can in America. I dare say you won't answer
me, but I should like to ask you what you propose to do."
"I don't know what
I+'m going to do any more than you do," was the unilluminating answer.
"I don't mind telling you that."
"And what do you
think he will do?"
"I+'ve got to wait
till I find out. I+'m doing it. That was what I told you. What are you going to
do?" he added casually.
"I+'m going to
Lincoln's Inn Fields to have an interview with Palford & Grimby."
"That+'s a good
enough move," commented Tembarom, "if you think you can prove what
you say. You+'ve got to prove things, you know. I could+n't, so I lay low and
waited, just like I told you."
"Of course, of
course," Palliser himself almost grinned in his derision. "You have
only been waiting."
"When you+'ve got
to prove a thing, and have+n't much to go on, you+'ve got to wait," said
T. Tembarom -- "to wait and keep your mouth shut, whatever happens, and to
let yourself be taken for a fool or a horse-thief is+n't as gilt-edged a job as
it seems. But proof+'s what it+'s best to have before you ring up the curtain.
You+'d have to have it yourself. So would Palford & Grimby before it+'d be
stone-cold safe to rush things and accuse a man of a penitentiary
offense."
He took his
unconventional half-seat on the edge of the table, with one foot on the floor
and the other one lightly swinging. "Palford & Grimby are clever old
ducks, and they know that much. Thing they+'d know best would be that to set a
raft of lies going about a man who+'s got money enough to defend himself, and
to make them pay big damages for it afterward, would be pretty bum business. I
guess they know all about what proof stands for. They may have to wait; so may
you, same as I have."
Palliser realized that
he was in the position of a man striking at an adversary whose construction was
of india-rubber. He struck home, but left no bruise and drew no blood, which
was an irritating thing. He lost his temper.
"Proof!" he
jerked out. "There will be proof enough, and when it is made public, you
will not control the money you threaten to use."
"When you get
proof, just you let me hear about it," T. Tembarom said. "And all the
money I+'m threatening on shall go where it belongs, and I+'ll go back to New
York and sell papers if I have to. It won't come as hard as you think."
The flippant insolence
with which he brazened out his pretense that he had not lied, that his
ridiculous romance was actual and simple truth, suggested dangerous readiness
of device and secret knowledge of power which could be adroitly used.
"You are merely
marking time," said Palliser, rising, with cold determination to be
juggled with no longer. "You have hidden him away where you think you can
do as you please with a man who is an invalid. That is your dodge. You+'ve got
him hidden somewhere, and his friends had better get at him before it is too
late."
"I+'m not
answering questions this evening, and I+'m not giving addresses, though there
are no witnesses to take them down. If he+'s hidden away, he+'s where he won't
be disturbed," was T. Tembarom's rejoinder. "You may lay your bottom
dollar on that."
Palliser walked toward
the door without speaking. He had almost reached it when he whirled about
involuntarily, arrested by a shout of laughter.
"Say,"
announced Tembarom, "you may+n't know it, but this lay-out would make a
first-rate turn in a vaudeville. You think I+'m lying, I look like I+'m lying,
I guess every word I say sounds like I+'m lying. To a fellow like you, I guess
it could+n't help but sound that way. And I+'m not lying. That+'s where the
joke comes in. I+'m not lying. I+'ve not told you all I know because it+'s none
of your business and would+n't help; but what I have told you is the stone-cold
truth."
He was keeping it up to
the very end with a desperate determination not to let go his hold of his pose
until he had made his private shrewd deal, whatsoever it was. At least, so it
struck Palliser, who merely said:
"I+'m leaving the
house by the first train to-morrow morning." He fixed a cold gray eye on
the fool's grin.
"Six
forty-five," said T. Tembarom. "I'll order the carriage. I might go
up myself."
The door closed.
Tembarom was looking
cheerful enough when he went into his bedroom. He had become used to its size
and had learned to feel that it was a good sort of place. It had the hall
bedroom at Mrs. Bowse's boarding-house "beaten to a frazzle." There
was about everything in it that any man could hatch up an idea he'd like to
have. He had slept luxuriously on the splendid carved bed through long nights,
he had lain awake and thought out things on it, he had lain and watched the
fire-light flickering on the ceiling, as he thought about Ann and made plans,
and "fixed up" the Harlem flat which could be run on fifteen per. He
had picked out the pieces of furniture from the Sunday Earth advertisement
sheet, and had set them in their places. He always saw the six-dollar mahogany-
stained table set for supper, with Ann at one end and himself at the other. He
had grown actually fond of the old room because of the silence and comfort of
it, which tended to give reality to his dreams. Pearson, who had ceased to look
anxious and who had acquired fresh accomplishments in the form of an entirely
new set of duties, was waiting, and handed him a telegram.
"This just
arrived, sir," he explained. "James brought it here because he
thought you had come up, and I did+n't send it down because I heard you on the
stairs."
"That+'s right.
Thank you, Pearson," his master said.
He tore the yellow
envelop, and read the message. In a moment Pearson knew it was not an ordinary
message, and therefore remained more than ordinarily impassive of expression.
He did not even ask of himself what it might convey.
Mr. Temple Barholm
stood still a few seconds, with the look of a man who must think and think
rapidly.
"What is the next
train to London, Pearson?" he asked.
"There is one at
twelve thirty-six, sir," he answered. "It+'s the last till six in the
morning. You have to change at Crowley.
"You+'re always
ready, Pearson," returned Mr. Temple Barholm. "I want to get that
train."
Pearson was always
ready. Before the last word was quite spoken he had turned and opened the
bedroom door.
"I'll order the
dog-cart; that's quickest, sir," he said. He was out of the room and in
again almost immediately. Then he was at the wardrobe and taking out what Mr.
Temple Barholm called his "grip," but what Pearson knew as a Gladstone
bag. It was always kept ready packed for unexpected emergencies of travel.
Mr. Temple Barholm sat
at the table and drew pen and paper toward him. He looked excited; he looked
more troubled than Pearson had seen him look before.
"The wire+'s from
Sir Ormsby Galloway, Pearson," he said.
"It's about Mr.
Strangeways. He+'s done what I used to be always watching out against: he's
disappeared."
"Disappeared,
sir!" cried Pearson, and almost dropped the Gladstone bag. "I beg
pardon, sir. I know there+'s no time to lose." He steadied the bag and
went on with his task without even turning round.
His master was in some
difficulty. He began to write, and after dashing off a few words, stopped, and
tore them up.
"No," he
muttered, "that won't do. There's no time to explain." Then he began
again, but tore up his next lines also. "That says too much and not
enough. It+'d frighten the life out of her."
He wrote again, and
ended by folding the sheet and putting it into an envelop.
"This is a message
for Miss Alicia," he said to Pearson. "Give it to her in the morning.
I don't want her to worry because I had to go in a hurry. Tell her everything's
going to be all right; but you need+n't mention that anything+'s happened to
Mr. Strangeways."
"Yes, sir,"
answered Pearson.
Mr. Temple Barholm was
already moving about the room, doing odd things for himself rapidly, and he
went on speaking.
"I want you and
Rose to know," he said, "that whatever happens, you are both fixed
all right -- both of you. I+'ve seen to that."
"Thank you,
sir," Pearson faltered, made uneasy by something new in his tone.
"You said whatever happened, sir -- "
"Whatever old
thing happens," his master took him up.
"Not to you, sir.
Oh, I hope, sir, that nothing -- "
Mr. Temple Barholm put
a cheerful hand on his shoulder.
"Nothing+'s going
to happen that+'ll hurt any one. Things may change, that+'s all. You and Rose
are all right, Miss Alicia's all right, I+'m all right. Come along. Got to
catch that train."
In this manner he took
his departure.
Miss Alicia had from
necessity acquired the habit of early rising at Roweroft vicarage, and as the
next morning was bright, she was clipping roses on a terrace before breakfast
when Pearson brought her the note.
"Mr. Temple
Barholm received a telegram from London last night, ma'am," he explained,
"and he was obliged to take the midnight train. He had+n't time to do any
more than leave a few lines for you, but he asked me to tell you that nothing
disturbing had occurred. He specially mentioned that every thing was all
right."
"But how very
sudden!" exclaimed Miss Alicia, opening her note and beginning to read it.
Plainly it had been written hurriedly indeed. It read as though he had been in
such haste that he had+n't had time to be clear.
Dear little Miss Alicia:
I+'ve got to light out
of here as quick as I can make it. I can't even stop to tell you why. There+'s
just one thing -- don't get rattled, Miss Alicia. Whatever any one says or
does, just don't let yourself get rattled. Yours affectionately,
T. TEMBAROM.
"Pearson,"
Miss Alicia exclaimed, again looking up, "are you sure everything is all
right?"
"That was what he
said, ma'am. `All right,' ma'am."
"Thank you,
Pearson. I am glad to hear it."
She walked to and fro
in the sunshine, reading the note and rereading it.
"Of course if he
said it was all right, it was all right," she murmured. "It is only
the phrasing that makes me slightly nervous. Why should he ask me not to get
rattled?" The term was by this time as familiar to her as any in Dr. Johnson's
dictionary. "Of course he knows I do get rattled much too easily; but why
should I be in danger of getting rattled now if nothing has happened?" She
gave a very small start as she remembered something. "Could it be that
Captain Palliser -- But how could he? Though I do not like Captain
Palliser."
Captain Palliser, her
distaste for whom at the moment quite agitated her, was this morning an early
riser also, and as she turned in her walk she found him coming toward her.
"I find I am
obliged to take an early train to London this morning," he said, after
their exchange of greetings. "It is quite unexpected. I spoke to Mr.
Temple Barholm about it last night."
Perhaps the
unexpectedness, perhaps a certain suggestion of coincidence, caused Miss
Alicia's side ringlets to appear momentarily tremulous.
"Then perhaps we
had better go in to breakfast at once," she said.
"Is Mr. Temple
Barholm down?" he inquired as they seated themselves at the
breakfast-table.
"He is not here,"
she answered. "He, too, was called away unexpectedly. He went to London by
the midnight train."
She had never been so
aware of her unchristian lack of liking for Captain Palliser as she was when he
paused a moment before he made any comment. His pause was as marked as a start,
and the smile he indulged in was, she felt, most singularly disagreeable. It
was a smile of the order which conceals an unpleasant explanation of itself.
"Oh," he
remarked. "he has gone first, has he?"
"Yes," she
answered, pouring out his coffee for him. "He evidently had business of
importance."
They were quite alone,
and she was not one of the women one need disturb oneself about. She had been
browbeaten into hypersensitive timidity early in life, and did not know how to resent
cleverly managed polite bullying. She would always feel herself at fault if she
was tempted to criticize any one. She was innocent and nervous enough to betray
herself to any extent, because she would feel it rude to refuse to answer
questions, howsoever far they exceeded the limits of polite curiosity. He had
learned a good deal from her in the past. Why not try what could be startled
out of her now? Thus Captain Palliser said:
"I dare say you
feel a little anxious at such an extraordinarily sudden departure," he
suggested amiably. "Bolting off in the middle of the night was sudden, if
he did not explain himself."
"He had no time to
explain," she answered.
"That makes it
appear all the more sudden. But no doubt he left you a message. I saw you were
reading a note when I joined you on the terrace."
Lightly casual as he
chose to make the words sound, they were an audacity he would have known better
than to allow himself with any one but a timid early-Victorian spinster whose
politeness was hypersensitive in its quality.
"He particularly
desired that I should not be anxious," she said. "He is always
considerate."
"He would, of
course, have explained everything if he had not been so hurried?"
"Of course, if it
had been necessary," answered Miss Alicia, nervously sipping her tea.
"Naturally,"
said Captain Palliser. "His note no doubt mentioned that he went away on
business connected with his friend Mr. Strangeways?"
There was no question
of the fact that she was startled.
"He had not time
enough," she said. "He could only write a few lines. Mr.
Strangeways?"
"We had a long
talk about him last night. He told me a remarkable story," Captain
Palliser went on. "I suppose you are quite familiar with all the details
of it?"
"I know how he found
him in New York, and I know how generous he has been to him."
"Have you been
told nothing more?"
"There was nothing
more to tell. If there was anything, I am sure he had some good reason for not
telling me," said Miss Alicia, loyally. "His reasons are always
good."
Palliser's air of
losing a shade or so of discretion as a result of astonishment was really well
done.
"Do you mean to
say that he has not even hinted that ever since he arrived at Temple Barholm he
has strongly suspected Strangeways' identity -- that he has even known who he
is?" he exclaimed.
Miss Alicia's small
hands clung to the table-cloth
"He has not known
at all. He has been most anxious to discover. He has used every endeavor,"
she brought out with some difficulty.
"You say he has
been trying to find out?" Palliser interposed.
"He has been more
than anxious," she protested. "He has been to London again and again;
he has gone to great expense; he has even seen people from Scotland Yard. I
have sometimes almost thought he was assuming more responsibility than was just
to himself. In the case of a relative or an old friend, but for an entire
stranger -- Oh, really, I ought not to seem to criticize. I do not presume to
criticize his wonderful generosity and determination and goodness. No one
should presume to question him."
"If he knows that
you feel like this -- " Palliser began.
"He knows all that
I feel," Miss Alicia took him up with a pretty, rising spirit. "He
knows that I am full of unspeakable gratitude to him for his beautiful kindness
to me; he knows that I admire and respect and love him in a way I could never
express, and that I would do anything in the world he could wish me to
do."
"Naturally,"
said Captain Palliser. "I was only about to express my surprise that since
he is aware of all this he has not told you who he has proved Strangeways to
be. It is a little odd, you know."
"I think" --
Miss Alicia was even gently firm in her reply -- "that you are a little
mistaken in believing Mr. Temple Barholm has proved Mr. Strangeways to be
anybody. When he has proof, he will no doubt think proper to tell me about it.
Until then I should prefer -- "
Palliser laughed as he
finished her sentence.
"Not to know. I
was not going to betray him, Miss Alicia. He evidently has one of his excellent
reasons for keeping things to himself. I may mention, however, that it is not
so much he who has proof as I myself."
"You!" How
could she help quite starting in her seat when his gray eyes fixed themselves
on her with such a touch of finely amused malice?
"I offered him the
proof last night, and it rather upset him," he said. "He thought no
one knew but himself, and he was not inclined to tell the world. He was upset
because I said I had seen the man and could swear to his identity. That was why
he went away so hurriedly. He no doubt went to see Strangeways and talk it
over."
"See Mr.
Strangeways? But Mr. Strangeways -- " Miss Alicia rose and rang the bell.
"Tell Pearson I
wish to see him at once," she said to the footman.
Palliser took in her
mood without comment. He had no objection to being present when she made
inquiries of Pearson.
"I hear the wheels
of the dog-cart," he remarked. "You see, I must catch my train."
Pearson stood at the
door.
"Is not Mr.
Strangeways in his room, Pearson?" Miss Alicia asked.
"Mr. Temple
Barholm took him to London when he last went, ma'am," answered Pearson.
"You remember he went at night. The doctor thought it best."
"He did not tell
you that, either?" said Palliser, casually.
"The dog-cart is
at the door, sir," announced Pearson.
Miss Alicia's hand was
unsteady when the departing guest took it.
"Don't be
disturbed," he said considerately, "but a most singular thing has
happened. When I asked so many questions about Temple Barholm's Man with the
Iron Mask I asked them for curious reasons. That must be my apology. You will
hear all about it later, probably from Palford & Grimby."
When he had left the
room Miss Alicia stood upon the hearth- rug as the dog-cart drove away, and she
was pale. Her simple and easily disturbed brain was in a whirl. She could
scarcely remember what she had heard, and could not in the least comprehend
what it had seemed intended to imply, except that there had been concealed in
the suggestions some disparagement of her best beloved.
Singular as it was that
Pearson should return without being summoned, when she turned and found that he
mysteriously stood inside the threshold again, as if she had called him, she
felt a great sense of relief.
"Pearson,"
she faltered, "I am rather upset by certain things which Captain Palliser
has said. I am afraid I do not understand."
She looked at him
helplessly, not knowing what more to say. She wished extremely that she could
think of something definite.
The masterly finish of
Pearson's reply lay in its neatly restrained hint of unobtrusively perceptive
sympathy.
"Yes, Miss. I was
afraid so. Which is why I took the liberty of stepping into the room again. I
myself do not understand, but of course I do not expect to. If I may be so bold
as to say it, Miss, whatever we don't understand, we both understand Mr. Temple
Barholm. My instructions were to remind you, Miss, that everything would be all
right."
Miss Alicia took up her
letter from the table where she had laid it down.
"Thank you,
Pearson," she said, her forehead beginning to clear itself a little.
"Of course, of course. I ought not to -- He told me not to -- get
rattled," she added with plaintive ingenuousness, "and I ought not
to, above all things."
"Yes, Miss. It is
most important that you should not."
THE story of the
adventures, experiences, and journeyings of Mr. Joseph Hutchinson, his
daughter, and the invention, if related in detail, would prove reading of
interest; but as this is merely a study of the manner in which the untrained
characteristics and varied limitations of one man adjusted or failed to adjust
themselves to incongruous surroundings and totally unprepared-for
circumstances, such details, whatsoever their potential picturesqueness, can be
touched upon but lightly. No new idea of value to the world of practical
requirements is presented to the public at large without the waking of many
sleeping dogs, and the stirring of many snapping fish, floating with open ears
and eyes in many pools. An uneducated, blustering, obstinate man of one idea,
having resentfully borne discouragement and wounded egotism for years, and
suddenly confronting immense promise of success, is not unlikely to be prey
easily harpooned. Joseph Hutchinson's rebound from despair to high and
well-founded hope made of him exactly what such a man is always made by such
rebound. The testimony to his genius and judgment which acknowledgment of the
value of his work implied was naturally, in his opinion, only a proper tribute
which the public had been a bull-headed fool not to lay at his feet years
before. So much time lost, and so much money for it, as well as for him, and
served 'em all damned well right, he said. If Temple Barholm had+n't come into
his money, and had+n't had more sense than the rest of them, where would they all
have been? Perhaps they+'d never have had the benefit of the thing he+'d been
telling them about for years. He prided himself immensely on the possession of
a business shrewdness which was an absolute defense against any desire on the
part of the iniquitous to overreach him. He believed it to be a peculiarly
Lancashire characteristic, and kept it in view constantly.
"Lancashire+'s not
easy to do," he would say hilariously. "Them that can do a Lancashire
chap has got to look out that they get up early in the morning and don't go to
bed till late."
Smooth-mannered and
astute men of business who knew how to make a man talk were given diffuse and
loud-voiced explanations of his methods and long-unacknowledged merits and
characteristics. His life, his morals, and his training, or rather lack of it,
were laid before them as examples of what a man might work himself up to if
"he had it in him." Education did+n't do it. He had never been to
naught but a village school, where he+'d picked up precious little but the
three R's. It had to be born in a man. Look at him! His invention promised to
bring him in a fortune like a duke's, if he managed it right and kept his eyes
open for sharpers. This company and that company were after him, but Lancashire
did+n't snap up things without going into 'em, and under 'em, and through 'em,
for the matter of that.
The well-mannered
gentlemen of business stimulated him greatly by their appreciative attention.
He sometimes lost his head a trifle and almost bullied them, but they did not
seem to mind it. Their apparently old-time knowledge of and respect for
Lancashire business sagacity seemed invariably a marked thing. Men of genius
and powerful character combined with practical shrewdness of outlook they
intimated, were of enormous value to the business world. They were to be
counted upon as important factors. They could see and deal with both sides of a
proposal as those of weaker mind could not.
"That they
can," Hutchinson would admit, rolling about in his chair and thrusting his
hands in his pockets. "They+'ve got some bottom to stand on." And he
would feel amenable to reason.
Little Ann found her
duties and responsibilities increasing daily. Many persons seemed to think it
necessary to come and talk business, and father had so much to think of and
reason out, so that he could be sure that he did+n't make any mistakes. In a
quiet, remote, and darkened corner of her mind, in which were stored all such
things as it was well to say little or nothing about, there was discreetly kept
for reference the secretly acquired knowledge that father did not know so much
about business ways and business people as he thought he did. Mother had
learned this somewhat important fact, and had secluded it in her own private
mental store-room with much affectionate delicacy.
