THE NOVELS AND STORIES OF
RICHARD HARDING DAVIS
THE
RED CROSS GIRL
WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY
GOUVERNEUR MORRIS ILLUSTRATED BY
RICHARD HARDING DAVISNEW YORK
CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS
1917 The first seven stories in this volume from ``The Red Cross
Girl,'' copyright 1912, by CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS;
"The Card Sharp" from "Somewhere in France,"
copyright, 1915, by CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS.
----
``The Boy Who Cried Wolf,'' copyright, 1916, by THE
METROPOLITAN MAGAZINE COMPANY.
----
COPYRIGHT, 1916, BY
CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS TO
BESSIE McCOY DAVIS
``And they rise to
their feet as he passes, gentlemen unafraid.''
HE was almost too good
to be true. In addition, the gods loved him, and so he had to die young. Some
people think that a man of fifty-two is middle- aged. But if R. H. D. had lived
to be a hundred, he would never have grown old. It is not generally known that the
name of his other brother was Peter Pan.
Within the year we have
played at pirates together, at the taking of sperm whales; and we have
ransacked the Westchester Hills for gunsites against the Mexican invasion. And
we have made lists of guns, and medicines, and tinned things, in case we should
ever happen to go elephant shooting in Africa. But we weren't going to hurt the
elephants. Once R. H. D. shot a hippopotamus and he was always ashamed and
sorry. I think he never killed anything else. He wasn't that kind of a
sportsman. Of hunting, as of many other things, he has said the last word. Do
you remember the Happy Hunting Ground in ``The Bar Sinister''?--``Where nobody
hunts us, and there is nothing to hunt.''
Experienced persons
tell us that a man-hunt is the most exciting of all sports. R. H. D. hunted men
in Cuba. He hunted for wounded men who were out in front of the trenches and
still under fire, and found some of them and brought them in. The Rough Riders
didn't make him an honorary member of their regiment just because he was
charming and a faithful friend, but largely because they were a lot of
daredevils and he was another.
To hear him talk you
wouldn't have thought that he had ever done a brave thing in his life. He
talked a great deal, and he talked even better than he wrote (at his best he
wrote like an angel), but I have dusted every corner of my memory and cannot
recall any story of his in which he played a heroic or successful part. Always
he was running at top speed, or hiding behind a tree, or lying face down in a
foot of water (for hours!) so as not to be seen. Always he was getting the
worst of it. But about the other fellows he told the whole truth with lightning
flashes of Wit and character building and admiration or contempt. Until the
invention of moving pictures the world had nothing in the least like his talk.
His eye had photographed, his mind had developed and prepared the slides, his
words sent the light through them, and lo and behold, they were reproduced on
the screen of your own mind, exact in drawing and color. With the written word
or the spoken word he was the greatest recorder and reporter of things that he
had seen of any man, perhaps, that ever lived. The history of the last thirty
years, its manners and customs and its leading events and inventions, cannot be
written truthfully without reference to the records which he has left, to his
special articles and to his letters. Read over again the Queen's Jubilee, the
Czar's Coronation, the March of the Germans through Brussels, and see for
yourself if I speak too zealously, even for a friend, to whom, now that R. H.
D. is dead, the world can never be the same again.
But I did not set out
to estimate his genius. That matter will come in due time before the unerring
tribunal of posterity.
One secret of Mr.
Roosevelt's hold upon those who come into contact with him is his energy.
Retaining enough for his own use (he uses a good deal, because every day he
does the work of five or six men), he distributes the inexhaustible remainder
among those who most need it. Men go to him tired and discouraged, he sends
them away glad to be alive, still gladder that he is alive, and ready to fight
the devil himself in a good cause. Upon his friends R. H. D. had the same
effect. And it was not only in proximity that he could distribute energy, but
from afar, by letter and cable. He had some intuitive way of knowing just when
you were slipping into a slough of laziness and discouragement. And at such
times he either appeared suddenly upon the scene, or there came a boy on a
bicycle, with a yellow envelope and a book to sign, or the postman in his
buggy, or the telephone rang and from the receiver there poured into you
affection and encouragement.
But the great times, of
course, were when he came in person, and the temperature of the house, which a
moment before had been too hot or too cold, became just right, and a sense of
cheerfulness and well-being invaded the hearts of the master and the mistress
and of the servants in the house and in the yard. And the older daughter ran to
him, and the baby, who had been fretting because nobody would give her a
double-barrelled shotgun, climbed upon his knee and forgot all about the
disappointments of this uncompromising world.
He was touchingly sweet
with children. I think he was a little afraid of them. He was afraid perhaps
that they wouldn't find out how much he loved them. But when they showed him
that they trusted him, and, unsolicited, climbed upon him and laid their cheeks
against his, then the loveliest expression came over his face, and you knew
that the great heart, which the other day ceased to beat, throbbed with an
exquisite bliss, akin to anguish.
One of the happiest
days I remember was when vI and mine received a telegram saying that he had a
baby of his own. And I thank God that little Miss Hope is too young to know
what an appalling loss she has suffered....
Perhaps he stayed to
dine. Then perhaps the older daughter was allowed to sit up an extra half-hour
so that she could wait on the table (and though I say it, that shouldn't, she
could do this beautifully, with dignity and without giggling), and perhaps the
dinner was good, or R. H. D. thought it was, and in that event he must abandon
his place and storm the kitchen to tell the cook all about it. Perhaps the
gardener was taking life easy on the kitchen porch. He, too, came in for
praise. R. H. D. had never seen our Japanese iris so beautiful; as for his,
they wouldn't grow at all. It wasn't the iris, it was the man behind the iris.
And then back he would come to us, with a wonderful story of his adventures in
the pantry on his way to the kitchen, and leaving behind him a cook to whom
there had been issued a new lease of life, and a gardener who blushed and
smiled in the darkness under the Actinidia vines.
It was in our little
house at Aiken, in South Carolina, that he was with us most and we learned to
know him best, and that he and I became dependent upon each other in many ways.
Events, into which I
shall not go, had made his life very difficult and complicated. And he who had
given so much friendship to so many people needed a little friendship in
return, and perhaps, too, he needed for a time to live in a house whose master
and mistress loved each other, and where there were children. Before he came
that first year our house had no name. Now it is called ``Let's Pretend.''
Now the chimney in the
living-room draws, but in those first days of the built-over house it didn't.
At least, it didn't draw all the time, but we pretended that it did, and with
much pretense came faith. From the fireplace that smoked to the serious things
of life we extended our pretendings, until real troubles went down before
them--down and out.
It was one of Aiken's
very best winters, and the earliest spring I ever lived anywhere. R. H. D. came
shortly after Christmas. The spirĉas were in bloom, and the monthly roses; you
could always find a sweet violet or two somewhere in the yard; here and there
splotches of deep pink against gray cabin walls proved that precocious
peach-trees were in bloom. It never rained. At night it was cold enough for
fires. In the middle of the day it was hot. The wind never blew, and every
morning we had a four for tennis and every afternoon we rode in the woods. And
every night we sat in front of the fire (that didn't smoke because of
pretending) and talked until the next morning.
He was one of those
rarely gifted men who find their chiefest pleasure not in looking backward or
forward, but in what is going on at the moment. Weeks did not have to pass
before it was forced upon his knowledge that Tuesday, the fourteenth (let us
say), had been a good Tuesday. He knew it the moment he waked at 7 A. M. and
perceived the Tuesday sunshine making patterns of bright light upon the floor.
The sunshine rejoiced him and the knowledge that even before breakfast there
was vouchsafed to him a whole hour of life. That day began with attentions to
his physical well-being. There were exercises conducted with great vigor and
rejoicing, followed by a tub, artesian cold, and a loud and joyous singing of
ballads.
At fifty R. H. D. might
have posed to some Praxiteles and, copied in marble, gone down the ages as
``statue of a young athlete.'' He stood six feet and over, straight as a Sioux
chief, a noble and leonine head carried by a splendid torso. His skin was as fine
and clean as a child's. He weighed nearly two hundred pounds and had no fat on
him. He was the weight-throwing rather than the running type of athlete, but so
tenaciously had he clung to the suppleness of his adolescent days that he could
stand stiff-legged and lay his hands flat upon the floor.
The singing over,
silence reigned. But if you had listened at his door you must have heard a pen
going, swiftly and boldly. He was hard at work, doing unto others what others
had done unto him. You were a stranger to him; some magazine had accepted a
story that you had written and published it. R. H. D. had found something to
like and admire in that story (very little perhaps), and it was his duty and
pleasure to tell you so. If he had liked the story very much he would send you
instead of a note a telegram. Or it might be that you had drawn a picture, or,
as a cub reporter, had shown golden promise in a half column of unsigned print,
R. H. D. would find you out, and find time to praise you and help you. So it was
that when he emerged from his room at sharp eight o'clock, he was wide-awake
and happy and hungry, and whistled and double-shuffled with his feet, out of
excessive energy, and carried in his hands a whole sheaf of notes and letters
and telegrams.
Breakfast with him was
not the usual American breakfast, a sullen, dyspeptic gathering of persons who
only the night before had rejoiced in each other's society. With him it was the
time when the mind is, or ought to be, at its best, the body at its freshest and
hungriest. Discussions of the latest plays and novels, the doings and undoings
of statesmen, laughter and sentiment--to him, at breakfast, these things were
as important as sausages and thick cream.
Breakfast over, there
was no dawdling and putting off of the day's work (else how, at eleven sharp,
could tennis be played with a free conscience?). Loving, as he did, everything
connected with a newspaper, he would now pass by those on the hall-table with
never so much as a wistful glance, and hurry to his workroom.
He wrote sitting down.
He wrote standing up. And, almost you may say, he wrote walking up and down.
Some people, accustomed to the delicious ease and clarity of his style, imagine
that he wrote very easily. He did and he didn't. Letters, easy, clear, to the
point, and gorgeously human, flowed from him without let or hindrance. That
masterpiece of corresponding, ``The German March Through Brussels,'' was
probably written almost as fast as he could talk (next to Phillips Brooks, he
was the fastest talker I ever heard), but when it came to fiction he had no
facility at all. Perhaps I should say that he held in contempt any facility
that he may have had. It was owing to his incomparable energy and Joblike
patience that he ever gave us any fiction at all. Every phrase in his fiction
was, of all the myriad phrases he could think of, the fittest in his relentless
judgment to survive. Phrases, paragraphs, pages, whole stories even, were
written over and over again. He worked upon a principle of elimination. If he
wished to describe an automobile turning in at a gate, he made first a long and
elaborate description from which there was omitted no detail, which the most
observant pair of eyes in Christendom had ever noted with reference to just
such a turning. Thereupon he would begin a process of omitting one by one those
details which he had been at such pains to recall; and after each omission he
would ask himself: ``Does the picture remain?'' If it did not, he restored the
detail which he had just omitted, and experimented with the sacrifice of some
other, and so on, and so on, until after Herculean labor there remained for the
reader one of those swiftly flashed, ice-clear pictures (complete in every
detail) with which his tales and romances are so delightfully and continuously
adorned.
But it is quarter to
eleven, and, this being a time of holiday, R. H. D. emerges from his workroom
happy to think that he has placed one hundred and seven words between himself
and the wolf who hangs about every writer's door. He isn't satisfied with those
hundred and seven words. He never was in the least satisfied with anything that
he wrote, but he has searched his mind and his conscience and he believes that
under the circumstances they are the very best that he can do. Anyway, they can
stand in their present order until--after lunch.
A sign of his youth was
the fact that to the day of his death he had denied himself the luxury and
slothfulness of habits. I have never seen him smoke automatically as most men
do. He had too much respect for his own powers of enjoyment and for the
sensibilities, perhaps, of the best Havana tobacco. At a time of his own
deliberate choosing, often after many hours of hankering and renuncia- tion, he
smoked his cigar. He smoked it with delight, with a sense of being rewarded,
and he used all the smoke there was in it.
He dearly loved the
best food, the best champagne, and the best Scotch whiskey. But these things
were friends to him, and not enemies. He had toward food and drink the Continental
attitude; namely, that quality is far more important than quantity; and he got
his exhilaration from the fact that he was drinking champagne and not from the
champagne. Perhaps I shall do well to say that on questions of right and wrong
he had a will of iron. All his life he moved resolutely in whichever direction
his conscience pointed; and, although that ever present and never obtrusive
conscience of his made mistakes of judgment now and then, as must all
consciences, I think it can never once have tricked him into any action that
was impure or unclean. Some critics maintain that the heroes and heroines of
his books are impossibly pure and innocent young people. R. H. D. never called
upon his characters for any trait of virtue, or renunciation, or self-mastery
of which his own life could not furnish examples.
Fortunately, he did not
have for his friends the same conscience that he had for himself. His great
gift of eyesight and observation failed him in his judgments upon his friends.
If only you loved him, you could get your biggest failures of conduct somewhat
more than forgiven, without any trouble at all. And of your mole-hill virtues
he made splendid mountains. He only interfered with you when he was afraid that
you were going to hurt some one else whom he also loved. Once I had a telegram
from him which urged me for heaven's sake not to forget that the next day was
my wife's birthday. Whether I had forgotten it or not is my own private affair.
And when I declared that I had read a story which I liked very, very much and
was going to write to the author to tell him so, he always kept at me till the
letter was written.
Have I said that he had
no habits? Every day, when he was away from her, he wrote a letter to his
mother, and no swift scrawl at that, for, no matter how crowded and eventful
the day, he wrote her the best letter that he could write. That was the only
habit he had. He was a slave to it.
Once I saw R. H. D.
greet his old mother after an absence. They threw their arms about each other
and rocked to and fro for a long time. And it hadn't been a long absence at
that. No ocean had been between them; her heart had not been in her mouth with
the thought that he was under fire, or about to become a victim of jungle
fever. He had only been away upon a little expedition, a mere matter of digging
for buried treasure. We had found the treasure, part of it a chipmunk's skull
and a broken arrow-head, and R. H. D. had been absent from his mother for
nearly two hours and a half.
I set about this article
with the knowledge that I must fail to give more than a few hints of what he
was like. There isn't much more space at my command, and there were so many
sides to him that to touch upon them all would fill a volume. There were the
patriotism and the Americanism, as much a part of him as the marrow of his
bones, and from which sprang all those brilliant headlong letters to the
newspapers; those trenchant assaults upon evil- doers in public office, those
quixotic efforts to redress wrongs, and those simple and dexterous exposures of
this and that, from an absolutely unexpected point of view. He was a quickener
of the public conscience. That people are beginning to think tolerantly of
preparedness, that a nation which at one time looked yellow as a dandelion is
beginning to turn Red, White, and Blue is owing in some measure to him.
R. H. D. thought that
war was unspeakably terrible. He thought that peace at the price which our
country has been forced to pay for it was infinitely worse. And he was one of
those who have gradually taught this country to see the matter in the same way.
I must come to a close
now, and I have hardly scratched the surface of my subject. And that is a
failure which I feel keenly but which was inevitable. As R. H. D. himself used
to say of those deplorable ``personal interviews'' which appear in the
newspapers, and in which the important person interviewed is made by the cub
reporter to say things which he never said, or thought, or dreamed of-- ``You
can't expect a fifteen-dollar-a-week brain to describe a thousand-dollar-a-week
brain.''
There is, however, one
question which I should attempt to answer. No two men are alike. In what one
salient thing did R. H. D. differ from other men--differ in his personal
character and in the character of his work? And that question I can answer
offhand, without taking thought, and be sure that I am right.
An analysis of his
works, a study of that book which the Recording Angel keeps will show one
dominant characteristic to which even his brilliancy, his clarity of style, his
excellent mechanism as a writer are subordinate; and to which, as a man, even
his sense of duty, his powers of affection, of forgiveness, of loving-kindness
are subordinate, too; and that characteristic is cleanliness.
The biggest force for
cleanliness that was in the world has gone out of the world--gone to that Happy
Hunting Ground where ``Nobody hunts us and there is nothing to hunt.''
R. H. D. . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . Gouverneur Morris
THE RED CROSS GIRL . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1
THE GRAND CROSS OF THE
CRESCENT. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50
THE INVASION OF
ENGLAND. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 95
BLOOD WILL TELL. . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .128
THE SAILORMAN. . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .163
THE MIND READER. . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .188
THE NAKED MAN. . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .227
THE BOY WHO CRIED WOLF
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .251
THE CARD-SHARP . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .277
ILLUSTRATIONS SHE CLUTCHED THE SAILORMAN IN BOTH HER HANDS
AND KISSED THE BESEECHING, WORSHIPPING SMILE. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
.Frontispiece
THE DAY HE CHOSE TO
TELL HER WAS THE FIRST DAY THEY WERE AT SEA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
48
HE WAS. . . ``A FRIEND
OF A FRIEND OF A FRIEND'' . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
74
FORD FOUND HIMSELF
LOOKING INTO A REVOLVER OF THE LARGEST CALIBRE ISSUED BY A CIVILIZED PEOPLE . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .118
IN FRONT OF DAVID'S
NOSE HE SHOOK A FIST AS LARGE AS A CATCHER'S GLOVE . . . . . . . . . . . . .
.144
WHEN Spencer Flagg laid
the foundation-stone for the new million-dollar wing he was adding to the Flagg
Home for Convalescents, on the hills above Greenwich, the New York Republic
sent Sam Ward to cover the story, and with him Redding to take photographs. It
was a crisp, beautiful day in October, full of sunshine and the joy of living,
and from the great lawn in front of the Home you could see half over Connecticut
and across the waters of the Sound to Oyster Bay.
Upon Sam Ward, however,
the beauties of Nature were wasted. When, the night previous, he had been given
the assignment he had sulked, and he was still sulking. Only a year before he
had graduated into New York from a small up-state college and a small upstate
newspaper, but already he was a ``star'' man, and Hewitt, the city editor,
humored him.
``What's the matter
with the story?'' asked the city editor. ``With the speeches and lists of names
it ought to run to two columns.''
``Suppose it does!''
exclaimed Ward; ``anybody can collect type-written speeches and lists of names.
That's a messenger boy's job. Where's there any heart-interest in a Wall Street
broker like Flagg waving a silver trowel and singing, `See what a good boy am
I!' and a lot of grownup men in pinafores saying, `This stone is well and truly
laid.' Where's the story in that?''
``When I was a
reporter,'' declared the city editor, ``I used to be glad to get a day in the
country.''
``Because you'd never
lived in the country,'' returned Sam. ``If you'd wasted twenty-six years in the
backwoods, as I did, you'd know that every minute you spend outside of New York
you're robbing yourself.''
``Of what?'' demanded
the city editor. ``There's nothing to New York except cement, iron girders,
noise, and zinc garbage cans. You never see the sun in New York; you never see
the moon unless you stand in the middle of the street and bend backward. We
never see flowers in New York except on the women's hats. We never see the
women except in cages in the elevators--they spend their lives shooting up and
down elevator shafts in department stores, in apartment houses, in office
buildings. And we never see children in New York because the janitors won't let
the women who live in elevators have children! Don't talk to me! New York's a
Little Nemo nightmare. It's a Joke. It's an insult!''
``How curious!'' said
Sam. ``Now I see why they took you off the street and made you a city editor. I
don't agree with anything you say. Especially are you wrong about the women.
They ought to be caged in elevators, but they're not. Instead, they flash past
you in the street; they shine upon you from boxes in the theatre; they frown at
you from the tops of 'buses; they smile at you from the cushions of a taxi,
across restaurant tables under red candle shades, when you offer them a seat in
the subway. They are the only thing in New York that gives me any trouble.''
The city editor sighed.
``How young you are!'' he exclaimed. ``However, to-morrow you will be free from
your only trouble. There will be few women at the celebration, and they will be
interested only in convalescents--and you do not look like a convalescent.''
Sam Ward sat at the
outer edge of the crowd of overdressed females and overfed men, and, with a
sardonic smile, listened to Flagg telling his assembled friends and sycophants
how glad he was they were there to see him give away a million dollars.
``Aren't you going to
get his speech?'' asked Redding, the staff photographer.
``Get his speech!''
said Sam. ``They have Pinkertons all over the grounds to see that you don't
escape with less than three copies. I'm waiting to hear the ritual they always
have, and then I'm going to sprint for the first train back to the centre of
civilization.''
``There's going to be a
fine lunch,'' said Redding, ``and reporters are expected. I asked the policeman
if we were, and he said we were.''
Sam rose, shook his
trousers into place, stuck his stick under his armpit and smoothed his yellow
gloves. He was very thoughtful of his clothes and always treated them with
courtesy.
``You can have my
share,'' he said. ``I cannot forget that I am fifty-five minutes from Broadway.
And even if I were starving I would rather have a club sandwich in New York
than a Thanksgiving turkey dinner in New Rochelle.''
He nodded and with
eager, athletic strides started toward the iron gates; but he did not reach the
iron gates, for on the instant trouble barred his way. Trouble came to him wearing
the blue cambric uniform of a nursing sister, with a red cross on her arm, with
a white collar turned down, white cuffs turned back, and a tiny black velvet
bonnet. A bow of white lawn chucked her impudently under the chin. She had hair
like golden-rod and eyes as blue as flax, and a complexion of such health and
cleanliness and dewiness as blooms only on trained nurses.
She was so lovely that
Redding swung his hooded camera at her as swiftly as a cowboy could have
covered her with his gun.
Reporters become star
reporters because they observe things that other people miss and because they
do not let it appear that they have observed them. When the great man who is
being interviewed blurts out that which is indiscreet but most important, the cub
reporter says: ``That's most interesting, sir. I'll make a note of that.'' And
so warns the great man into silence. But the star reporter receives the
indiscreet utterance as though it bored him; and the great man does not know he
has blundered until he reads of it the next morning under screaming headlines.
Other men, on being
suddenly confronted by Sister Anne, which was the official title of the nursing
sister, would have fallen backward, or swooned, or gazed at her with soulful,
worshipping eyes; or, were they that sort of beast, would have ogled her with
impertinent approval. Now Sam, because he was a star reporter, observed that
the lady before him was the most beautiful young woman he had ever seen; but no
one would have guessed that he observed that--least of all Sister Anne. He
stood in her way and lifted his hat, and even looked into the eyes of blue as
impersonally and as calmly as though she were his great-aunt--as though his
heart was not beating so fast that it choked him.
``I am from the
Republic,'' he said. ``Everybody is so busy here to-day that I'm not able to
get what I need about the Home. It seems a pity,'' he added disappointedly,
``because it's so well done that people ought to know about it.'' He frowned at
the big hospital buildings. It was apparent that the ignorance of the public
concerning their excellence greatly annoyed him.
When again he looked at
Sister Anne she was regarding him in alarm--obviously she was upon the point of
instant flight.
``You are a reporter?''
she said.
Some people like to
place themselves in the hands of a reporter because they hope he will print
their names in black letters; a few others --only reporters know how few--would
as soon place themselves in the hands of a dentist.
``A reporter from the
Republic,'' repeated Sam.
``But why ask me?''
demanded Sister Anne.
Sam could see no reason
for her question; in extenuation and explanation he glanced at her uniform.
``I thought you were at
work here,'' he said simply. ``I beg your pardon.''
He stepped aside as
though he meant to leave her. In giving that impression he was distinctly
dishonest.
``There was no other
reason,'' persisted Sister Anne. ``I mean for speaking to me?''
The reason for speaking
to her was so obvious vthat Sam wondered whether this could be the height of
innocence or the most banal coquetry. The hostile look in the eyes of the lady
proved it could not be coquetry.
``I am sorry,'' said
Sam. ``I mistook you for one of the nurses here; and, as you didn't seem busy,
I thought you might give me some statistics about the Home--not really
statistics, you know, but local color.''
Sister Anne returned
his look with one as steady as his own. Apparently she was weighing his
statement. She seemed to disbelieve it. Inwardly he was asking himself what
could be the dark secret in the past of this young woman that at the mere
approach of a reporter even of such a nice-looking reporter as himself--she
should shake and shudder.
``If that's what you
really want to know,'' said Sister Anne doubtfully, ``I'll try and help you;
but,'' she added, looking at him as one who issues an ultimatum, ``you must not
say anything about me!''
Sam knew that a woman
of the self-advertising, club-organizing class will always say that to a
reporter at the time she gives him her card so that he can spell her name
correctly; but Sam recognized that this young woman meant it. Besides, what was
there that he could write about her? Much as he might like to do so, he could
not begin his story with: ``The Flagg Home for Convalescents is also the home
of the most beautiful of all living women.'' No copy editor would let that get
by him. So, as there was nothing to say that he would be allowed to say, he
promised to say nothing. Sister Anne smiled; and it seemed to Sam that she
smiled, not because his promise had set her mind at ease, but because the
promise amused her. Sam wondered why.
Sister Anne fell into
step beside him and led him through the wards of the hospital. He found that it
existed for and revolved entirely about one person. He found that a million
dollars and some acres of buildings, containing sun-rooms and hundreds of rigid
white beds, had been donated by Spencer Flagg only to provide a background for
Sister Anne--only to exhibit the depth of her charity, the kindness of her
heart, the unselfishness of her nature.
``Do you really scrub
the floors?'' he demanded--``I mean you yourself--down on your knees, with a
pail and water and scrubbing brush?''
Sister Anne raised her
beautiful eyebrows and laughed at him.
``We do that when we
first come here,'' she said--``when we are probationers. Is there a newer way
of scrubbing floors?''
And these awful
patients,'' demanded Sam --``do you wait on them? Do you have to submit to
their complaints and whinings and ingratitude?'' He glared at the unhappy
convalescents as though by that glance he would annihilate them. ``It's not
fair!'' exclaimed Sam. ``It's ridiculous. I'd like to choke them!''
``That's not exactly
the object of a home for convalescents,'' said Sister Anne.
``You know perfectly
well what I mean,'' said Sam. ``Here are you--if you'll allow me to say so--a
magnificent, splendid, healthy young person, wearing out your young life over a
lot of lame ducks, failures, and cripples.''
``Nor is that quite the
way we look at it,'' said Sister Anne.
``We?'' demanded Sam.
Sister Anne nodded
toward a group of nurses.
``I'm not the only
nurse here,'' she said. ``There are over forty.''
``You are the only one
here,'' said Sam, ``who is not! That's just what I mean--I appreciate the work
of a trained nurse; I understand the ministering angel part of it; but you--I'm
not talking about anybody else; I'm talking about you--you are too young!
Somehow you are different; you are not meant to wear yourself out fighting
disease and sickness, measuring beef broth and making beds.''
Sister Anne laughed
with delight.
``I beg your pardon,''
said Sam stiffly.
``No--pardon me,'' said
Sister Anne; ``but your ideas of the duties of a nurse are so quaint.''
``No matter what the
duties are,'' declared Sam; ``you should not be here!''
Sister Anne shrugged
her shoulders; they were charming shoulders--as delicate as the pinions of a
bird.