"Father+'s a great
man and a good man, Ann love," she had confided to her, choosing an
occasion when her husband was a hundred miles away, "and he is right-down
Lancashire in his clever way of seeing through people that think themselves
sharp; but when a man is a genius and noble-minded he sometimes can't see the
right people's faults and wickedness. He thinks they mean as honest as he does.
And there+'s times when he may get taken in if some one, perhaps not half as
clever as he is, does+n't look after him. When the invention+'s taken up, and
everybody's running after him to try to cheat him out of his rights, if I+'m
not there, Ann, you must just keep with him and watch every minute. I+'ve seen
these sharp, tricky ones right-down flinch and quail when there was a nice,
quiet-behaved woman in the room, and she just fixed her eye steady and
clear-like on them, and showed she+'d took in every word and was like to
remember. You know what I mean, Ann; you+'ve got that look in your own
eye."
She had. The various
persons who interviewed Mr. Hutchinson became familiar with the fact that he
had an unusual intimacy with and affection for his daughter. She was present on
all occasions. If she had not been such a quiet and entirely unobtrusive little
thing, she might have been an obstacle to freedom of expression. But she seemed
a childish, unsophisticated creature, who always had a book with her when she
waited in an office, and a trifle of sewing to occupy herself with when she was
at home. At first she so obliterated herself that she was scarcely noticed; but
in course of time it became observed by some that she was curiously pretty. The
face usually bent over her book or work was tinted like a flower, and she had
quite magnificent red hair. A stout old financier first remarked her eyes. He
found one day that she had quietly laid her book on her lap, and that they were
resting upon him like unflinching crystals as he talked to her father. Their
serenity made him feel annoyed and uncomfortable. It was a sort of recording
serenity. He felt as though she would so clearly remember every word he had
said that she would be able to write it down when she went home; and he did not
care to have it written down. So he began to wander somewhat in his argument,
and did not reach his conclusions.
"I was glad,
Father, to see how you managed that gentleman this afternoon," Little Ann
said that night when Hutchinson had settled himself with his pipe after an
excellent dinner.
"Eh?" he
exclaimed. "Eh?"
"The one,"
she exclaimed, "that thought he was so sure he was going to persuade you
to sign that paper. I do wonder he could think you+'d listen to such a poor
offer, and tie up so much. Why, even I could see he was trying to take advantage,
and I know nothing in the world about business."
The financier in
question had been a brilliant and laudatory conversationalist, and had so
soothed and exhilarated Mr. Hutchinson that such perils had beset him as his
most lurid imaginings could never have conceived in his darkest moments of
believing that the entire universe had ceased all other occupation to engage in
that of defrauding him of his rights and dues. He had been so uplifted by the
admiration of his genius so properly exhibited, and the fluency with which his
future fortunes had been described, that he had been huffed when the arguments
seemed to dwindle away. Little Ann startled him, but it was not he who would
show signs of dismay at the totally unexpected expression of adverse opinion.
He had got into the habit of always listening, though inadvertently, as it
were, to Ann as he had inadvertently listened to her mother.
"Rosenthal?"
he said. "Are you talking about him?"
"Yes, I am,"
Little Ann answered, smiling approvingly over her bit of sewing. "Father,
I wish you+'d try and teach me some of the things you know about business.
I+'ve learned a little by just listening to you talk; but I should so like to
feel as if I could follow you when you argue. I do so enjoy hearing you argue.
It's just an education."
"Women are not up
to much at business," reflected Hutchinson. If you+'d been a boy, I+'d
have trained you same as I+'ve trained myself. You+'re a sharp little thing,
Ann, but you+'re a woman. Not but what a woman+'s the best thing on earth,"
he added almost severely in his conviction -- "the best thing on earth in
her place. I don't know what I+'d ever have done without you, Ann, in the bad
times."
He loved her,
blundering old egotist, just as he had loved her mother. Ann always knew it,
and her own love for him warmed all the world about them both. She got up and
went to him to kiss him, and pat him, and stuff a cushion behind his stout
back.
"And now the good
times have come," she said, bestowing on him two or three special little
pats which were caresses of her own invention, "and people see what you
are and always have been, as they ought to have seen long ago, I don't want to
feel as if I could+n't keep up with you and understand your plans. Perhaps
I+'ve got a little bit of your cleverness, and you might teach me to use it in
small ways. I+'ve got a good memory you know, Father love, and I might
recollect things people say and make bits of notes of them to save you trouble.
And I can calculate. I once got a copy of Bunyan's `Pilgrim's Progress' for a
prize at the village school just for sums."
The bald but
unacknowledged fact that Mr. Hutchinson had never exhibited gifts likely to
entitle him to receive a prize for "sums" caused this suggestion to
be one of some practical value. When business men talked to him of per cents.,
and tenth shares or net receipts, and expected him to comprehend their
proportions upon the spot without recourse to pencil and paper, he felt himself
grow hot and nervous and red, and was secretly terrified lest the party of the
second part should detect that he was tossed upon seas of horrible uncertainty.
T. Tembarom in the same situation would probably have said,
"This is the place
where T. T. sits down a while to take breath and count things up on his
fingers. I am not a sharp on arithmetic, and I need time -- lots of it."
Mr. Hutchinson's way
was to bluster irritatedly.
"Aye, aye, I see
that, of course, plain enough. I see that. And feel himself breaking into a
cold perspiration. "Eh, this English climate is a damp un," he would
add when it became necessary to mop his red forehead somewhat with his big
clean handkerchief.
Therefore he found it
easy to receive Little Ann's proposition with favor.
"There+'s summat
i' that," he acknowledged graciously dropping into Lancashire.
"That+'s one of the little things a woman can do if she+'s sharp at
figures. Your mother taught me that much. She always said women ought to look
after the bits of things as was too small for a man to bother with."
"Men have the big
things to look after. That+'s enough for anybody," said Little Ann.
"And they ought to leave something for women to do. If you'll just let me
keep notes for you and remember things and answer your letters, and just make
calculations you're too busy to attend to, I should feel right-down happy,
Father."
"Eh!" he said
relievedly, "tha art like thy mother."
"That would make
me happy if there was nothing else to{??} do it," said Ann, smoothing his
shoulder.
"You're her
girl," he said, warmed and supported.
"Yes, I+'m her
girl, and I+'m yours. Now, is+n't there some little thing I could begin with?
Would you mind telling me if I was right in what I thought you thought about
Mr. Rosenthal's offer?"
"What did you
think I thought about it?" He was able to put affectionate condescension
into the question.
She went to her
work-basket and took out a sheet of paper. She came back and sat cozily on the
arm of his chair.
"I had to put it
all down when I came home," she said. "I wanted to make sure I
had+n't forgotten. I do hope I did+n't make mistakes."
She gave it to him to
look at, and as he settled himself down to its careful examination, she kept
her blue eyes upon him. She herself did not know that it was a wonderful little
document in its neatly jotted down notes of the exact detail most important to
his interests.
There were figures,
there were calculations of profits, there were records of the gist of his
replies, there were things Hutchinson himself could not possibly have fished
out of the jumbled rag-bag of his uncertain recollections.
"Did I say
that?" he exclaimed once.
"Yes, Father love,
and I could see it upset him. I was watching his face because it was+n't a face
I took to."
Joseph Hutchinson began
to chuckle -- the chuckle of a relieved and gratified stout man.
"Tha kept thy eyes
open, Little Ann," he said. "And the way tha's put it down is a
credit to thee. And I'll lay a sovereign that tha made no mistakes in what tha
thought I was thinking."
He was a little anxious
to hear what it had been. The memorandum had brought him up with a slight
shock, because it showed him that he had not remembered certain points, and had
passed over others which were of dangerous importance. Ann slipped her warm arm
about his neck, as she nearly always did when she sat on the arm of his chair
and talked things over with him. She had never thought, in fact she was not
even aware, that her soft little instincts made her treat him as the big, good,
conceited, blundering child nature had created him.
"What I was seeing
all the time was the way you were taking in his trick of putting whole lots of
things in that did+n't really matter, and leaving out things that did,"
she explained. "He kept talking about what the invention would make in
England, and how it would make it, and adding up figures and per cents. and
royalties until my head was buzzing inside. And when he thought he'd got your
mind fixed on England so that you+'d almost forget there was any other country
to think of, he read out the agreement that said `All rights,' and he was silly
enough to think he could get you to sign it without reading it over and over
yourself, and showing it to a clever lawyer that would know that as many tricks
can be played by things being left out of a paper as by things being put
in."
Small beads of moisture
broke out on the bald part of Joseph Hutchinson's head. He had been first so
flattered and exhilarated by the quoting of large figures, and then so
flustrated and embarrassed by his inability to calculate and follow argument,
and again so soothed and elated and thrilled by his own importance in the
scheme and the honors which his position in certain companies would heap upon
him, that an abyss had yawned before him of which he had been wholly unaware.
He was not unaware of it now. He was a vainglorious, ignorant man, whose life
had been spent in common work done under the supervision of those who knew what
he did not know. He had fed himself upon the comforting belief that he had
learned all the tricks of any trade. He had been openly boastful of his
astuteness and experience, and yet, as Ann's soft little voice went on, and she
praised his cleverness in seeing one point after another, he began to quake
within himself before the dawning realization that he had seen none of them,
that he had been carried along exactly as Rosenthal had intended that he should
be, and that if luck had not intervened, he had been on the brink of signing
his name to an agreement that would have implied a score of concessions he
would have bellowed like a bull at the thought of making if he had known what
he was doing.
"Aye, lass,"
he gulped out when he could speak -- "aye, lass, tha wert right enow. I+'m
glad tha wert there and heard it, and saw what I was thinking. I did+n't say
much. I let the chap have rope enow to hang himself with. When he comes back
I+'ll give him a bit o' my mind as+'ll startle him. It was right-down clever of
thee to see just what I had i' my head about all that there gab about things as
did+n't matter, an' the leavin' out them as did -- thinking I would+n't notice.
Many+'s the time I+'ve said, `It is na so much what's put into a contract as
what's left out.' I'll warrant tha'st heard me say it thysen."
"I dare say I
have," answered Ann, "and I dare say that was why it came into my
mind."
"That was
it," he answered. "Thy mother was always tellin' me of things I+'d
said that I+'d clean forgot myself."
He was beginning to
recover his balance and self-respect. It would have been so like a Lancashire
chap to have seen and dealt shrewdly with a business schemer who tried to
outwit him that he was gradually convinced that he had thought all that had
been suggested, and had comported himself with triumphant though silent
astuteness. He even began to rub his hands.
"I+'ll show
him," he said, "I+'ll send him off with a flea in his ear."
"If you+'ll help
me, I+'ll study out the things I+'ve written down on this paper," Ann
said, "and then I+'ll write down for you just the things you make up your
mind to say. It will be such a good lesson for me, if you don't mind, Father.
It won't be much to write it out the way you+'ll say it. You know how you
always feel that in business the fewer words the better, and that, however much
a person deserves it, calling names and showing you+'re angry is only wasting
time. One of the cleverest things you ever thought was that a thief does+n't
mind being called one if he's got what he wanted out of you; he'll only laugh
to see you in a rage when you can't help yourself. And if he has+n't got what
he wanted, it+'s only waste of strength to work yourself up. It+'s you being
what you are that makes you know that temper is+n't business."
"Well," said
Hutchinson, drawing a long and deep breath, "I was almost hot enough to
have forgot that, and I+'m glad you+'ve reminded me. We+'ll go over that paper
now, Ann. I+'d like to give you your lesson while we+'ve got a bit o' time to
ourselves and what I+'ve said is fresh in your mind. The trick is always to get
at things while they+'re fresh in your mind."
The little daughter
with the red hair was present during Rosenthal's next interview with the owner
of the invention. The fellow, he told himself, had been thinking matters over,
had perhaps consulted a lawyer; and having had time for refection, he did not
present a mass of mere inflated and blundering vanity as a target for adroit
aim. He seemed a trifle sulky, but he did not talk about himself diffusely, and
lose his head when he was smoothed the right way. He had a set of curiously
concise notes to which he referred, and he stuck to his points with a bulldog
obstinacy which was not to be shaken. Something had set him on a new tack. The
tricks which could be used only with a totally ignorant and readily flattered
and influenced business amateur were no longer in order. This was baffling and
irritating.
The worst feature of
the situation was that the daughter did not read a book, as had seemed her
habit at other times. She sat with a tablet and pencil on her knee, and, still
as unobtrusively as ever, jotted down notes.
"Put that down,
Ann," her father said to her more than once. "There's no objections
to having things written down, I suppose?" he put it bluntly to Rosenthal.
"I+'ve got to have notes made when I+'m doing business. Memory+'s all well
enough, but black and white+'s better. No one can go back of black and white.
Notes save time."
There was but one
attitude possible. No man of business could resent the recording of his
considered words, but the tablet and pencil and the quietly bent red head were
extraordinary obstacles to the fluidity of eloquence. Rosenthal found his
arguments less ready and his methods modifying themselves. The outlook narrowed
itself. When he returned to his office and talked the situation over with his
partner, he sat and bit his nails in restless irritation.
"Ridiculous as it
seems, outrageously ridiculous, I+'ve an idea," he said, "I+'ve more
than an idea that we have to count with the girl."
"Girl? What
girl?"
"Daughter.
Well-behaved, quiet bit of a thing, who sits in a corner and listens while she
pretends to sew or read. I+'m certain of it. She+'s taken to making notes now,
and Hutchinson's turned stubborn. You need not laugh, Lewis. She+'s in it.
We+'ve got to count with that girl, little female mouse as she looks."
This view, which was
first taken by Rosenthal and passed on to his partner, was in course of time
passed on to others and gradually accepted, sometimes reluctantly and with much
private protest, sometimes with amusement. The well-behaved daughter went with
Hutchinson wheresoever his affairs called him. She was changeless in the
unobtrusiveness of her demeanor, which was always that of a dutiful and
obedient young person who attended her parent because he might desire her
humble little assistance in small matters.
"She+'s my
secretary," Hutchinson began to explain, with a touch of swagger.
"I+'ve got to have a secretary, and I+'d rather trust my private business
to my own daughter than to any one else. It+'s safe with her."
It was so safe with her
steady demureness that Hutchinson found himself becoming steady himself. The
"lessons" he gave to Little Ann, and the notes made as a result,
always ostensibly for her own security and instruction, began to form a singularly
firm foundation for statement and argument. He began to tell himself that his
memory was improving. Facts were no longer jumbled together in his mind. He
could better follow a line of logical reasoning. He less often grew red and hot
and flustered.
"That's the thing
I+'ve said so often -- that temper's got naught to do wi' business, and only
upsets a man when he wants all his wits about him. It's the truest thing I ever
worked out," he not infrequently congratulated himself. "If a chap
can keep his temper, he+'ll be like to keep his head and drive his bargain. I
see it plainer every day o' my life."
IT was in the course of
the "lessons" that he realized that he had always argued that the
best way to do business was to do it face to face with people. To stay in
England, and let another chap make your bargains for you in France or Germany
or some other outlandish place, where frog-eating foreigners ran loose, was a
fool's trick. He+'d said it often enough. "Get your eye on 'em, and let
them know you+'ve got it on them, and they+'d soon find out they were dealing
with Lancashire, and not with foreign knaves and nincompoops." So, when it
became necessary to deal with France, Little Ann packed him up neatly, so to
speak, and in the rôle of obedient secretarial companion took him to that
country, having for weeks beforehand mentally confronted the endless
complications attending the step. She knew, in the first place, what the effect
of the French language would be upon his temper: that it would present itself
to him as a wall deliberately built by the entire nation as a means of
concealing a deep duplicity the sole object of which was the baffling,
thwarting, and undoing of Englishmen, from whom it wished to wrest their honest
rights. Apoplexy becoming imminent, as a result of his impotent rage during
their first few days in Paris, she paid a private visit to a traveler's agency,
and after careful inquiry discovered that it was not impossible to secure the
attendance and service of a well- mannered young man who spoke most of the
languages employed by most of the inhabitants of the globe. She even found that
she might choose from a number of such persons, and she therefore selected with
great care.
"One that's got a
good temper, and is+n't easy irritated," she said to herself, in summing
up the aspirants, "but not one that+'s easy-tempered because he+'s silly.
He must have plenty of common sense as well as be willing to do what he+'s
told."
When her father
discovered that he himself had been considering the desirability of engaging
the services of such a person, and had, indeed, already, in a way, expressed
his intention of sending her to "the agency chap" to look him up, she
was greatly relieved.
"I can try to
teach him what you+'ve taught me, Father," she said, "and of course
he+'ll learn just by being with you."
The assistant engaged
was a hungry young student who had for weeks, through ill luck, been
endeavoring to return with some courage the gaze of starvation, which had been
staring him in the face.
His name was Dudevant,
and with desperate struggles he had educated himself highly, having cherished
literary ambitions from his infancy. At this juncture it had become imperative
that he should, for a few months at least, obtain food. Ann had chosen well by
instinct. His speech had told her that he was intelligent, his eyes had told
her that he would do anything on earth to earn his living.
From the time of his
advent, Joseph Hutchinson had become calmer and had ceased to be in peril of
apoplectic seizure. Foreign nations became less iniquitous and dangerous,
foreign languages were less of a barrier, easier to understand. A pleasing
impression that through great facility he had gained a fair practical knowledge
of French, German, and Italian, supported and exhilarated him immensely.
"It+'s right-down
wonderful how a chap gets to understand these fellows' lingo after he+'s
listened to it a bit," he announced to Ann. "I would+n't have
believed it of myself that I could see into it as quick as I have. I could+n't
say as I understand everything they say just when they+'re saying it; but I
understand it right enough when I+'ve had time to translate like. If foreigners
did+n't talk so fast and run their words one into another, and jabber as if
their mouths was full of puddin', it 'd be easier for them as is English. Now,
there+'s `wee' and `nong.' I know 'em whenever I hear 'em, and that's a good
bit of help."
"Yes,"
answered Ann, "of course that+'s the chief thing you want to know in
business, whether a person is going to say `yes' or `no.' "
He began to say
"wee" and "nong" at meals, and once broke forth "Passy
mor le burr" in a tone so casually Parisian that Ann was frightened,
because she did not understand immediately, and also because she saw looming up
before her a future made perilous by the sudden interjection of unexpected
foreign phrases it would be incumbent upon her and Dudevant to comprehend
instantaneously without invidious hesitation.
"Don't you
understand? Pass the butter. Don't you understand a bit o' French like
that?" he exclaimed irritatedly. "Buy yourself one o' these books
full of easy sentences and learn some of 'em, lass. You oughtn't to be
travelin' about with your father in foreign countries and learnin' nothin'. It+'s
not every lass that+'s gettin' your advantages."
Ann had not mentioned
the fact that she spent most of her rare leisure moments in profound study of
phrase-books and grammars, which she kept in her trunk and gave her attention
to before she got up in the morning, after she went to her room at night, and
usually while she was dressing. You can keep a book open before you when you
are brushing your hair. Dudevant gave her a lesson or so whenever time allowed.
She was as quick to learn as her father thought he was, and she was desperately
determined. It was really not long before she understood much more than
"wee and nong" when she was present at a business interview.
"You are a
wonderful young lady," Dudevant said, with that well-known yearning in his
eyes. "You are most wonderful."
"She's just a
wonder," Mrs. Bowse and her boarders had said. And the respectful yearning
in the young Frenchman's eyes and voice were well known to her because she had
seen it often before, and remembered it, in Jem Bowles and Julius Steinberger.
That this young man had without an hour of delay fallen abjectly in love with
her was a circumstance with which she dealt after her own inimitably kind and
undeleterious method, which in itself was an education to any amorous youth.
"I can understand
all you tell me," she said when he reached the point of confiding his hard
past to her. "I can understand it because I knew some one who had to fight
for himself just that way, only perhaps it was harder because he was+n't
educated as you are."
"Did he -- confide
in you?" Dudevant ventured, with delicate hesitation. "You are so
kind I am sure he did, Mademoiselle."
"He told me about
it because he knew I wanted to hear," she answered. "I was very fond
of him," she added, and her kind gravity was quite unshaded by any
embarrassment. "I was right-down fond of him."
His emotion rendered
him for a moment indiscreet, to her immediate realization and regret, as was
evident by his breaking off in the midst of his question.
"And now -- are
you?"
"Yes, I always
shall be, Mr. Dudevant."
His adoration naturally
only deepened itself as all hope at once receded, as it could not but recede
before the absolute pellucid truth of her.
"However much he
likes me, he will get over it in time. People do, when they know how things
stand," she was thinking, with maternal sympathy.
It did him no bitter
harm to help her with her efforts at learning what she most needed, and he
found her intelligence and modest power of concentration remarkable. A
singularly clear knowledge of her own specialized requirements was a practical
background to them both. She had no desire to shine; she was merely steadily
bent on acquiring as immediately as possible a comprehension of nouns, verbs,
and phrases that would be useful to her father. The manner in which she applied
herself, and assimilated what it was her quietly fixed intention to assimilate,
bespoke her possession of a brain the powers of which being concentrated on
large affairs might have accomplished almost startling results. There was,
however, nothing startling in her intentions, and ambition did not touch her.
Yet, as she went with Hutchinson from one country to another, more than one man
of affairs had it borne in upon him that her young slimness and her silence
represented an unanticipated knowledge of points under discussion which might
wisely be considered as a factor in all decisions for or against. To realize
that a soft-cheeked, child-eyed girl was an element to regard privately in
discussions connected with the sale of, or the royalties paid on, a valuable
patent appeared in some minds to be a situation not without flavor. She was the
kind of little person a man naturally made love to, and a girl who was made
love to in a clever manner frequently became amenable to reason, and might be
persuaded to use her influence in the direction most desired. But such male
financiers as began with this idea discovered that they had been led into
errors of judgment through lack of familiarity with the variations of type. One
personable young man of title, who had just been disappointed in a desirable
marriage with a fortune, being made aware that the invention was likely to
arrive at amazing results, was sufficiently rash to approach Mr. Hutchinson
with formal proposals. Having a truly British respect for the lofty in place,
and not being sufficiently familiar with titled personages to discriminate
swiftly between the large and the small, Joseph Hutchinson was somewhat unduly
elated.
"The chap+'s a
count, lass," he said. "Tha 'u'd go back to Manchester a
countess."
"I+'ve heard
they+'re nearly all counts in these countries," commented Ann. "And
there+'s countesses that have to do their own washing, in a manner of speaking.
You send him to me, Father."
When the young man
came, and compared the fine little nose of Miss Hutchinson with the large and
bony structure dominating the countenance of the German heiress he had lost,
also when he gazed into the clearness of the infantile blue eyes, his spirits
rose. He felt himself en veine; he was equal to attacking the situation. He
felt that he approached it with alluring and chivalric delicacy. He almost
believed all that he said.
But the pellucid
blueness of the gaze that met his was confusingly unstirred by any shade of
suitable timidity or emotion. There was something in the lovely, sedate little
creature, something so undisturbed and matter of fact, that it frightened him,
because he suddenly felt like a fool whose folly had been found out.
"That's downright
silly," remarked Little Ann, not allowing him to escape from her glance,
which unhesitatingly summed up him and his situation. "And you know it is.
You don't know anything about me, and you would+n't like me if you did. And I
should+n't like you. We're too different. Please go away, and don't say
anything more about it. I should+n't have patience to talk it over."
"Father," she
said that night, "if ever I get married at all, there+'s only one person
I+'m going to marry. You know that." And she would say no more.
By the time they
returned to England, the placing of the invention in divers countries had been
arranged in a manner which gave assurance of a fortune for its owners on a
foundation not likely to have established itself in more adverse circumstances.
Mr. Hutchinson had really driven some admirable bargains, and had secured
advantages which to his last hour he would believe could have been achieved
only by Lancashire shrewdness and Lancashire ability to "see as far
through a mile-stone as most chaps, an' a bit farther." The way in which
he had never allowed himself to be "done" caused him at times to
chuckle himself almost purple with self-congratulation.
"They got to know
what they was dealing with, them chaps. They was sharp, but Joe was a bit
sharper," he would say.
They found letters
waiting for them when they reached London.
"There+'s one fro'
thy grandmother," Hutchinson said, in dealing out the package.
"She+'s written to thee pretty steady for an old un."
This was true. Letters
from her had followed them from one place to another. This was a thick one in
an envelop of good size.
"Are+n't tha going
to read it?" he asked.
"Not till you+'ve
had your dinner, Father. You+'ve had a long day of it with that channel at the
end. I want to see you comfortable with your pipe."
The hotel was a good
one, and the dinner was good. Joseph Hutchinson enjoyed it with the appetite of
a robust man who has had time to get over a not too pleasant crossing. When he
had settled down into a stout easy-chair with the pipe, he drew a long and
comfortable breath as he looked about the room.
"Eh, Ann,
lass," he said, "thy mother+'d be fine an' set up if she could see aw
this. Us having the best that+'s to be had, an' knowin' we can have it to the
end of our lives, that+'s what it+'s come to, tha knows. No more third-class
railway-carriages for you and me. No more `commercial' an' `temperance' hotels.
Th' first cut+'s what we can have -- th' upper cut. Eh, eh, but it+'s a good
day for a man when he+'s begun to be appreciated as he should be."
"It+'s a good day
for those that love him," said Little Ann. "And I dare say mother
knows every bit about it."
"I dare say she
does," admitted Hutchinson, with tender lenience. "She was one o'
them as believed that way. And I never knowed her to be wrong in aught else, so
I+'m ready to give in as she was reet about that. Good lass she was, good
lass."
He had fallen into a
contented and utterly comfortable doze in his chair when Ann sat down to read
her grandmother's letter. The old woman always wrote at length, giving many
details and recording village events with shrewd realistic touches. Throughout
their journeyings, Ann had been followed by a record of the estate and
neighborhood of Temple Barholm which had lacked nothing of atmosphere. She had
known what the new lord of the manor did, what people said, what the attitude
of the gentry had become; that the visit of the Countess of Mallowe and her
daughter had extended itself until curiosity and amusement had ceased to
comment, and passively awaited results. She had heard of Miss Alicia and her
reincarnation, and knew much of the story of the Duke of Stone, whose
reputation as a "dommed clever owd chap" had earned for him a sort of
awed popularity. There had been many "ladies." The new Temple Barholm
had boldly sought them out and faced them in their strongholds with the manner
of one who would confront the worst and who revealed no tendency to flinch. The
one at Stone Hover with the "pretty color" and the one with the
dimples had appeared frequently upon the scene. Then there had been Lady Joan
Fayre, who had lived at his elbow, sitting at his table, driving in his
carriages with the air of cold aloofness which the cottagers "could na
abide an' had no patience wi'." She had sometimes sat and wondered and
wondered about things, and sometimes had flushed daisy- red instead of
daisy-pink; and sometimes she had turned rather pale and closed her soft mouth
firmly. But, though she had written twice a week to her grandmother, she had
recorded principally the successes and complexities of the invention, and had
asked very few questions. Old Mrs. Hutchinson would tell her all she must know,
and her choice of revelation would be made with a far-sightedness which needed
no stimulus of questioning. The letter she had found awaiting her had been long
on its way, having missed her at point after point and followed her at last to
London. It looked and felt thick and solid in its envelop. Little Ann opened
it, stirred by the suggestion of quickened pulse-beats with which she had
become familiar. As she bent over it she looked sweetly flushed and warmed.
Joseph Hutchinson's
doze had almost deepened into sleep when he was awakened by the touch of her
hand on his shoulder. She was standing by him, holding some sheets of her
grandmother's letter, and several other sheets were lying on the table.
Something had occurred which had changed her quiet look.
"Has aught
happened to your grandmother?" he asked.
"No, Father, but
this letter that's been following me from one place to another has got some
queer news in it."
"What+'s up, lass?
Tha looks as if summat was up."
"The thing that's
happened has given me a great deal to think of," was her answer.
"It+'s about Mr. Temple Barholm and Mr. Strangeways."
He became wide-awake at
once, sitting up and turning in his chair in testy anxiety.
"Now, now,"
he exclaimed, "I hope that cracked chap+'s not gone out an' out mad an'
done some mischief. I towd Temple Barholm it was a foolish thing to do, taking
all that trouble about him. Has he set fire to th' house or has he knocked th'
poor lad on th' head?"
"No, he has+n't,
Father. He+'s disappeared, and Mr. Temple Barholm+'s disappeared, too."
"Disappeared?"
Hutchinson almost shouted. "What for, i' the Lord's name?"
"Nobody knows for
certain, and people are talking wild. The village is all upset, and all sorts
of silly things are being said."
"What sort o'
things?"
"You know what
servants at big houses are -- how they hear bits of talk and make much of
it," she explained. "They+'ve been curious and chattering among
themselves about Mr. Strangeways from the first. It was Burrill that said he
believed he was some relation that was being hid away for some good reason. One
night Mr. Temple Barholm and Captain Palliser were having a long talk together,
and Burrill was about -- "
"Aye, he'd be
about if he thought there was a chance of him hearing summat as was none of his
business," jerked out Hutchinson, irately.
"They were talking
about Mr. Strangeways, and Burrill heard Captain Palliser getting angry; and as
he stepped near the door he heard him say out loud that he could swear in any
court of justice that the man he had seen at the west room window -- it+'s a startling
thing, Father -- was Mr. James Temple Barholm." For the moment her face
was pale.
Hereupon Hutchinson
sprang up.
"What!" His
second shout was louder than his first. "Th' liar! Th' chap's dead, an' he
knows it. Th' dommed mischief-makin' liar!"
Her eyes were clear and
speculatively thoughtful, notwithstanding her lack of color.
"There have been
people that have been thought dead that have come back to their friends alive.
It's happened many a time," she said. "It would+n't be so strange for
a man that had no friends to be lost in a wild, far-off place where there was
neither law nor order, and where every man was fighting for his own life and
the gold he was mad after. Particularly a man that was shamed and desperate and
wanted to hide himself. And, most of all, it would be easy, if he was like Mr.
Strangeways, and could+n't remember, and had lost himself."
As her father listened,
the angry redness of his countenance moderated its hue. His eyes gradually
began to question and his under jaw fell slightly.
"Si' thee,
lass," he broke out huskily, "does that mean to say tha believes
it?"
"It+'s not often
you can believe what you don't know," she answered. "I don't know
anything about it. There+'s just one thing I believe, because I know it. I believe
what grandmother does. Read that."
She handed him the
final sheet of old Mrs. Hutchinson's letter. It was written with very black ink
and in an astonishingly bold and clear hand. It was easy to read the sentences
with which she ended.
There+'s a lot said.
There+'s always more saying than doing. But it+'s right-down funny to see how
the lad has made hard and fast friends just going about in his queer way, and
no one knowing how he did it. I like him myself. He's one of those you need+n't
ask questions about. If there+'s anything said that is+n't to his credit, it+'s
not true. There+'s no ifs, buts, or ands about that, Ann.
Little Ann herself read
the words as her father read them.
"That+'s the thing
I believe, because I know it," was all she said.
"It+'s the thing
I+'d swear to mysel'," her father answered bluffly. "But, by Judd --
"
She gave him a little
push and spoke to him in homely Lancashire phrasing, and with some soft
unsteadiness of voice.
"Sit thee down,
Father love," she said, "and let me sit on thy knee."
He sat down with
emotional readiness, and she sat on his stout knee like a child. It was a thing
she did in tender or troubled moments as much in these days as she had done
when she was sis or seven. Her little lightness and soft young ways made it the
most natural thing in the world, as well as the prettiest. She had always sat
on his knee in the hours when he had been most discouraged over the invention.
She had known it made him feel as though he were taking care of her, and as
though she depended utterly on him to steady the foundations of her world. What
could such a little bit of a lass do without "a father"?
"It+'s upset thee,
lass," he said. "It's upset thee."
He saw her slim hands
curl themselves into small, firm fists as they rested on her lap.
"I can't bear to
think that ill can be said of him, even by a wastrel like Captain
Palliser," she said. "He+'s mine."
It made him fumble
caressingly at her big knot of soft red hair.
"Thine, is
he?" he said. "Thine! Eh, but tha did say that just like thy mother
would ha' said it; tha brings the heart i' my throat now and again. That chap's
i' luck, I can tell him -- same as I was once."
"He+'s mine now,
whatever happens," she went on, with a firmness which no skeptic would
have squandered time in the folly of hoping to shake. "He's done what I
told him to do, and it+'s me he wants. He+'s found out for himself, and so have
I. He can have me the minute he wants me -- the very minute."
"He can?"
said Hutchinson. "That settles it. I believe tha+'d rather take him when
he was i' trouble than when he was out of it. Same as tha+'d rather take him i'
a fiat in Harlem on fifteen dollar a week than on fifteen hundred."
"Yes, Father, I
would. It+'d give me more to do for him."
"Eh, eh," he
grunted tenderly, "thy mother again. I used to tell her as the only thing
she had agen me was that I never got i' jail so she could get me out an' stand
up for me after it. There+'s only one thing worrits me a bit: I wish the lad
had+n't gone away."
"I+'ve thought
that out, though I+'ve not had much time to reason about things," said
Little Ann. "If he's gone away, he's gone to get something; and whatever
it happens to be, he+'ll be likely to bring it back with him, Father."
OLD Mrs. Hutchinson's
letter had supplied much detail, but when her son and grand- daughter arrived
in the village of Temple Barholm they heard much more, the greater part of it
not in the least to be relied upon.
"The most of it is
lies, as folks enjoys theirsels pretendin' to believe," the grandmother
commented. "It+'s servants'-hall talk and cottage gossip, and plenty made
itself up out o' beer drunk in th' tap-room at th' Wool Park. In a place where
naught much happens, people get into th' way o springin' on a bit o' news, and
shakin' and worryin' it like a terrier does a rat. It+'s nature. That lad+'s
given 'em lots to talk about ever since he coom. He+'s been a blessin' to 'em.
If he+'d been gentry, he+'d not ha' been nigh as lively. Th' village lads tries
to talk through their noses like him. Little Tummas Hibblethwaite does it i'
broad Lancashire."
The only facts fairly
authenticated were that the mysterious stranger had been taken away very late
one night, some time before the interview between Mr. Temple Barholm and
Captain Palliser, of which Burrill knew so much because he had "happened
to be about." When a domestic magnate of Burrill's type "happens to
be about" at a crisis, he is not unlikely to hear a great deal. Burrill,
it was believed, knew much more than he deigned to make public. The entire
truth was that Captain Palliser himself, in one of his hasty appearances in the
neighborhood of Temple Barholm, had bestowed a few words of cold caution on him.
"Don't talk too
much," he had said. "Proof is required before talk is safe. The
American was sharp enough to say that to me himself. He was sharp enough, too,
to keep his man hidden. I was the only person that saw him who could have
recognized him, and I saw him by chance. Palford & Grimby require proof. We
are in search of it. Servants will talk; but if you don't want to run the risk
of getting yourself into trouble, don't make absolute statements."
This had been a
disappointment to Burrill, who had seen himself developing in magnitude; but he
was a timid man, and therefore felt it wise to convey his knowledge merely
through the conviction carried by a dignified silence after his first
indiscreet revelation of having "happened to be about" had been made.
It would have been some solace to him to intimate to Miss Alicia by his bearing
and the manner of his services that she had been discovered, so to speak, in
the character of a sort of accomplice; that her position was a perilously
uncertain one, which would probably end in utter downfall, leaving her in her
old and proper place as an elderly, insignificant, and unattractive poor
relation, without a feature to recommend her. But being, as before remarked, a
timid man, and recalling the interview between himself and his employer held
outside the dining-room door, and having also a disturbing memory of the sharp,
cool, boyish eye and the tone of the casual remark that he had "a head on
his shoulders" and that it was "up to him to make the others
understand," it seemed as well to restrain his inclinations until the
proof Palford & Grimby required was forthcoming.
It was perhaps the
moderate and precautionary attitude of Palford & Grimby, during their first
somewhat startled though reserved interview with Captain Palliser, which had
prevented the vaguely wild rumors from being regarded as more than villagers'
exaggerated talk among themselves. The "gentry," indeed, knew much
less of the cottagers than the cottagers knew of the gentry; consequently events
furnishing much excitement among the village people not infrequently remained
unheard-of by those in the class above them. A story less incredible might have
been more considered; but the highly colored reasons given for the absence of
the owner of Temple Barholm would, if heard of, have been more than likely to
be received and passed over with a smile.
The manner of Mr.
Palford and also of Mr. Grimby during the deliberately unmelodramatic and
carefully connected relation of Captain Palliser's singular story, was that of
professional gentlemen who for reasons of good breeding were engaged in
restraining outward expression of conviction that they were listening to utter
nonsense. Palliser himself was aware of this, and upon the whole did not wonder
at it in entirely unimaginative persons of extremely sober lives. In fact, he
had begun by giving them some warning as to what they might expect in the way
of unusualness.
"You will, no
doubt, think what I am about to tell you absurd and incredible," he had
prefaced his statements. "I thought the same myself when my first
suspicions were aroused. I was, in fact, inclined to laugh at my own idea until
one link connected itself with another."
Neither Mr. Grimby nor
Mr. Palford was inclined to laugh. On the contrary, they were extremely grave,
and continued to find it necessary to restrain their united tendency to
indicate facially that the thing must be nonsense. It transcended all bounds,
as it were. The delicacy with which they managed to convey this did them much credit.
This delicacy was equaled by the moderation with which Captain Palliser drew
their attention to the fact that it was not the thing likely-to-happen on which
were founded the celebrated criminal cases of legal history; it was the
incredible and almost impossible events, the ordinarily unbelievable
duplicities, moral obliquities and coincidences, which made them what they were
and attracted the attention of the world. This, Mr. Palford and his partner
were obviously obliged to admit. What they did not admit was that such things
never having occurred in one's own world, they had been mentally relegated to
the world of newspaper and criminal record as things that could not happen to
oneself. Mr. Palford cleared his throat in a seriously cautionary way.
"This is, of
course, a matter suggesting too serious an accusation not to be approached in
the most conservative manner," he remarked.
"Most serious
consequences have resulted in cases implying libelous assertions which have
been made rashly," added Mr. Grimby. "As Mr. Temple Barholm intimated
to you, a man of almost unlimited means has command of resources which it might
not be easy to contend with if he had reason to feel himself injured."
The fact that Captain
Palliser had in a bitterly frustrated moment allowed himself to be goaded into
losing his temper, and "giving away" to Tembarom the discovery on
which he had felt that he could rely as a lever, did not argue that a like
weakness would lead him into more dangerous indiscretion. He had always regarded
himself as a careful man whose defenses were well built about him at such
crises in his career as rendered entrenchment necessary. There would, of
course, be some pleasure in following the matter up and getting more than even
with a man who had been insolent to him; but a more practical feature of the
case was that if, through his alert observation and shrewd aid, Jem Temple
Barholm was restored to his much-to-be-envied place in the world, a far from
unnatural result would be that he might feel suitable gratitude and
indebtedness to the man who, not from actual personal liking but from a mere
sense of justice, had rescued him. As for the fears of Messrs. Palford &
Grimby, he had put himself on record with Burrill by commanding him to hold his
tongue and stating clearly that proof was both necessary and lacking. No man
could be regarded as taking risks whose attitude was so wholly conservative and
non-accusing. Servants will gossip. A superior who reproves such gossip holds
an unattackable position. In the private room of Palford & Grimby, however,
he could confidently express his opinions without risk.
"The recognition
of a man lost sight of for years, and seen only for a moment through a window,
is not substantial evidence," Mr. Grimby had proceeded. "The incident
was startling, but not greatly to be relied upon."
"I knew him."
Palliser was slightly grim in his air of finality. "He was a man most men
either liked or hated. I did+n't like him. I detested a trick he had of staring
at you under his drooping lids. By the way, do you remember the portrait of
Miles Hugo which was so like him?"
Mr. Palford remembered
having heard that there was a certain portrait in the gallery which Mr. James
Temple Barholm had been said to resemble. He had no distinct recollection of
the ancestor it represented.
"It was a certain
youngster who was a page in the court of Charles the Second and who died young.
Miles Hugo Charles James was his name. He is my strongest clue. The American
seemed rather keen the first time we talked together. He was equally keen about
Jem Temple Barholm. He wanted to know what he looked like, and whether it was
true that he was like the portrait."
"Indeed!"
exclaimed Palford and Grimby, simultaneously.
"It struck me that
there was something more than mere curiosity in his manner," Palliser
enlarged. "I could+n't make him out then. Later, I began to see that he
was remarkably anxious to keep every one from Strangeways. It was a sort of Man
in the Iron Mask affair. Strangeways was apparently not only too excitable to
be looked at or spoken to, but too excitable to be spoken of. He would+n't talk
about him."