``One must live,'' said
Sister Anne.
They had passed through
the last cold corridor, between the last rows of rigid white cots, and had come
out into the sunshine. Below them stretched Connecticut, painted in autumn
colors. Sister Anne seated herself upon the marble railing of the terrace and
looked down upon the flashing waters of the Sound.
``Yes; that's it,'' she
repeated softly--``one must live.''
Sam looked at her--but,
finding that to do so made speech difficult, looked hurriedly away. He admitted
to himself that it was one of those occasions, only too frequent with him, when
his indignant sympathy was heightened by the fact that ``the woman was very
fair.'' He conceded that. He was not going to pretend to himself that he was
not prejudiced by the outrageous beauty of Sister Anne, by the assault upon his
feelings made by her uniform--made by the appeal of her profession, the
gentlest and most gracious of all professions. He was honestly disturbed that
this young girl should devote her life to the service of selfish sick people.
``If you do it because
you must live, then it can easily be arranged; for there are other ways of
earning a living.''
The girl looked at him
quickly, but he was quite sincere and again she smiled.
``Now what would you
suggest?'' she asked. ``You see,'' she said, ``I have no one to advise me--no
man of my own age. I have no brothers to go to. I have a father, but it was his
idea that I should come here; and so I doubt if he would approve of my changing
to any other work. Your own work must make you acquainted with many women who
earn their own living. Maybe you could advise me?''
Sam did not at once
answer. He was calculating hastily how far his salary would go toward
supporting a wife. He was trying to remember which of the men in the office
were married, and whether they were those whose salaries were smaller than his
own. Collins, one of the copy editors, he knew, was very ill-paid; but Sam also
knew that Collins was married, because his wife used to wait for him in the
office to take her to the theatre, and often Sam had thought she was extremely
well vdressed. Of course Sister Anne was so beautiful that what she might wear
would be a matter of indifference; but then women did not always look at it
that way. Sam was so long considering offering Sister Anne a life position that
his silence had become significant; and to cover his real thoughts he said
hurriedly:
``Take type-writing,
for instance. That pays very well. The hours are not difficult.''
``And manicuring?''
suggested Sister Anne.
Sam exclaimed in
horror.
``You!'' he cried
roughly. ``For you! Quite impossible!''
``Why for me?'' said
the girl.
In the distress at the
thought Sam was jabbing his stick into the gravel walk as though driving the
manicuring idea into a deep grave. He did not see that the girl was smiling at
him mockingly.
``You?'' protested Sam.
``You in a barber's shop washing men's fingers who are not fit to wash the
streets you walk on! Good Lord!'' His vehemence was quite honest. The girl
ceased smiling. Sam was still jabbing at the gravel walk, his profile toward
her--and, unobserved, she could study his face. It was an attractive
face--strong, clever, almost illegally good-looking. It explained why, as he had
complained to the city editor, his chief trouble in New York was with the
women. With his eyes full of concern, Sam turned to her abruptly.
``How much do they give
you a month?''
``Forty dollars,''
answered Sister Anne.
``This is what hurts me
about it,'' said Sam. ``It is that you should have to work and wait on other
people when there are so many strong, hulking men who would count it God's
blessing to work for you, to wait on you, and give their lives for you.
However, probably you know that better than I do.''
``No; I don't know
that,'' said Sister Anne.
Sam recognized that it
was quite absurd that it should be so, but this statement gave him a sense of
great elation, a delightful thrill of relief. There was every reason why the
girl should not confide in a complete stranger even to deceive him was quite
within her rights; but, though Sam appreciated this, he preferred to be
deceived.
``I think you are
working too hard,'' he said, smiling happily--``I think you ought to have a
change. You ought to take a day off! Do they ever give you a day off?''
``Next Saturday,'' said
Sister Anne. ``Why?''
``Because,'' explained
Sam, ``if you won't think it too presumptuous, I was going to prescribe a day
off for you--a day entirely away from iodoform and white enamelled cots. It is
what you need, a day in the city and a lunch where they have music; and a
matinee, where you can laugh--or cry, if you like that better--and then, maybe,
some fresh air in the park in a taxi; and after that dinner and more theatre
--and then I'll see you safe on the train for Greenwich. Before you answer,''
he added hurriedly, ``I want to explain that I contemplate taking a day off
myself and doing all these things with you--and that if you want to bring any
of the other forty nurses along as a chaperon, I hope you will. Only, honestly,
I hope you won't!''
The proposal apparently
gave Sister Anne much pleasure. She did not say so, but her eyes shone and when
she looked at Sam she was almost laughing with happiness.
``I think that would be
quite delightful,'' said Sister Anne--``quite delightful! Only it would be
frightfully expensive; even if I don't bring another girl, which I certainly
would not, it would cost a great deal of money. I think we might cut out the taxicab--and
walk in the park and feed the squirrels.''
``Oh!'' exclaimed Sam
in disappointment--``then you know Central Park?''
Sister Anne's eyes grew
quite expressionless.
``I once lived near
there,'' she said.
``In Harlem?''
``Not exactly in Harlem,
but near it. I was quite young,'' said Sister Anne. ``Since then I have always
lived in the country or in--other places.''
Sam's heart was singing
with pleasure.
``It's so kind of you
to consent,'' he cried. ``Indeed, you are the kindest person in all the world.
I thought so when I saw you bending over these sick people, and now I know.''
``It is you who are
kind,'' protested Sister Anne, ``to take pity on me.''
``Pity on you!''
laughed Sam. ``You can't pity a person who can do more with a smile than old
man Flagg can do with all his millions. Now,'' he demanded in happy
anticipation, ``where are we to meet?''
``That's it,'' said
Sister Anne. ``Where are we to meet?''
``Let it be at the
Grand Central Station. The day can't begin too soon,'' said Sam; ``and before
then telephone me what theatre and restaurants you want and I'll reserve seats
and tables. Oh,'' exclaimed Sam joyfully, ``it will be a wonderful day--a
wonderful day!''
Sister Anne looked at
him curiously and, so it seemed, a little wistfully. She held out her hand.
``I must go back to my
duties,'' she said. ``Good-by.''
``Not good-by,'' said
Sam heartily--``only until Saturday--and my name's Sam Ward and my address is
the city room of the Republic. What's your name?''
``Sister Anne,'' said
the girl. ``In the nursing order to which I belong we have no last names.''
``So,'' asked Sam,
``I'll call you Sister Anne?''
``No; just Sister,''
said the girl.
``Sister!'' repeated
Sam--``Sister!'' He breathed the word rather than spoke it; and the way he said
it and the way he looked when he said it made it carry almost the touch of a
caress. It was as if he had said ``Sweetheart!'' or ``Beloved!'' ``I'll not
forget,'' said Sam.
Sister Anne gave an
impatient, annoyed laugh.
``Nor I,'' she said.
Sam returned to New
York in the smoking-car, puffing feverishly at his cigar and glaring dreamily
at the smoke. He was living the day over again and, in anticipation, the day
off, still to come. He rehearsed their next meeting at the station; he
considered whether or not he would meet her with a huge bunch of violets or
would have it brought to her when they were at luncheon by the head waiter. He
decided the latter way would be more of a pleasant surprise. He planned the
luncheon. It was to be the most marvellous repast he could evolve; and, lest
there should be the slightest error, he would have it prepared in advance--and
it should cost half his week's salary.
The place where they
were to dine he would leave to her, because he had observed that women had
strange ideas about clothes--some of them thinking that certain clothes must go
with certain restaurants. Some of them seemed to believe that, instead of their
conferring distinction upon the restaurant, the restaurant conferred distinction
upon them. He was sure Sister Anne would not be so foolish, but it might be
that she must always wear her nurse's uniform and that she would prefer not to
be conspicuous; so he decided that the choice of where they would dine he would
leave to her. He calculated that the whole day ought to cost about eighty
dollars, which, as star reporter, was what he was then earning each week. That
was little enough to give for a day that would be the birthday of his life! No,
he contradicted--the day he had first met her must always be the birthday of
his life; for never had he met one like her and he was sure there never would
be one like her--she was so entirely superior to all the others, so fine, so
difficult--in her manner there was something that rendered her unapproachable.
Even her simple nurse's gown was worn with a difference. She might have been a
princess in fancy dress. And yet, how humble she had been when he begged her to
let him for one day personally conduct her over the great city! ``You are so kind
to take pity on me,'' she had said. He thought of many clever, pretty speeches
he might have made. He was so annoyed he had not thought of them at the time
that he kicked violently at the seat in front of him.
He wondered what her
history might be; he was sure it was full of beautiful courage and
self-sacrifice. It certainly was outrageous that one so glorious must work for
her living, and for such a paltry living--forty dollars a month! It was worth
that merely to have her sit in the flat where one could look at her; for
already he had decided that, when they were married, they would live in a
flat--probably in one overlooking Central Park, on Central Park West. He knew
of several attractive suites there at thirty-five dollars a week--or, if she
preferred the suburbs, he would forsake his beloved New York and return to the
country. In his gratitude to her for being what she was, he conceded even that
sacrifice.
When he reached New
York, from the speculators he bought front-row seats at five dollars for the
two most popular plays in town. He put them away carefully in his waistcoat
pocket. Possession of them made him feel that already he had obtained an option
on six hours of complete happiness.
After she left Sam,
Sister Anne passed hurriedly through the hospital to the matron's room and,
wrapping herself in a raccoon coat, made her way to a waiting motor car and
said, ``Home!'' to the chauffeur. He drove her to the Flagg family vault, as
Flagg's envious millionaire neighbors called the pile of white marble that
topped the highest hill above Greenwich, and which for years had served as a
landfall to mariners on the Sound.
There were a number of
people at tea when she arrived and they greeted her noisily.
``I have had a most
splendid adventure!'' said Sister Anne. ``There were six of us, you know,
dressed up as Red Cross nurses, and we gave away programmes. Well, one of the
New York reporters thought I was a real nurse and interviewed me about the
Home. Of course I knew enough about it to keep it up, and I kept it up so well
that he was terribly sorry for me; and----''
One of the tea drinkers
was little Hollis Holworthy, who prided himself on knowing who's who in New
York. He had met Sam Ward at first nights and prize fights. He laughed
scornfully.
``Don't you believe
it!'' he interrupted ``That man who was talking to you was Sam Ward. He's the
smartest newspaper man in New York; he was just leading you on. Do you suppose
there's a reporter in America who wouldn't know you in the dark? Wait until you
see the Sunday paper.''
Sister Anne exclaimed
indignantly.
``He did not know me!''
she protested. ``It quite upset him that I should be wasting my life measuring
out medicines and making beds.''
There was a shriek of
disbelief and laughter. ``I told him,'' continued Sister Anne, ``that I got
forty dollars a month, and he said I could make more as a typewriter; and I
said I preferred to be a manicurist.''
``Oh, Anita!''
protested the admiring chorus.
``And he was most
indignant. He absolutely refused to allow me to be a manicurist. And he asked
me to take a day off with him and let him show me New York. And he offered, as
attractions, moving-picture shows and a drive on a Fifth Avenue 'bus, and
feeding peanuts to the animals in the park. And if I insisted upon a chaperon I
might bring one of the nurses. We're to meet at the soda-water fountain in the
Grand Central Station. He said, `The day cannot begin too soon!' ''
``Oh, Anita!'' shrieked
the chorus.
Lord Deptford, who as
the newspapers had repeatedly informed the American public, had come to the
Flaggs' country-place to try to marry Anita Flagg, was amused.
``What an awfully jolly
rag!'' he cried. ``And what are you going to do about it?''
``Nothing,'' said Anita
Flagg. ``The reporters have been making me ridiculous for the last three years;
now I have got back at one of them! And,'' she added, ``that's all there is to
that!''
That night, however,
when the house party was making toward bed, Sister Anne stopped by the stairs
and said to Lord Deptford: ``I want to hear you call me Sister.''
``Call you what?''
exclaimed the young man. ``I will tell you,'' he whispered, ``what I'd like to
call you!''
``You will not!''
interrupted Anita. ``Do as I tell you and say Sister once. Say it as though you
meant it.''
``But I don't mean
it,'' protested his lordship. ``I've said already what I----''
``Never mind what
you've said already,'' commanded Miss Flagg. ``I've heard that from a lot of
people. Say Sister just once.''
His lordship frowned in
embarrassment.
``Sister!'' he
exclaimed. It sounded like the pop of a cork.
Anita Flagg laughed
unkindly and her beautiful shoulders shivered as though she were cold.
``Not a bit like it,
Deptford,'' she said. ``Good-night.''
Later Helen Page, who
came to her room to ask her about a horse she was to ride in the morning, found
her ready for bed but standing by the open window looking out toward the great
city to the south.
When she turned Miss
Page saw something in her eyes that caused that young woman to shriek with
amazement.
``Anita!'' she
exclaimed. ``You crying! What in Heaven's name can make you cry?''
It was not a kind
speech, nor did Miss Flagg receive it kindly. She turned upon the tactless
intruder.
``Suppose,'' cried
Anita fiercely, ``a man thought you were worth forty dollars a month --honestly
didn't know!--honestly believed you were poor and worked for your living, and
still said your smile was worth more than all of old man Flagg's millions, not
knowing they were your millions. Suppose he didn't ask any money of you, but
just to take care of you, to slave for you--only wanted to keep your pretty
hands from working, and your pretty eyes from seeing sickness and pain. Suppose
you met that man among this rotten lot, what would you do? What wouldn't you
do?''
``Why, Anita!''
exclaimed Miss Page.
``What would you do?''
demanded Anita Flagg. ``This is what you'd do: You'd go down on your knees to
that man and say: `Take me away! Take me away from them, and pity me, and be
sorry for me, and love me and love me and love me!''
``And why don't you?''
cried Helen Page.
``Because I'm as rotten
as the rest of them!'' cried Anita Flagg. ``Because I'm a coward. And that's
why I'm crying. Haven't I the right to cry?''
AT the exact moment
Miss Flagg was proclaiming herself a moral coward, in the local room of the
Republic Collins, the copy editor, was editing Sam's story of the laying of the
corner-stone. The copy editor's cigar was tilted near his left eyebrow; his blue
pencil, like a guillotine ready to fall upon the guilty word or paragraph, was
suspended in mid-air; and continually, like a hawk preparing to strike, the
blue pencil swooped and circled. But page after page fell softly to the desk
and the blue pencil remained inactive. As he read, the voice of Collins rose in
muttered ejaculations; and, as he continued to read, these explosions grew
louder and more amazed. At last he could endure no more and, swinging swiftly
in his revolving chair, his glance swept the office. ``In the name of Mike!''
he shouted. ``What is this?''
The reporters nearest
him, busy with pencil and typewriters, frowned in impatient protest. Sam Ward,
swinging his legs from the top of a table, was gazing at the ceiling, wrapped
in dreams and tobacco smoke. Upon his clever, clean-cut features the expression
was far-away and beatific. He came back to earth.
``What's what?'' Sam
demanded.
At that moment Elliott,
the managing editor, was passing through the room, his hands filled with
freshly pulled proofs. He swung toward Collins quickly and snatched up Sam's
copy. The story already was late--and it was important.
``What's wrong?'' he
demanded.
Over the room there
fell a sudden hush.
``Read the opening
paragraph,'' protested Collins. ``It's like that for a column! It's all about a
girl--about a Red Cross nurse. Not a word about Flagg or Lord Deptford. No
speeches! No news! It's not a news story at all. It's an editorial, and an
essay, and a spring poem. I don't know what it is. And what's worse,'' wailed
the copy editor defiantly and to the amazement of all, ``It's so darned good
that you can't touch it. You've got to let it go or kill it.''
The eyes of the
managing editor, masked by his green paper shade, were racing over Sam's
written words. He thrust the first page back at Collins.
``Is it all like
that?''
``There's a column like
that!''
``Run it just as it
is,'' commanded the managing editor. ``Use it for your introduction and get
your story from the flimsy. And, in your head, cut out Flagg entirely. Call it
`The Red Cross Girl.' And play it up strong with pictures.''
He turned on Sam and
eyed him curiously.
``What's the idea,
Ward?'' he said. ``This is a newspaper--not a magazine!''
The click of the
typewriters was silent, the hectic rush of the pencils had ceased, and the
staff, expectant, smiled cynically upon the star reporter. Sam shoved his hands
into his trousers pockets and also smiled, but unhappily.
``I know it's not news,
sir,'' he said; but that's the way I saw the story--outside on the lawn, the
band playing, and the governor and the governor's staff and the clergy burning
incense to Flagg; and inside, this girl right on the job--taking care of the
sick and wounded. It seemed to me that a million from a man that won't miss a
million didn't stack up against what this girl was doing for these sick folks!
What I wanted to say,'' continued Sam stoutly, ``was that the moving spirit of
the hospital was not in the man who signed the checks, but in these women who
do the work--the nurses, like the one I wrote about; the one you called `The
Red Cross Girl.' ''
Collins, strong through
many years of faithful service, backed by the traditions of the profession,
snorted scornfully.
``But it's not news!''
``It's not news,'' said
Elliott doubtfully; ``but it's the kind of story that made Frank O'Malley
famous. It's the kind of story that drives men out of this business into the
arms of what Kipling calls `the illegitimate sister.' ''
It seldom is granted to
a man on the same day to give his whole heart to a girl and to be patted on the
back by his managing editor, and it was this combination, and not the drinks he
dispensed to the staff in return for its congratulations, that sent Sam home
walking on air. He loved his business, he was proud of his business; but never
before had it served him so well. It had enabled him to tell the woman he
loved, and incidentally a million other people, how deeply he honored her; how
clearly he appreciated her power for good. No one would know he meant Sister
Anne, save two people--Sister Anne and himself; but for her and for him that
was as many as should know. In his story he had used real incidents of the day;
he had described her as she passed through the wards of the hospital, cheering
and sympathetic; he had told of the little acts of consideration that endeared
her to the sick people.
The next morning she
would know that it was she of whom he had written; and between the lines she
would read that the man who wrote them loved her. So he fell asleep, impatient
for the morning. In the hotel at which he lived the Republic was always placed
promptly outside his door; and, after many excursions into the hall, he at last
found it. On the front page was his story, ``The Red Cross Girl.'' It had the
place of honor--right-hand column; but more conspicuous than the headlines of
his own story was one of Redding's photographs. It was the one he had taken of
Sister Anne when first she had approached them, in her uniform of mercy,
advancing across the lawn, walking straight into the focus of the camera. There
was no mistaking her for any other living woman; but beneath the picture, in
bold, staring, uncompromising type, was a strange and grotesque legend.
``Daughter of
Millionaire Flagg,'' it read, ``in a New Rôle. Miss Anita Flagg as The Red
Cross Girl.''
For a long time Sam
looked at the picture, and then, folding the paper so that the picture was
hidden, he walked to the open window. From below, Broadway sent up a tumultuous
greeting--cable cars jangled, taxis hooted; and on the sidewalks, on their way
to work, processions of shop-girls stepped out briskly. It was the street and
the city and the life he had found fascinating, but now it jarred and affronted
him. A girl he knew had died, had passed out of his life forever--worse than
that, had never existed; and yet the city went on just as though that made no
difference, or just as little difference as it would have made had Sister Anne
really lived and really died.
At the same early hour,
an hour far too early for the rest of the house party, Anita Flagg and Helen
Page, booted and riding-habited, sat alone at the breakfast table, their tea
before them; and in the hands of Anita Flagg was the Daily Republic. Miss Page
had brought the paper to the table and, with affected indignation at the
impertinence of the press, had pointed at the front-page photograph; but Miss
Flagg was not looking at the photograph, or drinking her tea, or showing in her
immediate surroundings any interest whatsoever. Instead, her lovely eyes were
fastened with fascination upon the column under the heading ``The Red Cross
Girl''; and, as she read, the lovely eyes lost all trace of recent slumber, her
lovely lips parted breathlessly, and on her lovely cheeks the color flowed and
faded and glowed and bloomed. When she had read as far as a paragraph
beginning, ``When Sister Anne walked between them those who suffered raised
their eyes to hers as flowers lift their faces to the rain,'' she dropped the
paper and started for the telephone.
``Any man,'' cried she,
to the mutual discomfort of Helen Page and the servants, ``who thinks I'm like
that mustn't get away! I'm not like that and I know it; but if he thinks so
that's all I want. And maybe I might be like that--if any man would help.''
She gave her attention
to the telephone and ``Information.'' She demanded to be instantly put into
communication with the Daily Republic and Mr. Sam Ward. She turned again upon
Helen Page.
``I'm tired of being
called a good sport,'' she protested, ``by men who aren't half so good sports
as I am. I'm tired of being talked to about money--as though I were a
stock-broker. This man's got a head on his shoulders, and he's got the
shoulders too; and he's got a darned good-looking head; and he thinks I'm a
ministering angel and a saint; and he put me up on a pedestal and made me
dizzy--and I like being made dizzy; and I'm for him! And I'm going after him!''
``Be still!'' implored
Helen Page. ``Any one might think you meant it!'' She nodded violently at the
discreet backs of the men-servants.
``Ye gods, Parker!''
cried Anita Flagg.
``Does it take three of
you to pour a cup of tea? Get out of here, and tell everybody that you all
three caught me in the act of proposing to an American gentleman over the
telephone and that the betting is even that I'll make him marry me!''
The faithful and sorely
tried domestics fled toward the door.
``And what's more,''
Anita hurled after them, ``get your bets down quick, for after I meet him the
odds will be a hundred to one!''
Had the Republic been
an afternoon paper, Sam might have been at the office and might have gone to
the telephone, and things might have happened differently; but, as the Republic
was a morning paper, the only person in the office was the lady who scrubbed
the floors and she refused to go near the telephone. So Anita Flagg said,
``I'll call him up later,'' and went happily on her ride, with her heart warm
with love for all the beautiful world; but later it was too late.
To keep himself fit,
Sam Ward always walked to the office. On this particular morning Hollis
Holworthy was walking uptown and they met opposite the cathedral.
``You're the very man I
want,'' said Holworthy Joyously--``you've got to decide a bet.''
He turned and fell into
step with Sam.
``It's one I made last
night with Nita Flagg. She thinks you didn't know who she was yesterday, and I
said that was ridiculous. Of course you knew. I bet her a theatre party.''
To Sam it seemed hardly
fair that so soon, before his fresh wound had even been dressed, it should be
torn open by impertinent fingers; but he had no right to take offense. How
could the man, or any one else, know what Sister Anne had meant to him?
``I'm afraid you
lose,'' he said. He halted to give Holworthy the hint to leave him, but
Holworthy had no such intention.
``You don't say so!''
exclaimed that young man. ``Fancy one of you chaps being taken in like that! I
thought you were taking her in--getting up a story for the Sunday supplement!''
Sam shook his head,
nodded, and again moved on; but he was not yet to escape.
``And, instead of your
footing her,'' exclaimed Holworthy incredulously, ``she was having fun with
you!''
With difficulty Sam
smiled.
``So it would seem,''
he said.
``She certainly made an
awfully funny story of it!'' exclaimed Holworthy admiringly. ``I thought she
was making it up--she must have made some of it up. She said you asked her to
take a day off in New York. That isn't so, is it?'' v
``Yes, that's so.''
``By Jove!'' cried
Holworthy--``and that you invited her to see the moving-picture shows?''
Sam, conscious of the
dearly bought front-row seats in his pocket, smiled pleasantly.
``Did she say I said
that--or you?'' he asked.
``She did.''
``Well, then, I must
have said it.''
Holworthy roared with
amusement.
``And that you invited
her to feed peanuts to the monkeys at the Zoo?''
Sam avoided the little
man's prying eyes.
``Yes; I said that
too.''
``And I thought she was
making it up!'' exclaimed Holworthy. ``We did laugh! You must see the fun of it
yourself.''
Lest Sam should fail to
do so he proceeded to elaborate.
``You must see the fun
in a man trying to make a date with Anita Flagg--just as if she were nobody!''
``I don't think,'' said
Sam, ``that was my idea.'' He waved his stick at a passing taxi. ``I'm late,''
he said. He abandoned Hollis on the sidewalk, chuckling and grinning with
delight, and unconscious of the mischief he had made.
An hour later at the office,
when Sam was waiting for an assignment, the telephone boy hurried to him, his
eyes lit with excitement.
``You're wanted on the
'phone,'' he commanded. His voice dropped to an awed whisper. ``Miss Anita
Flagg wants to speak to you!''
The blood ran leaping
to Sam's heart and face. Then he remembered that this was not Sister Anne who
wanted to speak to him, but a woman he had never met.
``Say you can't find
me,'' he directed.
The boy gasped, fled,
and returned precipitately. v
``The lady says she
wants your telephone number--says she must have it.''
``Tell her you don't
know it; tell her it's against the rules--and hang up.''
Ten minutes later the
telephone boy, in the strictest confidence, had informed every member of the
local staff that Anita Flagg--the rich, the beautiful, the daring, the original
of the Red Cross story of that morning--had twice called up Sam Ward and by
that young man had been thrown down--and thrown hard!
That night Elliott, the
managing editor, sent for Sam; and when Sam entered his office he found also
there Walsh, the foreign editor, with whom he was acquainted only by sight.
Elliott introduced them
and told Sam to be seated.
``Ward,'' he began
abruptly, ``I'm sorry to lose you, but you've got to go. It's on account of
that story of this morning.''
Sam made no sign, but
he was deeply hurt. From a paper he had served so loyally this seemed scurvy
treatment. It struck him also that, considering the spirit in which the story
had been written, it was causing him more kinds of trouble than was quite fair.
The loss of position did not disturb him. In the last month too many managing
editors had tried to steal him from the Republic for him to feel anxious as to
the future. So he accepted his dismissal calmly, and could say without
resentment: ``Last night I thought you liked the story, sir?''
``I did,'' returned
Elliott; ``I liked it so much that I'm sending you to a bigger place, where you
can get bigger stories. We want you to act as our special correspondent in London.
Mr. Walsh will explain the work; and if you'll go you'll sail next Wednesday.''
After his talk with the
foreign editor Sam again walked home on air. He could not believe it was
real--that it was actually to him it had happened; for hereafter he was to
witness the march of great events, to come in contact with men of international
interests. Instead of reporting what was of concern only from the Battery to
Forty-seventh Street, he would now tell New York what was of interest in Europe
and the British Empire, and so to the whole world. There was one drawback only
to his happiness--there was no one with whom he might divide it. He wanted to
celebrate his good fortune; he wanted to share it with some one who would
understand how much it meant to him, who would really care. Had Sister Anne
lived, she would have understood; and he would have laid himself and his new
position at her feet and begged her to accept them--begged her to run away with
him to this tremendous and terrifying capital of the world, and start the new
life together.