"That is
exceedingly curious," remarked Mr. Palford, but it was not in response to
Palliser. A few moments before he had suddenly looked thoughtful. He wore now
the aspect of a man trying to recall something as Palliser continued.
"One day, after I
had been to look at a sunset through a particular window in the wing where
Strangeways was kept, I passed the door of his sitting-room, and heard the
American arguing with him. He was evidently telling him he was to be taken
elsewhere, and the poor devil was terrified. I heard him beg him for God's sake
not to send him away. There was panic in his voice. In connection with the fact
that he has got him away secretly -- at midnight -- it+'s an ugly thing to
recall."
"It would seem to
have significance." Grimby said it uneasily.
"It set me
thinking and looking into things," Palliser went on. "Pearson was
secretive, but the head man, Burrill, made casual enlightening remarks. I
gathered some curious details, which might or might not have meant a good deal.
When Strangeways suddenly appeared at his window one evening a number of things
fitted themselves together. My theory is that the American -- Tembarom, as he
used to call himself -- may not have been certain of the identity at first, but
he would+n't have brought Strangeways with him if he had not had some reason to
suspect who he was. He dare+n't lose sight of him, and he wanted time to make
sure and to lay his plans. The portrait of Miles Hugo was a clue which alarmed
him, and no doubt he has been following it. If he found it led to nothing, he
could easily turn Strangeways over to the public charge and let him be put into
a lunatic asylum. If he found it led to a revelation which would make him a
pauper again, it would be easy to dispose of him."
"Come! Come!
Captain Palliser! We must+n't go too far!" ejaculated Mr. Grimby,
alarmedly. It shocked him to think of the firm being dragged into a case
dealing with capital crime and possible hangmen! That was not its line of the
profession.
Captain Palliser's
slight laugh contained no hint of being shocked by any possibilities whatever.
"There are
extremely private asylums and so-called sanatoriums where the discipline is
strict, and no questions are asked. One sometimes reads in the papers of cases
in which mild-mannered keepers in defending themselves against the attacks of
violent patients are obliged to use force -- with disastrous results. It is in
such places that our investigations should begin."
"Dear me! Dear
me!" Mr. Grimby broke out. "Is+n't that going rather far? You surely
don't think -- "
"Mr. Tembarom's
chief characteristic was that he was a practical and direct person. He would do
what he had to do in exactly that businesslike manner. The inquiries I have
been making have been as to the whereabouts of places in which a supefluous
relative might be placed without attracting attention.
"That is really
astute, but -- but -- what do you think, Palford?" Mr. Grimby turned to
his partner, still wearing the shocked and disturbed expression.
"I have been
recalling to mind a circumstance which probably bears upon the case," said
Mr. Palford. "Captain Palliser's mention of the portrait reminded me of
it. I remember now that on Mr. Temple Barholm's first visit to the
picture-gallery he seemed much attracted by the portrait of Miles Hugo. He
stopped and examined it curiously. He said he felt as if he had seen it before.
He turned to it once or twice; and finally remarked that he might have seen
some one like it at a great fancy-dress ball which had taken place in New
York."
"Had he been
invited to the ball?" laughed Palliser.
"I did not gather
that," replied Mr. Palford gravely. "He had apparently watched the
arriving guests from some railings near by -- or perhaps it was a lamp-post --
with other newsboys."
"He recognized the
likeness to Strangeways, no doubt, and it gave him what he calls a `jolt,'
" said Captain Palliser. "He must have experienced a number of jolts
during the last few months."
Palford & Grimby's
view of the matter continued to be marked by extreme distaste for the whole
situation and its disturbing and irritating possibilities. The coming of the
American heir to the estate of Temple Barholm had been trying to the verge of
extreme painfulness; but, sufficient time having lapsed and their client having
troubled them but little, they had outlived the shock of his first appearance
and settled once more into the calm of their accustomed atmosphere and routine.
That he should suddenly reappear upon their dignified horizon as a probable
melodramatic criminal was a fault of taste and a lack of consideration beyond
expression. To be dragged into vulgar detective work, to be referred to in
newspapers in a connection which would lead to confusing the firm with the
representatives of such branches of the profession as dealt with persons who
had committed acts for which in vulgar parlance they might possibly
"swing," if their legal defenders did not "get them off,"
to a firm whose sole affairs had been the dealing with noble and ancient
estates, with advising and supporting personages of stately name, and with
private and weighty family confidences. If the worst came to the worst, the
affair would surely end in the most glaring and odious notoriety: in head-lines
and daily reports even in London, in appalling pictures of every one concerned
in every New York newspaper, even in baffled struggles to keep abominable
woodcuts of themselves -- Mr. Edward James Palford and Mr. James Matthew Grimby
-- from being published in sensational journalistic sheets! Professional duty
demanded that the situation should be dealt with, that investigation should be
entered into, that the most serious even if conservative steps should be taken
at once. With regard to the accepted report of Mr. James Temple Barholm's
tragic death, it could not be denied that Captain Palliser's view of the
naturalness of the origin of the mistake that had been made had a logical air.
"In a region full
of rioting derelicts crazed with the lawless excitement of their dash after
gold," he had said, "identities and names are easily lost. Temple
Barholm himself was a derelict and in a desperate state. He was in no mood to
speak of himself or try to make friends. He no doubt came and went to such work
as he did scarcely speaking to any one. A mass of earth and debris of all sorts
suddenly gives way, burying half-a-dozen men. Two or three are dug out dead,
the others not reached. There was no time to spare to dig for dead men. Some
one had seen Temple Barholm near the place; he was seen no more. Ergo, he was
buried with the rest. At that time, those who knew him in England felt it was the
best thing that could have happened to him. It would have been if his valet had
not confessed his trick, and old Temple Barholm had not died. My theory is that
he may have left the place days before the accident without being missed. His
mental torment caused some mental illness, it does not matter what. He lost his
memory and wandered about -- the Lord knows how or where he lived; he probably
never knew himself. The American picked him up and found that he had money. For
reasons of his own, he professed to take care of him. He must have come on some
clue just when he heard of his new fortune. He was naturally panic-stricken; it
must have been a big blow at that particular moment. He was sharp enough to see
what it might mean, and held on to the poor chap like grim death, and has been
holding on ever since."
"We must begin to
take steps," decided Palford & Grimby. "We must of course take
steps at once, but we must begin with discretion."
After grave private
discussion, they began to take the steps in question and with the caution that
it seemed necessary to observe until they felt solid ground under their feet.
Captain Palliser was willing to assist them. He had been going into the matter
himself. He went down to the neighborhood of Temple Barholm and quietly looked
up data which might prove illuminating when regarded from one point or another.
It was on the first of these occasions that he saw and warned Burrill. It was
from Burrill he heard of Tummas Hibblethwaite.
"There+'s an
impident little vagabond in the village, sir," he said, "that Mr.
Temple Barholm used to go and see and take New York newspapers to. A cripple
the lad is, and he+'s got a kind of craze for talking about Mr. James Temple
Barholm. He had a map of the place where he was said to be killed. If I may
presume to mention it, sir," he added with great dignity, "it is my
opinion that the two had a good deal of talk together on the subject."
"I dare say,"
Captain Palliser admitted indifferently, and made no further inquiry or remark.
He sauntered into the
Hibblethwaite cottage, however, late the next afternoon.
Tummas was in a bad
temper, for reasons quite sufficient for himself, and he regarded him sourly.
"What has tha coom
for?" he demanded. "I did na ask thee."
"Don't be cheeky!"
said Captain Palliser. "I will give you a sovereign if you+'ll let me see
the map you and Mr. Temple Barholm used to look at and talk so much
about."
He laid the sovereign
down on the small table by Tummas's sofa, but Tummas did not pick it up.
"I know who tha
art. Tha 'rt Palliser, an' tha wast th' one as said as him as was killed in th'
Klondike had coom back alive."
"You+'ve been
listening to that servants' story, have you?" remarked Palliser. "You
had better be careful as to what you say. I suppose you never heard of libel
suits. Where would you find yourself if you were called upon to pay Mr. Temple
Barholm ten thousand pounds' damages? You+'d be obliged to sell your
atlas."
"Burrill towd as
he heard thee say tha+'d swear in court as it was th' one as was killed as
tha+'d seen."
"That's Burrill's
story, not mine. And Burrill had better keep his mouth shut," said
Palliser. "If it were true, how would you like it? I+'ve heard you were
interested in `th' one as was killed.' "
Tummas's eyes burned
troublously.
"I+'ve got reet
down taken wi' th' other un," he answered. "He+'s noan gentry, but
he+'s th' reet mak'. I -- I dunnot believe as him as was killed has coom
back."
"Neither do
I," Palliser answered, with amiable tolerance. "The American
gentleman had better come back himself and disprove it. When you used to talk
about the Klondike, he never said anything to make you feel as if he doubted
that the other man was dead?"
"Not him,"
answered Tummas.
"Eh! Tummas, what
art tha talkin' about?" exclaimed Mrs. Hibblethwaite, who was mending at
the other end of the room. "I heerd him say mysel, `Suppose th' story
had+n't been true an' he was alive somewhere now, it+'d make a big change,
wouldna' it?' An' he laughed."
"I never heerd
him," said Tummas, in stout denial.
"Tha+'s losin' tha
moind," commented his mother. "As soon as I heerd th' talk about him
runnin' away an' takin' th' mad gentleman wi' him I remembered it. An' I
remembered as he sat still after it and said nowt for a minute or so, same as
if he was thinkin' things over. Theer was summat a bit queer about it."
"I never heerd
him," Tummas asserted, obstinately, and shut his mouth.
"He were as ready
to talk about th' poor gentleman as met with th' accident as tha wert thysel',
Tummas," Mrs. Hibblethwaite proceeded, moved by the opportunity offered
for presenting her views on the exciting topic. "He+'d ax thee aw sorts o'
questions about what tha+'d found out wi' pumpin' foak. He+'d ax me questions
now an' agen about what he was loike to look at, an' how tall he wur. Onct he
axed me if I remembered what soart o' chin he had an' how he spoke."
"It wur to set
thee goin' an' please me," volunteered Tummas, grudgingly. "He did it
same as he+'d look at th' map to please me an' tell me tales about th'
news-lads i' New York."
It had not seemed
improbable that a village cripple tied to a sofa would be ready enough to
relate all he knew, and perhaps so much more that it would be necessary to use
discretion in selecting statements of value. To drop in and give him a
sovereign and let him talk had appeared simple. Lads of his class liked to be
listened to, enjoyed enlarging upon and rendering dramatic such material as had
fallen into their hands. But Tummas was an eccentric, and instinct led him to
close like an oyster before a remote sense of subtly approaching attack. It was
his mother, not he, who had provided information; but it was not sufficiently
specialized to be worth much.
"What did tha say
he+'d run away fur?" Tummas said to his parent later. "He+'s not one
o' th' runnin' away soart."
"He has probably
been called away by business," remarked Captain Palliser, as he rose to go
after a few minutes' casual talk with Mrs. Hibblethwaite. "It was a
mistake not to leave an address behind him. Your mother is mistaken in saying
that he took the mad gentleman with him. He had him removed late at night some
time before he went himself."
"Tak tha
sov'rin'," said Tummas, as Palliser moved away. "I did na show thee
th' atlas. Tha did na want to see it."
"I will leave the
sovereign for your mother," said Palliser. "I+'m sorry you are not in
a better humor."
His interest in the
atlas had indeed been limited to his idea that it would lead to subjects of
talk which might cast illuminating side-lights and possibly open up avenues and
vistas. Tummas, however, having instinctively found him displeasing, he had
gained but little.
Avenues and vistas were
necessary -- avenues through which the steps of Palford and Grimby might
wander, vistas which they might explore with hesitating, investigating glances.
So far, the scene remained unpromisingly blank. The American Temple Barholm had
simply disappeared, as had his mysterious charge. Steps likely to lead to
definite results can scarcely be taken hopefully in the case of a person who
has seemed temporarily to cease to exist. You cannot interrogate him, you
cannot demand information, whatsoever the foundations upon which rest your
accusations, if such accusation can be launched only into thin air and the fact
that there is nobody to reply to -- to acknowledge or indignantly refute them
-- is in itself a serious barrier to accomplishment. It was also true that only
a few weeks had elapsed since the accused had, so to speak, dematerialized. It
was also impossible to calculate upon what an American of his class and
peculiarities would be likely to do in any circumstances whatever.
In private conference,
Palford and Grimby frankly admitted to each other that they would almost have
preferred that Captain Palliser should have kept his remarkable suspicions to
himself, for the time being at least. Yet when they had admitted this they were
confronted by the disturbing possibility -- suggested by Palliser -- that
actual crime had been or might be committed. They had heard unpleasant stories
of private lunatic asylums and their like. Things to shudder at might be going
on at the very moment they spoke to each other. Under this possibility, no
supineness would be excusable. Efforts to trace the missing man must at least
be made. Efforts were made, but with no result. Painful as it was to reflect on
the subject of the asylums, careful private inquiry was made, information was
quietly collected, there were even visits to gruesomely quiet places on various
polite pretexts.
"If a longer
period of time had elapsed," Mr. Palford remarked several times, with some
stiffness of manner, "we should feel that we had more solid foundation for
our premises."
"Perfectly
right," Captain Palliser agreed with him, "but it is lapse of time
which may mean life or death to Jem Temple Barholm; so it+'s perhaps as well to
be on the safe side and go on quietly following small clues. I dare say you
would feel more comfortable yourselves."
Both Mr. Palford and
Mr. Grimby, having made an appointment with Miss Alicia, arrived one afternoon
at Temple Barholm to talk to her privately, thereby casting her into a state of
agonized anxiety which reduced her to pallor.
"Our visit is
merely one of inquiry, Miss Temple Barholm," Mr. Palford began.
"There is perhaps nothing alarming in our client's absence."
"In the note which
he left me he asked me to -- feel no anxiety," Miss Alicia said.
"He left you a
note of explanation? I wish we had known this earlier!" Mr. Palford's tone
had the note of relieved exclamation. Perhaps there was an entirely simple
solution of the painful difficulty.
But his hope had been
too sanguine.
"It was not a note
of explanation, exactly. He went away too suddenly to have time to
explain."
The two men looked at
each other disturbedly.
"He had not
mentioned to you his intention of going?" asked Mr. Grimby.
"I feel sure he did
not know he was going when he said good-night. He remained with Captain
Palliser talking for some time." Miss Alicia's eyes held wavering and
anxious question as she looked from one to the other. She wondered how much
more than herself her visitors knew. "He found a telegram when he went to
his room. It contained most disquieting news about Mr. Strangeways. He -- he
had got away from the place where -- "
"Got away!"
Mr. Palford was again exclamatory. "Was he in some institution where he
was kept under restraint?"
Miss Alicia was wholly
unable to explain to herself why some quality in his manner filled her with
sudden distress.
"Oh, I think not!
Surely not! Surely nothing of that sort was necessary. He was very quiet
always, and he was getting better every day. But it was important that he
should be watched over. He was no doubt under the care of a physician in some
quiet sanatorium."
"Some quiet
sanatorium!" Mr. Palford's disturbance of mind was manifest. "But you
did not know where?"
"No. Indeed, Mr.
Temple Barholm talked very little of Mr. Strangeways. I believe he knew that it
distressed me to feel that I could be of no real assistance as -- as the case
was so peculiar."
Each perturbed
solicitor looked again with rapid question at the other. Miss Alicia saw the
exchange of glances and, so to speak, broke down under the pressure of their
unconcealed anxiety. The last few weeks with their suggestion of accusation too
vague to be met had been too much for her.
"I am afraid -- I
feel sure you know something I do not," she began. "I am most anxious
and unhappy. I have not liked to ask questions, because that would have seemed
to imply a doubt of Mr. Temple Barholm. I have even remained at home because I
did not wish to hear things I could not understand. I do not know what has been
said. Pearson, in whom I have the greatest confidence, felt that Mr. Temple
Barholm would prefer that I should wait until he returned."
"Do you think he
will return?" said Mr. Grimby, amazedly.
"Oh!" the
gentle creature ejaculated. "Can you possibly think he will not? Why?
Why?"
Mr. Palford had shared
his partner's amazement. It was obvious that she was as ignorant as a babe of
the details of Palliser's extraordinary story. In her affectionate
consideration for Temple Barholm she had actually shut herself up lest she
should hear anything said against him which she could not refute. She stood
innocently obedient to his wishes, like the boy upon the burning deck, awaiting
his return and his version of whatsoever he had been accused of. There was
something delicately heroic in the little, slender old thing, with her troubled
eyes and her cap and her quivering sideringlets.
"You," she appealed,
"are his legal advisers, and will be able to tell me if there is anything
he would wish me to know. I could not allow myself to listen to villagers or
servants; but I may ask you."
"We are far from
knowing as much as we desire to know," Mr. Palford replied.
"We came here, in
fact," added Grimby, "to ask questions of you, Miss Temple
Barholm."
"The fact that
Miss Temple Barholm has not allowed herself to be prejudiced by village gossip,
which is invariably largely unreliable, will make her an excellent
witness," Mr. Palford said to his partner, with a deliberation which held
suggestive significance. Each man, in fact, had suddenly realized that her
ignorance would leave her absolutely unbiased in her answers to any questions
they might put, and that it was much better in cross-examining an emotional
elderly lady that such should be the case.
"Witness!"
Miss Alicia found the word alarming. Mr. Palford's bow was apologetically
palliative.
"A mere figure of
speech, madam," he said.
"I really know so
little every one else does+n't know." Miss Alicia's protest had a touch of
bewilderment in it. What could they wish to ask her?
"But, as we
understand it, your relations with Mr. Temple Barholm were most affectionate
and confidential."
"We were very fond
of each other," she answered.
"For that reason
he no doubt talked to you more freely than to other people," Mr. Grimby
put it. "Perhaps, Palford, it would be as well to explain to Miss Temple
Barholm that a curious feature of this matter is that it -- in a way --
involves certain points concerning the late Mr. Temple Barholm."
Miss Alicia uttered a
pathetic exclamation.
"Poor Jem -- who
died so cruelly!"
Mr. Palford bent his
head in acquiescence.
"Perhaps you can
tell me what the present Mr. Temple Barholm knew of him -- how much he
knew?"
"I told him the
whole story the first time we took tea together," Miss Alicia replied;
and, between her recollection of that strangely happy afternoon and her wonder
at its connection with the present moment, she began to feel timid and
uncertain.
"How did it seem
to impress him?"
She remembered it all
so well -- his queer, dear New York way of expressing his warm-hearted
indignation at the cruelty of what had happened.
"Oh, he was very
much excited. He was so sorry for him. He wanted to know everything about him.
He asked me what he looked like."
"Oh!" said
Palford. "He wanted to know that?"
"He was so full of
sympathy," she replied, her explanation gaining warmth. "When I told
him that the picture of Miles Hugo in the gallery was said to look like Jem as
a boy, he wanted very much to see it. Afterward we went and saw it together. I
shall always remember how he stood and looked at it. Most young men would not
have cared. But he always had such a touching interest in poor Jem."
"You mean that he
asked questions about him -- about his death, and so forth?" was Mr.
Palford's inquiry.
"About all that
concerned him. He was interested especially in his looks and manner of speaking
and personality, so to speak. And in the awful accident which ended his life,
though he would not let me talk about that after he had asked his first
questions."
"What kind of
questions?" suggested Grimby.
"Only about what
was known of the time and place, and how the sad story reached England. It used
to touch me to think that the only person who seemed to care was the one who --
might have been expected to be almost glad the tragic thing had happened. But
he was not."
Mr. Palford watched Mr.
Grimby, and Mr. Grimby gave more than one dubious and distressed glance at
Palford.
"His interest was
evident," remarked Palford, thoughtfully. "And unusual under the
circumstances."
For a moment he
hesitated, then put another question: "Did he ever seem -- I should say,
do you remember any occasion when he appeared to think that -- there might be
any reason to doubt that Mr. James Temple Barholm was one of the men who died
in the Klondike?"
He felt that through
this wild questioning they had at least reached a certain testimony supporting
Captain Palliser's views; and his interest reluctantly increased. It was
reluctant because there could be no shadow of a question that this innocent
spinster lady told the absolute truth; and, this being the case, one seemed to
be dragged to the verge of depths which must inevitably be explored. Miss
Alicia's expression was that of one who conscientiously searched memory.