Among all the women he
knew, there was none to take her place. Certainty Anita Flagg could not take
her place. Not because she was rich, not because she had jeered at him and made
him a laughing-stock, not because his admiration--and he blushed when he
remembered how openly, how ingenuously he had shown it to her--meant nothing;
but because the girl he thought she was, the girl he had made dreams about and
wanted to marry without a moment's notice, would have seen that what he
offered, ridiculous as it was when offered to Anita Flagg, was not ridiculous
when offered sincerely to a tired, nerve-worn, overworked nurse in a hospital.
It was because Anita Flagg had not seen that that she could not now make up to
him for the girl he had lost, even though she herself had inspired that girl
and for a day given her existence.
Had he known it, the
Anita Flagg of his imagining was just as unlike and as unfair to the real girl
as it was possible for two people to be. His Anita Flagg he had created out of
the things he had read of her in impertinent Sunday supplements and from the
impression he had been given of her by the little ass, Holworthy. She was not
at all like that. Ever since she had come of age she had been beset by
sycophants and flatterers, both old and young, both men and girls, and by men
who wanted her money and by men who wanted her. And it was because she got the
motives of the latter two confused that she was so often hurt and said sharp,
bitter things that made her appear hard and heartless.
As a matter of fact, in
approaching her in the belief that he was addressing an entirely different
person, Sam had got nearer to the real Anita Flagg than had any other man. And
she knew it; but Sam did not know it. And so--when on arriving at the office
the next morning, which was a Friday, he received a telegram reading,
``Arriving to-morrow nine-thirty from Greenwich; the day cannot begin too soon;
don't forget you promised to meet me. Anita Flagg''--he was able to reply:
``Extremely sorry; but promise made to a different person, who unfortunately
has since died!''
When Anita Flagg read
this telegram there leaped to her lovely eyes tears that sprang from self-pity
and wounded feelings. She turned miserably, appealingly to Helen Page.
``But why does he do it
to me?'' Her tone was that of the bewildered child who has struck her head
against the table, and from the naughty table, without cause or provocation,
has received the devil of a bump.
Before Miss Page could
venture upon an explanation, Anita Flagg had changed into a very angry young
woman.
``And what's more,''
she announced, ``he can't do it to me!''
She sent her telegram
back again as it was, word for word, but this time it was signed, ``Sister
Anne.''
In an hour the answer
came: ``Sister Anne is the person to whom I refer. She is dead.''
Sam was not altogether
at ease at the outcome of his adventure. It was not in his nature to be
rude--certainly not to a woman, especially not to the most beautiful woman he
had ever seen. For, whether her name was Anita or Anne, about her beauty there
could be no argument; but he assured himself that he had acted within his
rights. A girl who could see in a well-meant offer to be kind only a subject
for ridicule was of no interest to him. Nor did her telegrams insisting upon
continuing their acquaintance flatter him. As he read them, they showed only
that she looked upon him as one entirely out of her world--as one with whom she
could do an unconventional thing and make a good story about it later, knowing
that it would be accepted as one of her amusing caprices.
He was determined he
would not lend himself to any such performance. And, besides, he no longer was
a foot-loose, happy-go-lucky reporter. He no longer need seek for experiences
and material to turn into copy. He was now a man with a responsible
position--one who soon would be conferring with cabinet ministers and putting
ambassadors at their ease. He wondered if a beautiful heiress, whose hand was
sought in marriage by the nobility of England, would understand the importance
of a London correspondent. He hoped some one would tell her. He liked to think
of her as being considerably impressed and a little unhappy.
Saturday night he went
to the theatre for which he had purchased tickets. And he went alone, for the
place that Sister Anne was to have occupied could not be filled by any other
person. It would have been sacrilege. At least, so it pleased him to pretend.
And all through dinner, which he ate alone at the same restaurant to which he
had intended taking her, he continued to pretend she was with him. And at the
theatre, where there was going forward the most popular of all musical
comedies, the seat next to him, which to the audience appeared wastefully
empty, was to him filled with her gracious presence. That Sister Anne was not
there--that the pretty romance he had woven about her had ended in
disaster--filled him with real regret. He was glad he was leaving New York. He
was glad he was going where nothing would remind him of her. And then he
glanced up--and looked straight into her eyes!
He was seated in the
front row, directly on the aisle. The seat Sister Anne was supposed to be
occupying was on his right, and a few seats farther to his right rose the stage
box; and in the stage box, almost upon the stage, and with the glow of the
foot-lights full in her face, was Anita Flagg, smiling delightedly down on him.
There were others with her. He had a confused impression of bulging
shirt-fronts, and shining silks, and diamonds, and drooping plumes upon
enormous hats. He thought he recognized Lord Deptford and Holworthy; but the
only person he distinguished clearly was Anita Flagg. The girl was all in black
velvet, which was drawn to her figure like a wet bathing suit; round her throat
was a single string of pearls, and on her hair of golden-rod was a great hat of
black velvet, shaped like a bell, with the curving lips of a lily. And from
beneath its brim Anita Flagg, sitting rigidly erect with her white-gloved hands
resting lightly on her knee, was gazing down at him, smiling with pleasure,
with surprise, with excitement.
When she saw that, in
spite of her altered appearance, he recognized her, she bowed so violently and
bent her head so eagerly that above her the ostrich plumes dipped and
courtesied like wheat in a storm. But Sam neither bowed nor courtesied.
Instead, he turned his head slowly over his left shoulder, as though he thought
she was speaking not to him but some one beyond him, across the aisle. And then
his eyes returned to the stage and did not again look toward her. It was not
the cut direct, but it was a cut that hurt; and in their turn the eyes of Miss
Flagg quickly sought the stage. At the moment, the people in the audience
happened to be laughing; and she forced a smile and then laughed with them.
Out of the corner of
his eye Sam could not help seeing her profile exposed pitilessly in the glow of
the foot-lights; saw her lips tremble like those of a child about to cry; and
then saw the forced, hard smile--and heard her laugh lightly and mechanically.
``That's all she
cares!'' he told himself.
It seemed to him that
in all he heard of her, in everything she did, she kept robbing him still
further of all that was dear to him in Sister Anne.
For five minutes,
conscious of the foot-lights, Miss Flagg maintained upon her lovely face a
fixed and intent expression, and then slowly and unobtrusively drew back to a
seat in the rear of the box. In the darkest recesses she found Holworthy, shut
off from a view of the stage by a barrier of women's hats.
``Your friend Mr.
Ward,'' she began abruptly in a whisper, ``is the rudest, most ill-bred person
I ever met. When I talked to him the other day I thought he was nice. He was
nice. But he has behaved abominably--like a boor--like a sulky child. Has he no
sense of humor? Because I played a joke on him, is that any reason why he
should hurt me?''
``Hurt you?'' exclaimed
little Holworthy in amazement. ``Don't be ridiculous! How could he hurt you?
Why should you care how rude he is? Ward's a clever fellow, but he fancies
himself. He's conceited. He's too good-looking; and a lot of silly women have
made such a fuss over him. So when one of them laughs at him he can't
understand it. That's the trouble. I could see that when I was telling him.''
``Telling him!''
repeated Miss Flagg--``Telling him what?''
``About what a funny
story you made of it,'' explained Holworthy. ``About his having the nerve to
ask you to feed the monkeys and to lunch with him.''
Miss Flagg interrupted
with a gasping intake of her breath.
``Oh!'' she said
softly. ``So--so you told him that, did you? And--what else did you tell him?''
``Only what you told
us--that he said `the day could not begin too soon'; that he said he wouldn't
let you be a manicure and wash the hands of men who weren't fit to wash the
streets you walked on.''
There was a pause.
``Did I tell you he
said that?'' breathed Anita Flagg.
``You know you did,''
said Holworthy.
There was another
pause.
``I must have been
mad!'' said the girl.
There was a longer
pause and Holworthy shifted uneasily.
``I'm afraid you are
angry,'' he ventured.
``Angry!'' exclaimed
Miss Flagg. ``I should say I was angry!--but not with you. I'm very much
pleased with you. At the end of the act I'm going to let you take me out into
the lobby.''
With his arms tightly
folded, Sam sat staring unhappily at the stage and seeing nothing. He was sorry
for himself because Anita Flagg had destroyed his ideal of a sweet and noble
woman --and he was sorry for Miss Flagg because a man had been rude to her.
That he happened to be that man did not make his sorrow and indignation the
less intense; and, indeed, so miserable was he and so miserable were his looks,
that his friends on the stage considered sending him a note, offering, if he
would take himself out of the front row, to give him back his money at the box
office. Sam certainly wished to take himself away; but he did not want to admit
that he was miserable, that he had behaved ill, that the presence of Anita v
Flagg could spoil his evening--could, in the slightest degree affect him. So he
sat, completely wretched, feeling that he was in a false position; that if he
were it was his own fault; that he had acted like an ass and a brute. It was
not a cheerful feeling.
When the curtain fell
he still remained seated. He knew before the second act there was an
interminable wait; but he did not want to chance running into Holworthy in the
lobby and he told himself it would be rude to abandon Sister Anne. But he now
was not so conscious of the imaginary Sister Anne as of the actual box party on
his near right, who were laughing and chattering volubly. He wondered whether
they laughed at him--whether Miss Flagg were again entertaining them at his
expense; again making his advances appear ridiculous. He was so sure of it that
he flushed indignantly. He was glad he had been rude.
And then, at his elbow,
there was the rustle of silk; and a beautiful figure, all in black velvet,
towered above him, then crowded past him, and sank into the empty seat at his
side. He was too startled to speak--and Miss Anita Flagg seemed to understand
that and to wish to give him time; for, without regarding him in the least, and
as though to establish the fact that she had come to stay, she began calmly and
deliberately to remove the bell-like hat. This accomplished, she bent toward
him, her eyes looking straight into his, her smile reproaching him. In the
familiar tone of an old and dear friend she said to him gently:
``This is the day you
planned for me. Don't you think you've wasted quite enough of it?''
Sam looked back into
the eyes, and saw in them no trace of laughter or of mockery, but, instead,
gentle reproof and appeal--and something else that, in turn, begged of him to
be gentle.
For a moment, too
disturbed to speak, he looked at her, miserably, remorsefully.
``It's not Anita Flagg
at all,'' he said. ``It's Sister Anne come back to life again!''
The girl shook her
head.
``No; it's Anita Flagg.
I'm not a bit like the girl you thought you met and I did say all the things
Holworthy told you I said; but that was before I understood--before I read what
you wrote about Sister Anne--about the kind of me you thought you'd met. When I
read that I knew what sort of a man you were. I knew you had been really kind
and gentle, and I knew you had dug out something that I did not know was
there--that no one else had found. And I remembered how you called me Sister. I
mean the way you said it. And I wanted to hear it again. I wanted you to say
it.''
She lifted her face to
his. She was very near him--so near that her shoulder brushed against his arm.
In the box above them her friends, scandalized and amused, were watching her
with the greatest interest. Half of the people in the now half-empty house were
watching them with the greatest interest. To them, between reading
advertisements on the programme and watching Anita Flagg making desperate love
to a lucky youth in the front row, there was no question of which to choose.
The young people in the
front row did not know they were observed. They were alone--as much alone as
though they were seated in a biplane, sweeping above the clouds.
``Say it again,''
prompted Anita Flagg. ``Say Sister.''
``I will not!''
returned the young man firmly. ``But I'll say this,'' he whispered: ``I'll say
you're the most wonderful, the most beautiful, and the finest woman who has
ever lived!''
Anita Flagg's eyes left
his quickly; and, with her head bent, she stared at the bass drum in the
orchestra.
``I don't know,'' she
said, ``but that sounds just as good.''
When the curtain was
about to rise she told him to take her back to her box, so that he could meet
her friends and go on with them to supper; but when they reached the rear of
the house she halted.
``We can see this
act,'' she said, ``or--my car's in front of the theatre--we might go to the
park and take a turn or two--or three. Which would you prefer?''
``Don't make me
laugh!'' said Sam.
As they sat all
together at supper with those of the box party, but paying no attention to them
whatsoever, Anita Flagg sighed contentedly.
``There's only one
thing,'' she said to Sam, ``that is making me unhappy; and because it is such
sad news I haven't told you. It is this: I am leaving America. I am going to
spend the winter in London. I sail next Wednesday.''
``My business is to
gather news,'' said Sam, ``but in all my life I never gathered such good news
as that.''
``Good news!''
exclaimed Anita.
``Because,'' explained
Sam, ``I am leaving America--I am spending the winter in England --I am sailing
on Wednesday. No; I also am unhappy, but that is not what makes me unhappy.''
``Tell me,'' begged
Anita.
``Some day,'' said Sam.
The day he chose to
tell her was the first day they were at sea--as they leaned upon the rail,
watching Fire Island disappear.
``This is my
unhappiness,'' said Sam--and he pointed to a name on the passenger list. It
was: ``The Earl of Deptford, and valet.'' ``And because he is on board!''
Anita Flagg gazed with
interest at a pursuing sea-gull.
``He is not on board,''
she said. ``He changed to another boat.''
Sam felt that by a word
from her a great weight might be lifted from his soul. He looked at her
appealingly--hungrily.
``Why did he change?''
he begged.
Anita Flagg shook her
head in wonder. She smiled at him with amused despair.
``Is that all that is
worrying you?'' she said.
OF some college
students it has been said that, in order to pass their examinations, they will
deceive and cheat their kind professors. This may or may not be true. One only
can shudder and pass hurriedly on. But whatever others may have done, when
young Peter Hallowell in his senior year came up for those final examinations
which, should he pass them even by a nose, would gain him his degree, he did
not cheat. He may have been too honest, too confident, too lazy, but Peter did
not cheat. It was the professors who cheated.
At Stillwater College,
on each subject on which you are examined you can score a possible hundred.
That means perfection, and in the brief history of Stillwater, which is a very
new college, only one man has attained it. After graduating he ``accepted a
position'' in an asylum for the insane, from which he was promoted later to the
poor-house, where he died. Many Stillwater undergraduates studied his career
and, lest they also should attain perfection, were afraid to study anything
else. Among these Peter was by far the most afraid.
The marking system at
Stillwater is as follows: If in all the subjects in which you have been
examined your marks added together give you an average of ninety, you are
passed ``with honors''; if of seventy-five, you pass ``with distinction''; if
of fifty, you just ``pass.'' It is not unlike the grocer's nice adjustment of
fresh eggs, good eggs, and eggs. The whole college knew that if Peter got in
among the eggs he would be lucky, but the professors and instructors of
Stillwater were determined that, no matter what young Hallowell might do to
prevent it, they would see that he passed his examinations. And they
constituted the jury of awards. Their interest in Peter was not because they
loved him so much, but because each loved his own vine-covered cottage, his
salary, and his dignified title the more. And each knew that that one of the
faculty who dared to flunk the son of old man Hallowell, who had endowed
Stillwater, who supported Stillwater, and who might be expected to go on
supporting Stillwater indefinitely, might also at the same time hand in his
official resignation.
Chancellor Black, the
head of Stillwater, was an up-to-date college president. If he did not actually
run after money he went where money was, and it was not his habit to be downright
rude to those who possessed it. And if any three-thousand-dollar-a-year
professor, through a too strict respect for Stillwater's standards of learning,
should lose to that institution a half-million-dollar observatory,
swimming-pool, or gymnasium, he was the sort of college president who would see
to it that the college lost also the services of that too conscientious
instructor.
He did not put this in
writing or in words, but just before the June examinations, when on the campus
he met one of the faculty, he would inquire with kindly interest as to the
standing of young Hallowell.
``That is too bad!'' he
would exclaim, but more in sorrow than in anger. ``Still, I hope the boy can
pull through. He is his dear father's pride, and his father's heart is set upon
his son's obtaining his degree. Let us hope he will pull through.''
For four years every
professor had been pulling Peter through, and the conscience of each had become
calloused. They had only once more to shove him through and they would be free
of him forever. And so, although they did not conspire together, each knew that
of the firing squad that was to aim Its rifles at Peter, his rifle would hold
the blank cartridge.
The only one of them
who did not know this was Doctor Henry Gilman. Doctor Gilman was the professor
of ancient and modern history at Stillwater, and greatly respected and loved.
He also was the author of those well-known text-books, ``The Founders of
Islam,'' and ``The Rise and Fall of the Turkish Empire.'' This latter work, in
five volumes, had been not unfavorably compared to Gibbon's ``Decline and Fall
of the Roman Empire.'' The original newspaper comment, dated some thirty years
back, the doctor had preserved, and would produce it, now somewhat frayed and
worn, and read it to visitors. He knew it by heart, but to him it always
possessed a contemporary and news interest.
``Here is a review of
the history,'' he would say--he always referred to it as ``the'' history
--``that I came across in my Transcript.''
In the eyes of Doctor
Gilman thirty years was so brief a period that it was as though the clipping
had been printed the previous afternoon.
The members of his
class who were examined on the ``Rise and Fall,'' and who invariably came to
grief over it, referred to it briefly as ``the Fall,'' sometimes feelingly as
``the ----Fall.'' ``The'' history began when Constantinople was Byzantium,
skipped lightly over six centuries to Constantine, and in the last two volumes
finished up the Mohammeds with the downfall of the fourth one and the coming of
Suleiman. Since Suleiman, Doctor Gilman did not recognize Turkey as being on
the map. When his history said the Turkish Empire had fallen, then the Turkish
Empire fell. Once Chancellor Black suggested that he add a sixth volume that
would cover the last three centuries.
``In a history of
Turkey issued as a textbook,'' said the chancellor, ``I think the
Russian-Turkish War should be included.''
Doctor Gilman, from
behind his gold-rimmed spectacles, gazed at him in mild reproach.
``The war in the
Crimea!'' he exclaimed. ``Why, I was alive at the time. I know all about it.
That is not history.''
Accordingly, it
followed that to a man who since the seventeenth century knew of no event of
interest, Cyrus Hallowell, of the meat-packers' trust, was not an imposing
figure. And to such a man the son of Cyrus Hallowell was but an ignorant young
savage, to whom ``the'' history certainty had been a closed book. And so when
Peter returned his examination paper in a condition almost as spotless as that
in which he had received it, Doctor Gilman carefully and conscientiously, with
malice toward none and with no thought of the morrow, marked it ``five.''
Each of the other
professors and instructors had marked Peter fifty. In their fear of Chancellor
Black they dared not give the boy less, but they refused to be slaves to the
extent of crediting him with a single point higher than was necessary to pass
him. But Doctor Gilman's five completely knocked out the required average of
fifty, and young Peter was ``found'' and could not graduate. It was an awful
business! The only son of the only Hallowell refused a degree in his father's
own private college-- the son of the man who had built the Hallowell Memorial,
the new Laboratory, the Anna Hallowell Chapel, the Hallowell Dormitory, and the
Hallowell Athletic Field. When on the bulletin board of the dim hall of the
Memorial to his departed grandfather Peter read of his own disgrace and
downfall, the light the stained-glass window cast upon his nose was of no
sicklier a green than was the nose itself. Not that Peter wanted an A.M. or an
A.B., not that he desired laurels he had not won, but because the young man was
afraid of his father. And he had cause to be. Father arrived at Stillwater the
next morning. The interviews that followed made Stillwater history.
``My son is not an
ass!'' is what Hallowell senior is said to have said to Doctor Black.
``And if in four years
you and your faculty cannot give him the rudiments of an education, I will send
him to a college that can. And I'll send my money where I send Peter.''
In reply Chancellor
Black could have said that it was the fault of the son and not of the college;
he could have said that where three men had failed to graduate one hundred and eighty
had not. But did he say that? Oh, no, he did not say that! He was not that sort
of a college president. Instead, he remained calm and sympathetic, and like a
conspirator in a comic opera glanced apprehensively round his study. He lowered
his voice.
``There has been
contemptible work here,'' he whispered--``spite and a mean spirit of reprisal.
I have been making a secret investigation, and I find that this blow at your
son and you, and at the good name of our college, was struck by one man, a man
with a grievance --Doctor Gilman. Doctor Gilman has repeatedly desired me to
raise his salary.'' This did not happen to be true, but in such a crisis Doctor
Black could not afford to be too particular.
``I have seen no reason
for raising his salary --and there you have the explanation. In revenge he has
made this attack. But he has overshot his mark. In causing us temporary
embarrassment he has brought about his own downfall. I have already asked for
his resignation.
Every day in the week
Hallowell was a fair, sane man, but on this particular day he was wounded, his
spirit was hurt, his self-esteem humiliated. He was in a state of mind to
believe anything rather than that his son was an idiot.
``I don't want the man
discharged,'' he protested, ``just because Peter is lazy. But if Doctor Gilman
was moved by personal considerations, if he sacrificed my Peter in order to get
even----''
``That,'' exclaimed
Black in a horrified whisper, ``is exactly what he did! Your generosity to the
college is well known. You are recognized all over America as its patron. And
he believed that when I refused him an increase in salary it was really you who
refused it--and he struck at you through your son. Everybody thinks so. The
college is on fire with indignation. And look at the mark he gave Peter! Five!
That in itself shows the malice. Five is not a mark, it is an insult! No one,
certainly not your brilliant son--look how brilliantly he managed the glee-club
and foot-ball tour--is stupid enough to deserve five. No, Doctor Gilman went
too far. And he has been justly punished!''
What Hallowell senior
was willing to believe of what the chancellor told him, and his opinion of the
matter as expressed to Peter, differed materially.
``They tell me,'' he
concluded, ``that in the fall they will give you another examination, and if
you pass then, you will get your degree. No one will know you've got it.
They'll slip it to you out of the side-door like a cold potato to a tramp. The
only thing people will know is that when your classmates stood up and got their
parchments--the thing they'd been working for for four years, the only reason
for their going to college at all--you were not among those present. That's
your fault; but if you don't get your degree next fall that will be my fault.
I've supported you through college and you've failed to deliver the goods. Now
you deliver them next fall, or you can support yourself.''
``That will be all
right,'' said Peter humbly; ``I'll pass next fall.''
``I'm going to make
sure of that,'' said Hallowell senior. ``To-morrow you will take all those
history books that you did not open, especially Gilman's `Rise and Fall,' which
it seems you have not even purchased, and you will travel for the entire summer
with a private tutor----''
Peter, who had
personally conducted the foot-ball and base-ball teams over half of the Middle
States and daily bullied and browbeat them, protested with indignation.
``I won't travel with a
private tutor!''
``If I say so,'' returned
Hallowell senior grimly, ``you'll travel with a governess and a trained nurse,
and wear a straitjacket. And you'll continue to wear it until you can recite
the history of Turkey backward. And in order that you may know it backward and
forward you will spend this summer in Turkey--in Constantinople--until I send
you permission to come home.
``Constantinople!''
yelled Peter. ``In August! Are you serious?''
``Do I look it?'' asked
Peter's father. He did.
``In Constantinople,''
explained Mr. Hallowell senior, ``there will be nothing to distract you from
your studies, and in spite of yourself every minute you will be imbibing
history and local color.''
``I'll be imbibing
fever,'' returned Peter, ``and sunstroke and sudden death. If you want to get
rid of me, why don't you send me to the island where they sent Dreyfus? It's
quicker. You don't have to go to Turkey to study about Turkey.''
``You do!'' said his
father.
Peter did not wait for
the festivities of commencement week. All day he hid in his room, packing his
belongings or giving them away to the members of his class, who came to tell
him what a rotten shame it was, and to bid him good-by. They loved Peter for
himself alone, and at losing him were loyally enraged. They desired publicly to
express their sentiments, and to that end they planned a mock trial of the
``Rise and Fall,'' at which a packed jury would sentence it to cremation. They
planned also to hang Doctor Gilman in effigy. The effigy with a rope round its
neck was even then awaiting mob violence. It was complete to the silver-white
beard and the gold spectacles. But Peter squashed both demonstrations. He did
not know Doctor Gilman had been forced to resign, but he protested that the
horse-play of his friends would make him appear a bad loser.
``It would look,
boys,'' he said, ``as though I wouldn't take my medicine. Looks like kicking
against the umpire's decision. Old Gilman fought fair. He gave me just what was
coming to me. I think a darn sight more of him than I do of that bunch of
boot-lickers that had the colossal nerve to pretend I scored fifty!''
Doctor Gilman sat in
his cottage that stood on the edge of the campus, gazing at a plaster bust of
Socrates which he did not see. Since that morning he had ceased to sit in the
chair of history at Stillwater College. They were retrenching, the chancellor
had told him curtly, cutting down unnecessary expenses, for even in his anger
Doctor Black was too intelligent to hint at his real motive, and the professor
was far too innocent of evil, far too detached from college politics to
suspect. He would remain a professor emeritus on half pay, but he no longer
would teach. The college he had served for thirty years--since it consisted of
two brick buildings and a faculty of ten young men--no longer needed him. Even
his ivy-covered cottage, in which his wife and he had lived for twenty years,
in which their one child had died, would at the beginning of the next term be
required of him. But the college would allow him those six months in which to
``look round.'' So, just outside the circle of light from his student lamp, he
sat in his study, and stared with unseeing eyes at the bust of Socrates. He was
not considering ways and means. They must be faced later. He was considering
how he could possibly break the blow to his wife. What eviction from that house
would mean to her no one but he understood. Since the day their little girl had
died, nothing in the room that had been her playroom, bedroom, and nursery had
been altered, nothing had been touched. To his wife, somewhere in the house
that wonderful, God-given child was still with them. Not as a memory but as a
real and living presence. When at night the professor and his wife sat at
either end of the study table, reading by the same lamp, he would see her
suddenly lift her head, alert and eager, as though from the nursery floor a
step had sounded, as though from the darkness a sleepy voice had called her.
And when they would be forced to move to lodgings in the town, to some
students' boarding-house, though they could take with them their books, their
furniture, their mutual love and comradeship, they must leave behind them the
haunting presence of the child, the colored pictures she had cut from the
Christmas numbers and plastered over the nursery walls, the rambler roses that
with her own hands she had planted and that now climbed to her window and each
summer peered into her empty room.
Outside Doctor Gilman's
cottage, among the trees of the campus, paper lanterns like oranges aglow were
swaying in the evening breeze. In front of Hallowell the flame of a bonfire
shot to the top of the tallest elms, and gathered in a circle round it the glee
club sang, and cheer succeeded cheer--cheers for the heroes of the cinder
track, for the heroes of the diamond and the grid-iron, cheers for the men who
had flunked--especially for one man who had flunked. But for the man who for
thirty years in the class room had served the college there were no cheers. No
one remembered him, except the one student who had best reason to remember him.