"I do not remember
that he really expressed doubt," she answered, carefully. "Not
exactly that, but -- "
"But what?"
prompted Palford as she hesitated. "Please try to recall exactly what he
said. It is most important."
The fact that his
manner was almost eager, and that eagerness was not his habit, made her catch
her breath and look more questioning and puzzled than before.
"One day he came
to my sitting-room when he seemed rather excited," she explained. "He
had been with Mr. Strangeways, who had been worse than usual. Perhaps he wanted
to distract himself and forget about it. He asked me questions and talked about
poor Jem for about an hour. And at last he said, `Do you suppose there's any
sort of chance that it mightn't be true -- that story that came from the
Klondike?' He said it so thoughtfully that I was startled and said, `Do you
think there could be such a chance -- do you?' And he drew a long breath and
answered, `You want to be sure about things like that; you+'ve got to be sure.'
I was a little excited, so he changed the subject very soon afterward, and I
never felt quite certain of what he was really thinking. You see what he said
was not so much an expression of doubt as a sort of question."
A touch of the lofty
condemnatory made Mr. Palford impressive.
"I am compelled to
admit that I fear that it was a question of which he had already guessed the
answer," he said.
At this point Miss
Alicia clasped her hands quite tightly together upon her knees.
"If you
please," she exclaimed, "I must ask you to make things a little clear
to me. What dreadful thing has happened? I will regard any communication as a
most sacred confidence."
"I think we may as
well, Palford?" Mr. Grimby suggested to his partner.
"Yes,"
Palford acquiesced. He felt the difficulty of a blank explanation. "We are
involved in a most trying position," he said. "We feel that great
discretion must be used until we have reached more definite certainty. An
extraordinary -- in fact, a startling thing has occurred. We are beginning, as
a result of cumulative evidence, to feel that there was reason to believe that
the Klondike story was to be doubted -- "
"That poor Jem --
!" cried Miss Alicia.
"One begins to be
gravely uncertain as to whether he has not been in this house for months,
whether he was not the mysterious Mr. Strangeways!"
"Jem! Jem!"
gasped poor little Miss Temple Barholm, quite white with shock.
"And if he was the
mysterious Strangeways," Mr. Grimby assisted to shorten the matter,
"the American Temple Barholm apparently knew the fact, brought him here
for that reason, and for the same reason kept him secreted and under
restraint."
"No! No!"
cried Miss Alicia. "Never! Never! I beg you not to say such a thing.
Excuse me -- I cannot listen! It would be wrong -- ungrateful. Excuse me!"
She got up from her seat, trembling with actual anger in her sense of outrage.
It was a remarkable thing to see the small, elderly creature angry, but this
remarkable thing had happened. It was as though she were a mother defending her
young.
"I loved poor Jem
and I love Temple, and, though I am only a woman who never has been the least
clever, I know them both. I know neither of them could lie or do a wicked,
cunning thing. Temple is the soul of honor."
It was quite an
inspirational outburst. She had never before in her life said so much at one
time. Of course tears began to stream down her face, while Mr. Palford and Mr.
Grimby gazed at her in great embarrassment.
"If Mr.
Strangeways was poor Jem come back alive, Temple did not know -- he never knew.
All he did for him was done for kindness' sake. I -- I -- " It was
inevitable that she should stammer before going to this length of violence, and
that the words should burst from her: "I would swear it!"
It was really a shock
to both Palford and Grimby. That a lady of Miss Temple Barholm's age and
training should volunteer to swear to a thing was almost alarming. It was also
in rather unpleasing taste.
"Captain Palliser
obliged Mr. Temple Temple Barholm to confess that he had known for some
time," Mr. Palford said with cold regret. "He also informed him that
he should communicate with us without delay."
"Captain Palliser
is a bad man." Miss Alicia choked back a gasp to make the protest.
"It was after
their interview that Mr. Temple Barholm almost immediately left the
house."
"Without any
explanation whatever," added Grimby.
"He left a few
lines for me," defended Miss Alicia.
"We have not seen
them." Mr. Palford was still as well as cold. Poor little Miss Alicia took
them out of her pocket with an unsteady hand. They were always with her, and
she could not on such a challenge seem afraid to allow them to be read. Mr.
Palford took them from her with a slight bow of thanks. He adjusted his glasses
and read aloud, with pauses between phrases which seemed somewhat to puzzle
him.
"Dear little Miss
Alicia:
"I+'ve got to
light out of here as quick as I can make it. I can't even stop to tell you why.
There+'s just one thing -- don't get rattled, Miss Alicia. Whatever any one
says or does, don't get rattled. "Yours affectionately,
"T. TEMBAROM."
There was a silence,
Mr. Palford passed the paper to his partner, who gave it careful study.
Afterward he refolded it and handed it back to Miss Alicia.
"In a court of
law," was Mr. Palford's sole remark, "it would not be regarded as
evidence for the defendant."
Miss Alicia's tears
were still streaming, but she held her ringleted head well up.
"I cannot stay! I
beg your pardon, I do indeed!" she said. "But I must leave you. You
see," she added, with her fine little touch of dignity, "*as yet this
house is still Mr. Temple Barholm's home, and I am the grateful recipient of
his bounty. Burrill will attend you and make you quite comfortable." With
an obeisance which was like a slight curtsey, she turned and fled.
In less than an hour
she walked up the neat bricked path, and old Mrs. Hutchinson, looking out, saw
her through the tiers of flower-pots in the window. Hutchinson himself was in
London, but Ann was reading at the other side of the room.
"Here+'s poor
little owd Miss Temple Barholm aw in a flutter," remarked her grandmother.
"Tha's got some work cut out for thee if tha+'s going to quiet her. Oppen
th' door, lass.
Ann opened the door,
and stood by it with calm though welcoming dimples.
"Miss
Hutchinson" -- Miss Alicia began all at once to realize that they did not
know each other, and that she had flown to the refuge of her youth without
being at all aware of what she was about to say. "Oh! Little Ann!"
she broke down with frank tears. "My poor boy! My poor boy!"
Little Ann drew her
inside and closed the door.
"There, Miss
Temple Barholm," she said. "There now! Just come in and sit down.
I+'ll get you a good cup of tea. You need one."
THE Duke of Stone had
been sufficiently occupied with one of his slighter attacks of rheumatic gout
to have been, so to speak, out of the running in the past weeks. His
indisposition had not condemned him to the usual dullness, however. He had
suffered less pain than was customary, and Mrs. Braddle had been more than
usually interesting in conversation on those occasions when, in making him very
comfortable in one way or another, she felt that a measure of entertainment
would add to his well-being. His epicurean habit of mind tended toward causing
him to find a subtle pleasure in the hearing of various versions of any story
whatever. His intimacy with T. Tembarom had furnished forth many an agreeable
mental repast for him. He had had T. Tembarom's version of himself, the version
of the county, the version of the uneducated class, and his own version. All of
these had had varying shades of their own. He had found a cynically fine flavor
in Palliser's version, which he had gathered through talk and processes of
exclusion and inclusion.
"There is a good
deal to be said for it," he summed it up. "It's plausible on ordinary
sophisticated grounds. T. Tembarom would say, `It looks sort of that way.'
"
As Mrs. Braddle had
done what she could in the matter of expounding her views of the uncertainties
of the village attitude, he had listened with stimulating interest. Mrs.
Braddle's version on the passing of T. Tembarom stood out picturesquely against
the background of the version which was his own -- the one founded on the
singular facts he had shared knowledge of with the chief character in the
episode. He had not, like Miss Alicia, received a communication from Tembarom.
This seemed to him one of the attractive features of the incident. It provided
opportunity for speculation. Some wild development had called the youngster
away in a rattling hurry. Of what had happened since his departure he knew no
more than the villagers knew. What had happened for some months before his
going he had watched with the feeling of an intelligently observant spectator
at a play. He had been provided with varied emotions by the fantastic drama. He
had smiled; he had found himself moved once or twice, and he had felt a good
deal of the thrill of curious uncertainty as to what the curtain would rise and
fall on. The situation was such that it was impossible to guess. Results could
seem only to float in the air. One thing might happen; so might another, so
might a dozen more. What he wished really to attain was some degree of
certainty as to what was likely to occur in any case to the American Temple
Barholm.
He felt, the first time
he drove over to call on Miss Alicia, that his indisposition and confinement to
his own house had robbed him of something. They had deprived him of the
opportunity to observe shades of development and to hear the expressing of
views of the situation as it stood. He drove over with views of his own and
with anticipations. He had reason to know that he would encounter in the dear
lady indications of the feeling that she had reached a crisis. There was a
sense of this crisis impending as one mounted the terrace steps and entered the
hall. The men-servants endeavored to wipe from their countenances any
expression denoting even a vague knowledge of it. He recognized their laudable
determination to do so. Burrill was monumental in the unconsciousness of his
outward bearing.
Miss Alicia, sitting
waiting on Fate in the library, wore precisely the aspect he had known she
would wear. She had been lying awake at night and she had of course wept at
intervals, since she belonged to the period the popular female view of which
had been that only the unfeeling did not so relieve themselves in crises of the
affections. Her eyelids were rather pink and her nice little face was tired.
"It is very, very
kind of you to come," she said, when they shook hands. "I
wonder" -- her hesitance was touching in its obvious appeal to him not to
take the wrong side, -- "I wonder if you know how deeply troubled I have
been?"
"You see, I have
had a touch of my abominable gout, and my treasure of a Braddle has been
nursing me and gossiping," he answered. "So, of course I know a great
deal. None of it true, I dare say. I felt I must come and see you,
however."
He looked so neat and
entirely within the boundaries of finished and well-dressed modernity and
every-day occurrence, in his perfectly fitting clothes, beautifully shining
boots, and delicate fawn gaiters, that she felt a sort of support in his mere
aspect. The mind connected such almost dapper freshness and excellent taste
only with unexaggerated incidents and a behavior which almost placed the stamp
of absurdity upon the improbable in circumstance. The vision of disorderly and
illegal possibilities seemed actually to fade into an unreality.
"If Mr. Palford
and Mr. Grimby knew him as I know him -- as -- as you know him -- " she
added with a faint hopefulness.
"Yes, if they knew
him as we know him that would make a different matter of it," admitted the
duke, amiably. But, thought Miss Alicia, he might only have put it that way
through consideration for her feelings, and because he was an extremely
polished man who could not easily reveal to a lady a disagreeable truth. He did
not speak with the note of natural indignation which she thought she must have
detected if he had felt as she felt herself. He was of course a man whose
manner had always the finish of composure. He did not seem disturbed or even
very curious -- only kind and most polite.
"If we only knew
where he was!" she began again. "If we only knew where Mr.
Strangeways was!"
"My impression is
that Messrs. Palford & Grimby will probably find them both before
long," he consoled her. "They are no doubt exciting themselves
unnecessarily."
He was not agitated at
all; she felt it would have been kinder if he had been a little agitated. He
was really not the kind of person whose feelings appeared very deep, being
given to a light and graceful cynicism of speech which delighted people; so
perhaps it was not natural that he should express any particular emotion even
in a case affecting a friend -- surely he had been Temple's friend. But if he
had seemed a little distressed, or doubtful or annoyed, she would have felt
that she understood better his attitude. As it was, he might almost have been
on the other side -- a believer or a disbeliever -- or merely a person looking
on to see what would happen. When they sat down, his glance seemed to include
her with an interest which was sympathetic but rather as if she were a child
whom he would like to pacify. This seemed especially so when she felt she must
make clear to him the nature of the crisis which was pending, as he had felt
when he entered the house.
"You perhaps do
not know" -- the appeal which had shown itself in her eyes was in her
voice -- "that the solicitors have decided, after a great deal of serious
discussion and private inquiry in London, that the time has come when they must
take open steps."
"In the matter of
investigation?" he inquired.
"They are coming
here this afternoon with Captain Palliser to -- to question the servants, and
some of the villagers. They will question me," alarmedly.
"They would be
sure to do that," -- he really seemed quite to envelop her with kindness
-- "but I beg of you not to be alarmed. Nothing you could have to say
could possibly do harm to Temple Barholm." He knew it was her fear of this
contingency which terrified her.
"You do feel sure
of that?" she burst forth, relievedly. "You do -- because you know
him?"
"I do. Let us be
calm, dear lady. Let us be calm."
"I will! I
will!" she protested. "But Captain Palliser has arranged that a lady
should come here -- a lady who disliked poor Temple very much. She was most
unjust to him."
"Lady Joan
Fayre?" he suggested, and then paused with a remote smile as if lending
himself for the moment to some humor he alone detected in the situation.
"She will not
injure his cause, I think I can assure you."
"She insisted on
misunderstanding him. I am so afraid -- "
The appearance of
Pearson at the door interrupted her and caused her to rise from her seat. The
neat young man was pale and spoke in a nervously lowered voice.
"I beg pardon,
Miss. I beg your Grace's pardon for intruding, but -- "
Miss Alicia moved
toward him in such a manner that he himself seemed to feel that he might
advance.
"What is it,
Pearson? Have you anything special to say?"
"I hope I am not
taking too great a liberty, Miss, but I did come in for a purpose, knowing that
his Grace was with you and thinking you might both kindly advise me. It is about
Mr. Temple Barholm, your Grace -- " addressing him as if in involuntary
recognition of the fact that he might possibly prove the greater support.
"Our Mr. Temple
Barholm, Pearson? We are being told there are two of them." The duke's
delicate emphasis on the possessive pronoun was delightful, and it so moved and
encouraged sensitive little Pearson that he was emboldened to answer with
modest firmness:
"Yes, -- ours.
Thank you, your Grace."
"You feel him
yours too, Pearson?" a shade more delightfully still.
"I -- I take the
liberty, your Grace, of being deeply attached to him, and more than
grateful."
"What did you want
to ask advice about?"
"The family
solicitors. Captain Palliser and Lady Joan Fayre and Mr. and Miss Hutchinson
are to be here shortly, and I have been told I am to be questioned. What I want
to know, your Grace, is -- " He paused, and looked no longer pale but
painfully red as he gathered himself together for his anxious outburst --
"Must I speak the truth?"
Miss Alicia started
alarmedly.
The duke looked down at
the delicate fawn gaiters covering his fine instep. His fleeting smile was not
this time an external one.
"Do you not wish
to speak the truth, Pearson?"
Pearson's manner could
have been described only as one of obstinate frankness.
"No, your Grace. I
do not! Your Grace may misunderstand me -- but I do not!"
His Grace tapped the
gaiters with the slight ebony cane he held in his hand.
"Is this" --
he put it with impartial curiosity -- "because the truth might be
detrimental to our Mr. Temple Barholm?"
"If you please,
your Grace," Pearson made a firm step forward, "what is the
truth?"
"That is what
Messrs. Palford & Grimby seem determined to find out. Probably only our Mr.
Temple Barholm can tell them."
"Your Grace, what
I+'m thinking of is that if I tell the truth it may seem to prove something
that's not the truth."
"What kinds of
things, Pearson?" still impartially.
"I can be plain
with your Grace. Things like this: I was with Mr. Temple Barholm and Mr.
Strangeways a great deal. They'll ask me about what I heard. They'll ask me if
Mr. Strangeways was willing to go away to the doctor; if he had to be persuaded
and argued with. Well, he had and he had+n't, your Grace. At first, just the
mention of it would upset him so that Mr. Temple Barholm would have to stop
talking about it and quiet him down. But when he improved -- and he did improve
wonderfully, your Grace -- he got into the way of sitting and thinking it over
and listening quite quiet. But if I+'m asked suddenly -- "
"What you are
afraid of is that you may be asked point- blank questions without
warning?" his Grace put it with the perspicacity of experience.
"That's why I
should be grateful for advice. Must I tell the truth, your Grace, when it will
make them believe things I+'d swear are lies -- I+'d swear it, your
Grace."
"So would I,
Pearson." His serene lightness was of the most baffling, but curiously supporting,
order. "This being the case, my advice would be not to go into detail. Let
us tell white lies -- all of us -- without a shadow of hesitancy. Miss Temple
Barholm, even you must do your best."
"I will try --
indeed, I will try!" And the Duke felt her tremulously ardent assent
actually delicious.
"There! we+'ll
consider that settled, Pearson," he said.
"Thank you, your
Grace. Thank you, Miss," Pearson's relieved gratitude verged on the
devout. He turned to go, and as he did so his attention was arrested by an
approach he remarked through a window.
"Mr. and Miss
Hutchinson are arriving now, Miss," he announced, hastily.
"They are to be
brought in here," said Miss Alicia.
The duke quietly left
his seat and went to look through the window with frank and unembarrassed
interest in the approach. He went, in fact, to look at Little Ann, and as he
watched her walk up the avenue, her father lumbering beside her, he evidently
found her aspect sufficiently arresting.
"Ah!" he
exclaimed softly, and paused. "What a lot of very nice red hair," he
said next. And then, "No wonder! No wonder!"
"That, I should
say," he remarked as Miss Alicia drew near, "is what I once heard a
bad young man call `a deserving case.' "
He was conscious that
she might have been privately a little shocked by such aged flippancy, but she
was at the moment perturbed by something else.
"The fact is that
I have never spoken to Hutchinson," she fluttered. "These changes are
very confusing. I suppose I ought to say Mr. Hutchinson, now that he is such a
successful person, and Temple -- "
"Without a shadow
of a doubt!" The duke seemed struck by the happiness of the idea.
"They will make him a peer presently. He may address me as `Stone' at any
moment. One must learn to adjust one's self with agility. "The old order
changeth.' Ah! she is smiling at him and I see the dimples."
Miss Alicia made a
clean breast of it.
"I went to her --
I could not help it!" she confessed. "I was in such distress and dare
not speak to anybody. Temple had told me that she was so wonderful. He said she
always understood and knew what to do."
"Did she in this
case?" he asked, smiling.
Miss Alicia's manner
was that of one who could express the extent of her admiration only in
disconnected phrases.
"She was like a
little rock. Such a quiet, firm way! Such calm certainty! Oh, the comfort she
has been to me! I begged her to come here to day. I did not know her father had
returned."
"No doubt he will
have testimony to give which will be of the greatest assistance," the duke
said most encouragingly. "Perhaps he will be a sort of rock."
"I -- I don't in
the least know what he will be!" sighed Miss Alicia, evidently uncertain
in her views.
But when the father and
daughter were announced she felt that his Grace was really enchanting in the
happy facility of his manner. He at least adjusted himself with agility
Hutchinson was of course lumbering. Lacking the support of T. Tembarom's
presence and incongruity, he himself was the incongruous feature. He would have
been obliged to bluster by way of sustaining himself, even if he had only found
himself being presented to Miss Alicia; but when it was revealed to him that he
was also confronted with the greatest personage of the neighborhood, he became
as hot and red as he had become during certain fateful business interviews.
More so, indeed. "Th' other chaps had+n't been dukes;" and to
Hutchinson the old order had not yet so changed that a duke was not an
awkwardly impressive person to face unexpectedly.
The duke's manner of
shaking hands with him, however, was even touched with an amiable suggestion of
appreciation of the value of a man of genius. He had heard of the invention, in
fact knew some quite technical things about it. He realized its importance. He
had congratulations for the inventor and the world of inventions so greatly
benefited.
"Lancashire must
be proud of your success, Mr. Hutchinson." How agreeably and with what
ease he said it!
"Aye, it+'s a
success now, your Grace," Hutchinson answered, "but I might have
waited a good bit longer if it had+n't been for that lad an' his bold backing
of me."
"Mr. Temple
Barholm?" said the duke.
"Aye. He+'s got
th' way of making folks see things that they can't see even when they+'re
hitting them in th' eyes. I+'d that lost heart I could never have done it
myself."
"But now it is
done," smiled his Grace. "Delightful!"
"I+'ve got there
-- same as they say in New York -- I+'ve got there," said Hutchinson.
He sat down in response
to Miss Alicia's invitation. His unease was wonderfully dispelled. He felt
himself a person of sufficient importance to address even a duke as man to man.
"What+'s all this
romancin' talk about th' other Temple Barholm comin' back, an' our lad knowin'
an' hidin' him away? An' Palliser an' th' lawyers an' th' police bein' after
'em both?"
"You have heard
the whole story?" from the duke.
"I+'ve heard naught
else since I come back."
"Grandmother knew
a great deal before we came home," said Little Ann.