But in this recollection Peter had no rancor or bitterness and, still anxious
lest he should be considered a bad loser, he wished Doctor Gilman and every one
else to know that. So when the celebration was at its height and just before
his train was due to carry him from Stillwater, he ran across the campus to the
Gilman cottage to say good-by. But he did not enter the cottage. He went so far
only as half-way up the garden walk. In the window of the study which opened
upon the veranda he saw through a frame of honeysuckles the professor and his
wife standing beside the study table. They were clinging to each other, the
woman weeping silently with her cheek on his shoulder, her thin, delicate,
well-bred hands clasping his arms, while the man comforted her awkwardly,
unhappily, with hopeless, futile caresses.
Peter, shocked and
miserable at what he had seen, backed steadily away. What disaster had befallen
the old couple he could not imagine. The idea that he himself might in any way
be connected with their grief never entered his mind. He was certain only that,
whatever the trouble was, it was something so intimate and personal that no
mere outsider might dare to offer his sympathy. So on tiptoe he retreated down
the garden walk and, avoiding the celebration at the bonfire, returned to Elis
rooms. An hour later the entire college escorted him to the railroad station,
and with ``He's a jolly good fellow'' and ``He's off to Philippopolis in vthe
morn-ing'' ringing in his ears, he sank back in his seat in the smoking-car and
gazed at the lights of Stillwater disappearing out of his life. And he was
surprised to find that what lingered in his mind was not the students, dancing
like red Indians round the bonfire, or at the steps of the smoking-car fighting
to shake his hand, but the man and woman alone in the cottage stricken with
sudden sorrow, standing like two children lost in the streets, who cling to
each other for comfort and at the same moment whisper words of courage.
Two months later, at
Constantinople, Peter was suffering from remorse over neglected opportunities,
from prickly heat, and from fleas. Had it not been for the moving-picture man,
and the poker and baccarat at the Cercle Oriental, he would have flung himself
into the Bosphorus. In the mornings with the tutor he read ancient history,
which he promptly forgot; and for the rest of the hot, dreary day with the
moving-picture man through the bazaars and along the water-front he stalked
subjects for the camera.
The name of the
moving-picture man was Harry Stetson. He had been a newspaper reporter, a
press-agent, and an actor in vaudeville and in a moving-picture company. Now on
his own account he was preparing an illustrated lecture on the East, adapted to
churches and Sunday-schools. Peter and he wrote it in collaboration, and in the
evenings rehearsed it with lantern slides before an audience of the hotel
clerk, the tutor, and the German soldier of fortune who was trying to sell the
young Turks very old battleships. Every other foreigner had fled the city, and
the entire diplomatic corps had removed itself to the summer capital at
Therapia.
There Stimson, the
first secretary of the embassy and, in the absence of the ambassador, chargé
d'affaires, invited Peter to become his guest. Stimson was most anxious to be
polite to Peter, for Hallowell senior was a power in the party then in office,
and a word from him at Washington in favor of a rising young diplomat would do
no harm. But Peter was afraid his father would consider Therapia ``out of
bounds.''
``He sent me to
Constantinople,'' explained Peter, ``and if he thinks I'm not playing the game
the Lord only knows where he might send me next--and he might cut off my
allowance.''
In the matter of
allowance Peter's father had been most generous. This was fortunate, for poker,
as the pashas and princes played it at the Cercle, was no game for cripples or
children. But, owing to his letter-of-credit and his ill-spent life, Peter was
able to hold his own against men three times his age and of fortunes nearly
equal to that of his father. Only they disposed of their wealth differently. On
many a hot evening Peter saw as much of their money scattered over the green
table as his father had spent over the Hallowell Athletic Field.
In this fashion Peter
spent his first month of exile--in the morning trying to fill his brain with
names of great men who had been a long time dead, and in his leisure hours with
local color. To a youth of his active spirit it was a dull life without joy or
recompense. A letter from Charley Hines, a classmate who lived at Stillwater,
which arrived after Peter had endured six weeks of Constantinople, released him
from boredom and gave life a real Interest. It was a letter full of gossip
intended to amuse. One paragraph failed of its purpose. It read: ``Old man
Gilman has got the sack. The chancellor offered him up as a sacrifice to your
father, and because he was unwise enough to flunk you. He is to move out in
September. I ran across them last week when I was looking for rooms for a
Freshman cousin. They were reserving one in the same boarding-house. It's a
shame, and I know you'll agree. They are a fine old couple, and I don't like to
think of them herding with Freshmen in a shine boarding-house. Black always was
a swine.''
Peter spent fully ten
minutes in getting to the cable office.
``Just learned,'' he
cabled his father, ``Gilman dismissed because flunked me consider this
outrageous please see he is reinstated.''
The answer, which
arrived the next day, did not satisfy Peter. It read: ``Informed Gilman acted
through spite have no authority as you know to interfere any act of Black.''
Since Peter had learned
of the disaster that through his laziness had befallen the Gilmans, his
indignation at the injustice had been hourly increasing. Nor had his banishment
to Constantinople strengthened his filial piety. On the contrary, it had
rendered him independent and but little inclined to kiss the paternal rod. In
consequence his next cable was not conciliatory.
``Dismissing Gilman
looks more like we acted through spite ␣ makes me appear contemptible
␣ Black is a toady ␣ will do as you direct ␣
please reinstate.''
To this somewhat
peremptory message his father answered:
``If your position
unpleasant yourself to blame not Black ␣ incident is closed.''
``Is it?'' said the son
of his father. He called Stetson to his aid and explained. Stetson reminded him
of the famous cablegram of his distinguished contemporary: ``Perdicaris alive
or Ralsuli dead!''
Peter's paraphrase of
this ran: ``Gilman returns to Stillwater or I will not try for degree.''
The reply was equally
emphatic:
``You earn your degree
or you earn your own living.''
This alarmed Stetson,
but caused Peter to deliver his ultimatum: ``Choose to earn my own living
␣ am leaving Constantinople.''
Within a few days
Stetson was also leaving Constantinople by steamer via Naples. Peter, who had
come to like him very much, would have accompanied him had he not preferred to
return home more leisurely by way of Paris and London.
``You'll get there long
before I do,'' said Peter, ``and as soon as you arrive I want you to go to
Stillwater and give Doctor Gilman some souvenir of Turkey from me. Just to show
him I've no hard feelings. He wouldn't accept money, but he can't refuse a
present. I want it to be something characteristic of the country, like a prayer
rug, or a scimitar, or an illuminated Koran, or----''
Somewhat doubtfully,
somewhat sheepishly, Stetson drew from his pocket a flat morocco case and
opened it. ``What's the matter with one of these?'' he asked.
In a velvet-lined jewel
case was a star of green enamel and silver gilt. To it was attached a ribbon of
red and green.
``That's the Star of
the Crescent,'' said Peter. ``Where did you buy it?''
``Buy it!'' exclaimed
Stetson. ``You don't buy them. The Sultan bestows them.''
``I'll bet the Sultan
didn't bestow that one,'' said Peter.
``I'll bet,'' returned
Stetson, ``I've got something in my pocket that says he did.''
He unfolded an imposing
document covered with slanting lines of curving Arabic letters in gold. Peter
was impressed but still sceptical.
``What does that say
when it says it in English?'' he asked.
``It says,'' translated
Stetson, ``that his Imperial Majesty, the Sultan, bestows upon Henry Stetson,
educator, author, lecturer, the Star of the Order of the Crescent, of the fifth
class, for services rendered to Turkey.''
Peter interrupted him
indignantly.
``Never try to fool the
fakirs, my son,'' he protested. ``I'm a fakir myself. What services did you
ever----''
``Services rendered,''
continued Stetson undisturbed, ``in spreading throughout the United States a
greater knowledge of the customs, industries, and religion of the Ottoman
Empire. That,'' he explained, ``refers to my--I should say our--moving-picture
lecture. I thought it would look well if, when I lectured on Turkey, I wore a
Turkish decoration, so I went after this one.''
Peter regarded his
young friend with incredulous admiration.
``But did they believe
you,'' he demanded, ``when you told them you were an author and educator?''
Stetson closed one eye
and grinned. ``They believed whatever I paid them to believe.''
``If you can get one of
those,'' cried Peter, ``old man Gilman ought to get a dozen. I'll tell them
he's the author of the longest and dullest history of their flea-bitten empire
that was ever written. And he's a real professor and a real author, and I can prove
it. I'll show them the five volumes with his name in each. How much did that
thing cost you?''
``Two hundred dollars
in bribes,'' said Stetson briskly, ``and two months of diplomacy.''
``I haven't got two
months for diplomacy,'' said Peter, ``so I'll have to increase the bribes. I'll
stay here and get the decoration for Gilman, and you work the papers at home.
No one ever heard of the Order of the Crescent, but that only makes it the
easier for us. They'll only know what we tell them, and we'll tell them it's
the highest honor ever bestowed by a reigning sovereign upon an American
scholar. If you tell the people often enough that anything is the best they
believe you. That's the way father sells his hams. You've been a press-agent.
From now on you're going to be my press-agent--I mean Doctor Gilman's
press-agent. I pay your salary, but your work is to advertise him and the Order
of the Crescent. I'll give you a letter to Charley Hines at Stillwater. He
sends out college news to a syndicate and he's the local Associated Press man.
He's sore at their discharging Gilman and he's my best friend, and he'll work
the papers as far as you like. Your job is to make Stillwater College and
Doctor Black and my father believe that when they lost Gilman they lost the man
who made Stillwater famous. And before we get through boosting Gilman, we'll
make my father's million-dollar gift laboratory look like an insult.''
In the eyes of the
former press-agent the light of battle burned fiercely, memories of his
triumphs in exploitation, of his strategies and tactics in advertising soared
before him.
``It's great!'' he
exclaimed. ``I've got your idea and you've got me. And you're darned lucky to
get me. I've been press-agent for politicians, actors, society leaders, breakfast
foods, and horse-shows--and I'm the best! I was in charge of the publicity
bureau for Galloway when he ran for governor. He thinks the people elected him.
I know I did. Nora Nashville was getting fifty dollars a week in vaudeville
when I took hold of her; now she gets a thousand. I even made people believe
Mrs. Hampton-Rhodes was a society leader at Newport, when all she ever saw of
Newport was Bergers and the Muschenheim-Kings. Why, I am the man that made the
American people believe Russian dancers can dance!''
``It's plain to see you
hate yourself,'' said Peter. ``You must not get so despondent or you might
commit suicide. How much money will you want?''
``How much have you
got?''
``All kinds,'' said
Peter. ``Some in a letter-of-credit that my father earned from the fretful pig,
and much more in cash that I won at poker from the pashas. When that's gone
I've got to go to work and earn my living. Meanwhile your salary is a hundred a
week and all you need to boost Gilman and the Order of the Crescent. We are now
the Gilman Defense, Publicity, and Development Committee, and you will begin by
introducing me to the man I am to bribe.''
``In this country you
don't need any introduction to the man you want to bribe,'' exclaimed Stetson;
``you just bribe him!''
THAT same night in the
smoking-room of the hotel, Peter and Stetson made their first move in the game
of winning for Professor Gilman the Order of the Crescent. Stetson presented
Peter to a young effendi in a frock coat and fez. Stetson called him Osman. He
was a clerk in the foreign office and appeared to be ``a friend of a friend of
a friend'' of the assistant third secretary.
The five volumes of the
``Rise and Fall'' were spread before him, and Peter demanded to know why so
distinguished a scholar as Doctor Gilman had not received some recognition from
the country he had so sympathetically described. Osman fingered the volumes
doubtfully, and promised the matter should be brought at once to the attention
of the grand vizier.
After he had departed
Stetson explained that Osman had just as little chance of getting within
speaking distance of the grand vizier as of the ladies of his harem.
``It's like Tammany,''
said Stetson; ``there are sachems, district leaders, and lieutenants. Each of
them is entitled to trade or give away a few of these decorations, just as each
district leader gets his percentage of jobs in the street-cleaning department.
This fellow will go to his patron, his patron will go to some under-secretary
in the cabinet, he will put it up to a palace favorite, and they will divide
your money.
``In time the minister
of foreign affairs will sign your brevet and a hundred others, without knowing
what he is signing; then you cable me, and the Star of the Crescent will burst
upon the United States in a way that will make Halley's comet look like a wax
match.''
The next day Stetson
and the tutor sailed for home and Peter was left alone to pursue, as he
supposed, the Order of the Crescent. On the contrary, he found that the Order
of the Crescent was pursuing him. He had not appreciated that, from underlings
and backstair politicians, an itinerant showman like Stetson and the only son
of an American Crsus would receive very different treatment.
Within twenty-four
hours a fat man with a blue-black beard and diamond rings called with Osman to
apologize for the latter. Osman, the fat man explained--had been about to make
a fatal error. For Doctor Gilman he had asked the Order of the Crescent of the
fifth class, the same class that had been given Stetson. The fifth class, the
fat man explained, was all very well for tradesmen, dragomans, and eunuchs, but
as an honor for a savant as distinguished as the friend of Mr. Hallowell, the
fourth class would hardly be high enough. The fees, the fat man added, would
also be higher; but, he pointed out, It was worth the difference, because the
fourth class entitled the wearer to a salute from all sentries.
``There are few
sentries at Stillwater,'' said Peter; ``but I want the best and I want it
quick. Get me the fourth class.''
The next morning he was
surprised by an early visit from Stimson of the embassy. The secretary was
considerably annoyed.
``My dear Hallowell,''
he protested, ``why the devil didn't you tell me you wanted a decoration? Of
course the State department expressly forbids us to ask for one for ourselves,
or for any one else. But what's the Constitution between friends? I'll get it
for you at once--but, on two conditions: that you don't tell anybody I got it,
and that you tell me why you want it, and what you ever did to deserve it.''
Instead, Peter
explained fully and so sympathetically that the diplomat demanded that he, too,
should be enrolled as one of the Gilman Defense Committee. v
``Doctor Gilman's
history,'' he said, ``must be presented to the Sultan. You must have the five
volumes rebound in red and green, the colors of Mohammed, and with as much gold
tooling as they can carry. I hope,'' he added, ``they are not soiled.''
``Not by me,'' Peter
assured him.
``I will take them myself,''
continued Stimson, ``to Muley Pasha, the minister of foreign affairs, and ask
him to present them to his Imperial Majesty. He will promise to do so, but he
won't; but he knows I know he won't; so that is all right. And in return he
will present us with the Order of the Crescent of the third class.''
``Going up!'' exclaimed
Peter. ``The third class. That will cost me my entire letter-of-credit.''
``Not at all,'' said
Stimson. ``I've saved you from the grafters. It will cost you only what you pay
to have the books rebound. And the third class is a real honor of which any one
might be proud. You wear it round your neck, and at your funeral it entitles
you to an escort of a thousand soldiers.''
``I'd rather put up
with fewer soldiers,'' said Peter, ``and wear it longer round my neck. What's
the matter with our getting the second class or the first class?''
At such ignorance
Stimson could not repress a smile.
``The first class,'' he
explained patiently, ``is the Great Grand Cross, and is given only to reigning
sovereigns. The second is called the Grand Cross, and is bestowed only on
crowned princes, prime ministers, and men of world-wide fame----''
``What's the matter
with Doctor Gilman's being of world-wide fame?'' said Peter. ``He will be some
day, when Stetson starts boosting.''
``Some day,'' retorted
Stimson stiffly, ``I may be an ambassador. When I am I hope to get the Grand
Cross of the Crescent, but not now. I'm sorry you're not satisfied,'' he added
aggrievedly. ``No one can get you anything higher than the third class, and I
may lose my official head asking for that.''
``Nothing is too good
for old man Gilman,'' said Peter, ``nor for you. You get the third class for
him, and I'll have father make you an ambassador.''
That night at poker at
the club Peter sat next to Prince Abdul, who had come from a reception at the
grand vizier's and still wore his decorations. Decorations now fascinated
Peter, and those on the coat of the young prince he regarded with wide-eyed
awe. He also regarded Abdul with wide-eyed awe, because he was the favorite
nephew of the Sultan, and because he enjoyed the reputation of having the worst
reputation in Turkey. Peter wondered why. He always had found Abdul charming,
distinguished, courteous to the verge of humility, most cleverly cynical, most
brilliantly amusing. At poker he almost invariably won, and while doing so was
so politely bored, so indifferent to his cards and the cards held by others,
that Peter declared he had never met his equal.
In a pause in the game,
while some one tore the cover off a fresh pack, Peter pointed at the star of
diamonds that nestled behind the lapel of Abdul's coat.
``May I ask what that
is?'' said Peter.
The prince frowned at
his diamond sunburst as though it annoyed him, and then smiled delightedly.
``It is an order,'' he
said in a quick aside, ``bestowed only upon men of world-wide fame. I dined
to-night,'' he explained, ``with your charming compatriot, Mr. Joseph
Stimson.''
``And Joe told?'' said
Peter.
The prince nodded.
``Joe told,'' he repeated; ``but it is all arranged. Your distinguished friend,
the Sage of Stillwater, will receive the Crescent of the third class.''
Peter's eyes were still
fastened hungrily upon the diamond sunburst.
``Why,'' he demanded,
``can't some one get him one like that?''
As though about to take
offense the prince raised his eyebrows, and then thought better of it and
smiled.
``There are only two
men in all Turkey,'' he said, ``who could do that.''
``And is the Sultan the
other one?'' asked Peter. The prince gasped as though he had suddenly stepped
beneath a cold shower, and then laughed long and silently. v
``You flatter me,'' he
murmured.
``You know you could if
you liked!'' whispered Peter stoutly.
Apparently Abdul did
not hear him. ``I will take one card,'' he said.
Toward two in the
morning there was seventy-five thousand francs in the pot, and all save Prince
Abdul and Peter had dropped out. ``Will you divide?'' asked the prince.
``Why should I?'' said
Peter. ``I've got you beat now. Do you raise me or call?'' The prince called
and laid down a full house. Peter showed four tens.
``I will deal you one
hand, double or quits,'' said the prince.
Over the end of his
cigar Peter squinted at the great heap of mother-of-pearl counters and
gold-pieces and bank-notes.
``You will pay me
double what is on the table,'' he said, ``or you quit owing me nothing.''
The prince nodded.
``Go ahead,'' said
Peter.
The prince dealt them
each a hand and discarded two cards. Peter held a seven, a pair of kings, and a
pair of fours. Hoping to draw another king, which might give him a three higher
than the three held by Abdul, he threw away the seven and the lower pair. He
caught another king. The prince showed three queens and shrugged his shoulders.
Peter, leaning toward
him, spoke out of the corner of his mouth.
``I'll make you a
sporting proposition,'' he murmured. ``You owe me a hundred and fifty thousand
francs. ``I'll stake that against what only two men in the empire can give
me.''
The prince allowed his
eyes to travel slowly round the circle of the table. But the puzzled glances of
the other players showed that to them Peter's proposal conveyed no meaning.
The prince smiled
cynically.
``For yourself?'' he
demanded.
``For Doctor Gilman,''
said Peter.
``We will cut for deal
and one hand will decide,'' said the prince. His voice dropped to a whisper.
``And no one must ever know,'' he warned.
Peter also could be
cynical.
``Not even the
Sultan,'' he said.
Abdul won the deal and
gave himself a very good hand. But the hand he dealt Peter was the better one.
The prince was a good
loser. The next afternoon the Gazette Officielle announced that upon Doctor
Henry Gilman, professor emeritus of the University of Stillwater, U. S. A., the
Sultan had been graciously pleased to confer the Grand Cross of the Order of the
Crescent.
Peter flashed the great
news to Stetson. The cable caught him at Quarantine. It read: ``Captured
Crescent, Grand Cross. Get busy.''
But before Stetson
could get busy the campaign of publicity had been brilliantly opened from
Constantinople. Prince Abdul, although pitchforked into the Gilman Defense
Committee, proved himself one of its most enthusiastic members.
``For me it becomes a
case of noblesse oblige,'' he declared. ``If it is worth doing at all it is
worth doing well. To-day the Sultan will command that the ``Rise and Fall'' be
translated into Arabic, and that it be placed in the national library.
Moreover, the University of Constantinople, the College of Salonica, and the
National Historical Society have each elected Doctor Gilman an honorary member.
I proposed him, the Patriarch of Mesopotamia seconded him. And the Turkish
ambassador in America has been instructed to present the insignia with his own
hands.''
Nor was Peter or
Stimson idle. To assist Stetson in his press-work, and to further the idea that
all Europe was now clamoring for the ``Rise and Fall,'' Peter paid an
impecunious but over-educated dragoman to translate it into five languages, and
Stimson officially wrote of this, and of the bestowal of the Crescent to the State
Department. He pointed out that not since General Grant had passed through
Europe had the Sultan so highy{sic} honored an American. He added he had been
requested by the grand vizier--who had been requested by Prince Abdul--to
request the State Department to inform Doctor Gilman of these high honors. A
request from such a source was a command and, as desired, the State Department
wrote as requested by the grand vizier to Doctor Gilman, and tendered
congratulations. The fact was sent out briefly from Washington by Associated
Press. This official recognition by the Government and by the newspapers was
all and more than Stetson wanted. He took off his coat and with a megaphone,
rather than a pen, told the people of the United States who Doctor Gilman was, who
the Sultan was, what a Grand Cross was, and why America's greatest historian
was not without honor save in his own country. Columns of this were paid for
and appeared as ``patent insides,'' with a portrait of Doctor Gilman taken from
the Stillwater College Annual, and a picture of the Grand Cross drawn from
imagination, in eight hundred newspapers of the Middle, Western, and Eastern
States. Special articles, paragraphs, portraits, and pictures of the Grand
Cross followed, and, using Stillwater as his base, Stetson continued to flood
the country. Young Hines, the local correspondent, acting under instructions by
cable from Peter, introduced him to Doctor Gilman as a traveller who lectured
on Turkey, and one who was a humble admirer of the author of the ``Rise and
Fall.'' Stetson, having studied it as a student crams an examination, begged
that he might sit at the feet of the master. And for several evenings, actually
at his feet, on the steps of the ivy-covered cottage, the disguised press-agent
drew from the unworldly and unsuspecting scholar the simple story of his life.
To this, still in his character as disciple and student, he added photographs
he himself made of the master, of the master's Ivy-covered cottage, of his
favorite walk across the campus, of the great historian at work at his desk, at
work in his rose garden, at play with his wife on the croquet lawn. These he
held until the insignia should be actually presented. This pleasing duty fell
to the Turkish ambassador, who, much to his astonishment, had received
instructions to proceed to Stillwater, Massachusetts, a place of which he had
never heard, and present to a Doctor Gilman, of whom he had never heard, the
Grand Cross of the Crescent. As soon as the insignia arrived in the official
mail-bag a secretary brought it from Washington to Boston, and the ambassador
travelled down from Bar Harbor to receive it, and with the secretary took the
local train to Stillwater.
The reception extended
to him there is still remembered by the ambassador as one of the happiest
incidents of his distinguished career. Never since he came to represent his
Imperial Majesty in the Western republic had its barbarians greeted him in a
manner in any way so nearly approaching his own idea of what was his due.
``This ambassador,''
Hines had explained to the mayor of Stillwater, who was also the proprietor of
its largest department store, ``is the personal representative of the Sultan.
So we've got to treat him right.''
``It's exactly,'' added
Stetson, ``as though the Sultan himself were coming.''
``And so few crowned
heads visit Stillwater,'' continued Hines, ``that we ought to show we
appreciate this one, especially as he comes to pay the highest honor known to
Europe to one of our townsmen.''
The mayor chewed nervously
on his cigar.
``What'd I better do?''
he asked.
``Mr. Stetson here,''
Hines pointed out, ``has lived in Turkey, and he knows what they expect. Maybe
he will help us.''
``Will you?'' begged
the mayor.
``I will,'' said
Stetson.
Then they visited the
college authorities. Chancellor Black and most of the faculty were on their
vacations. But there were half a dozen professors still in their homes around
the campus, and it was pointed out to them that the coming honor to one lately
of their number reflected glory upon the college and upon them, and that they
should take official action.
It was also suggested
that for photographic purposes they should wear their academic robes, caps, and
hoods. To these suggestions, with alacrity--partly because they all loved
Doctor Gilman and partly because they had never been photographed by a
moving-picture machine--they all agreed. So it came about that when the
ambassador, hot and cross and dusty, stepped off the way-train at Stillwater
station, he found to his delighted amazement a red carpet stretching to a
perfectly new automobile, a company of the local militia presenting arms, a
committee, consisting of the mayor in a high hat and white gloves and three
professors in gowns and colored hoods, and the Stillwater Silver Cornet Band
playing what, after several repetitions, the ambassador was graciously--
pleased to recognize as his national anthem.
The ambassador forgot
that he was hot and cross. He forgot that he was dusty. His face radiated
satisfaction and perspiration. Here at last were people who appreciated him and
his high office. And as the mayor helped him into the automobile, and those
students who lived in Stillwater welcomed him with strange yells, and the
moving-picture machine aimed at him point blank, he beamed with condescension.
But inwardly he was ill at ease.
Inwardly he was
chastising himself for having, through his ignorance of America, failed to
appreciate the importance of the man he had come to honor. When he remembered
he had never even heard of Doctor Gilman he blushed with confusion. And when he
recollected that he had been almost on the point of refusing to come to
Stillwater, that he had considered leaving the presentation to his secretary,
he shuddered. What might not the Sultan have done to him! What a narrow escape!
Attracted by the band,
by the sight of their fellow townsmen in khaki, by the sight of the stout
gentleman in the red fez, by a tremendous liking and respect for Doctor Gilman,
the entire town of Stillwater gathered outside his cottage. And inside, the old
professor, trembling and bewildered and yet strangely happy, bowed his
shoulders while the ambassador slipped over them the broad green scarf and upon
his only frock coat pinned the diamond sunburst. In woful embarrassment Doctor
Gilman smiled and bowed and smiled, and then, as the delighted mayor of
Stillwater shouted, ``Speech,'' in sudden panic he reached out his hand quickly
and covertly, and found the hand of his wife.
``Now, then, three long
ones!'' yelled the cheer leader. ``Now, then, `See the Conquering Hero!' ''
yelled the bandmaster. ``Attention! Present arms!'' yelled the militia captain;
and the townspeople and the professors applauded and waved their hats and
handkerchiefs. And Doctor Gilman and his wife, he frightened and confused, she
happy and proud, and taking it all as a matter of course, stood arm in arm in
the frame of honeysuckles and bowed and bowed and bowed. And the ambassador so
far unbent as to drink champagne, which appeared mysteriously in tubs of ice
from the rear of the ivy-covered cottage, with the mayor, with the wives of the
professors, with the students, with the bandmaster. Indeed, so often did he
unbend that when the perfectly new automobile conveyed him back to the
Touraine, he was sleeping happily and smiling in his sleep.
Peter had arrived in
America at the same time as had the insignia, but Hines and Stetson would not
let him show himself In Stillwater. They were afraid if all three conspirators
fore-gathered they might inadvertently drop some clew that would lead to
suspicion and discovery.