The duke turned his
attention to her with an engaged smile. His look, his bow, his bearing, in the
moment of their being presented to each other, had seemed to Miss Alicia the
most perfect thing. His fine eye had not obviously wandered while he talked to
her father, but it had in fact been taking her in with an inclusiveness not
likely to miss agreeable points of detail.
"What is her
opinion, may I ask?" he said. "What does she say?"
"Grandmother is
very set in her ways, your Grace." The limpidity of her blue eye and a
flickering dimple added much to the quaint comprehensiveness of her answer.
"She says the world+'s that full of fools that if they were all killed the
Lord would have to begin again with a new Adam and Eve."
"She has entire
faith in Mr. Temple Barholm -- as you have," put forward his Grace.
"Mine's not faith
exactly. I know him," Little Ann answered, her tone as limpid as her eyes.
"There+'s more
than her has faith in him," broke forth Hutchinson. "Danged if I
don't like th' way them village chaps are taking it. They+'re ready to fight
over it. Since they've found out what it+'s come to, an' about th' lawyers
comin' down, they+'re talkin' about gettin' up a kind o' demonstration."
"Delightful!"
ejaculated his Grace again. He leaned forward. "Quite what I should have
expected. There's a good deal of beer drunk, I suppose."
"Plenty o' beer,
but it'll do no harm." Hutchinson began to chuckle. "They+'re talkin'
o' gettin' out th' fife an' drum band an' marchin' round th' village with a
calico banner with `Vote for T. Tembarom' painted on it, to show what they
think of him."
The duke chuckled also.
"I wonder how
he+'s managed it?" he laughed. "They would+n't do it for any of the
rest of us, you know, though I+'ve no doubt we+'re quite as deserving. I am, I
know."
Hutchinson stopped
laughing and turned on Miss Alicia.
"What+'s that
young woman comin' down here for?" he inquired.
"Lady Joan was
engaged to Mr. James Temple Barholm," Miss Alicia answered.
"Eh! Eh!"
Hutchinson jerked out. "That+'ll turn her into a wildcat, I+'ll warrant.
She'll do all th' harm she can. I+'m much obliged to you for lettin' us come,
ma'am. I want to be where I can stand by him."
"Father,"
said Little Ann, "what you have got to remember is that you must+n't fly
into a passion. You know you+'ve always said it never did any good, and it only
sends the blood to your head."
"You are not
nervous, Miss Hutchinson?" the duke suggested.
"About Mr. Temple
Barholm? I could+n't be, your Grace. If I was to see two policemen bringing him
in handcuffed I should+n't be nervous. I should know the handcuffs did+n't
belong to him, and the policemen would look right-down silly to me."
Miss Alicia fluttered
over to fold her in her arms.
"Do let me kiss
you," she said. "Do let me, Little Ann!"
Little Ann had risen at
once to meet her embrace. She put a hand on her arm.
"We don't know
anything about this really," she said. "We+'ve only heard what people
say. We have+n't heard what he says. I+'m going to wait." They were all
looking at her, -- the duke with such marked interest that she turned toward
him as she ended. "And if I had to wait until I was as old as grandmother
I+'d wait -- and nothing would change my mind.
"And I+'ve been
lying awake at night!" softly wailed Miss Alicia.
IT was Mr. Hutchinson
who, having an eye on the window, first announced an arriving carriage.
"Some of 'em+'s
comin' from the station," he remarked. "There+'s no young woman with
'em, that I can see from here."
"I thought I heard
wheels." Miss Alicia went to look out, agitatedly. "It is the
gentlemen. Perhaps Lady Joan -- " she turned desperately to the duke.
"I don't know what to say to Lady Joan. I don't know what she will say to
me. I don't know what she is coming for, Little Ann, do keep near me!"
It was a pretty thing
to see Little Ann stroke her hand and soothe her.
"Don't be
frightened, Miss Temple Barholm. All you+'ve got to do is to answer
questions," she said.
"But I might say
things that would be wrong -- things that would harm him."
"No, you mightn't,
Miss Temple Barholm. He's not done anything that could bring harm on him."
The Duke of Stone, who
had seated himself in T. Tembarom's favorite chair, which occupied a point of
vantage, seemed to Mr. Palford and Mr. Grimby when they entered the room to
wear the aspect of a sort of presidiary audience. The sight of his erect head and
clear-cut, ivory-tinted old face, with its alert, while wholly unbiased,
expression, somewhat startled them both. They had indeed not expected to see
him, and did not know why he had chosen to come. His presence might mean any
one of several things, and the fact that he enjoyed a reputation for quite
alarming astuteness of a brilliant kind presented elements of probable
embarrassment. If he thought that they had allowed themselves to be led upon a
wild-goose chase, he would express his opinions with trying readiness of
phrase.
His manner of greeting
them, however, expressed no more than a lightly agreeable detachment from any
view whatsoever. Captain Palliser felt this curiously, though he could not have
said what he would have expected from him if he had known it would be his whim
to appear.
"How do you do?
How d' you do?" His Grace shook hands with the amiable ease which scarcely
commits a man even to casual interest, after which he took his seat again.
"How d' do, Miss
Hutchinson?" said Palliser. How d' do, Mr. Hutchinson? Mr. Palford will be
glad to find you here."
Mr. Palford shook hands
with correct civility.
"I am,
indeed," he said. "It was in your room in New York that I first saw
Mr. Temple Temple Barholm.
Aye, it was, responded
Hutchinson, dryly.
"I thought Lady
Joan was coming," Miss Alicia said to Palliser."
"She will be here
presently. She came down in our train, but not with us."
"What -- what is
she coming for?" faltered Miss Alicia
"Yes," put in
the duke, "what, by the way, is she coming for?"
"I wrote and asked
her to come," was Palliser's reply. "I have reason to believe she may
be able to recall something of value to the inquiry which is being made."
"That+'s
interesting," said his Grace, but with no air of participating
particularly. "She does+n't like him, though, does she? Would+n't do to
put her on the jury.
He did not wait for any
reply, but turned to Mr. Palford.
"All this is
delightfully portentous. Do you know it reminds me of a scene in one of those
numerous plays where the wrong man has murdered somebody -- or has+n't murdered
somebody -- and the whole company must be cross-examined because the curtain
cannot be brought down until the right man is unmasked. Do let us come into
this, Mr. Palford; what we seems so inadequate."
Mr. Palford and Mr.
Grimby each felt that there lurked in this manner a possibility that they were
being regarded lightly. All the objections to their situation loomed annoyingly
large.
"It is, of course,
an extraordinary story," Mr. Palford said, "but if we are not
mistaken in our deductions, we may find ourselves involved in a cause célèbre
which will set all England talking."
"I am not
mistaken," Palliser presented the comment with a short and dry laugh.
"Tha seems pretty
cock-sure!" Hutchinson thrust in.
"I am. No one knew
Jem Temple Barholm better than I did in the past. We were intimate --
enemies." And he laughed again.
"Tha says tha+'ll
swear th' chap tha saw through th' window was him?" said Hutchinson.
"I+'d swear
it," with composure.
The duke was
reflecting. He was again tapping with his cane the gaiter covering his slender,
shining boot.
"If Mr. Temple
Temple Barholm had remained here his actions would have seemed less
suspicious?" he suggested.
It was Palliser who
replied.
"Or if he had+n't
whisked the other man away. He lost his head and played the fool."
"He didn't lose
his head, that chap. It's screwed on th' right way -- his head is,"
grunted Hutchinson.
"The curious
fellow has a number of friends," the duke remarked to Palford and Grimby,
in his impartial tone. "I am hoping you are not thinking of
cross-examining me. I have always been convinced that under cross-examination I
could be induced to innocently give evidence condemnatory to both sides of any
case whatever. But would you mind telling me what the exact evidence is so
far?"
Mr. Palford had been
opening a budget of papers.
"It is evidence
which is cumulative, your Grace," he said. "Mr. Temple Temple
Barholm's position would have been a far less suspicious one -- as you yourself
suggested -- if he had remained, or if he had+n't secretly removed Mr. -- Mr.
Strangeways."
"The last was
Captain Palliser's suggestion, I believe," smiled the duke. "Did he
remove him secretly. How secretly, for instance?"
"At night,"
answered Palliser. "Miss Temple Barholm herself did not know when it
happened. Did you? turning to Miss Alicia, who at once flushed and paled.
"He knew that I
was rather nervous where Mr. Strangeways was concerned. I am sorry to say he
found that out almost at once. He even told me several times that I must not
think of him -- that I need hear nothing about him. She turned to the duke, her
air of appeal plainly representing a feeling that he would understand her confession.
"I scarcely like to say it, but wrong as it was I could+n't help feeling
that it was like having a -- a lunatic in the house I was afraid he might be
more -- ill -- than Temple realized, and that he might some time become
violent. I never admitted so much of course, but I was."
"You see, she was
not told," Palliser summed it up succinctly.
"Evidently,"
the duke admitted. "I see your point. But he seemed to disengage himself
from all sense of admitting implications with entire calmness, as he turned
again to Mr. Palford and his papers.
"You were saying
that the exact evidence was -- ?"
Mr. Palford referred to
a sheet of notes.
"That -- whether
before or shortly after his arrival here is not at all certain -- Mr. Temple
Temple Barholm began strongly to suspect the identity of the person then known
as Strangeways -- "
Palliser again emitted
the short and dry laugh, and both the duke and Mr. Palford looked at him
inquiringly.
"He had `got on
to' it before he brought him, he answered their glances. "Be sure of
that."
"Then why did he
bring him? the duke suggested lightly.
"Oh, well,"
taking his cue from the duke, and assuming casual lightness also, "he was
obliged to come himself, and was jolly well convinced that he had better keep
his hand on the man, also his eye. It was a good-enough idea. He could+n't
leave a thing like that wandering about the States. He could play benefactor
safely in a house of the size of this until he was ready for action."
The duke gave a moment
to considering the matter -- still detachedly.
"It is, on the
whole, not unlikely that something of the sort might suggest itself to the
criminal mind," he said. And his glance at Mr. Palford intimated that he
might resume his statement.
"We have secured
proof that he applied himself to secret investigation. He is known to have
employed Scotland Yard to make certain inquiries concerning the man said to
have been killed in the Klondike. Having evidently reached more than suspicion
he began to endeavor to persuade Mr. Strangeways to let him take him to London.
This apparently took some time. The mere suggestion of removal threw the
invalid into a state of painful excitement -- "
"Did Pearson tell
you that?" the duke inquired.
"Captain Palliser
himself in passing the door of the room one day heard certain expressions of
terrified pleading," was Mr. Palford's explanation.
"I heard
enough," Palliser took it up carelessly, "to make it worth while to
question Pearson -- who must have heard a great deal more. Pearson was ordered
to hold his tongue from the first, but he will have to tell the truth when he
is asked."
The duke did not appear
to resent his view.
"Pearson would be
likely to know what went on," he remarked. "He+'s an intelligent
little fellow."
"The fact remains
that in spite of his distress and reluctance Mr. Strangeways was removed
privately, and there our knowledge ends. He has not been seen since -- and a
few hours after, Captain Palliser expressed his conviction, that the person he
had seen through the West Room window was Mr. James Temple Barholm, Mr. Temple
Temple Barholm left the house taking a midnight train, and leaving no clue as
to his whereabouts or intentions."
"Disappeared!"
said the duke. "Where has he been looked for?"
The countenance of both
Mr. Palford and his party expressed a certain degree of hesitance.
"Principally in
asylums and so-called sanatoriums, Mr. Grimby admitted with a hint of
reluctance.
"Places where the
curiosity of outsiders is not encouraged, said Palliser languidly. "And
where if a patient dies in a fit of mania there are always respectable
witnesses to explain that his case was hopeless from the first."
Mr. Hutchinson had been
breathing hard occasionally as he sat and listened, and now he sprang up uttering
a sound dangerously near a violent snort.
"Art tha accusin'
that lad o' bein' black villain enough to be ready to do bloody murder?"
he cried out.
"He was in a very
tight place, Hutchinson," Palliser shrugged his shoulders as he said it.
"But one makes suggestions at this stage -- not accusations.
That Hutchinson had
lost his head was apparent to his daughter at least.
"Tha+'d be in a
tight place, my fine chap, if I had my way, he flung forth irately. "I+'d
like to get thy head under my arm."
The roll of approaching
wheels reached Miss Alicia.
"There's another
carriage," was her agitated exclamation. "Oh, dear! It must be Lady
Joan!"
Little Ann left her
seat to make her father return to his.
"Father, you+'d
better sit down," she said, gently pushing him in the right direction.
"When you can't prove a thing a a lie, it+'s just as well to keep quiet
until you can." And she kept quiet herself, though she turned and stood
before Palliser and spoke with clear deliberateness. "What you pretend to
believe is not true, Captain Palliser. It's just not true, she gave to him.
They were facing and
looking at each other when Burrill announced Lady Joan Fayre. She entered
rather quickly and looked round the room with a sweeping glance, taking them all
in. She went to the duke first, and they shook hands.
"I am glad you are
here!" she said.
"I would not have
been out of it, my dear young lady," he answered, " `for a farm.'
That+'s a quotation."
I know," she
replied, giving her hand to Miss Alicia, and taking in Palliser and the
solicitors with a bow which was little more than a nod. Then she saw Little
Ann, and walked over to her to shake hands.
"I am glad you are
here. I rather felt you would be," was her greeting. I am glad to see
you."
"Whether tha 'rt
glad to see me or not I+'m glad I+'m here," said Hutchinson bluntly.
"I+'ve just been speaking a bit o' my mind."
"Now, Father
love!" Little Ann put her hand on his arm.
Lady Joan looked him
over. Her hungry eyes were more hungry than ever. She looked like a creature in
a fever and worn by it.
"I think I am glad
you are here too," she answered
Palliser sauntered over
to her. He had approved the duke's air of being at once detached and inquiring,
and he did not intend to wear the aspect of the personage who plays the
unpleasant part of the pursuer and avenger. What he said was --
"It was good of
you to come, Lady Joan."
"Did you think I
would stay away?" was her answer. "But I will tell you that I don't
believe it is true."
You think that it is
too good to be true?"
Her hot eyes had
records in them it would have been impossible for him to read or understand.
She had been so torn; she had passed through such hours since she had been told
this wild thing.
"Pardon my not
telling you what I think," she said. "Nothing matters, after all, if
he is alive!"
"Except that we
must find him," said Palliser.
"If he is in the
same world with me I shall find him," fiercely.. Then she turned again to
Ann. "You are the girl T Tembarom loves?" she put it to her.
"Yes, my
lady."
"If he was lost,
and you knew he was on the earth with you, don't you know that you would find
him?"
"I should know
he+'d come back to me," Little Ann answered her. "That's what --
" her small face looked very fine as in her second of hesitation a
spirited flush ran over it, "that+'s what your man will do," quite
firmly.
It was amazing to see
how the bitter face changed, as if one word had brought back a passionate
softening memory.
"My man!" Her
voice mellowed until it was deep and low. "Did you call T. Tembarom that,
too? Oh, I understand you! Keep near me while I talk to these people." She
made her sit down by her.
"I know every
detail of your letters." She addressed Palliser as well as Palford &
Grimby, sweeping all details aside. "What is it you want to ask me?"
"This is our
position, your ladyship," Mr. Palford fumbled a little with his papers in
speaking. "Mr. Temple Temple Barholm and the person known as Mr.
Strangeways have been searched for so far without result. In the meantime we
realize that the more evidence we obtain that Mr. Temple Temple Barholm
identified Strangeways and acted from motive, the more solid the foundation
upon which Captain Palliser's conviction rests. Up to this point we have only
his statement which he is prepared to make on oath. Fortunately, however, he on
one occasion overheard something said to you which he believes will be
corroborative evidence."
"What did you
overhear?" she inquired of Palliser.
Her tone was not
pacific considering that, logically, she must -- be on the side of the
investigators. But it was her habit, as Captain Palliser remembered, to seem to
put most people on the defensive. He meant to look as uninvolved as the duke,
but it was not quite within his power. His manner was sufficiently deliberate.
"One evening,
before you left for London, I was returning from the billiard-room, and heard
you engaged in animated conversation with -- our host. My attention was
arrested, first because -- " a sketch of a smile ill-concealed itself,
"you usually scarcely deigned to speak to him, and secondly because I
heard Jem Temple Barholm's name."
"And you --
?" neither eyes nor manner omitted the word listened.
But the slight lift of
his shoulders was indifferent enough.
"I listened
deliberately. I was convinced that the fellow was a criminal impostor, and I
wanted evidence."
"Ah! come
now," remarked the duke amiably. "Now we are getting on. Did you gain
any?"
"I thought so.
Merely of the cumulative order, of course," Palliser answered with
moderation. "Those were early days. He asked you," turning to Lady
Joan again, "if you knew any one -- any one -- who had any sort of a
photograph of Jem. You had one and you showed it to him!"
She was quite silent
for a moment. The hour came back to her -- the extraordinary hour when he had
stood in his lounging fashion before her, and through some odd, uncivilized but
absolutely human force of his own had made her listen to him -- and had gone on
talking in his nasal voice until with one common, crude, grotesque phrase he
had turned her hideous world upside down -- changed the whole face of it --
sent the stone wall rising before her crumbling into dust, and seemed somehow
to set her free. For the moment he had lifted a load from her the nature of
which she did not think he could understand -- a load of hatred and silence.
She had clutched his hand, she had passionately wept on it, she could have
kissed it. He had told her she could come back and not be afraid. As the
strange episode rose before her detail by detail, she literally stared at
Palliser.
"You did, did+n't
you?" he inquired.
"Yes," she
answered.
Her mind was in a riot,
because in the midst of things which must be true, something was false. But
with the memory of a myriad subtle duplicities in her brain, she had never seen
anything which could have approached a thing like that. He had made her feel
more human than any one in the world had ever made her feel -- but Jem. He had
been able to do it because he was human himself -- human. "I+'m
friendly," he had said with his boy's laugh -- "just friendly."
"I saw him start,
though you did not," Palliser continued. "He stood and studied the
locket intently."
She remembered
perfectly. He had examined it so closely that he had unconsciously knit his
brows.
"He said something
in a rather low voice," Palliser took it up. "I could not quite catch
it all. It was something about `knowing the face again.' I can see you
remember, Lady Joan. Can you repeat the exact words?"
He did not understand
the struggle he saw in her face. It would have been impossible for him to
understand it. What she felt was that if she lost hold on her strange belief in
the honesty of this one decent thing she had seen and felt so close to her that
it cleared the air she breathed, it would be as if she had fallen into a
bottomless abyss. Without knowing why she did it, she got up from her chair as
if she were a witness in a court.
"Yes, I can,"
she said. "Yes, I can; but I wish to make a statement for myself. Whether
Jem Temple Barholm is alive or dead, Captain Palliser, T. Tembarom has done him
no harm."
The duke sat up
delicately alert. He had evidently found her worth looking at and listening to
from the outset.
"Hear! Hear!"
he said pleasantly.
"What were the
exact words?" suggested Palliser.
Miss Alicia who had
been weeping on Little Ann's shoulder -- almost on her lap -- lifted her head
to listen. Hutchinson set his jaw and grunted, and Mr. Palford cleared his
throat mechanically.
"He said,"
and no one better than herself realized how ominously "cumulative"
the words sounded, "that a man would know a face like that again --
wherever he saw it."
"Wherever he saw
it!" ejaculated Mr. Grimby.
There ensued a moment
of entire pause. It was inevitable. Having reached this point a taking of breath
was necessary. Even the duke ceased to appear entirely detached. As Mr. Palford
turned to his papers again there was perhaps a slight feeling of awkwardness in
the air. Miss Alicia had dropped, terror smitten, into new tears.
The slight awkwardness
was, on the whole, rather added to by T. Tembarom -- as if serenely introduced
by the hand of drama itself -- opening the door and walking into the room. He
came in with a matter-of-fact, but rather obstinate, air, and stopped in their
midst, looking round at them as if collectedly taking them all in.
Hutchinson sprang to
his feet with a kind of roar, his big hands plunging deep into his trousers
pockets.
"Here he is!
Danged if he is+n't!" he bellowed. "Now lad, tha let 'em have
it!"
What he was to let them
have did not ensue, because his attitude was not one of assault.
"Say, you are all
here, ain't you!" he remarked obviously. "Good business!"