So Peter worked from
New York, and his first act was anonymously to supply his father and Chancellor
Black with all the newspaper accounts of the great celebration at Stillwater.
When Doctor Black read them he choked. Never before had Stillwater College been
brought so prominently before the public, and never before had her president
been so utterly and completely ignored. And what made it worse was that he
recognized that even had he been present he could not have shown his face. How
could he, who had, as every one connected with the college now knew, out of
spite and without cause, dismissed an old and faithful servant, join in
chanting his praises. He only hoped his patron, Hallowell senior, might not
hear of Gilman's triumph. But Hallowell senior heard little of anything else.
At his office, at his clubs, on the golf-links, every one he met congratulated
him on the high and peculiar distinction that had come to his pet college.
``You certainly have
the darndest luck in backing the right horse,'' exclaimed a rival pork-packer
enviously. ``Now if I pay a hundred thousand for a Velasquez it turns out to be
a bad copy worth thirty dollars, but you pay a professor three thousand and he
brings you in half a million dollars' worth of free advertising. Why, this
Doctor Gilman's doing as much for your college as Doctor Osler did for Johns
Hopkins or as Walter Camp does for Yale.''
Mr. Hallowell received
these congratulations as gracefully as he was able, and in secret raged at
Chancellor Black. Each day his rage increased. It seemed as though there would
never be an end to Doctor Gilman. The stone he had rejected had become the
corner-stone of Stillwater. Whenever he opened a newspaper he felt like
exclaiming: ``Will no one rid me of this pestilent fellow?'' For the ``Rise and
Fall,'' in an edition de luxe limited to two hundred copies, was being bought
up by all his book-collecting millionaire friends; a popular edition was on
view in the windows of every book-shop; it was offered as a prize to
subscribers to all the more sedate magazines, and the name and features of the
distinguished author had become famous and familiar. Not a day passed but that
some new honor, at least so the newspapers stated, was thrust upon him.
Paragraphs announced that he was to be the next exchange professor to Berlin;
that in May he was to lecture at the Sorbonne; that in June he was to receive a
degree from Oxford.
A fresh-water college
on one of the Great Lakes leaped to the front by offering him the chair of
history at that seat of learning at a salary of five thousand dollars a year.
Some of the honors that had been thrust upon Doctor Gilman existed only in the
imagination of Peter and Stetson, but this offer happened to be genuine.
``Doctor Gilman
rejected it without consideration. He read the letter from the trustees to his
wife and shook his head.
``We could not be happy
away from Stillwater,'' he said. ``We have only a month more in the cottage,
but after that we still can walk past it; we can look into the garden and see
the flowers she planted. We can visit the place where she lies. But if we went
away we should be lonely and miserable for her, and she would be lonely for
us.''
Mr. Hallowell could not
know why Doctor Gilman had refused to leave Stillwater; but when he read that
the small Eastern college at which Doctor Gilman had graduated had offered to
make him its president, his jealousy knew no bounds.
He telegraphed to
Black: ``Reinstate Gilman at once; offer him six thousand--offer him whatever
he wants, but make him promise for no consideration to leave Stillwater he is
only member faculty ever brought any credit to the college if we lose him I'll
hold you responsible.''
The next morning, hat
in hand, smiling ingratiatingly, the chancellor called upon Doctor Gilman and
ate so much humble pie that for a week he suffered acute mental indigestion.
But little did Hallowell senior care for that. He had got what he wanted. Doctor
Gilman, the distinguished, was back in the faculty, and had made only one
condition--that he might live until he died in the ivy-covered cottage.
Two weeks later, when
Peter arrived at Stillwater to take the history examination, which, should he
pass it, would give him his degree, he found on every side evidences of the
``worldwide fame'' he himself had created. The news-stand at the depot, the
book-stores, the drug-stores, the picture-shops, all spoke of Doctor Gilman;
and postcards showing the ivy-covered cottage, photographs and enlargements of
Doctor Gilman, advertisements of the different editions of ``the'' history
proclaimed his fame. Peter, fascinated by the success of his own handiwork,
approached the ivy-covered cottage in a spirit almost of awe. But Mrs. Gilman
welcomed him with the same kindly, sympathetic smile with which she always gave
courage to the unhappy ones coming up for examinations, and Doctor Gilman's
high honors in no way had spoiled his gentle courtesy.
The examination was in
writing, and when Peter had handed in his papers Doctor Gilman asked him if he
would prefer at once to know the result.
``I should indeed!''
Peter assured him.
``Then I regret to tell
you, Hallowell,'' said the professor, ``that you have not passed. I cannot
possibly give you a mark higher than five.'' In real sympathy the sage of
Stillwater raised his eyes, but to his great astonishment he found that Peter,
so far from being cast down or taking offense, was smiling delightedly, much as
a fond parent might smile upon the precocious act of a beloved child.
``I am afraid,'' said
Doctor Gilman gently ``that this summer you did not work very hard for your
degree!''
Peter laughed and
picked up his hat.
``To tell you the
truth, Professor,'' he said, ``you're right. I got working for something worth
while--and I forgot about the degree.''
THIS is the true inside
story of the invasion of England in 1911 by the Germans, and why it failed. I
got my data from Baron von Gottlieb, at the time military attaché of the German
Government with the Russian army in the second Russian-Japanese War, when Russia
drove Japan out of Manchuria, and reduced her to a third-rate power. He told me
of his part in the invasion as we sat, after the bombardment of Tokio, on the
ramparts of the Emperor's palace, watching the walls of the paper houses below
us glowing and smoking like the ashes of a prairie fire.
Two years before, at
the time of the invasion, von Gottlieb had been Carl Schultz, the head-waiter
at the East Cliff Hotel at Cromer, and a spy.
The other end of the
story came to me through Lester Ford, the London correspondent of the New York
Republic. They gave me permission to tell it in any fashion I pleased, and it
is here set down for the first time.
In telling the story,
my conscience is not in the least disturbed, for I have yet to find any one who
will believe it.
What led directly to
the invasion was that some week-end guest of the East Cliff Hotel left a copy
of ``The Riddle of the Sands'' in the coffee-room, where von Gottlieb found it;
and the fact that Ford attended the Shakespeare Ball. Had neither of these
events taken place, the German flag might now be flying over Buckingham Palace.
And, then again, it might not.
As every German knows,
``The Riddle of the Sands'' is a novel written by a very clever Englishman in
which is disclosed a plan for the invasion of his country. According to this
plan an army of infantry was to be embarked in lighters, towed by
shallow-draft, sea-going tugs, and despatched simultaneously from the seven
rivers that form the Frisian Isles. From there they were to be convoyed by
battle-ships two hundred and forty miles through the North Sea, and thrown upon
the coast of Norfolk somewhere between the Wash and Mundesley. The fact that
this coast is low-lying and bordered by sand flats which at low water are dry,
that England maintains no North Sea squadron, and that her nearest naval base
is at Chatham, seem to point to it as the spot best adapted for such a raid.
What von Gottlieb
thought was evidenced by the fact that as soon as he read the book he mailed it
to the German Ambassador in London, and under separate cover sent him a letter.
In this he said: ``I suggest your Excellency brings this book to the notice of
a certain royal personage, and of the Strategy Board. General Bolivar said,
`When you want arms, take them from the enemy.' Does not this also follow when
you want ideas?''
What the Strategy Board
thought of the plan is a matter of history. This was in 1910. A year later,
during the coronation week, Lester Ford went to Clarkson's to rent a monk's
robe in which to appear at the Shakespeare Ball, and while the assistant
departed in search of the robe, Ford was left alone in a small room hung with
full-length mirrors and shelves, and packed with the uniforms that Clarkson
rents for Covent Garden balls and amateur theatricals. While waiting, Ford
gratified a long, secretly cherished desire to behold himself as a military
man, by trying on all the uniforms on the lower shelves; and as a result, when
the assistant returned, instead of finding a young American in English clothes
and a high hat, he was confronted by a German officer in a spiked helmet
fighting a duel with himself in the mirror. The assistant retreated
precipitately, and Ford, conscious that he appeared ridiculous, tried to turn
the tables by saying, ``Does a German uniform always affect a Territorial like
that?''
The assistant laughed
good-naturedly.
``It did give me quite
a turn,'' he said. ``It's this talk of invasion, I fancy. But for a fact, sir,
if I was a Coast Guard, and you came along the beach dressed like that, I'd
take a shot at you, just on the chance, anyway.''
``And, quite right,
too!'' said Ford.
He was wondering when
the invasion did come whether he would stick at his post in London and
dutifully forward the news to his paper, or play truant and as a war
correspondent watch the news in the making. So the words of Mr. Clarkson's
assistant did not sink in. But a few weeks later young Major Bellew recalled
them. Bellew was giving a dinner on the terrace of the Savoy Restaurant. His guests
were his nephew, young Herbert, who was only five years younger than his uncle,
and Herbert's friend Birrell, an Irishman, both in their third term at the
university. After five years' service in India, Bellew had spent the last
``Eights'' week at Oxford, and was complaining bitterly that since his day the
undergraduate had deteriorated. He had found him serious, given to study, far
too well behaved. Instead of Jorrocks, he read Galsworthy; instead of ``wines''
he found pleasure in debating clubs where he discussed socialism. Ragging,
practical jokes, ingenious hoaxes, that once were wont to set England in a
roar, were a lost art. His undergraduate guests combated these charges
fiercely. His criticisms they declared unjust and without intelligence.
``You're talking rot!''
said his dutiful nephew. ``Take Phil here, for example. I've roomed with him
three years and I can testify that he has never opened a book. He never heard
of Galsworthy until you spoke of him. And you can see for yourself his table manners
are quite as bad as yours!''
``Worse!'' assented
Birrell loyally.
``And as for ragging!
What rags, in your day, were as good as ours; as the Carrie Nation rag, for
instance, when five hundred people sat through a temperance lecture and never
guessed they were listening to a man from Balliol?''
``And the Abyssinian
Ambassador rag!'' cried Herbert. ``What price that? When the Dreadnought manned
the yards for him and gave him seventeen guns. That was an Oxford rag, and
carried through by Oxford men. The country hasn't stopped laughing yet. You
give us a rag!'' challenged Herbert. ``Make it as hard as you like; something
risky, something that will make the country sit up, something that will send us
all to jail, and Phil and I will put it through whether it takes one man or a
dozen. Go on,'' he persisted, ``and I bet we can get fifty volunteers right
here in town and all of them undergraduates.''
``Give you the idea,
yes!'' mocked Bellew, trying to gain time. ``That's just what I say. You boys
to-day are so dull. You lack initiative. It's the idea that counts. Anybody can
do the acting. That's just amateur theatricals!''
``Is it!'' snorted
Herbert. ``If you want to know what stage fright is, just go on board a British
battle-ship with your face covered with burnt cork and insist on being treated
like an ambassador. You'll find it's a little different from a first night with
the Simla Thespians!''
Ford had no part in the
debate. He had been smoking comfortably and with well-timed nods, impartially
encouraging each disputant. But now he suddenly laid his cigar upon his plate,
and, after glancing quickly about him, leaned eagerly forward. They were at the
corner table of the terrace, and, as it was now past nine o'clock, the other
diners had departed to the theatres and they were quite alone. Below them,
outside the open windows, were the trees of the embankment, and beyond, the
Thames, blocked to the west by the great shadows of the Houses of Parliament,
lit only by the flame in the tower that showed the Lower House was still
sitting.
``I'll give you an idea
for a rag,'' whispered Ford. ``One that is risky, that will make the country
sit up, that ought to land you in Jail? Have you read `The Riddle of the
Sands'?''
Bellew and Herbert
nodded; Birrell made no sign.
``Don't mind him,''
exclaimed Herbert impatiently. ``He never reads anything! Go on!''
``It's the book most
talked about,'' explained Ford. ``And what else is most talked about?'' He
answered his own question. ``The landing of the Germans in Morocco and the
chance of war. Now, I ask you, with that book in everybody's mind, and the war
scare in everybody's mind, what would happen if German soldiers appeared
to-night on the Norfolk coast just where the book says they will appear? Not
one soldier, but dozens of soldiers; not in one place, but in twenty places?''
``What would happen?''
roared Major Bellew loyally. ``The Boy Scouts would fall out of bed and kick
them into the sea!''
``Shut up!'' snapped
his nephew irreverently. He shook Ford by the arm. ``How?'' he demanded
breathlessly. ``How are we to do it? It would take hundreds of men.''
``Two men,'' corrected
Ford, ``and a third man to drive the car. I thought it out one day at
Clarkson's when I came across a lot of German uniforms. I thought of it as a
newspaper story, as a trick to find out how prepared you people are to meet
invasion. And when you said just now that you wanted a chance to go to
jail----''
``What's your plan?''
interrupted Birrell.
``We would start just
before dawn--'' began Ford.
``We?'' demanded
Herbert. ``Are you in this?''
``Am I in it?'' cried
Ford indignantly. ``It's my own private invasion! I'm letting you boys in on
the ground floor. If I don't go, there won t be any invasion!''
The two pink-cheeked
youths glanced at each other inquiringly and then nodded.
``We accept your
services, sir,'' said Birrell gravely. ``What's your plan?''
In astonishment Major
Bellew glanced from one to the other and then slapped the table with his open
palm. His voice shook with righteous indignation.
``Of all the
preposterous, outrageous-- Are you mad?'' he demanded. ``Do you suppose for one
minute I will allow----''
His nephew shrugged his
shoulders and, rising, pushed back his chair.
``Oh, you go to the
devil!'' he exclaimed cheerfully. ``Come on, Ford,'' he said. ``We'll find some
place where uncle can't hear us.''
Two days later a
touring car carrying three young men, in the twenty-one miles between Wells and
Cromer, broke down eleven times. Each time this misfortune befell them one
young man scattered tools in the road and on his knees hammered ostentatiously
at the tin hood; and the other two occupants of the car sauntered to the beach.
There they chucked pebbles at the waves and then slowly retraced their steps.
Each time the route by which they returned was different from the one by which
they had set forth. Sometimes they followed the beaten path down the cliff or,
as it chanced to be, across the marshes; sometimes they slid down the face of
the cliff; sometimes they lost themselves behind the hedges and in the lanes of
the villages. But when they again reached the car the procedure of each was
alike--each produced a pencil and on the face of his ``Half Inch'' road map
traced strange, fantastic signs.
At lunch-time they
stopped at the East Cliff Hotel at Cromer and made numerous and trivial
inquiries about the Cromer golf links. They had come, they volunteered, from
Ely for a day of sea-bathing and golf; they were returning after dinner. The
head-waiter of the East Cliff Hotel gave them the information they desired. He
was an intelligent head-waiter, young, and of pleasant, not to say
distinguished, bearing. In a frock coat he might easily have been mistaken for
something even more important than a head-waiter--for a German riding-master, a
leader of a Hungarian band, a manager of a Ritz hotel. But he was not above his
station. He even assisted the porter in carrying the coats and golf bags of the
gentlemen from the car to the coffee-room where, with the intuition of the
homing pigeon, the three strangers had, unaided, found their way. As Carl
Schultz followed, carrying the dust-coats, a road map fell from the pocket of
one of them to the floor. Carl Schultz picked it up, and was about to replace
it, when his eyes were held by notes scrawled roughly in pencil. With an
expression that no longer was that of a head-waiter, Carl cast one swift glance
about him and then slipped into the empty coat-room and locked the door. Five
minutes later, with a smile that played uneasily over a face grown gray with
anxiety, Carl presented the map to the tallest of the three strangers. It was
open so that the pencil marks were most obvious. By his accent it was evident
the tallest of the three strangers was an American.
``What the devil!'' he
protested; ``which of you boys has been playing hob with my map?''
`For just an instant
the two pink-cheeked ones regarded him with disfavor; until, for just an
instant, his eyebrows rose and, with a glance, he signified the waiter.
``Oh, that!'' exclaimed
the younger one. ``The Automobile Club asked us to mark down petrol stations.
Those marks mean that's where you can buy petrol.''
The head-waiter
breathed deeply. With an assured and happy countenance, he departed and, for
the two-hundredth time that day, looked from the windows of the dining-room out
over the tumbling breakers to the gray stretch of sea. As though fearful that
his face would expose his secret, he glanced carefully about him and then,
assured he was alone, leaned eagerly forward, scanning the empty, tossing
waters.
In his mind's eye he
beheld rolling tug-boats straining against long lines of scows, against the dead
weight of field-guns, against the pull of thousands of motionless, silent
figures, each in khaki, each in a black leather helmet, each with one hundred
and fifty rounds.
In his own language
Carl Schultz reproved himself.
``Patience,'' he
muttered; ``patience! By ten to-night all will be dark. There will be no stars.
There will be no moon. The very heavens fight for us, and by sunrise our
outposts will be twenty miles inland!''
At lunch-time Carl
Schultz carefully, obsequiously waited upon the three strangers. He gave them
their choice of soup, thick or clear, of gooseberry pie or Half-Pay pudding. He
accepted their shillings gratefully, and when they departed for the links he
bowed them on their way. And as their car turned up Jetty Street, for one instant,
he again allowed his eyes to sweep the dull gray ocean. Brown-sailed
fishing-boats were beating in toward Cromer. On the horizon line a Norwegian
tramp was drawing a lengthening scarf of smoke. Save for these the sea was
empty.
By gracious permission
of the manageress Carl had obtained an afternoon off, and, changing his coat,
he mounted his bicycle and set forth toward Overstrand. On his way he nodded to
the local constable, to the postman on his rounds, to the driver of the char à
banc. He had been a year in Cromer and was well known and well liked.
Three miles from
Cromer, at the top of the highest hill in Overstrand, the chimneys of a house
showed above a thick tangle of fir-trees. Between the trees and the road rose a
wall, high, compact, forbidding. Carl opened the gate in the wall and pushed
his bicycle up a winding path hemmed in by bushes. At the sound of his feet on
the gravel the bushes new apart, and a man sprang into the walk and confronted
him. But, at sight of the head-waiter, the legs of the man became rigid, his
heels clicked together, his hand went sharply to his visor.
Behind the house,
surrounded on every side by trees, was a tiny lawn. In the centre of the lawn,
where once had been a tennis court, there now stood a slim mast. From this mast
dangled tiny wires that ran to a kitchen table. On the table, its brass work
shining in the sun, was a new and perfectly good wireless outfit, and beside
it, with his hand on the key, was a heavily built, heavily bearded German. In
his turn, Carl drew his legs together, his heels clicked, his hand stuck to his
visor.
``I have been in
constant communication,'' said the man with the beard. ``They will be here just
before the dawn. Return to Cromer vand openly from the post-office telegraph
your cousin in London: `Will meet you to-morrow at the Crystal Palace.' On
receipt of that, in the last edition of all of this afternoon's papers, he will
insert the final advertisement. Thirty thousand of our own people will read it.
They will know the moment has come!''
As Carl coasted back to
Cromer he flashed past many pretty gardens where, upon the lawns, men in
flannels were busy at tennis or, with pretty ladies, deeply occupied in
drinking tea. Carl smiled grimly. High above him on the sky-line of the cliff
he saw the three strangers he had served at luncheon. They were driving before
them three innocuous golf balls.
``A nation of
wasters,'' muttered the German, ``sleeping at their posts. They are fiddling
while England falls!''
Mr. Shutliffe, of
Stiffkey, had led his cow in from the marsh, and was about to close the
cow-barn door, when three soldiers appeared suddenly around the wall of the
village church. They ran directly toward him. It was nine o'clock, but the
twilight still held. The uniforms the men wore were unfamiliar, but in his day
Mr. Shutliffe had seen many uniforms, and to him all uniforms looked alike. The
tallest soldier snapped at Mr. Shutliffe fiercely in a strange tongue.
``Du bist gefangen!''
he announced. ``Das Dorf ist besetzt. Wo sind unsere Leute?'' he demanded.
``You'll 'ave to excuse
me, sir,'' said Mr. Shutliffe, ``but I am a trifle 'ard of 'earing.''
The soldier addressed
him in English.
``What is the name of
this village?'' he demanded.
Mr. Shuttiffe, having
lived in the village upward of eighty years, recalled its name with difficulty.
``Have you seen any of
our people?''
With another painful
effort of memory Mr. Shutliffe shook his head.
``Go indoors!''
commanded the soldier, ``and put out all lights, and remain indoors. We have
taken this village. We are Germans. You are a prisoner! Do you understand?''
``Yes, sir, thank'ee,
sir, kindly,'' stammered Mr. Shutliffe. ``May I lock in the pigs first, sir?''
One of the soldiers
coughed explosively, and ran away, and the two others trotted after him. When
they looked back, Mr. Shutliffe was still standing uncertainly in the dusk,
mildly concerned as to whether he should lock up the pigs or obey the German
gentleman.
The three soldiers
halted behind the church wall.
``That was a fine
start!'' mocked Herbert. ``Of course, you had to pick out the Village Idiot. If
they are all going to take it like that, we had better pack up and go home.''
``The village inn is
still open,'' said Ford. ``We'll close It.''
They entered with fixed
bayonets and dropped the butts of their rifles on the sanded floor. A man in
gaiters choked over his ale and two fishermen removed their clay pipes and
stared. The bar-maid alone arose to the occasion.
``Now, then,'' she
exclaimed briskly, ``what way is that to come tumbling into a respectable
place? None of your tea-garden tricks in here, young fellow, my lad, or----''
The tallest of the
three intruders, in deep guttural accents, interrupted her sharply.
``We are Germans!'' he
declared. ``This village is captured. You are prisoners of war. Those lights
you will out put, and yourselves lock in. If you into the street go, we will
shoot!''
He gave a command in a
strange language; so strange, indeed, that the soldiers with him failed to
entirely grasp his meaning, and one shouldered his rifle, while the other
brought his politely to a salute.
``You ass!'' muttered
the tall German. ``Get out!''
As they charged into
the street, they heard behind them a wild feminine shriek, then a crash of
pottery and glass, then silence, and an instant later the Ship Inn was buried
in darkness.
``That will hold
Stiffkey for a while!'' said Ford. ``Now, back to the car.''
But between them and
the car loomed suddenly a tall and impressive figure. His helmet and his
measured tread upon the deserted cobble-stones proclaimed his calling.
``The constable!''
whispered Herbert. ``He must see us, but he mustn't speak to us.''
For a moment the three
men showed themselves in the middle of the street, and then, as though at sight
of the policeman they had taken alarm, disappeared through an opening between
two houses. Five minutes later a motor-car, with its canvas top concealing its
occupants, rode slowly into Stiffkey's main street and halted before the
constable. The driver of the car wore a leather skull-cap and goggles. From his
neck to his heels he was covered by a raincoat.
``Mr. Policeman,'' he
began; ``when I turned in here three soldiers stepped in front of my car and
pointed rifles at me. Then they ran off toward the beach. What's the idea--manuvres?
Because, they've no right to----''
``Yes, sir,'' the
policeman assured him promptly; ``I saw them. It's manuvres, sir.
Territorials.''
``They didn't look like
Territorials,'' objected the chauffeur. ``They looked like Germans.''
Protected by the
deepening dusk, the constable made no effort to conceal a grin.
``Just Territorials,
sir,'' he protested soothingly; ``skylarking maybe, but meaning no harm. Still,
I'll have a look round, and warn 'em.''
A voice from beneath
the canvas broke in angrily:
``I tell you, they were
Germans. It's either a silly joke, or it's serious, and you ought to report it.
It's your duty to warn the Coast Guard.''
The constable
considered deeply.
``I wouldn't take it on
myself to wake the Coast Guard,'' he protested; ``not at this time of the
night. But if any Germans' been annoying you, gentlemen, and you wish to lodge
a complaint against them, you give me your cards----''
``Ye gods!'' cried the
man in the rear of the car. ``Go on!'' he commanded.
As the car sped out of
Stiffkey, Herbert exclaimed with disgust:
``What's the use!'' he
protested. ``You couldn't wake these people with dynamite! I vote we chuck it
and go home.''
``They little know of
England who only Stiffkey know,'' chanted the chauffeur reprovingly. ``Why, we
haven't begun yet. Wait till we meet a live wire!''
Two miles farther along
the road to Cromer, young Bradshaw, the job-master's son at Blakeney, was
leading his bicycle up the hill. Ahead of him something heavy flopped from the
bank into the road--and in the light of his acetylene lamp he saw a soldier.
The soldier dodged across the road and scrambled through the hedge on the bank
opposite. He was followed by another soldier, and then by a third. The last man
halted.
``Put out that light,''
he commanded. ``Go to your home and tell no one what you have seen. If you
attempt to give an alarm you will be shot. Our sentries are placed every fifty
yards along this road.''
The soldier disappeared
from in front of the ray of light and followed his comrades, and an instant
later young Bradshaw heard them sliding over the cliff's edge and the pebbles
clattering to the beach below. Young Bradshaw stood quite still. In his heart
was much fear--fear of laughter, of ridicule, of failure. But of no other kind
of fear. Softly, silently he turned his bicycle so that it faced down the long
hill he had just climbed. Then he snapped off the light. He had been reliably
informed that in ambush at every fifty yards along the road to Blakeney,
sentries were waiting to fire on him. And he proposed to run the gauntlet. He
saw that it was for this moment that, first as a volunteer and later as a
Territorial, he had drilled in the town hall, practiced on the rifle range, and
in mixed manuvres slept in six inches of mud. As he threw his leg across his
bicycle, Herbert, from the motor-car farther up the hill, fired two shots over
his head. These, he explained to Ford, were intended to give ``verisimilitude
to an otherwise bald and unconvincing narrative.'' And the sighing of the
bullets gave young Bradshaw exactly what he wanted--the assurance that he was
not the victim of a practical joke. He threw his weight forward and, lifting
his feet, coasted downhill at forty miles an hour into the main street of
Blakeney. Ten minutes later, when the car followed, a mob of men so completely
blocked the water-front that Ford was forced to stop. His head-lights
illuminated hundreds of faces, anxious, sceptical, eager. A gentleman with a
white mustache and a look of a retired army officer pushed his way toward Ford,
the crowd making room for him, and then closing in his wake.
``Have you seen any--any
soldiers?'' he demanded.
``German soldiers!''
Ford answered. ``They tried to catch us, but when I saw who they were, I ran
through them to warn you. They fired and----''
``How many--and
where?''
``A half-company at
Stiffkey and a half-mile farther on a regiment. We didn't know then they were
Germans, not until they stopped us. You'd better telephone the garrison,
and----''
``Thank you!'' snapped
the elderly gentleman. ``I happen to be in command of this district. What are
your names?''
Ford pushed the car
forward, parting the crowd.
``I've no time for
that!'' he called. ``We've got to warn every coast town in Norfolk. You take my
tip and get London on the long distance!''
As they ran through the
night Ford spoke over his shoulder.
``We've got them
guessing,'' he said. ``Now, what we want is a live wire, some one with
imagination, some one with authority who will wake the countryside.''