Miss Alicia got up from
the sofa and came trembling toward him as one approaches one risen from the
dead, and he made a big stride toward her and took her in his arms, patting her
shoulder in reproachful consolation.
"Say, you have+n't
done what I told you -- have you?" he soothed. "You+'ve let yourself
get rattled."
"But I knew it
was+n't true," she sobbed. "I knew it was+n't."
"Of course you
did, but you got rattled all the same." And he patted her again.
The duke came forward
with a delightfully easy and -- could it be almost jocose? -- air of bearing
himself. Palford and Grimby remarked it with pained dismay. He was so
unswerving in his readiness as he shook hands
"How well done of
you!" he said. "How well arranged! But I+'m afraid you did+n't
arrange it at all. It has merely happened. Where did you come from?"
"From America; got
back yesterday." T. Tembarom's hand-shake was a robust hearty greeting.
"It's all right."
"From
America!" The united voices of the solicitors exclaimed it.
Joseph Hutchinson broke
into a huge guffaw, and he stamped in exultation.
"I+'m danged if he
has na' been to America!" he cried out. "To America!"
"Oh!" Miss
Alicia gasped hysterically, "they go backward and forward to America like
-- like lightning!"
Little Ann had not
risen at his entrance, but sat still with her hands clasped tightly on her lap.
Her face had somehow the effect of a flower gradually breaking into
extraordinary bloom. Their eyes had once met and then she remained, her soul in
hers which were upon him, as she drank in every word he uttered. Her time had
not yet come.
Lady Joan had remained
standing by the chair, which a few moments before her manner had seemed to
transform into something like a witness stand in a court of justice. Her hungry
eyes had grown hungrier each second, and her breath came and went quickly. The
very face she had looked up at on her last talk with T. Tembarom -- the oddly
human face -- turned on her as he came to her. It was just as it had been that
night -- just as commonly uncommon and believable.
"Say, Lady Joan!
You did+n't believe all that guff, did you -- You did+n't?" he said.
"No -- no -- no! I
could+n't!" she cried fiercely.
He saw she was snaking
with suspense, and he pushed her gently into a chair.
"You+'d better sit
down a minute. You're about all in," he said.
She might have been a
woman with an ague as she caught his arm, shaking it because her hands
themselves so shook.
"Is it true?"
was her low cry. "Is he alive -- is he alive?"
"Yes, he+'s
alive." And as he answered he drew close and so placed himself before her
that he shielded her from the others in the room. He seemed to manage to shut
them out, so that when she dropped her face on her arms against the chair-back
her shuddering, silent sobbing was hidden decently. It was not only his body
which did it, but some protecting power which was almost physically visible.
She felt it spread before her. "Yes, he+'s alive," he said, "and
he+'s all right -- though it been a long time coming, by gee!"
"He+'s
alive." They all heard it. For a man of Palliser's make to stand silent in
the midst of mysterious slowly accumulating convictions that some one --
perilously of his own rarely inept type -- was on the verge of feeling
appallingly like a fool -- was momentarily unendurable. And nothing had been
explained, after all.
"Is this what you
call `bluff' in New York?" he demanded. "You+'ve got a lot to
explain. You admit that Jem Temple Barholm is alive?" and realized his
asinine error before the words were fully spoken.
The realization was the
result of the square-shouldered swing with which T. Tembarom turned round, and
the expression of his eyes as they ran over him.
"Admit!" he
said. "Admit hell! He+'s up-stairs," with a slight jerk of his head
in the direction of the ceiling.
The duke alone did not
gasp. He laughed slightly.
"We've just got
here. He came down from London with me, and Sir Ormsby Galloway." And he
said it not to Palliser but to Palford and Grimby.
"The Sir Ormsby
Galloway?" It was an ejaculation from Mr. Palford himself.
T. Tembarom stood
square and gave his explanation to the lot of them, so to speak, without
distinction.
"He's the big
nerve specialist. I+'ve had him looking after the case from the first -- before
I began to suspect anything. I took orders, and orders were to keep him quiet
and not let any fool butt in and excite him. That+'s what I+'ve been giving my
mind to. The great stunt was to get him to go and stay at Sir Ormsby's
place." He stopped a moment and suddenly flared forth as if he had had
about enough of it. He almost shouted at them in exasperation. "All I+'m
going to tell you is that for about six months I+'ve been trying to prove that
Jem Temple Barholm was Jem Temple Barholm, and the hardest thing I had to do
was to get him so that he could prove it himself." He strode over to the
hearth and rang a bell. "It's not my place to give orders here now,"
he said, "but Jem commissioned me to see this thing through. Sir Ormsby'll
tell you all you want to hear."
He turned and spoke
solely to the duke.
"This is what
happened," he said. "I dare say you+'ll laugh when you hear it. I
almost laughed myself. What does Jem do, when he thinks things over, but get
some fool notion in his head about not coming back here and pushing me out. And
he lights out and leaves the country -- leaves it -- to get time to think it
over some more."
The duke did not laugh.
He merely smiled -- a smile which had a shade of curious self-questioning in
it.
"Romantic and
emotional -- and quite ridiculous," he commented slowly. "He'd have
awakened to that when he had thought it out `some more.' The thing could+n't be
done."
Burrill had presented
himself in answer to the bell, and awaited orders. His Grace called Tembarom's
attention to him, and Tembarom included Palliser with Palford and Grimby when
he gave his gesture of instruction.
"Take these
gentlemen to Sir Ormsby Galloway, and then ask Mr. Temple Barholm if he+'ll
come down-stairs," he said.
It is possible that
Captain Palliser felt himself more irritatingly infolded in the swathing
realization that some one was in a ridiculous position, and it is certain that
Mr. Palford felt it necessary to preserve an outwardly flawless dignity as the
duke surprisingly left his chair and joined them.
"Let me go,
too," he suggested; "I may be able to assist in throwing light."
His including movement in Miss Alicia's direction was delightfully gracious and
friendly. It was inclusive of Mr. Hutchinson also.
"Will you come
with us, Miss Temple Barholm?" he said. "And you too, Mr. Hutchinson.
We shall go over it all in its most interesting detail, and you must be eager
about it. I am myself."
His happy and entirely
correct idea was that the impending entrance of Mr. James Temple Barholm would
"come off" better in the absence of audience.
Hutchinson almost
bounced from his chair in his readiness. Miss Alicia looked at Tembarom.
"Yes, Miss
Alicia," he answered her inquiring glance. "You go, too. You+'ll get
it all over quicker."
Rigid propriety forbade
that Mr. Palford should express annoyance, but the effort to restrain the
expression of it was in his countenance. Was it possible that the American
habit of being jocular had actually held its own in a matter as serious as
this? And could even the most cynical and light-minded of ducal personages have
been involved in its unworthy frivolities? But no one looked jocular --
Tembarom's jaw was set in its hard line, and the duke, taking up the broad
ribbon of his rimless monocle to fix the glass in his eye, wore the expression
of a man whose sense of humor was temporarily in abeyance.
"Are we to
understand that your Grace -- ?"
"Yes," said
his Grace a trifle curtly, "I have known about it for some time."
"But why was
nobody told?" put in Palliser.
"Why should people
be told? There was nothing sufficiently definite to tell. It was a waiting
game." His Grace wasted no words. "I was told. Mr. Temple Barholm did
not know England or English methods. His idea -- perhaps a mistaken one -- was
that an English duke ought to be able to advise him. He came to me and made a
clean breast of it. He goes straight at things, that young fellow. Makes what
he calls a `bee line.' Oh! I+'ve been in it -- I+'ve been in it, I assure
you."
It was as they crossed
the hall that his Grace slightly laughed.
"It struck me as a
sort of wild-goose chase at first. He had only a ghost of a clue -- a mere
resemblance to a portrait. But he believed in it, and he had an instinct."
He laughed again. "The dullest and most unmelodramatic neighborhood in
England has been taking part in a melodrama -- but there has been no villain in
it -- only a matter-of-fact young man, working out a queer thing in his own
queer, matter-of-fact way."
When the door closed
behind them, Tembarom went to Lady Joan. She had risen and was standing before
the window, her back to the room. She looked tall and straight and tensely
braced when she turned round, but there was endurance, not fierceness in her
eyes.
"Did he leave the
country knowing I was here -- waiting?" she asked. Her voice was low and
fatigued. She had remembered that years had passed, and that it was perhaps
after all only human that long anguish should blot things out, and dull a hopeless
man's memory.
"No,"
answered Tembarom sharply. "He did+n't. You were+n't in it then. He
believed you+'d married that Duke of Merthshire fellow. This is the way it was:
Let me tell it to you quick. A letter that had been wandering round came to him
the night before the cave-in, when they thought he was killed. It told him old
Temple Barholm was dead. He started out before daylight, and you can bet he was
strung up till he was near crazy with excitement. He believed that if he was in
England with plenty of money he could track down that card- sharp lie. He
believed you+'d help him. Somewhere, while he was traveling he came across an
old paper with a lot of dope about your being engaged."
Joan remembered well
how her mother had worked to set the story afloat -- how they had gone through
the most awful of their scenes -- almost raving at each other, shut up together
in the boudoir in Hill Street.
"That+'s all he
remembers, except that he thought some one had hit him a crack on the head.
Nothing had hit him. He+'d had too much to stand up under and something gave
way in his brain. He does+n't know what happened after that. He+'d wake up
sometimes just enough to know he was wandering about trying to get home. It+'s
been the limit to try to track him. If he+'d not come to himself we could never
have been quite sure. That's why I stuck at it. But he did come to himself. All
of a sudden. Sir Ormsby will tell you that's what nearly always happens. They
wake up all of a sudden. It's all right; it+'s all right. I used to promise him
it would be -- when I was+n't sure that I was+n't lying." And for the
first time he broke into the friendly grin -- but it was more valiant than
spontaneous. He wanted her to know that it was "all right."
"Oh!" she
cried, "oh! you -- "
She stopped because the
door was opening.
"It's Jem,"
he said sharply. "Ann, let's go." And that instant Little Ann was
near him.
"No! no! don't
go," cried Lady Joan.
Jem Temple Barholm came
in through the doorway. Life and sound and breath stopped for a second, and
then the two whirled into each other's arms as if a storm had swept them there.
"Jem!" she
wailed. "Oh, Jem! My man! Where have you been?"
"I+'ve been in
hell, Joan -- in hell!" he answered, choking -- "and this wonderful
fellow has dragged me out of it."
But Tembarom would have
none of it. He could not stand it. This sort of thing filled up his throat and
put him at an overwhelming disadvantage. He just laid a hand on Jem Temple
Barholm's shoulder and gave him an awkwardly friendly push.
"Say, cut me out
of it!" he said. "You get busy," his voice rather breaking.
"You+'ve got a lot to say to her. It was up to me before; -- now, it+'s up
to you."
Little Ann went with
him into the next room.
The room they went into
was a smaller one, quiet, and its oriel windows much overshadowed by trees. By
the time they stood together in the center of it Tembarom had swallowed
something twice or thrice, and had recovered himself. Even his old smile had
come back as he took one of her hands in each of his, and holding them wide
apart stood and looked down at her.
"God bless you,
Little Ann," he said. "I just knew I should find you here. I+'d have
bet my last dollar on it."
The hands he held were
trembling just a little, and the dimples quivered in and out. But her eyes were
steady, and a lovely increasing intensity glowed in them.
"You went after
him and brought him back. He was all wrought up, and he needed some one with
good common sense to stop him in time to make him think straight before he did
anything silly," she said.
"I says to
him," T. Tembarom made the matter clear; " `Say, you+'ve left
something behind that belongs to you! Come back and get it.' I meant Lady Joan.
And I says, `Good Lord, man, you+'re acting like a fellow in a play. That place
does+n't belong to me. It belongs to you. If it was mine, fair and square,
Little Willie+'d hang on to it. There+'d be no noble sacrifice in his. You get
a brace on."'
"When they were
talking in that silly way about you, and saying you+'d run away," said
Little Ann, her face uplifted adoringly as she talked, "I said to father,
`If he+'s gone, he+'s gone to get something. And he+'ll be likely to bring it
back."'
He almost dropped her
hands and caught her to him then. But he saved himself in time.
"Now this great
change has come," he said, "everything will be different. The men
you+'ll know will look like the pictures in the advertisements at the backs of
magazines -- those fellows with chins and smooth hair. I shall look like a chauffeur
among them."
But she did not blench
in the least, though she remembered whose words he was quoting. The intense and
lovely femininity in her eyes only increased. She came closer to him, and so
because of his height had to look up more.
"You will always
make jokes -- but I don't care. I don't care for anything but you," she
said. "I love your jokes; I love everything about you: I love your eyes --
and your voice -- and your laugh. I love your very clothes." Her voice
quivered as her dimples did. "These last months I+'ve sometimes felt as if
I should die of loving you."
It was a wonderful
thing -- wonderful. His eyes -- his whole young being had kindled as he looked
down drinking in every word.
"Is that the kind
of quiet little thing you are?" he said.
"Yes, it is,"
she answered firmly.
"And you+'re
satisfied -- you know, who it is I want? -- You+'re ready to do what you said
you would that last night at Mrs. Bowse's?"
"What do you
think?" she said in her clear little voice.
He caught her then in a
strong, hearty, young, joyous clutch.
"You come to me,
Little Ann. You come right to me," he said.
MANY an honest penny
was turned, with the assistance of the romantic Temple Barholm case, by writers
of paragraphs for newspapers published in the United States. It was not merely
a romance which belonged to England but was excitingly linked to America by the
fact that its hero regarded himself as an American, and had passed through all
the picturesque episodes of a most desirably struggling youth in the very
streets of New York itself, and had "worked his way up" to the proud
position of society reporter "on" a huge Sunday paper. It was
generally considered to redound largely to his credit that refusing "in
spite of all temptations to belong to other nations," he had been born in
Brooklyn, that he had worn ragged clothes and shoes with holes in them, that he
had blacked other people's shoes, run errands, and sold newspapers there. If he
had been a mere English young man, one recounting of his romance would have
disposed of him; but as he was presented to the newspaper public every
characteristic lent itself to elaboration. He was, in fact, flaringly
anecdotal. As a newly elected President who has made boots or driven a
canal-boat in his unconsidered youth endears himself indescribably to both
paragraph reader and paragraph purveyor, so did T. Tembarom endear himself. For
weeks, he was a perennial fount. What quite credible story cannot be related of
a hungry lad who is wildly flung by chance into immense fortune and the laps of
dukes, so to speak? The feeblest imagination must be stirred by the high color
of such an episode, and stimulated to superb effort. Until the public had
become sated with reading anecdotes depicting the extent of his early
privations, and dwelling on illustrations which presented lumber-yards in which
he had slept, and the facades of tumble-down tenements in which he had first
beheld the light of day, he was a modest source of income. Any lumber-yard or
any tenement sufficiently dilapidated would serve as a model; and the fact that
in the shifting architectural life of New York the actual original scenes of
the incidents had been demolished and built upon by new apartment-houses, or
new railroad stations, or new factories seventy-five stories high, was an
unobstructing triviality. Accounts of his manner of conducting himself in
European courts to which he had supposedly been bidden, of his immense
popularity in glittering circles, of his finely democratic bearing when confronted
by emperors surrounded by their guilty splendors, were the joy of remote
villages and towns. A thrifty and young minor novelist hastily incorporated him
in a serial, and syndicated it upon the spot under the title of "Living or
Dead." Among its especial public it was a success of such a nature as
betrayed its author into as hastily writing a second romance, which not being
rendered stimulating by a foundation of fact failed to repeat his triumph.
T. Tembarom, reading in
the library at Temple Barholm the first newspapers sent from New York, smiled
widely.
"You see they+'ve
got to say something, Jem," he explained. "It+'s too big a scoop to
be passed over. Something+'s got to be turned in. And it means money to the
fellows, too. It+'s good copy."
"Suppose,"
suggested Jem, watching him with interest, "you were to write the facts
yourself and pass them on to some decent chap who+'d be glad to get them."
"Glad!"
Tembarom flushed with delight. "Any chap would be 'way up in the air at
the chance. It+'s the best kind of stuff. Would+n't you mind? Are you sure you
would+n't?" He was the warhorse snuffing battle from afar.
Jem Temple Barholm
laughed outright at the gleam in his eyes.
"No, I should+n't
care a hang, dear fellow. And the fact that I objected would not stop the
story."
"No, it would+n't,
by gee! Say, I+'ll get Ann to help me, and we'll send it to the man who took my
place on the Earth. It+'ll mean board and boots to him for a month if he works
it right. And it+'ll be doing a good turn to Galton, too. I shall be glad to
see old Galton when I go back."
"You are quite
sure you want to go back?" inquired Jem. A certain glow of feeling was
always in his eyes when he turned them on T. Tembarom.
"Go back! I should
smile! Of course I shall go back. I+'ve got to get busy for Hutchinson and
I+'ve got to get busy for myself. I guess there+'ll be work to do that+'ll take
me half over the world; but I+'m going back first. Ann's going with me.
But there was no
reference to a return to New York when the Sunday Earth and other widely
circulated weekly sheets gave prominence to the marriage of Mr. Temple Temple
Barholm and Miss Hutchinson, only child and heiress of Mr. Joseph Hutchinson,
the celebrated inventor. From a newspaper point of view, the wedding had been
rather unfairly quiet, and it was necessary to fill space with a revival of the
renowned story, with pictures of bride and bridegroom, and of Temple Barholm
surrounded by ancestral oaks. A thriving business would have been done by the
reporters if an ocean greyhound had landed the pair at the dock some morning,
and snap-shots could have been taken as they crossed the gangway, and wearing
apparel described. But hope of such fortune was swept away by the closing
paragraph, which stated that Mr. and Mrs. Temple Barholm would "spend the
next two months in motoring through Italy and Spain in their 90 h. p.
Panhard."
It was T. Tembarom who
sent this last item privately to Galton.
"It+'s not
true," his letter added, "but what I+'m going to do is nobody's
business but mine and my wife+'s, and this will suit people just as well."
And then he confided to Galton the thing which was the truth.
The St. Francesca
apartment-house was a very new one, situated on a corner of an as yet sparsely
built but rapidly spreading avenue above the "100th Streets" -- many
numbers above them. There was a frankly unfinished air about the neighborhood,
but here and there a "store" had broken forth and valiantly displayed
necessities, and even articles verging upon the economically ornamental. It was
plainly imperative that the idea should be suggested that there were on the
spot sources of supply not requiring the immediate employment of the services
of the elevated railroad in the achievement of purchase, and also that
enterprise rightly encouraged might develop into being equal to all demands.
Here and there an exceedingly fresh and clean "market store,"
brilliant with the highly colored labels adorning tinned soups and meats and
edibles in glass jars, alluringly presented itself to the passer-by. The
elevated railroad perched upon iron supports, and with iron stairways so tall
that they looked almost perilous, was a prominent feature of the landscape.
There were stretches of waste ground, and high backgrounds of bits of country
and woodland to be seen. The rush of New York traffic had not yet reached the
streets, and the avenue was of an agreeable suburban cleanliness and calm.
People who lived in upper stories could pride themselves on having "views
of the river." These they laid stress upon when it was hinted that they
"lived a long way uptown."
The St. Francesca was
built of light-brown stone and decorated with much ornate molding. It was
fourteen stories high, and was supplied with ornamental fire-escapes. It was
"no slouch of a building." Everything decorative which could be done
for it had been done. The entrance was almost imposing, and a generous
lavishness in the way of cement mosaic flooring and new and thick red carpet
struck the eye at once. The grill-work of the elevator was of fresh, bright
blackness, picked out with gold, and the colored elevator-boy wore a blue
livery with brass buttons. Persons of limited means who were willing to discard
the excitements of "downtown" got a good deal for their money, and
frequently found themselves secretly surprised and uplifted by the atmosphere
of luxury which greeted them when they entered their red-carpeted hall. It was
wonderful, they said, congratulating one another privately, how much comfort
and style you got in a New York apartment-house after you passed the
"150ths."
On a certain afternoon
T. Tembarom, with his hat on the back of his head and his arms full of parcels,
having leaped off the "L" when it stopped at the nearest station,
darted up and down the iron stairways until he reached the ground, and then
hurried across the avenue to the St. Francesca. He made long strides, and two
or three times grinned as if thinking of something highly amusing; and once or
twice he began to whistle and checked himself. He looked approvingly at the
tall building and its solidly balustraded entrance-steps as he approached it,
and when he entered the red-carpeted hall he gave greeting to a small mulatto
boy in livery.