``Looks ahead there,''
said Birrell, ``as though it hadn't gone to bed.''
Before them, as on a
Mafeking night, every window in Cley shone with lights. In the main street were
fishermen, shopkeepers, ``trippers'' in flannels, summer residents. The women
had turned out as though to witness a display of fireworks. Girls were clinging
to the arms of their escorts, shivering in delighted terror. The proprietor of
the Red Lion sprang in front of the car and waved his arms.
``What's this tale
about Germans?'' he demanded jocularly.
``You can see their
lights from the beach,'' said Ford. ``They've landed two regiments between here
and Wells. Stiffkey is taken, and they've cut all the wires south.''
The proprietor refused
to be ``had.''
``Let 'em all come!''
he mocked.
``All right,'' returned
Ford. ``Let 'em come, but don't take it lying down! Get those women off the
streets, and go down to the beach, and drive the Germans back! Gangway,'' he
shouted, and the car shot forward. ``We warned you,'' he called, ``and it's up
to you to----''
His words were lost in
the distance. But behind him a man's voice rose with a roar like a rocket and
was met with a savage, deep-throated cheer.
Outside the village
Ford brought the car to a halt and swung in his seat.
``This thing is going
to fail!'' he cried petulantly. ``They don't believe us. We've got to show
ourselves--many times--in a dozen places.''
``The British mind
moves slowly,'' said Birrell, the Irishman. ``Now, if this had happened in my
native land----''
He was interrupted by
the screech of a siren, and a demon car that spurned the road, that splattered
them with pebbles, tore past and disappeared in the darkness. As it fled down
the lane of their head-lights, they saw that men in khaki clung to its sides,
were packed in its tonneau, were swaying from its running boards. Before they
could find their voices a motor cycle, driven as though the angel of death were
at the wheel, shaved their mud-guard and, in its turn, vanished into the night.
``Things are looking
up!'' said Ford. ``Where is our next stop? As I said before, what we want is a
live one.''
Herbert pressed his
electric torch against his road map.
``We are next billed to
appear,'' he said, ``about a quarter of a mile from here, at the signal-tower
of the Great Eastern Railroad, where we visit the night telegraph operator and
give him the surprise party of his life.''
The three men had
mounted the steps of the signal-tower so quietly that, when the operator heard
them, they already surrounded him. He saw three German soldiers with fierce
upturned mustaches, with flat, squat helmets, with long brown rifles. They saw
an anĉmic, pale-faced youth without a coat or collar, for the night was warm,
who sank back limply in his chair and gazed speechless with wide-bulging eyes.
In harsh, guttural
tones Ford addressed him. ``You are a prisoner,'' he said. ``We take over this
office in the name of the German Emperor. Get out!''
As though instinctively
seeking his only weapon of defence, the hand of the boy operator moved across
the table to the key of his instrument. Ford flung his rifle upon it.
``No, you don't!'' he
growled. ``Get out!''
With eyes still
bulging, the boy lifted himself into a sitting posture.
``My pay--my month's
pay?'' he stammered. ``Can I take It?''
The expression on the
face of the conqueror relaxed.
``Take it and get
out,'' Ford commanded.
With eyes still fixed
in fascinated terror upon the invader, the boy pulled open the drawer of the
table before him and fumbled with the papers inside.
``Quick!'' cried Ford.
The boy was very quick.
His hand leaped from the drawer like a snake, and Ford found himself looking
into a revolver of the largest calibre issued by a civilized people. Birrell
fell upon the boy's shoulders, Herbert twisted the gun from his fingers and
hurled it through the window, and almost as quickly hurled himself down the
steps of the tower. Birrell leaped after him. Ford remained only long enough to
shout: ``Don't touch that instrument! If you attempt to send a message through,
we will shoot. We go to cut the wires!''
For a minute, the boy
in the tower sat rigid, his ears strained, his heart beating in sharp,
suffocating stabs. Then, with his left arm raised to guard his face, he sank to
his knees and, leaning forward across the table, inviting as he believed his
death, he opened the circuit and through the night flashed out a warning to his
people.
When they had taken
their places in the car, Herbert touched Ford on the shoulder.
``Your last remark,''
he said, ``was that what we wanted was a live one.''
``Don't mention it!''
said Ford. ``He jammed that gun half down my throat. I can taste it still.
Where do we go from here?''
``According to the
route we mapped out this afternoon,'' said Herbert, ``we are now scheduled to
give exhibitions at the coast towns of Salthouse and Weybourne, but----''
``Not with me!''
exclaimed Birrell fiercely. ``Those towns have been tipped off by now by
Blakeney and Cley, and the Boy Scouts would club us to death. I vote we take
the back roads to Morston, and drop in on a lonely Coast Guard. If a Coast
Guard sees us, the authorities will have to believe him, and they'll call out
the navy.''
Herbert consulted his
map.
``There is a Coast
Guard,'' he said, ``stationed just the other side of Morston. And,'' he added
fervently, ``let us hope he's lonely.''
They lost their way in
the back roads, and when they again reached the coast an hour had passed. It
was now quite dark. There were no stars, nor moon, but after they had left the
car in a side lane and had stepped out upon the cliff, they saw for miles along
the coast great beacon fires burning fiercely.
Herbert came to an
abrupt halt.
``Since seeing those
fires,'' he explained, ``I feel a strange reluctance about showing myself in
this uniform to a Coast Guard.''
``Coast Guards don't
shoot!'' mocked Birrell. ``They only look at the clouds through a telescope.
Three Germans with rifles ought to be able to frighten one Coast Guard with a
telescope.''
The whitewashed cabin
of the Coast Guard was perched on the edge of the cliff. Behind it the downs
ran back to meet the road. The door of the cabin was open and from it a shaft
of light cut across a tiny garden and showed the white fence and the walk of
shells. v
``We must pass in
single file in front of that light,'' whispered Ford, ``and then, after we are
sure he has seen us, we must run like the devil!''
``I'm on in that last
scene,'' growled Herbert.
``Only,'' repeated Ford
with emphasis, ``we must be sure he has seen us.''
Not twenty feet from
them came a bursting roar, a flash, many roars, many flashes, many bullets.
``He's seen us!''
yelled Birrell.
After the light from
his open door had shown him one German soldier fully armed, the Coast Guard had
seen nothing further. But judging from the shrieks of terror and the sounds of
falling bodies that followed his first shot, he was convinced he was hemmed in
by an army, and he proceeded to sell his life dearly. Clip after clip of
cartridges he emptied into the night, now to the front, now to the rear, now
out to sea, now at his own shadow in the lamp-light. To the people a quarter of
a mile away at Morston it sounded like a battle.
After running half a
mile, Ford, bruised and breathless, fell at full length on the grass beside the
car. Near it, tearing from his person the last vestiges of a German uniform, he
found Birrell. He also was puffing painfully.
``What happened to
Herbert?'' panted Ford.
``I don't know,''
gasped Birrell, ``When I saw him last he was diving over the cliff into the
sea. How many times did you die?''
``About twenty!''
groaned the American, ``and, besides being dead, I am severely wounded. Every
time he fired, I fell on my face, and each time I hit a rock!''
A scarecrow of a figure
appeared suddenly in the rays of the head-lights. It was Herbert, scratched,
bleeding, dripping with water, and clad simply in a shirt and trousers. He
dragged out his kit bag and fell into his golf clothes.
``Anybody who wants a
perfectly good German uniform,'' he cried, ``can have mine. I left it in the
first row of breakers. It didn't fit me, anyway.''
The other two uniforms
were hidden in the seat of the car. The rifles and helmets, to lend color to
the invasion, were dropped in the open road, and five minutes later three
gentlemen in inconspicuous Harris tweeds, and with golf clubs protruding from
every part of their car, turned into the shore road to Cromer. What they saw
brought swift terror to their guilty souls and the car to an abrupt halt.
Before them was a regiment of regulars advancing in column of fours, at the
``double.'' An officer sprang to the front of the car and seated himself beside
Ford.
``I'll have to
commandeer this,'' he said. ``Run back to Cromer. Don't crush my men, but go
like the devil!''
``We heard firing
here,'' explained the officer ``at the Coast Guard station. The Guard drove
them back to the sea. He counted over a dozen. They made pretty poor practice,
for he isn't wounded, but his gravel walk looks as though some one had drawn a
harrow over it. I wonder,'' exclaimed the officer suddenly, ``if you are the
three gentlemen who first gave the alarm to Colonel Raglan and then went on to
warn the other coast towns. Because, if you are, he wants your names.''
Ford considered
rapidly. If he gave false names and that fact were discovered, they would be
suspected and investigated, and the worst might happen. So he replied that his
friends and himself probably were the men to whom the officer referred. He
explained they had been returning from Cromer, where they had gone to play
golf, when they had been held up by the Germans.
``You were lucky to
escape,'' said the officer ``And in keeping on to give warning you were taking
chances. If I may say so, we think you behaved extremely well.''
Ford could not answer.
His guilty conscience shamed him into silence. With his siren shrieking and his
horn tooting, he was forcing the car through lanes of armed men. They packed
each side of the road. They were banked behind the hedges. Their camp-fires
blazed from every hill-top.
``Your regiment seems
to have turned out to a man!'' exclaimed Ford admiringly.
``My regiment!''
snorted the officer. ``You've passed through five regiments already, and there
are as many more in the dark places. They're everywhere!'' he cried jubilantly.
``And I thought they
were only where you see the camp-fires,'' exclaimed Ford.
``That's what the
Germans think,'' said the officer. ``It's working like a clock,'' he cried
happily. ``There hasn't been a hitch. As soon as they got your warning to
Colonel Raglan, they came down to the coast like a wave, on foot, by trains, by
motors, and at nine o'clock the Government took over all the railroads. The
county regiments, regulars, yeomanry, territorials, have been spread along this
shore for thirty miles. Down in London the Guards started to Dover and Brighton
two hours ago. The Automobile Club in the first hour collected two hundred cars
and turned them over to the Guards in Bird Cage Walk. Cody and Grahame-White
and eight of his air men left Hendon an hour ago to reconnoitre the south
coast. Admiral Beatty has started with the Channel Squadron to head off the
German convoy in the North Sea, and the torpedo destroyers have been sent to
lie outside of Heligoland. We'll get that back by daylight. And on land every
one of the three services is under arms. On this coast alone before sunrise
we'll have one hundred thousand men, and from Colchester the brigade division
of artillery, from Ipswich the R. H. A.'s with siege-guns, field-guns,
quick-firing-guns, all kinds of guns spread out over every foot of ground from
here to Hunstanton. They thought they'd give us a surprise party. They will
never give us another surprise party!''
On the top of the hill
at Overstrand, the headwaiter of the East Cliff Hotel and the bearded German
stood in the garden back of the house with the forbidding walls. From the road
in front came unceasingly the tramp and shuffle of thousands of marching feet,
the rumble of heavy cannon, the clanking of their chains, the voices of men
trained to command raised in sharp, confident orders. The sky was illuminated
by countless fires. Every window of every cottage and hotel blazed with lights.
The night had been turned into day. The eyes of the two Germans were like the
eyes of those who had passed through an earthquake, of those who looked upon
the burning of San Francisco, upon the destruction of Messina.
``We were betrayed,
general,'' whispered the head-waiter.
``We were betrayed,
baron,'' replied the bearded one.
``But you were in time
to warn the flotilla.''
With a sigh, the older
man nodded.
``The last message I
received over the wireless,'' he said, ``before I destroyed it, read, `Your
message understood. We are returning. Our movements will be explained as manuvres.'
And,'' added the general, ``the English, having driven us back, will be willing
to officially accept that explanation. As manuvres, this night will go down
into history. Return to the hotel,'' he commanded, ``and in two months you can
rejoin your regiment.''
On the morning after
the invasion the New York Republic published a map of Great Britain that
covered three columns and a wood-cut of Ford that was spread over five. Beneath
it was printed: ``Lester Ford, our London correspondent, captured by the
Germans; he escapes and is the first to warn the English people.''
On the same morning, In
an editorial in The Times of London, appeared this paragraph:
``The Germans were
first seen by the Hon. Arthur Herbert, the eldest son of Lord Cinaris; Mr.
Patrick Headford Birrell--both of Balliol College, Oxford; and Mr. Lester Ford,
the correspondent of the New York Republic. These gentlemen escaped from the
landing party that tried to make them prisoners, and at great risk proceeded in
their motor-car over roads infested by the Germans to all the coast towns of
Norfolk, warning the authorities. Should the war office fail to recognize their
services, the people of Great Britain will prove that they are not
ungrateful.''
A week later three
young men sat at dinner on the terrace of the Savoy.
``Shall we, or shall we
not,'' asked Herbert, ``tell my uncle that we three, and we three alone, were
the invaders?''
``That's hardly
correct,'' said Ford, ``as we now know there were two hundred thousand
invaders. We were the only three who got ashore.''
``I vote we don't tell
him,'' said Birrell. ``Let him think with everybody else that the Germans blundered;
that an advance party landed too soon and gave the show away. If we talk,'' he
argued, ``we'll get credit for a successful hoax. If we keep quiet, everybody
will continue to think we saved England. I'm content to let it go at that.''
DAVID GREENE was an
employee of the Burdett Automatic Punch Company. The manufacturing plant of the
company was at Bridgeport, but in the New York offices there were working
samples of all the punches, from the little nickel-plated hand punch with which
conductors squeezed holes in railroad tickets, to the big punch that could bite
into an iron plate as easily as into a piece of pie. David's duty was to
explain these different punches, and accordingly when Burdett Senior or one of
the sons turned a customer over to David he spoke of him as a salesman. But
David called himself a ``demonstrator.'' For a short time he even succeeded in
persuading the other salesmen to speak of themselves as demonstrators, but the
shipping clerks and bookkeepers laughed them out of it. They could not laugh
David out of it. This was so, partly because he had no sense of humor, and
partly because he had a great-great-grandfather. Among the salesmen on lower
Broadway, to possess a great-great-grandfather is unusual, even a great-grandfather
is a rarity, and either is considered superfluous. But to David the possession
of a great-great-grandfather was a precious and open delight. He had possessed
him only for a short time. Undoubtedly he always had existed, but it was not
until David's sister Anne married a doctor in Bordentown, New Jersey, and
became socially ambitious, that David emerged as a Son of Washington.
It was sister Anne,
anxious to ``get in'' as a ``Daughter'' and wear a distaff pin in her
shirtwaist, who discovered the revolutionary ancestor. She unearthed him, or
rather ran him to earth, in the graveyard of the Presbyterian church at
Bordentown. He was no less a person than General Hiram Greene, and he had
fought with Washington at Trenton and at Princeton. Of this there was no doubt.
That, later, on moving to New York, his descendants became peace-loving
salesmen did not affect his record. To enter a society founded on heredity, the
important thing is first to catch your ancestor, and having made sure of him,
David entered the Society of the Sons of Washington with flying colors. He was
not unlike the man who had been speaking prose for forty years without knowing
it. He was not unlike the other man who woke to find himself famous. He had
gone to bed a timid, near-sighted, underpaid salesman without a relative in the
world, except a married sister in Bordentown, and he awoke to find he was a
direct descendant of ``Neck or Nothing'' Greene, a revolutionary hero, a friend
of Washington, a man whose portrait hung in the State House at Trenton. David's
life had lacked color. The day he carried his certificate of membership to the
big jewelry store uptown and purchased two rosettes, one for each of his two
coats, was the proudest of his life.
The other men in the
Broadway office took a different view. As Wyckoff, one of Burdett's flying
squadron of travelling salesmen, said, ``All grandfathers look alike to me,
whether they're great, or great-great-great. Each one is as dead as the other.
I'd rather have a live cousin who could loan me a five, or slip me a drink.
What did your great-great dad ever do for you?''
``Well, for one
thing,'' said David stiffly, ``he fought in the War of the Revolution. He saved
us from the shackles of monarchical England; he made it possible for me and you
to enjoy the liberties of a free republic.''
``Don't try to tell me
your grandfather did all that,'' protested Wyckoff, ``because I know better.
There were a lot of others helped. I read about it in a book.''
``I am not grudging
glory to others,'' returned David; ``I am only saying I am proud that I am a
descendant of a revolutionist.''
Wyckoff dived into his
inner pocket and produced a leather photograph frame that folded like a
concertina.
``I don't want to be a
descendant,'' he said; ``I'd rather be an ancestor. Look at those.'' Proudly he
exhibited photographs of Mrs. Wyckoff with the baby and of three other little
Wyckoffs. David looked with envy at the children.
``When I'm married,''
he stammered, and at the words he blushed, ``I hope to be an ancestor.''
``If you're thinking of
getting married,'' said Wyckoff, ``you'd better hope for a raise in salary.''
The other clerks were
as unsympathetic as Wyckoff. At first when David showed them his parchment
certificate, and his silver gilt insignia with on one side a portrait of
Washington, and on the other a Continental soldier, they admitted it was dead
swell. They even envied him, not the grandfather, but the fact that owing to
that distinguished relative David was constantly receiving beautifully engraved
invitations to attend the monthly meetings of the society; to subscribe to a
fund to erect monuments on battle-fields to mark neglected graves; to join in
joyous excursions to the tomb of Washington or of John Paul Jones; to inspect
West Point, Annapolis, and Bunker Hill; to be among those present at the annual
``banquet'' at Delmonico's. In order that when he opened these letters he might
have an audience, he had given the society his office address.
In these communications
he was always addressed as ``Dear Compatriot,'' and never did the words fall to
give him a thrill. They seemed to lift him out of Burdett's salesrooms and
Broadway, and place him next to things uncommercial, untainted, high, and
noble. He did not quite know what an aristocrat was, but be believed being a
compatriot made him an aristocrat. When customers were rude, when Mr. John or
Mr. Robert was overbearing, this idea enabled David to rise above their
Ill-temper, and he would smile and say to himself: ``If they knew the meaning
of the blue rosette in my button-hole, how differently they would treat me! How
easily with a word could I crush them!''
But few of the
customers recognized the significance of the button. They thought it meant that
David belonged to the Y. M. C. A. or was a teetotaler. David, with his gentle
manners and pale, ascetic face, was liable to give that impression.
When Wyckoff mentioned
marriage, the reason David blushed was because, although no one in the office
suspected it, he wished to marry the person in whom the office took the
greatest pride. This was Miss Emily Anthony, one of Burdett and Sons' youngest,
most efficient, and prettiest stenographers, and although David did not cut as
dashing a figure as did some of the firm's travelling men, Miss Anthony had
found something in him so greatly to admire that she had, out of office hours,
accepted his devotion, his theatre tickets, and an engagement ring. Indeed, so
far had matters progressed, that it had been almost decided when in a few
months they would go upon their vacations they also would go upon their
honeymoon. And then a cloud had come between them, and from a quarter from
which David had expected only sunshine.
The trouble befell when
David discovered he had a great-great-grandfather. With that fact itself Miss
Anthony was almost as pleased as was David himself, but while he was content to
bask in another's glory, Miss Anthony saw in his inheritance only an incentive
to achieve glory for himself.
From a hard-working
salesman she had asked but little, but from a descendant of a national hero she
expected other things. She was a determined young person, and for David she was
an ambitious young person. She found she was dissatisfied. She found she was
disappointed. The great-great-grandfather had opened up a new horizon--had, in
a way, raised the standard. She was as fond of David as always, but his tales of
past wars and battles, his accounts of present banquets at which he sat
shoulder to shoulder with men of whom even Burdett and Sons spoke with awe,
touched her imagination.
``You shouldn't be
content to just wear a button,'' she urged. ``If you're a Son of Washington,
you ought to act like one.''
``I know I'm not worthy
of you,'' David sighed.
``I don't mean that,
and you know I don't,'' Emily replied indignantly. ``It has nothing to do with
me! I want you to be worthy of yourself, of your grandpa Hiram!''
``But how?'' complained
David. ``What chance has a twenty-five dollar a week clerk----''
It was a year before
the Spanish-American War, while the patriots of Cuba were fighting the mother
country for their independence.
``If I were a Son of the
Revolution,'' said Emily, ``I'd go to Cuba and help free it.''
``Don't talk
nonsense,'' cried David. ``If I did that I'd lose my job, and we'd never be
able to marry. Besides, what's Cuba done for me? All I know about Cuba is, I
once smoked a Cuban cigar and it made me ill.''
``Did Lafayette talk
like that?'' demanded Emily. ``Did he ask what have the American rebels ever
done for me?''
``If I were in
Lafayette's class,'' sighed David, ``I wouldn't be selling automatic punches.''
``There's your trouble,''
declared Emily ``You lack self-confidence. You're too humble, you've got
fighting blood and you ought to keep saying to yourself, `Blood will tell,' and
the first thing you know, it will tell! You might begin by going into politics
in your ward. Or, you could join the militia. That takes only one night a week,
and then, if we did go to war with Spain, you'd get a commission, and come back
a captain!''
Emily's eyes were
beautiful with delight. But the sight gave David no pleasure. In genuine distress,
he shook his head.
``Emily,'' he said,
``you're going to be awfully disappointed in me.''
Emily's eyes closed as
though they shied at some mental picture. But when she opened them they were
bright, and her smile was kind and eager.
``No, I'm not,'' she
protested; ``only I want a husband with a career, and one who'll tell me to
keep quiet when I try to run it for him.''
``I've often wished you
would,'' said David.
``Would what? Run your
career for you?''
``No, keep quiet. Only
it didn't seem polite to tell you so.''
``Maybe I'd like you
better,'' said Emily, ``if you weren't so darned polite.''
A week later, early in
the spring of 1897, the unexpected happened, and David was promoted into the
flying squadron. He now was a travelling salesman, with a rise in salary and a
commission on orders. It was a step forward, but as going on the road meant
absence from Emily, David was not elated. Nor did it satisfy Emily. It was not
money she wanted. Her ambition for David could not be silenced with a raise in
wages. She did not say this, but David knew that in him she still found
something lacking, and when they said good-by they both were ill at ease and
completely unhappy. Formerly, each day when Emily in passing David in the
office said good-morning, she used to add the number of the days that still
separated them from the vacation which also was to be their honeymoon. But, for
the last month she had stopped counting the days --at least she did not count
them aloud.
David did not ask her
why this was so. He did not dare. And, sooner than learn the truth that she had
decided not to marry him, or that she was even considering not marrying him, he
asked no questions, but in ignorance of her present feelings set forth on his
travels. Absence from Emily hurt just as much as he had feared it would. He
missed her, needed her, longed for her. In numerous letters he told her so.
But, owing to the frequency with which he moved, her letters never caught up
with him. It was almost a relief. He did not care to think of what they might
tell him.
The route assigned
David took him through the South and kept him close to the Atlantic seaboard.
In obtaining orders he was not unsuccessful, and at the end of the first month
received from the firm a telegram of congratulation. This was of importance
chiefly because it might please Emily. But he knew that in her eyes the
great-great-grandson of Hiram Greene could not rest content with a telegram
from Burdett and Sons. A year before she would have considered it a high honor,
a cause for celebration. Now, he could see her press her pretty lips together
and shake her pretty head. It was not enough. But how could he accomplish more.
He began to hate his great-great-grandfather. He began to wish Hiram Greene had
lived and died a bachelor.
And then Dame Fortune
took David in hand and toyed with him and spanked him, and pelted and petted
him, until finally she made him her favorite son. Dame Fortune went about this
work in an abrupt and arbitrary manner.
On the night of the 1st
of March, 1897, two trains were scheduled to leave the Union Station at
Jacksonville at exactly the same minute, and they left exactly on time. As
never before in the history of any Southern railroad has this miracle occurred,
it shows that when Dame Fortune gets on the job she is omnipotent. She placed
David on the train to Miami as the train he wanted drew out for Tampa, and an
hour later, when the conductor looked at David's ticket, he pulled the
bell-cord and dumped David over the side into the heart of a pine forest. If he
walked back along the track for one mile, the conductor reassured him, he would
find a flag station where at midnight he could flag a train going north. In an
hour it would deliver him safely in Jacksonville.
There was a moon, but
for the greater part of the time it was hidden by fitful, hurrying clouds, and,
as David stumbled forward, at one moment he would see the rails like streaks of
silver, and the next would be encompassed in a complete and bewildering
darkness. He made his way from tie to tie only by feeling with his foot. After
an hour he came to a shed. Whether it was or was not the flag station the
conductor had in mind, he did not know, and he never did know. He was too
tired, too hot, and too disgusted to proceed, and dropping his suit case he sat
down under the open roof of the shed prepared to wait either for the train or
daylight. So far as he could see, on every side of him stretched a swamp,
silent, dismal, interminable. From its black water rose dead trees, naked of
bark and hung with streamers of funereal moss. There was not a sound or sign of
human habitation. The silence was the silence of the ocean at night David
remembered the berth reserved for him on the train to Tampa and of the loathing
with which he had considered placing himself between its sheets. But now how
gladly would he welcome it! For, in the sleeping-car, ill-smelling, close, and
stuffy, he at least would have been surrounded by fellow-sufferers of his own
species. Here his companions were owls, water-snakes, and sleeping buzzards.
I am alone,'' he told
himself, ``on a railroad embankment, entirely surrounded by alligators.''
And then he found he
was not alone.
In the darkness,
illuminated by a match, not a hundred yards from him there flashed suddenly the
face of a man. Then the match went out and the face with it. David noted that
it had appeared at some height above the level of the swamp, at an elevation
higher even than that of the embankment. It was as though the man had been
sitting on the limb of a tree. David crossed the tracks and found that on the
side of the embankment opposite the shed there was solid ground and what once
had been a wharf. He advanced over this cautiously, and as he did so the clouds
disappeared, and in the full light of the moon he saw a bayou broadening into a
river, and made fast to the decayed and rotting wharf an ocean-going tug. It
was from her deck that the man, in lighting his pipe, had shown his face. At
the thought of a warm engine-room and the company of his fellow creatures,
David's heart leaped with pleasure. He advanced quickly. And then something in
the appearance of the tug, something mysterious, secretive, threatening, caused
him to halt. No lights showed from her engine-room, cabin, or pilot-house. Her
decks were empty. But, as was evidenced by the black smoke that rose from her
funnel, she was awake and awake to some purpose. David stood uncertainly,
questioning whether to make his presence known or return to the loneliness of
the shed. The question was decided for him. He had not considered that standing
in the moonlight he was a conspicuous figure. The planks of the wharf creaked
and a man came toward him. As one who means to attack, or who fears attack, he approached
warily. He wore high boots, riding breeches, and a sombrero. He was a little
man, but his movements were alert and active. To David he seemed unnecessarily
excited. He thrust himself close against David.
``Who the devil are
you?'' demanded the man from the tug. ``How'd you get here?''
``I walked,'' said
David.
``Walked?'' the man
snorted incredulously.
``I took the wrong
train,'' explained David pleasantly. ``They put me off about a mile below here.
I walked back to this flag station. I'm going to wait here for the next train
north.''
The little man laughed
mockingly.
``Oh, no you're not,''
he said. ``If you walked here, you can just walk away again!'' With a sweep of
his arm, he made a vigorous and peremptory gesture.
``You walk!'' he
commanded.
``I'll do just as I
please about that,'' said David.
As though to bring
assistance, the little man started hastily toward the tug.
``I'll find some one
who'll make you walk!'' he called. ``You wait, that's all, you wait!''
David decided not to
wait. It was possible the wharf was private property and he had been
trespassing. In any case, at the flag station the rights of all men were equal,
and if he were in for a fight he judged it best to choose his own
battle-ground. He recrossed the tracks and sat down on his suit case in a dark
corner of the shed. Himself hidden in the shadows he could see in the moonlight
the approach of any other person.
``They're river
pirates,'' said David to himself, ``or smugglers. They're certainly up to some
mischief, or why should they object to the presence of a perfectly harmless
stranger?''
Partly with cold,
partly with nervousness, David shivered.
``I wish that train
would come,'' he sighed. And instantly? as though in answer to his wish, from
only a short distance down the track he heard the rumble and creak of
approaching cars. In a flash David planned his course of action.
The thought of spending
the night in a swamp infested by alligators and smugglers had become
intolerable. He must escape, and he must escape by the train now approaching.
To that end the train must be stopped. His plan was simple. The train was
moving very, very slowly, and though he had no lantern to wave, in order to
bring it to a halt he need only stand on the track exposed to the glare of the
headlight and wave his arms. David sprang between the rails and gesticulated
wildly. But in amazement his arms fell to his sides. For the train, now only a
hundred yards distant and creeping toward him at a snail's pace, carried no head-light,
and though in the moonlight David was plainly visible, it blew no whistle,
tolled no bell. Even the passenger coaches in the rear of the sightless engine
were wrapped in darkness. It was a ghost of a train, a Flying Dutchman of a
train, a nightmare of a train. It was as unreal as the black swamp, as the moss
on the dead trees, as the ghostly tug-boat tied to the rotting wharf.
``Is the place
haunted!'' exclaimed David.
He was answered by the
grinding of brakes and by the train coming to a sharp halt. And instantly from
every side men fell from it to the ground, and the silence of the night was
broken by a confusion of calls and eager greeting and questions and sharp words
of command.
So fascinated was David
in the stealthy arrival of the train and in her mysterious passengers that,
until they confronted him, he did not note the equally stealthy approach of
three men. Of these one was the little man from the tug With him was a fat,
red-faced Irish-American He wore no coat and his shirt-sleeves were drawn away
from his hands by garters of pink elastic, his derby hat was balanced behind
his ears, upon his right hand flashed an enormous diamond. He looked as though
but at that moment he had stopped sliding glasses across a Bowery bar. The
third man carried the outward marks vof a sailor. David believed he was the
tallest man he had ever beheld, but equally remarkable with his height was his
beard and hair, which were of a fierce brick-dust red. Even in the mild
moonlight it flamed like a torch.
``What's your
business?'' demanded the man with the flamboyant hair.
``I came here,'' began
David, ``to wait for a train----''
The tall man bellowed
with indignant rage.
``Yes,'' he shouted;
``this is the sort of place any one would pick out to wait for a train!''
In front of David's
nose he shook a fist as large as a catcher's glove. ``Don't you lie to me!'' he
bullied. ``Do you know who I am? Do you know who you're up against? I'm----''
The barkeeper person
interrupted.
``Never mind who you
are,'' he said. ``We know that. Find out who he is.''
David turned
appealingly to the barkeeper.
``Do you suppose I'd
come here on purpose?'' vhe protested. ``I'm a travelling man----''
``You won't travel any
to-night,'' mocked the red-haired one. ``You've seen what you came to see, and
all you want now is to get to a Western Union wire. Well, you don't do it. You
don't leave here to-night!''
As though he thought he
had been neglected, the little man in riding-boots pushed forward importantly.
``Tie him to a tree!''
he suggested.
``Better take him on
board,'' said the barkeeper, ``and send him back by the pilot. When we're once
at sea, he can't hurt us any.''
``What makes you think
I want to hurt you?'' demanded David. ``Who do you think I am?''
``We know who you
are,'' shouted the fiery-headed one. ``You're a blanketty-blank spy! You're a
government spy or a Spanish spy, and whichever you are you don't get away
to-night!''
David had not the
faintest idea what the man meant, but he knew his self-respect was being
ill-treated, and his self-respect rebelled.
``You have made a very
serious mistake,'' he said, ``and whether you like it or not, I am leaving here
to-night, and you can go to the devil!''
Turning his back David
started with great dignity to walk away. It was a short walk. Something hit him
below the ear and he found himself curling up comfortably on the ties. He had a
strong desire to sleep, but was conscious that a bed on a railroad track, on
account of trains wanting to pass, was unsafe. This doubt did not long disturb
him. His head rolled against the steel rail, his limbs relaxed. From a great
distance, and in a strange sing-song he heard the voice of the barkeeper
saying, ``Nine --ten--and out!''
When David came to his
senses his head was resting on a coil of rope. In his ears was the steady throb
of an engine, and in his eyes the glare of a lantern. The lantern was held by a
pleasant-faced youth in a golf cap who was smiling sympathetically. David rose
on his elbow and gazed wildly about him. He was in the bow of the ocean-going
tug, and he saw that from where he lay in the bow to her stern her decks were
packed with men. She was steaming swiftly down a broad river. On either side
the gray light that comes before the dawn showed low banks studded with stunted
palmettos. Close ahead David heard the roar of the surf.
``Sorry to disturb
you,'' said the youth in the golf cap, ``but we drop the pilot in a few minutes
and you're going with him.''
David moved his aching
head gingerly, and was conscious of a bump as large as a tennis ball behind his
right ear.
``What happened to
me?'' he demanded.
``You were sort of
kidnapped, I guess,'' laughed the young man. ``It was a raw deal, but they
couldn't take any chances. The pilot will land you at Okra Point. You can hire
a rig there to take you to the railroad.''
``But why?'' demanded
David indignantly. ``Why was I kidnapped? What had I done? vWho were those men
who----''
From the pilot-house
there was a sharp jangle of bells to the engine-room, and the speed of the tug
slackened.
``Come on,'' commanded
the young man briskly. ``The pilot's going ashore. Here's your grip, here's
your hat. The ladder's on the port side. Look where you're stepping. We can't
show any lights, and it's dark as----''
But, even as he spoke,
like a flash of powder, as swiftly as one throws an electric switch, as
blindingly as a train leaps from the tunnel into the glaring sun, the darkness
vanished and the tug was swept by the fierce, blatant radiance of a
search-light.
It was met by shrieks
from two hundred throats, by screams, oaths, prayers, by the sharp jangling of
bells, by the blind rush of many men scurrying like rats for a hole to hide in,
by the ringing orders of one man. Above the tumult this one voice rose like the
warning strokes of a fire-gong, and looking up to the pilot-house from whence
the voice came, David saw the barkeeper still in his shirt-sleeves and with his
derby hat pushed back behind his ears, with one hand clutching the telegraph to
the engine-room, with the other holding the spoke of the wheel.
David felt the tug,
like a hunter taking a fence, rise in a great leap. Her bow sank and rose,
tossing the water from her in black, oily waves, the smoke poured from her
funnel, from below her engines sobbed and quivered, and like a hound freed from
a leash she raced for the open sea. But swiftly as she fled, as a thief is held
in the circle of a policeman's bull's-eye, the shaft of light followed and
exposed her and held her in its grip. The youth in the golf cap was clutching
David by the arm. With his free hand he pointed down the shaft of light. So
great was the tumult that to be heard he brought his lips close to David's ear.
``That's the revenue
cutter!'' he shouted. ``She's been laying for us for three weeks, and now,'' he
shrieked exultingly, ``the old man's going to give her a race for it.''
From excitement, from
cold, from alarm, David's nerves were getting beyond his control.
``But how,'' he
demanded, ``how do I get ashore?''
``You don't!''
``When he drops the
pilot, don't I----''
``How can he drop the
pilot?'' yelled the youth. ``The pilot's got to stick by the boat. So have
you.''
David clutched the
young man and swung him so that they stood face to face.
``Stick by what boat?''
yelled David. ``Who are these men? Who are you? What boat is this?''
In the glare of the
search-light David saw the eyes of the youth staring at him as though he feared
he were in the clutch of a madman. Wrenching himself free, the youth pointed at
the pilot-house. Above it on a blue board in letters of gold-leaf a foot high
was the name of the tug. As David read it his breath left him, a finger of ice
passed slowly down his spine. The name he read was The Three Friends.
``The Three Friends!''
shrieked David. ``She's a filibuster! She's a pirate! Where're we going?
``To Cuba!''
David emitted a howl of
anguish, rage, and protest.
``What for?'' he
shrieked.
The young man regarded
him coldly.
``To pick bananas,'' he
said.
``I won't go to Cuba,''
shouted David. ``I've got to work! I'm paid to sell machinery. I demand to be
put ashore. I'll lose my job if I'm not put ashore. I'll sue you! I'll have the
law----''
David found himself
suddenly upon his knees. His first thought was that the ship had struck a rock,
and then that she was bumping herself over a succession of coral reefs. She
dipped, dived, reared, and plunged. Like a hooked fish, she flung herself in
the air, quivering from bow to stern. No longer was David of a mind to sue the
filibusters if they did not put him ashore. If only they had put him ashore, in
gratitude he would have crawled on his knees. What followed was of no interest
to David, nor to many of the filibusters, nor to any of the Cuban patriots.
Their groans of self-pity, their prayers and curses in eloquent Spanish, rose
high above the crash of broken crockery and the pounding of the waves. Even
when the search-light gave way to a brilliant sunlight the circumstance was
unobserved by David. Nor was he concerned in the tidings brought forward by the
youth in the golf cap, who raced the slippery decks and vaulted the prostrate
forms as sure-footedly as a hurdler on a cinder track. To David, in whom he
seemed to think he had found a congenial spirit, he shouted Joyfully, ``She's
fired two blanks at us!'' he cried; ``now she's firing cannon-balls!''
``Thank God,''
whispered David; ``perhaps she'll sink us!
But The Three Friends
showed her heels to the revenue cutter, and so far as David knew hours passed into
days and days into weeks. It was like those nightmares in which in a minute one
is whirled through centuries of fear and torment. Sometimes, regardless of
nausea, of his aching head, of the hard deck, of the waves that splashed and
smothered him, David fell into broken slumber. Sometimes he woke to a dull
consciousness of his position. At such moments he added to his misery by
speculating upon the other misfortunes that might have befallen him on shore.
Emily, he decided, had given him up for lost and married--probably a navy
officer in command of a battle-ship. Burdett and Sons had cast him off forever.
Possibly his disappearance had caused them to suspect him; even now they might
be regarding him as a defaulter, as a fugitive from justice. His accounts, no
doubt, were being carefully overhauled. In actual time, two days and two nights
had passed; to David it seemed many ages.
On the third day he
crawled to the stern, where there seemed less motion, and finding a boat's
cushion threw it in the lee scupper and fell upon it. From time to time the
youth in the golf cap had brought him food and drink, and he now appeared from
the cook's galley bearing a bowl of smoking soup.
David considered it a
doubtful attention.
But he said, ``You're
very kind. How did a fellow like you come to mix up with these pirates?''
The youth laughed
good-naturedly.
``They're not pirates,
they're patriots,'' he said, ``and I'm not mixed up with them. My name is Henry
Carr and I'm a guest of Jimmy Doyle, the captain.''
``The barkeeper with
the derby hat?'' said David.
``He's not a barkeeper,
he's a teetotaler,'' Carr corrected, ``and he's the greatest filibuster alive.
He knows these waters as you know Broadway, and he's the salt of the earth. I
did him a favor once; sort of mouse-helping-the-lion idea. Just through dumb
luck I found out about this expedition. The government agents in New York found
out I'd found out and sent for me to tell. But I didn't, and I didn't write the
story either. Doyle heard about that. So, he asked me to come as his guest, and
he's promised that after he's landed the expedition and the arms I can write as
much about it as I darn please.''
``Then you're a
reporter?'' said David.
``I'm what we call a
cub reporter,'' laughed Carr. ``You see, I've always dreamed of being a war
correspondent. The men in the office say I dream too much. They're always
guying me about it. But, haven't you noticed, it's the ones who dream who find
their dreams come true. Now this isn't real war, but it's a near war, and when
the real thing breaks loose, I can tell the managing editor I served as a war
correspondent in the Cuban-Spanish campaign. And he may give me a real job!''
``And you like this?''
groaned David.
``I wouldn't, if I were
as sick as you are,'' said Carr, ``but I've a stomach like a Harlem goat.'' He
stooped and lowered his voice. ``Now, here are two fake filibusters,'' he
whispered. ``The men you read about in the newspapers. If a man's a real
filibuster, nobody knows it!''
Coming toward them was
the tall man who had knocked David out, and the little one who had wanted to
tie him to a tree.
``All they ask,''
whispered Carr, ``is money and advertisement. If they knew I was a reporter,
they'd eat out of my hand. The tall man calls himself Lighthouse Harry. He once
kept a light-house on the Florida coast, and that's as near to the sea as he
ever got. The other one is a dare-devil calling himself Colonel Beamish. He
says he's an English officer, and a soldier of fortune, and that he's been in
eighteen battles. Jimmy says he's never been near enough to a battle to see the
red-cross flags on the base hospital. But they've fooled these Cubans. The
Junta thinks they're great fighters, and it's sent them down here to work the
machine guns. But I'm afraid the only fighting they will do will be in the
sporting columns, and not in the ring.''
A half dozen sea-sick
Cubans were carrying a heavy, oblong box. They dropped it not two yards from
where David lay, and with a screwdriver Lighthouse Harry proceeded to open the
lid.
Carr explained to David
that The Three Friends was approaching that part of the coast of Cuba on which
she had arranged to land her expedition, and that in case she was surprised by
one of the Spanish patrol boats she was preparing to defend herself.
``They've got an
automatic gun in that crate,'' said Carr, ``and they're going to assemble it.
You'd better move; they'll be tramping all over you.
David shook his head
feebly.
``I can't move!'' he
protested. ``I wouldn't move if it would free Cuba.''
For several hours with
very languid interest David watched Lighthouse Harry and Colonel Beamish screw
a heavy tripod to the deck and balance above it a quick-firing one-pounder.
They worked very slowly, and to David, watching them from the lee scupper, they
appeared extremely unintelligent.
``I don't believe
either of those thugs put an automatic gun together in his life,'' he whispered
to Carr. ``I never did, either, but I've put hundreds of automatic punches
together, and I bet that gun won't work.''
``What's wrong with
it?'' said Carr.
Before David could
summon sufficient energy to answer, the attention of all on board was diverted,
and by a single word.
Whether the word is
whispered apologetically by the smoking-room steward to those deep in bridge,
or shrieked from the tops of a sinking ship it never quite fails of its effect.
A sweating stoker from the engine-room saw it first.
``Land!'' he hailed.
The sea-sick Cubans
raised themselves and swung their hats; their voices rose in a fierce chorus.
``Cuba libre!'' they
yelled.
The sun piercing the
morning mists had uncovered a coast-line broken with bays and inlets. Above it
towered green hills, the peak of each topped by a squat blockhouse; in the
valleys and water courses like columns of marble rose the royal palms.
``You must look!'' Carr
entreated David. ``it's just as it is in the pictures!
``Then I don't have to
look,'' groaned David.
The Three Friends was
making for a point of land that curved like a sickle. On the inside of the
sickle was Nipe Bay. On the opposite shore of that broad harbor at the place of
rendezvous a little band of Cubans waited to receive the filibusters. The goal
was in sight. The dreadful voyage was done. Joy and excitement thrilled the
ship's company. Cuban patriots appeared in uniforms with Cuban flags pinned in
the brims of their straw sombreros. From the hold came boxes of small-arm
ammunition of Mausers, rifles, machetes, and saddles. To protect the landing a
box of shells was placed in readiness beside the one-pounder.
``In two hours, if we
have smooth water,'' shouted Lighthouse Harry, ``we ought to get all of this on
shore. And then, all I ask,'' he cried mightily, ``is for some one to kindly
show me a Spaniard!''
His heart's desire was
instantly granted. He was shown not only one Spaniard, but several Spaniards.
They were on the deck of one of the fastest gun-boats of the Spanish navy. Not
a mile from The Three Friends she sprang from the cover of a narrow inlet. She
did not signal questions or extend courtesies. For her the name of the
ocean-going tug was sufficient introduction. Throwing ahead of her a solid
shell, she raced in pursuit, and as The Three Friends leaped to full speed
there came from the gun-boat the sharp dry crackle of Mausers.
With an explosion of
terrifying oaths Lighthouse Harry thrust a shell into the breech of the
quick-firing gun. Without waiting to aim it, he tugged at the trigger. Nothing
happened! He threw open the breech and gazed impotently at the base of the
shell. It was untouched. The ship was ringing with cries of anger, of hate,
with rat-like squeaks of fear.
Above the heads of the
filibusters a shell screamed and within a hundred feet splashed into a wave.
From his mat in the lee
scupper David groaned miserably. He was far removed from any of the greater
emotions.
``It's no use!'' he
protested. ``They can't do! It's not connected!''
``What's not
connected?'' yelled Carr. He fell upon David. He half-lifted, half-dragged him
to his feet.
``If you know what's
wrong with that gun, you fix it! Fix it,'' he shouted, ``or I'll----''
David was not concerned
with the vengeance Carr threatened. For, on the instant a miracle had taken
place. With the swift insidiousness of morphine, peace ran through his veins,
soothed his racked body, his jangled nerves. The Three Friends had made the
harbor, and was gliding through water flat as a pond. But David did not know
why the change had come. He knew only that his soul and body were at rest, that
the sun was shining, that he had passed through the valley of the shadow, and
once more was a sane, sound young man.
With a savage thrust of
the shoulder he sent Lighthouse Harry sprawling from the gun. With swift,
practised fingers he fell upon its mechanism. He wrenched it apart. He lifted
it, reset, readjusted it.
Ignorant themselves,
those about him saw that he understood, saw that his work was good.
They raised a joyous,
defiant cheer. But a shower of bullets drove them to cover, bullets that ripped
the deck, splintered the superstructure, smashed the glass in the air ports,
like angry wasps sang in a continuous whining chorus. Intent only on the gun,
David worked feverishly. He swung to the breech, locked it, and dragged it
open, pulled on the trigger and found it gave before his forefinger.
He shouted with
delight.
``I've got it
working,'' he yelled.
He turned to his
audience, but his audience had fled. From beneath one of the life-boats
protruded the riding-boots of Colonel Beamish, the tall form of Lighthouse
Harry was doubled behind a water butt. A shell splashed to port, a shell
splashed to starboard. For an instant David stood staring wide-eyed at the
greyhound of a boat that ate up the distance between them, at the jets of smoke
and stabs of flame that sprang from her bow, at the figures crouched behind her
gunwale, firing in volleys.
To David it came
suddenly, convincingly, that in a dream he had lived it all before, and
something like raw poison stirred in David, something leaped to his throat and
choked him, something rose in his brain and made him see scarlet. He felt
rather than saw young Carr kneeling at the box of ammunition, and holding a
shell toward him. He heard the click as the breech shut, felt the rubber tire
of the brace give against the weight of his shoulder, down a long shining tube
saw the pursuing gun-boat, saw her again and many times disappear behind a
flash of flame. A bullet gashed his forehead, a bullet passed deftly through
his forearm, but he did not heed them. Confused with the thrashing of the
engines, with the roar of the gun he heard a strange voice shrieking
unceasingly:
``Cuba libre!'' it
yelled. ``To hell with Spain!'' and he found that the voice was his own.
The story lost nothing
in the way Carr wrote it.
``And the best of it
is,'' he exclaimed joyfully, ``it's true!''
For a Spanish gun-boat
had been crippled and forced to run herself aground by a tug-boat manned by
Cuban patriots, and by a single gun served by one man, and that man an
American. It was the first sea-fight of the war. Over night a Cuban navy had
been born, and into the limelight a cub reporter had projected a new ``hero,''
a ready-made, warranted-not-to-run, popular idol.
They were seated in the
pilot-house, ``Jimmy'' Doyle, Carr, and David, the patriots and their arms had
been safely dumped upon the coast of Cuba, and The Three Friends was gliding
swiftly and, having caught the Florida straits napping, smoothly toward Key
West. Carr had just finished reading aloud his account of the engagement.
You will tell the story
just as I have written it,'' commanded the proud author. ``Your being South as
a travelling salesman was only a blind. You came to volunteer for this
expedition. Before you could explain your wish you were mistaken for a
secret-service man, and hustled on board. That was just where you wanted to be,
and when the moment arrived you took command of the ship and single-handed won
the naval battle of Nipe Bay.''
Jimmy Doyle nodded his
head approvingly. ``You certainty did, Dave,'' protested the great man, ``I
seen you when you done it!''
At Key West Carr filed
his story and while the hospital surgeons kept David there over one steamer, to
dress his wounds, his fame and features spread across the map of the United
States.
Burdett and Sons basked
in reflected glory. Reporters besieged their office. At the Merchants Down-Town
Club the business men of lower Broadway tendered congratulations.
``Of course, it's a
great surprise to us,'' Burdett and Sons would protest and wink heavily. ``Of
course, when the boy asked to be sent South we'd no idea he was planning to
fight for Cuba! Or we wouldn't have let him go, would we?'' Then again they
would wink heavily. ``I suppose you know,'' they would say, ``that he's a
direct descendant of General Hiram Greene, who won the battle of Trenton. What
I say is, `Blood will tell!' '' And then in a body every one in the club would
move against the bar and exclaim: ``Here's to Cuba libre!''
When the Olivette from
Key West reached Tampa Bay every Cuban in the Tampa cigar factories was at the
dock. There were thousands of them and all of the Junta, in high hats, to read
David an address of welcome.
And, when they saw him
at the top of the gang-plank with his head in a bandage and his arm in a sling,
like a mob of maniacs they howled and surged toward him. But before they could
reach their hero the courteous Junta forced them back, and cleared a pathway
for a young girl. She was travel-worn and pale, her shirt-waist was
disgracefully wrinkled, her best hat was a wreck. No one on Broadway would have
recognized her as Burdett and Sons' most immaculate and beautiful stenographer.
She dug the shapeless
hat into David's shoulder, and clung to him. ``David!'' she sobbed, ``promise
me you'll never, never do it again!''
BEFORE Latimer put him
on watch, the Nantucket sailorman had not a care in the world. If the wind blew
from the north, he spun to the left; if it came from the south, he spun to the
right. But it was entirely the wind that was responsible. So, whichever way he
turned, he smiled broadly, happily. His outlook upon the world was that of one
who loved his fellow-man. He had many brothers as like him as twins all over
Nantucket and Cape Cod and the North Shore, smiling from the railings of
verandas, from the roofs of bungalows, from the eaves of summer palaces.
Empaled on their little iron uprights, each sailorman whirled--sometimes
languidly, like a great lady revolving to the slow measures of a waltz,
sometimes so rapidly that he made you quite dizzy, and had he not been a
sailorman with a heart of oak and a head and stomach of pine, he would have
been quite seasick. But the particular sailorman that Latimer bought for Helen
Page and put on sentry duty carried on his shoulders most grave and unusual
responsibilities. He was the guardian of a buried treasure, the keeper of the
happiness of two young people. It was really asking a great deal of a
care-free, happy-go-lucky weather-vane.
Every summer from
Boston Helen Page's people had been coming to Fair Harbor. They knew it when
what now is the polo field was their cow pasture. And whether at the age of
twelve or of twenty or more, Helen Page ruled Fair Harbor. When she arrived the
``season'' opened; when she departed the local trades-people sighed and began
to take account of stock. She was so popular because she possessed charm, and
because she played no favorites. To the grooms who held the ponies on the
side-lines her manner was just as simple and interested as it was to the gilded
youths who came to win the championship cups and remained to try to win Helen.
She was just as genuinely pleased to make a four at tennis with the ``kids'' as
to take tea on the veranda of the club-house with the matrons. To each her
manner was always as though she were of their age. When she met the latter on
the beach road, she greeted them riotously and joyfully by their maiden names.
And the matrons liked it. In comparison the deference shown them by the other
young women did not so strongly appeal.
``When I'm jogging
along in my station wagon,'' said one of them, ``and Helen shrieks and waves at
me from her car, I feel as though I were twenty, and I believe that she is
really sorry I am not sitting beside her, instead of that good-looking Latimer
man, who never wears a hat. Why does he never wear a hat? Because he knows he's
good-looking, or because Helen drives so fast he can't keep it on?''
``Does he wear a hat
when he is not with Helen?'' asked the new arrival. ``That might help some.''
``We will never know,''
exclaimed the young matron; ``he never leaves her.''
This was so true that
it had become a public scandal. You met them so many times a day driving
together, motoring together, playing golf together, that you were embarrassed
for them and did not know which way to look. But they gloried in their shame.
If you tactfully pretended not to see them, Helen shouted at you. She made you
feel you had been caught doing something indelicate and underhand.
The mothers of Fair
Harbor were rather slow in accepting young Latimer. So many of their sons had
seen Helen shake her head in that inarticulate, worried way, and look so sorry
for them, that any strange young man who apparently succeeded where those who
had been her friends for years had learned they must remain friends, could not
hope to escape criticism. Besides, they did not know him: he did not come from
Boston and Harvard, but from a Western city. They were told that at home, at
both the law and the game of politics, he worked hard and successfully; but it
was rather held against him by the youth of Fair Harbor that he played at other
games, not so much for the sake of the game as for exercise. He put aside many
things, such as whiskey and soda at two in the morning, and bridge all
afternoon, with the remark: ``I find it does not tend toward efficiency.'' It
was a remark that irritated and, to the minds of the men at the country clubs,
seemed to place him. They liked to play polo because they liked to play polo,
not because it kept their muscles limber and their brains clear.
``Some Western people
were telling me,'' said one of the matrons, ``that he wants to be the next
lieutenant-governor. They say he is very ambitious and very selfish.''
``Any man is selfish,''
protested one who for years had attempted to marry Helen, ``who wants to keep
Helen to himself. But that he should wish to be a lieutenant-governor, too, is
rather an anticlimax. It makes one lose sympathy.''
Latimer went on his way
without asking any sympathy. The companionship of Helen Page was quite
sufficient. He had been working overtime and was treating himself to his first
vacation in years--he was young--he was in love and he was very happy. Nor was
there any question, either, that Helen Page was happy. Those who had known her
since she was a child could not remember when she had not been happy, but these
days she wore her joyousness with a difference. It was in her eyes, in her
greetings to old friends: it showed itself hourly in courtesies and kindnesses.