"Hello, Tom!
How+'s everything?" he inquired, hilariously. "You taking good care
of this building? Let any more eight- room apartments? You+'ve got to keep
right on the job, you know. Can't have you loafing because you+'ve got those
brass buttons."
The small page showed
his teeth in gleeful appreciation of their friendly intimacy.
"Yassir. That+'s
so," he answered. "Mis' Barom she+'s waitin' for you. Them carpets is
come, sir. Tracy's wagon brought 'em 'bout an hour ago. I told her I+'d help
her lay 'em if she wanted me to, but she said you was comin' with the hammer
an' tacks. 'T war+n't that she thought I was too little. It was jest that there
was+n't no tacks. I tol' her jest call me in any time to do anythin' she want
done, an' she said she would."
"She+'ll do
it," said T. Tembarom. "You just keep on tap. I+'m just counting on
you and Light here," taking in the elevator-boy as he stepped into the
elevator, "to look after her when I+'m out."
The elevator-boy
grinned also, and the elevator shot up the shaft, the numbers of the floors
passing almost too rapidly to be distinguished. The elevator was new and so was
the boy, and it was the pride of his soul to land each passenger at his own
particular floor, as if he had been propelled upward from a catapult. But he
did not go too rapidly for this passenger, at least, though a paper parcel or
so was dropped in the transit and had to be picked up when he stopped at floor
fourteen.
The red carpets were on
the corridor there also, and fresh paint and paper were on the walls. A few
yards from the elevator he stopped at a door and opened it with a latch-key,
beaming with inordinate delight.
The door opened into
a-narrow corridor leading into a small apartment, the furniture of which was
not yet set in order. A roll of carpet and some mats stood in a corner, chairs
and tables with burlaps round their legs waited here and there, a cot with a
mattress on it, evidently to be transformed into a "couch," held
packages of bafflingly irregular shapes and sizes. In the tiny kitchen new pots
and pans and kettles, some still wrapped in paper, tilted themselves at various
angles on the gleaming new range or on the closed lids of the doll-sized
stationary wash-tubs.
Little Ann had been
very busy, and some of the things were unpacked. She had been sweeping and
mopping floors and polishing up remote corners, and she had on a big white
pinafore- apron with long sleeves, which transformed her into a sort of small
female chorister. She came into the narrow corridor with a broom in her hand,
her periwinkle-blue gaze as thrilled as an excited child's when it attacks the
arrangement of its first doll's house. Her hair was a little ruffled where it
showed below the white kerchief she had tied over her head. The warm, daisy
pinkness of her cheeks was amazing.
"Hello!"
called out Tembarom at sight of her. "Are you there yet? I don't believe
it."
"Yes, I+'m
here," she answered, dimpling at him.
"Not you!" he
said. "You could+n't be! You+'ve melted away. Let+'s see." And he
slid his parcels down on the cot and lifted her up in the air as if she had
been a baby. "How can I tell, anyhow?" he laughed out. "You
don't weigh anything, and when a fellow squeezes you he+'s got to look out what
he+'s doing."
He did not seem to
"look out" particularly when he caught her to him in a hug into which
she appeared charmingly to melt. She made herself part of it, with soft arms
which went at once round his neck and held him.
"Say!" he
broke forth when he set her down. "Do you think I+'m not glad to get
back?"
"No, I don't,
Tem," she answered, "I know how glad you are by the way I+'m glad
myself."
"You know just
everything!" he ejaculated, looking her over, "just every darned
thing -- God bless you! But don't you melt away, will you? That+'s what I+'m
afraid of. I+'ll do any old thing on earth if you+'ll just stay."
That was his great
joke, -- though she knew it was not so great a joke as it seemed, -- that he
would not believe that she was real, and believed that she might disappear at
any moment. They had been married three weeks, and she still knew when she saw
him pause to look at her that he would suddenly seize and hold her fast, trying
to laugh, sometimes not with entire success.
"Do you know how
long it was? Do you know how far away that big place was from everything in the
world?" he had said once. "And me holding on and gritting my teeth?
And not a soul to open my mouth to! The old duke was the only one who
understood, anyhow. He+'d been there."
"I+'ll stay,"
she answered now, standing before him as he sat down on the end of the
"couch." She put a firm, warm- palmed little hand on each side of his
face, and held it between them as she looked deep into his eyes. "You look
at me, Tem -- and see."
"I believe it
now," he said, "but I shan't in fifteen minutes."
"We+'re both
right-down silly," she said, her soft, cosy laugh breaking out. "Look
round this room and see what we+'ve got to do. Let's begin this minute. Did you
get the groceries?"
He sprang up and began
to go over his packages triumphantly.
"Tea, coffee,
sugar, pepper, salt, beefsteak," he called out.
"We can't have
beefsteak often," she said, soberly, "if we+'re going to do it on
fifteen a week."
"Good Lord,
no!" he gave back to her, hilariously. "But this is a Fifth Avenue
feed."
"Let+'s take them
into the kitchen and put them into the cupboard, and untie the pots and
pans." She was suddenly quite absorbed and businesslike. "We must
make the room tidy and tack down the carpet, and then cook the dinner."
He followed her and
obeyed her like an enraptured boy. The wonder of her was that, despite its
unarranged air, the tiny place was already cleared and set for action. She had
done it all before she had swept out the undiscovered corners. Everything was
near the spot to which it belonged. There was nothing to move or drag out of
the way.
"I got it all
ready to put straight," she said, "but I wanted you to finish it with
me. It would+n't have seemed right if I+'d done it without you. It would+n't
have been as much ours."
Then came active service.
She was like a small general commanding an army of one. They put things on
shelves; they hung things on hooks; they found places in which things belonged;
they set chairs and tables straight; and then, after dusting and polishing
them, set them at a more imposing angle; they unrolled the little green carpet
and tacked down its corners; and transformed the cot into a "couch"
by covering it with what Tracy's knew as a "throw" and adorning one
end of it with cotton-stuffed cushions. They hung little photogravures on the
walls and strung up some curtains before the good-sized window, which looked
down from an enormous height at the top of four-storied houses, and took in
beyond them the river and the shore beyond. Because there was no fireplace
Tembarom knocked up a shelf, and, covering it with a scarf (from Tracy's), set
up some inoffensive ornaments on it and flanked them with photographs of Jem
Temple Barholm, Lady Joan in court dress, Miss Alicia in her prettiest cap, and
the great house with its huge terrace and the griffins.
"Ain't she a
looker?" Tembarom said of Lady Joan. "And ain't Jem a looker, too?
Gee! they+'re a pair. Jem thinks this honeymoon stunt of ours is the best thing
he ever heard of -- us fixing ourselves up here just like we would have done if
nothing had ever happened, and we+'d had to do it on fifteen per. Say,"
throwing an arm about her, "are you getting as much fun out of it as if we
had to, as if I might lose my job any minute, and we might get fired out of
here because we could+n't pay the rent? I believe you+'d rather like to think I
might ring you into some sort of trouble, so that you could help me to get you
out of it."
"That's
nonsense," she answered, with a sweet, untruthful little face. "I
should+n't be very sensible if I was+n't glad you could+n't lose your job.
Father and I are your job now."
He laughed aloud. This
was the innocent, fantastic truth of it. They had chosen to do this thing -- to
spend their honeymoon in this particular way, and there was no reason why they
should not. The little dream which had been of such unattainable proportions in
the days of Mrs. Bowse's boarding-house could be realized to its fullest. No
one in the St. Francesca apartments knew that the young honey-mooners in the
five- roomed apartment were other than Mr. and Mrs. T. Barholm, as recorded on
the tablet of names in the entrance. Hutchinson knew, and Miss Alicia knew, and
Jem Temple Barholm, and Lady Joan. The Duke of Stone knew, and thought the old-
fashionedness of the idea quite the last touch of modernity.
"Did you see any
one who knew you when you were out?" Little Ann asked.
"No, and if I had
they would+n't have believed they+'d seen me, because the papers told them that
Mr. and Mrs. Temple Barholm are spending their honeymoon motoring through Spain
in their ninety-horse-power Panhard."
"Let+'s go and get
dinner," said Little Ann.
They went into the
doll's-house kitchen and cooked the dinner. Little Ann broiled steak and fried
potato chips, and T. Tembarom produced a wonderful custard pie he had bought at
a confectioner's. He set the table, and put a bunch of yellow daisies in the
middle of it.
"We could+n't do
it every day on fifteen per week," he said. "If we wanted flowers we
should have to grow them in old tomato-cans."
Little Ann took off her
chorister's-gown apron and her kerchief, and patted and touched up her hair.
She was pink to her ears, and had several new dimples; and when she sat down
opposite him, as she had sat that first night at Mrs. Bowse's boarding-house
supper, Tembarom stared at her and caught his breath.
"You are
there?" he said, "ain't you?"
"Yes, I am,"
she answered.
When they had cleared
the table and washed the dishes, and had left the toy kitchen spick and span,
the ten million lights in New York were lighted and casting their glow above
the city. Tembarom sat down on the Adams chair before the window and took Little
Ann on his knee. She was of the build which settles comfortably and with ease
into soft curves whose nearness is a caress. Looked down at from the fourteenth
story of the St. Francesca apartments, the lights strung themselves along lines
of streets, crossing and recrossing one another; they glowed and blazed against
masses of buildings, and they hung at enormous heights in mid-air here and
there, apparently without any support. Everywhere was the glow and dazzle of
their brilliancy of light, with the distant bee hum of a nearing elevated
train, at intervals gradually deepening into a roar. The river looked miles
below them, and craft with sparks or blaze of light went slowly or swiftly to
and fro.
"It's like a
dream," said Little Ann, after a long silence. "And we are up here
like birds in a nest."
He gave her a closer
grip.
"Miss Alicia once
said that when I was almost down and out," he said. "It gave me a
jolt. She said a place like this would be like a nest. Wherever we go, -- and
we+'ll have to go to lots of places and live in lots of different ways, --
we+'ll keep this place, and some time we+'ll bring her here and let her try it.
I+'ve just got to show her New York."
"Yes, let us keep
it," said Little Ann, drowsily, "just for a nest."
There was another
silence, and the lights on the river far below still twinkled or blazed as they
drifted to and fro.
"You are there,
ain't you?" said Tembarom in a half-whisper.
"Yes -- I
am," murmured Little Ann.
But she had had a busy
day, and when he looked down at her, she hung softly against his shoulder, fast
asleep. THE END
Abner Daniel . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Will N. Harben
Adventures of a Modest Man . .
. . . . . . . . . . . .Robert W. Chambers
Adventures of Sherlock Holmes.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . .A. Conan Doyle
After House, The . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . Mary Roberts Rinehart
Ailsa Paige. . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . Robert W. Chamben
Air Pilot, The . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . Randall Parrish
Alton of Somasco . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . Harold Bindloss
Andrew The Glad. . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . .Maria Thompson Dariess
Ann Boyd . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . .Will N. Harben
Anna the Adventuress . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . E. Phillips Oppenheim
Armchair at the Inn, The . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . .F. Hopkinson Smith
As the Sparks Fly Upward . . .
. . . . . . . . . . .Cyrus Townsend Brady
At the Mercy of Tiberius . . .
. . . . . . . . . . .Augusta Evans Wilson
At the Moorings. . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . Rosa A. Carey
Aunt Jane of Kentacky. . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . .Eliza Calvert Hall
Awakening of Helena Richie . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . Margaret Deland
Bandbox, The . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . .Louis Joseph Vance
Bar 20 . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . Clarence E. Mulford
Bar 20 Days. . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . Clarence E. Mulford
Barrier, The . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Rex Beach
Battle Ground, The . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . Ellen Glasgow
Bella Donna. . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . .Robert Hichens
Beloved Vagabond, The. . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . .William J. Locke
Ben Blair. . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . .Will Lillibridge
Beth Norvell . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . Bandall Parrish
Betrayal, The. . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . E. Phillips Oppenheim
Beulah (Illustrated Edition) .
. . . . . . . . . . . . .Augusta J. Evans
Bob Hampton of Placer. . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . Randall Parrish
Bob, Son of Battle . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . .Alfred Olivant
Brass Bowl, The. . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . .Louis Joseph Vance
Broad Highway, The . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . .Jeffery Farnol{??}
Bronze Bell, The.. . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . .Louis Joseph Vance
Buck Peters, Ranchman. . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . Clarence E. Mulford
Butterfly Man, The . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . .George Barr McCutcheon
By Right of Purchase . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . Harold Bindlost
Cabbages and Kings . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .O. Henry
Calling of Dan Matthews, The .
. . . . . . . . . . . .Harold Bell Wrigh:
Call of the Blood, The . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . .Robert Hichens
Cape Cod Stories . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . Joseph C. Lincoln
Cap'n Eri. . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . Joseph C. Lincoln
Cap'n Warren's Wards . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . .Joseph C. Lincoln
Popular Copyright Novels
AT MODERATE PRICES
Ask your dealer for a complete
list of A. L. Burt Company's Popular Copyright Fiction
Cardigan . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . .Robert W. Chambers
Car of Destiny, The. . . . . .
. . . . . . . .C. N. and A. M. Williamson
Carpet From Bagdad, The. . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . Harold MacGrath
Casting Away of Mrs. Lecks and
Mrs. Aleshine . . . . . . .P. B. Stockton
Chaperon, The. . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . .C. N. and A. M. Williamson
Circle, The. . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . .Katherine Cecil Thurston
Claw, The. . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . .Cynthia Stockley
Colonial Free Lance, A . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . Chauncey C. Hotchkiss
Coming of the Law, The . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . .Charles Alden Selzer
Conquest of Canaan, The. . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . .Booth Tarkington
Conspirators, The. . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . .Robert W. Chambers
Cordelia Blossom . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . George Randolph Chester
Counsel for the Defense. . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Leroy Scott
Cry in the Wilderness, A . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . .Mary E. Waller
Dark Hollow, The . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . .Anna Katharine Green
Day of Days, The . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . .Louis Joseph Vance
Depot Master . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . The Joseph C. Lincoln
Derelicts. . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . .William J. Locke
Desired Woman, The . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . .Will N. Harben
Destroying Angel, The. . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . .Louis Joseph Vance
Divine Fire, The . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .May Sinclair
Dixie Hart . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . .Will N. Harben
Dominant Dollar, The . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . .Will Lillibridge
Dr. David. . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . Marjorie Benton Cooke
Enchanted Hat, The . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . Harold MacGrath
Excuse Me. . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . Rupert Hughes
54-40 or Fight . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . Emerson Hough
Fighting Chance, The . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . .Robert W. Chambers
Financier, The . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . .Theodore Dreiser
Flamsted Quarries. . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . .Mary E. Waller
For a Maiden Brave . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . Chauncey C. Hotchkiss
Four Million, The. . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .O. Henry
From the Car Behind. . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . Eleanor M. Ingraham
Fruitful Vine, The . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . .Robert Hichens
Gentleman of France, A . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . .Stanley Weyman
Get-Rich-Quick-Wallingford,George.
. . . . . . . . . . .Randolph Chester
Gilbert Neal . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . .Will N. Harben
Girl From His Town, The. . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . Marie Van Vorst
Glory of Clementina, The . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . .William J. Locke
Glory of the Conquered, The. .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . .Susan Glaspell
Popular Copyright Novels
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God's Good Man . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . Marie Corelli
Going Some . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Rex Beach
Gordon Craig . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . Randall Parrish
Greyfriars Bobby . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . .Eleanor Atkinson
Guests of Hercules, The. . . .
. . . . . . . .C. N. and A. M. Williamson
Halcyone . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Elinor Glyn
Happy Island (Sequel to Uncle
William) . . . . . . . . . . .Jennette Lee
Havoc. . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . E. Phillips Oppenheim
Heart of the Hills, The. . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . John Fox, Jr.
Heart of the Desert, The . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . .Honore Willsie
Heather-Moon, The. . . . . . .
. . . . . . . .C. N. and A. M. Williamson
Her Weight in Gold . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . .George Barr McCutcheon
Herb of Grace. . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . Rosa N. Carey
Highway of Fato, The . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . Rosa N. Carey
Homesteaders, The. . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . Kate and Virgil D. Boyles
Hopalong Cassidy . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . Clarence E. Mulford
Honor of the Big Snows, The. .
. . . . . . . . . . .James Oliver Curwood
House of Happiness, The. . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . Kate Langley Bosher
House of the Lost Court, The .
. . . . . . . . . . . . .C. N. Williamson
House of the Whispering Pines,
The . . . . . . . . . . . . Anna K. Green
Household of Peter, The. . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . Rosa N. Carey
Hugh Wynne, Free Quaker. . . .
. . . . . . . . . .S. Weir Mitchell, M.D.
Husbands of Edith, The . . . .
. . . . . . . . . .George Barr McCutcheon
Idols. . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . .William J. Locke
Illustrious Prince, The. . . .
. . . . . . . . . . E. Phillips Oppenheim
Imposter, The. . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . John Reed Scott
In Defiance of the King. . . .
. . . . . . . . . . Chauncey C. Hotchkiss
Indifference of Juliet, The. .
. . . . . . . . . . . . Grace S. Richmond
Inez (Illustrated Edition) . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . .Augusta J. Evans
Infelice . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . .Augusta Evans Wilson
Initials Only. . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . .Anna Katharine Green
Iron Trail, The. . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Rex Beach
Iron Woman, The. . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . Margaret Deland
Ishmael (Illustrated). . . . .
. . . . . . .Mrs. E. D. E. N. Southeorth
Island of Regeneration, The. .
. . . . . . . . . . .Cyrus Townsend Brady
Japonette. . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . .Robert W. Chambers
Jane Cablo . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . .George Barr McCutcheon
Jeanne of the Marshes. . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . E. Phillips Oppenheim
Jennie Gerhardt. . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . .Theodore Dreiser
Joyful Heatherby . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . Payne Erskine
Judgment House, The. . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . .Sir Gilbert Parker
Popular Copyright Novels
AT MODERATE PRICES
Ask your dealer for a complete
list of A. L. Burt Company's Popular Copyright Fiction
Keith of the Border. . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . Randall Parrish
Key to the Unknown, The. . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . Rosa N. Carey
King Spruce. . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Holman Day
Knave of Diamonds, The . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . Ethel M. Dell
Lady and the Pirate, The . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . Emerson Hough
Lady Betty Across the Water. .
. . . . . . . .C. N. and A. M. Williamson
Land of Long Ago, The. . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . .Eliza Calvert Hall
Langford of the Three Bars . .
. . . . . . . . Kate and Virgil D. Boyles
Last Trail, The. . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Zane Grey
Last Voyage of the Donna
Isabel, The . . . . . . . . . . Randall Parrish
Leavenworth Case, The. . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . .Anna Katherine Green
Life Mask, The . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . Author of "To M. L. G."
Lighted Way, The . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . E. Phillips Oppenheim
Lin McLean . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Owen Wister
Little Brown Jug at Kildare,
The . . . . . . . . . . .Meredith Nicholson
Lonesome Land. . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . B. M. Bower
Lord Loveland Discovers
America. . . . . . . .C. N. and A. M. Williamson
Lorimer of the Northwest . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . Harold Bindloss
Lorraine . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . .Robert W. Chambers
Lost Ambassador, The . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . E. Phillips Oppenheim
Love Under Fire. . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . Randall Parrish
Macaria (Illustrated Edition).
. . . . . . . . . . . . .Augusta J. Evans
Maid at Arms, The. . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . .Robert W. Chambers
Maid of Old New York, A. . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . .Amelia E. Barr
Maids of Paradise, The . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . .Robert W. Chembers
Maid of the Whispering Hills,
The. . . . . . . . . . . . . Vingie E. Roe
Maid of the Forest, The. . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . Randall Parrish
Making of Bobby Burnit, The. .
. . . . . . . . . . Geo. Randolph Chester
Mam' Linda . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . .Will N. Harben
Marriage . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . H. G. Wells
Marriage a la Mode . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . .Mrs. Humphrey Ward
Master Mummer, The . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . E. Phillips Oppenheim
Masters of the Wheatlands. . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . Harold Bindloss
Max. . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . .Katherine Cecil Thurston
Mediator, The. . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Roy Norton
Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . .A. Conan Doyle
Missioner, The . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . E. Phillips Oppenheim
Miss Gibbie Gault. . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . Kate Langley Bosher
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