She was very kind to Latimer, too. She did not deceive him. She told him she liked
better to be with him than with any one else,--it would have been difficult to
deny to him what was apparent to an entire summer colony,--but she explained
that that did not mean she would marry him. She announced this when the signs
she knew made it seem necessary. She announced it in what was for her a
roundabout way, by remarking suddenly that she did not intend to marry for
several years.
This brought Latimer to
his feet and called forth from him remarks so eloquent that Helen found it very
difficult to keep her own. She as though she had been caught in an undertow and
was being whirled out to sea. When, at last, she had regained her breath, only
because Latimer had paused to catch his, she shook her head miserably.
``The trouble is,'' she
complained, ``there are so many think the same thing!''
``What do they think?''
demanded Latimer.
``That they want to
marry me.''
Checked but not
discouraged, Latimer attacked in force.
``I can quite believe
that,'' he agreed, ``but there's this important difference: no matter how much
a man wants to marry you, he can't love you as I do!''
``That's another thing
they think,'' sighed Helen.
``I'm sorry to be so
unoriginal,'' snapped Latimer.
``Please don't!''
pleaded Helen. ``I don't mean to be unfeeling. I'm not unfeeling. I'm only
trying to be fair. If I don't seem to take it to heart, it's because I know it
does no good. I can see how miserable a girl must be if she is loved by one man
and can't make up her mind whether or not she wants to marry him. But when
there's so many she just stops worrying; for she can't possibly marry them
all.''
``All!'' exclaimed
Latimer. ``It is incredible that I have undervalued you, but may I ask how many
there are?''
``I don't know,''
sighed Helen miserably. ``There seems to be something about me that----''
``There is!''
interrupted Latimer. ``I've noticed it. You don't have to tell me about it. I
know that the Helen Page habit is a damned difficult habit to break!''
It cannot be said that
he made any violent effort to break it. At least, not one that was obvious to
Fair Harbor or to Helen.
One of their favorite
drives was through the pine woods to the point on which stood the lighthouse,
and on one of these excursions they explored a forgotten wood road and came out
upon a cliff. The cliff overlooked the sea, and below it was a jumble of rocks
with which the waves played hide and seek. On many afternoons and mornings they
returned to this place, and, while Latimer read to her, Helen would sit with
her back to a tree and toss pine-cones into the water. Sometimes the poets
whose works he read made love so charmingly that Latimer was most grateful to
them for rendering such excellent first aid to the wounded, and into his voice
he would throw all that feeling and music that from juries and mass meetings
had dragged tears and cheers and votes.
But when his voice
became so appealing that it no longer was possible for any woman to resist it,
Helen would exclaim excitedly: ``Please excuse me for interrupting, but there
is a large spider--'' and the spell was gone.
One day she exclaimed:
``Oh!'' and Latimer patiently lowered the ``Oxford Book of Verse,'' and asked:
``What is it, now?''
``I'm so sorry,'' Helen
said, ``but I can't help watching that Chapman boy; he's only got one reef in,
and the next time he jibs he'll capsize, and he can't swim, and he'll drown. I
told his mother only yesterday----''
``I haven't the least
interest in the Chapman boy,'' said Latimer, ``or in what you told his mother,
or whether he drowns or not! I'm a drowning man myself!''
Helen shook her head
firmly and reprovingly. ``Men get over that kind of drowning,'' she said.
``Not this kind of man
doesn't!'' said Latimer. ``And don't tell me,'' he cried indignantly, ``that
that's another thing they all say.''
``If one could only be
sure!'' sighed Helen. ``If one could only be sure that you--that the right man
would keep on caring after you marry him the way he says he cares before you
marry him. If you could know that, it would help you a lot in making up your
mind.''
``There is only one way
to find that out,'' said Latimer; ``that is to marry him. I mean, of course,''
he corrected hastily, ``to marry me.''
One day, when on their
way to the cliff at the end of the wood road, the man who makes the Nantucket
sailor and peddles him passed through the village; and Latimer bought the
sailorman and carried him to their hiding-place. There he fastened him to the
lowest limb of one of the ancient pine-trees that helped to screen their
hiding-place from the world. The limb reached out free of the other branches,
and the wind caught the sailorman fairly and spun him like a dancing dervish.
Then it tired of him, and went off to try to drown the Chapman boy, leaving the
sailorman motionless with his arms outstretched, balancing in each hand a tiny
oar and smiling happily.
``He has a friendly
smile,'' said Helen; ``I think he likes us.''
``He is on guard,''
Latimer explained. ``I put him there to warn us if any one approaches, and when
we are not here, he is to frighten away trespassers. Do you understand?'' he
demanded of the sailorman. ``Your duty is to protect this beautiful lady. So
long as I love her you must guard this place. It is a life sentence. You are
always on watch. You never sleep. You are her slave. She says you have a
friendly smile. She wrongs you. It is a beseeching, abject, worshipping smile.
I am sure when I look at her mine is equally idiotic. In fact, we are in many
ways alike. I also am her slave. I also am devoted only to her service. And I
never sleep, at least not since I met her.''
From her throne among
the pine needles Helen looked up at the sailorman and frowned.
``It is not a happy
simile,'' she objected. ``For one thing, a sailorman has a sweetheart in every
port.''
``Wait and see,'' said
Latimer.
``And,'' continued the
girl with some asperity, ``if there is anything on earth that changes its mind
as often as a weather-vane, that is less certain, less constant----''
``Constant?'' Latimer
laughed at her in open scorn. ``You come back here,'' he challenged, ``months
from now, years from now, when the winds have beaten him, and the sun blistered
him, and the snow frozen him, and you will find him smiling at you just as he
is now, just as confidently, proudly, joyously, devotedly. Because those who
are your slaves, those who love you, cannot come to any harm; only if you
disown them, only if you drive them away!
The sailorman,
delighted at such beautiful language, threw himself about in a delirium of joy.
His arms spun in their sockets like Indian clubs, his oars flashed in the sun,
and his eyes and lips were fixed in one blissful, long-drawn-out, unalterable
smile.
When the golden-rod
turned gray, and the leaves red and yellow, and it was time for Latimer to
return to his work in the West, he came to say good-by. But the best Helen
could do to keep hope alive in him was to say that she was glad he cared. She
added it was very helpful to think that a man such as he believed you were so
fine a person, and during the coming winter she would try to be like the fine
person he believed her to be, but which, she assured him, she was not.
Then he told her again
she was the most wonderful being in the world, to which she said: ``Oh, indeed
no!'' and then, as though he were giving her a cue, he said: ``Good-by!'' But
she did not take up his cue, and they shook hands. He waited, hardly daring to
breathe.
``Surely, now that the
parting has come,'' he assured himself, ``she will make some sign, she will
give me a word, a look that will write `total' under the hours we have spent
together, that will help to carry me through the long winter.''
But he held her hand so
long and looked at her so hungrily that he really forced her to say: ``Don't
miss your train,'' which kind consideration for his comfort did not delight him
as it should. Nor, indeed, later did she herself recall the remark with
satisfaction.
With Latimer out of the
way the other two hundred and forty-nine suitors attacked with renewed hope.
Among other advantages they had over Latimer was that they were on the ground.
They saw Helen daily, at dinners, dances, at the country clubs, in her own drawing-room.
Like any sailor from the Charlestown Navy Yard and his sweetheart, they could
walk beside her in the park and throw peanuts to the pigeons, and scratch dates
and initials on the green benches; they could walk with her up one side of
Commonwealth Avenue and down the south bank of the Charles, when the sun was
gilding the dome of the State House, when the bridges were beginning to deck
themselves with necklaces of lights. They had known her since they wore
knickerbockers; and they shared many interests and friends in common; they
talked the same language. Latimer could talk to her only in letters, for with
her he shared no friends or interests, and he was forced to choose between
telling her of his lawsuits and his efforts in politics or of his love. To
write to her of his affairs seemed wasteful and impertinent, and of his love
for her, after she had received what he told of it in silence, he was too proud
to speak. So he wrote but seldom, and then only to say: ``You know what I send
you.'' Had he known it, his best letters were those he did not send. When in
the morning mail Helen found his familiar handwriting, that seemed to stand out
like the face of a friend in a crowd, she would pounce upon the letter, read
it, and, assured of his love, would go on her way rejoicing. But when in the
morning there was no letter, she wondered why, and all day she wondered why.
And the next morning when again she was disappointed, her thoughts of Latimer
and her doubts and speculations concerning him shut out every other interest.
He became a perplexing, insistent problem. He was never out of her mind. And
then he would spoil it all by writing her that he loved her and that of all the
women in the world she was the only one. And, reassured upon that point, Helen
happily and promptly would forget all about him.
But when she remembered
him, although months had passed since she had seen him, she remembered him much
more distinctly, much more gratefully, than that one of the two hundred and
fifty with whom she had walked that same afternoon. Latimer could not know it,
but of that anxious multitude he was first, and there was no second. At least
Helen hoped, when she was ready to marry, she would love Latimer enough to want
to marry him. But as yet she assured herself she did not want to marry any one.
As she was, life was very satisfactory. Everybody loved her, everybody invited
her to be of his party, or invited himself to join hers, and the object of each
seemed to be to see that she enjoyed every hour of every day. Her nature was
such that to make her happy was not difficult. Some of her devotees could do it
by giving her a dance and letting her invite half of Boston, and her kid
brother could do it by taking her to Cambridge to watch the team at practice.
She thought she was
happy because she was free. As a matter of fact, she was happy because she
loved some one and that particular some one loved her. Her being ``free'' was
only her mistaken way of putting it. Had she thought she had lost Latimer and
his love, she would have discovered that, so far from being free, she was bound
hand and foot and heart and soul.
But she did not know
that, and Latimer did not know that.
Meanwhile, from the
branch of the tree in the sheltered, secret hiding-place that overlooked the
ocean, the sailorman kept watch. The sun had blistered him, the storms had
buffeted him, the snow had frozen upon his shoulders. But his loyalty never
relaxed. He spun to the north, he spun to the south, and so rapidly did he scan
the surrounding landscape that no one could hope to creep upon him unawares.
Nor, indeed, did any one attempt to do so. Once a fox stole into the secret
hiding-place, but the sailorman flapped his oars and frightened him away. He
was always triumphant. To birds, to squirrels, to trespassing rabbits he was a
thing of terror. Once, when the air was still, an impertinent crow perched on
the very limb on which he stood, and with scornful, disapproving eyes surveyed
his white trousers, his blue reefer, his red cheeks. But when the wind suddenly
drove past them the sailorman sprang into action and the crow screamed in alarm
and darted away. So, alone and with no one to come to his relief, the sailorman
stood his watch. About him the branches bent with the snow, the icicles froze
him into immobility, and in the tree-tops strange groanings filled him with
alarms. But undaunted, month after month, alert and smiling, he waited the
return of the beautiful lady and of the tall young man who had devoured her
with such beseeching, unhappy eyes.
Latimer found that to
love a woman like Helen Page as he loved her was the best thing that could come
into his life. But to sit down and lament over the fact that she did not love
him did not, to use his favorite expression, ``tend toward efficiency.'' He
removed from his sight the three pictures of her he had cut from illustrated
papers, and ceased to write to her.
In his last letter he
said: ``I have told you how it is, and that is how it is always going to be.
There never has been, there never can be any one but you. But my love is too
precious, too sacred to be brought out every week in a letter and dangled
before your eyes like an advertisement of a motor-car. It is too wonderful a
thing to be cheapened, to be subjected to slights and silence. If ever you
should want it, it is yours. It is here waiting. But you vmust tell me so. I
have done everything a man can do to make you understand. But you do not want
me or my love. And my love says to me: `Don't send me there again to have the
door shut in my face. Keep me with you to be your inspiration, to help you to
live worthily.' And so it shall be.''
When Helen read that
letter she did not know what to do. She did not know how to answer it. Her
first impression was that suddenly she had grown very old, and that some one
had turned off the sun, and that in consequence the world had naturally grown
cold and dark. She could not see why the two hundred and forty-nine expected
her to keep on doing exactly the same things she had been doing with delight for
six months, and indeed for the last six years. Why could they not see that no
longer was there any pleasure in them? She would have written and told Latimer
that she found she loved him very dearly if in her mind there had not arisen a
fearful doubt. Suppose his letter was not quite honest? He said that he would
always love her, but how could she now know that? Why might not this letter be
only his way of withdrawing from a position which he wished to abandon, from
which, perhaps, he was even glad to escape? Were this true, and she wrote and
said all those things that were in her heart, that now she knew were true,
might she not hold him to her against his will? The love that once he had for
her might no longer exist, and if, in her turn, she told him she loved him and
had always loved him, might he not in some mistaken spirit of chivalry feel it
was his duty to pretend to care? Her cheeks burned at the thought. It was
intolerable. She could not write that letter. And as day succeeded day, to do
so became more difficult. And so she never wrote and was very unhappy. And
Latimer was very unhappy. But he had his work, and Helen had none, and for her
life became a game of putting little things together, like a picture puzzle, an
hour here and an hour there, to make up each day. It was a dreary game.
From time to time she
heard of him through the newspapers. For, in his own State, he was an
``Insurgent'' making a fight, the outcome of which was expected to show what
might follow throughout the entire West. When he won his fight much more was
written about him, and he became a national figure. In his own State the people
hailed him as the next governor, promised him a seat in the Senate. To Helen
this seemed to take him further out of her life. She wondered if now she held a
place even in his thoughts.
At Fair Harbor the two
hundred and forty-nine used to joke with her about her politician. Then they
considered Latimer of importance only because Helen liked him. Now they
discussed him impersonally and over her head, as though she were not present,
as a power, an influence, as the leader and exponent of a new idea. They seemed
to think she no longer could pretend to any peculiar claim upon him, that now
he belonged to all of them.
Older men would say to
her: ``I hear you know Latimer? What sort of a man is he?''
Helen would not know
what to tell them. She could not say he was a man who sat with his back to a
pine-tree, reading from a book of verse, or halting to devour her with humble,
entreating eyes.
She went South for the
winter, the doctors deciding she was run down and needed the change. And with
an unhappy laugh at her own expense she agreed in their diagnosis. She was
indifferent as to where they sent her, for she knew wherever she went she must
still force herself to go on putting one hour on top of another, until she had
built up the inexorable and necessary twenty-four.
When she returned
winter was departing, but reluctantly, and returning unexpectedly to cover the
world with snow, to eclipse the thin spring sunshine with cheerless clouds.
Helen took herself seriously to task. She assured herself it was weak-minded to
rebel. The summer was coming and Fair Harbor with all its old delights was
before her. She compelled herself to take heart, to accept the fact that, after
all, the world is a pretty good place, and that to think only of the past, to
live only on memories and regrets, was not only cowardly and selfish, but, as
Latimer had already decided, did not tend toward efficiency.
Among the other rules
of conduct that she imposed upon herself was not to think of Latimer. At least,
not during the waking hours. Should she, as it sometimes happened, dream of
him--should she imagine they were again seated among the pines, riding across
the downs, or racing at fifty miles an hour through country roads, with the
stone fences flying past, with the wind and the sun in their eyes, and in their
hearts happiness and content--that would not be breaking her rule. If she
dreamed of him, she could not be held responsible. She could only be grateful.
And then, just as she
had banished him entirely from her mind, he came East. Not as once he had
planned to come, only to see her, but with a blare of trumpets, at the command
of many citizens, as the guest of three cities. He was to speak at public
meetings, to confer with party leaders, to carry the war into the enemy's
country. He was due to speak in Boston at Faneuil Hall on the first of May, and
that same night to leave for the West, and three days before his coming Helen
fled from the city. He had spoken his message to Philadelphia, he had spoken to
New York, and for a week the papers had spoken only of him. And for that week,
from the sight of his printed name, from sketches of him exhorting cheering
mobs, from snap-shots of him on rear platforms leaning forward to grasp eager
hands, Helen had shut her eyes. And that during the time he was actually in
Boston she might spare herself further and more direct attacks upon her
feelings she escaped to Fair Harbor, there to remain until, on the first of May
at midnight, he again would pass out of her life, maybe forever. No one saw in
her going any significance. Spring had come, and in preparation for the summer
season the house at Fair Harbor must be opened and set in order, and the
presence there of some one of the Page family was easily explained.
She made the three
hours' run to Fair Harbor in her car, driving it herself, and as the familiar
landfalls fell into place, she doubted if it would not have been wiser had she stayed
away. For she found that the memories of more than twenty summers at Fair
Harbor had been wiped out by those of one summer, by those of one man. The
natives greeted her joyously: the boatmen, the fishermen, her own grooms and
gardeners, the village postmaster, the oldest inhabitant. They welcomed her as
though they were her vassals and she their queen. But it was the one man she
had exiled from Fair Harbor who at every turn wrung her heart and caused her
throat to tighten. She passed the cottage where he had lodged, and hundreds of
years seemed to have gone since she used to wait for him in the street, blowing
noisily on her automobile horn, calling derisively to his open windows.
Wherever she turned Fair Harbor spoke of him. The golf-links; the bathing
beach; the ugly corner in the main street where he always reminded her that it
was better to go slow for ten seconds than to remain a long time dead; the old
house on the stone wharf where the schooners made fast, which he intended to
borrow for his honeymoon; the wooden trough where they always drew rein to
water the ponies; the pond into which he had waded to bring her lilies.
On the second day of
her stay she found she was passing these places purposely, that to do so she
was going out of her way. They no longer distressed her, but gave her a strange
comfort. They were old friends, who had known her in the days when she was rich
in happiness.
But the secret
hiding-place--their very own hiding-place, the opening among the pines that
overhung the jumble of rocks and the sea--she could not bring herself to visit.
And then, on the afternoon of the third day when she was driving alone toward
the lighthouse, her pony, of his own accord, from force of habit, turned
smartly into the wood road. And again from force of habit, before he reached
the spot that overlooked the sea, he came to a full stop. There was no need to
make him fast. For hours, stretching over many summer days, he had stood under
those same branches patiently waiting.
On foot, her heart beating
tremulously, stepping reverently, as one enters the aisle of some dim
cathedral, Helen advanced into the sacred circle. And then she stood quite
still. What she had expected to find there she could not have told, but it was
gone. The place was unknown to her. She saw an opening among gloomy pines,
empty, silent, unreal. No haunted house, no barren moor, no neglected graveyard
ever spoke more poignantly, more mournfully, with such utter hopelessness.
There was no sign of his or of her former presence. Across the open space
something had passed its hand, and it had changed. What had been a
trysting-place, a bower, a nest, had become a tomb. A tomb, she felt, for
something that once had been brave, fine, and beautiful, but which now was
dead. She had but one desire, to escape from the place, to put it away from her
forever, to remember it, not as she now found it, but as first she had
remembered it, and as now she must always remember It. She turned softly on
tiptoe as one who has intruded on a shrine.
But before she could
escape there came from the sea a sudden gust of wind that caught her by the
skirts and drew her back, that set the branches tossing and swept the dead
leaves racing about her ankles. And at the same instant from just above her
head there beat upon the air a violent, joyous tattoo--a sound that was neither
of the sea nor of the woods, a creaking, swiftly repeated sound, like the
flutter of caged wings.
Helen turned in alarm
and raised her eyes--and beheld the sailorman.
Tossing his arms in a
delirious welcome, waltzing in a frenzy of joy, calling her back to him with
wild beckonings, she saw him smiling down at her with the same radiant,
beseeching, worshipping smile. In Helen's ears Latimer's commands to the
sailorman rang as clearly as though Latimer stood before her and had just
spoken. Only now they were no longer a jest; they were a vow, a promise, an
oath of allegiance that brought to her peace, and pride, and happiness.
``So long as I love
this beautiful lady,'' had been his foolish words, ``you will guard this place.
It is a life sentence!''
With one hand Helen
Page dragged down the branch on which the sailorman stood, with the other she
snatched him from his post of duty. With a joyous laugh that was a sob, she
clutched the sailorman in both her hands and kissed the beseeching, worshipping
smile.
An hour later her car,
on its way to Boston, passed through Fair Harbor at a rate of speed that caused
her chauffeur to pray between his chattering teeth that the first policeman would
save their lives by landing them in jail.
At the wheel, her
shoulders thrown forward, her eyes searching the dark places beyond the reach
of the leaping head-lights Helen Page raced against time, against the minions
of the law, against sudden death, to beat the midnight train out of Boston, to
assure the man she loved of the one thing that could make his life worth
living.
And close against her
heart, buttoned tight beneath her great-coat, the sailorman smiled in the
darkness, his long watch over, his soul at peace, his duty well performed.
WHEN Philip Endicott
was at Harvard, he wrote stories of undergraduate life suggested by things that
had happened to himself and to men he knew. Under the title of ``Tales of the
Yard'' they were collected in book form, and sold surprisingly well. After he
was graduated and became a reporter on the New York Republic, he wrote more
stories, in each of which a reporter was the hero, and in which his failure or
success in gathering news supplied the plot. These appeared first in the
magazines, and later in a book under the title of ``Tales of the Streets.''
They also were well received.
Then came to him the
literary editor of the Republic, and said: ``There are two kinds of men who
succeed in writing fiction--men of genius and reporters. A reporter can describe
a thing he has seen in such a way that he can make the reader see it, too. A
man of genius can describe something he has never seen, or any one else for
that matter, in such a way that the reader will exclaim: `I have never
committed a murder; but if I had, that's just the way I'd feel about it.' For
instance, Kipling tells us how a Greek pirate, chained to the oar of a trireme,
suffers; how a mother rejoices when her baby crawls across her breast. Kipling
has never been a mother or a pirate, but he convinces you he knows how each of
them feels. He can do that because he is a genius; you cannot do it because you
are not. At college you wrote only of what you saw at college; and now that you
are in the newspaper business all your tales are only of newspaper work. You
merely report what you see. So, if you are doomed to write only of what you
see, then the best thing for you to do is to see as many things as possible.
You must see all kinds of life. You must progress. You must leave New York, and
you had better go to London.''
``But on the
Republic,'' Endicott pointed out, ``I get a salary. And in London I should have
to sweep a crossing.''
``Then,'' said the
literary editor, ``you could write a story about a man who swept a crossing.''
It was not alone the
literary editor's words of wisdom that had driven Philip to London. Helen Carey
was in London, visiting the daughter of the American Ambassador; and, though
Philip had known her only one winter, he loved her dearly. The great trouble
was that he had no money, and that she possessed so much of it that, unless he
could show some unusual quality of mind or character, his asking her to marry
him, from his own point of view at least, was quite impossible. Of course, he
knew that no one could love her as he did, that no one so truly wished for her
happiness, or would try so devotedly to make her happy. But to him it did not
seem possible that a girl could be happy with a man who was not able to pay for
her home, or her clothes, or her food, who would have to borrow her purse if he
wanted a new pair of gloves or a hair-cut. For Philip Endicott, while rich in
birth and education and charm of manner, had no money at all. When, in May, he
came from New York to lay siege to London and to the heart of Helen Carey he
had with him, all told, fifteen hundred dollars. That was all he possessed in
the world; and unless the magazines bought his stories there was no prospect of
his getting any more.
Friends who knew London
told him that, if if you knew London well, it was easy to live comfortably
there and to go about and even to entertain modestly on three sovereigns a day.
So, at that rate, Philip calculated he could stay three months. But he found
that to know London well enough to be able to live there on three sovereigns a
day you had first to spend so many five-pound notes in getting acquainted with
London that there were no sovereigns left. At the end of one month he had just
enough money to buy him a second-class passage back to New York, and he was as
far from Helen as ever.
Often he had read in
stories and novels of men who were too poor to marry. And he had laughed at the
idea. He had always said that when two people truly love each other it does not
matter whether they have money or not. But when in London, with only a
five-pound note, and face to face with the actual proposition of asking Helen
Carey not only to marry him but to support him, he felt that money counted for
more than he had supposed. He found money was many different things--it was
self-respect, and proper pride, and private honors and independence. And,
lacking these things, he felt he could ask no girl to marry him, certainly not
one for whom he cared as he cared for Helen Carey. Besides, while he knew how
he loved her, he had no knowledge whatsoever that she loved him. She always
seemed extremely glad to see him; but that might be explained in different
ways. It might be that what was in her heart for him was really a sort of ``old
home week'' feeling; that to her it was a relief to see any one who spoke her
own language, who did not need to have it explained when she was jesting, and
who did not think when she was speaking in perfectly satisfactory phrases that
she must be talking slang.
The Ambassador and his
wife had been very kind to Endicott, and, as a friend of Helen's, had asked him
often to dinner and had sent him cards for dances at which Helen was to be one
of the belles and beauties. And Helen herself had been most kind, and had taken
early morning walks with him in Hyde Park and through the National Galleries;
and they had fed buns to the bears in the Zoo, and in doing so had laughed
heartily. They thought it was because the bears were so ridiculous that they
laughed. Later they appreciated that the reason they were happy was because they
were together. Had the bear pit been empty, they still would have laughed.
On the evening of the
thirty-first of May, Endicott had gone to bed with his ticket purchased for
America and his last five-pound note to last him until the boat sailed. He was
a miserable young man. He knew now that he loved Helen Carey in such a way that
to put the ocean between them was liable to unseat his courage and his
self-control. In London he could, each night, walk through Carlton House
Terrace and, leaning against the iron rails of the Carlton Club, gaze up at her
window. But, once on the other side of the ocean, that tender exercise must be
abandoned. He must even consider her pursued by most attractive guardsmen,
diplomats, and belted earls. He knew they could not love her as he did; he knew
they could not love her for the reasons he loved her, because the fine and
beautiful things in her that he saw and worshipped they did not seek, and so
did not find. And yet, for lack of a few thousand dollars, he must remain silent,
must put from him the best that ever came into his life, must waste the
wonderful devotion he longed to give, must starve the love that he could never
summon for any other woman.
On the thirty-first of
May he went to sleep utterly and completely miserable. On the first of June he
woke hopeless and unrefreshed.
And then the miracle
came.
Prichard, the ex-butler
who valeted all the young gentlemen in the house where Philip had taken
chambers, brought him his breakfast. As he placed the eggs and muffins on the
tables to Philip it seemed as though Prichard had said: ``I am sorry he is
leaving us. The next gentleman who takes these rooms may not be so open-handed.
He never locked up his cigars or his whiskey. I wish he'd give me his old
dress-coat. It fits me, except across the shoulders.''
Philip stared hard at
Prichard; but the lips of the valet had not moved. In surprise and
bewilderment, Philip demanded:
``How do you know it
fits? Have you tried it on?''
``I wouldn't take such
a liberty,'' protested Prichard. ``Not with any of our gentlemen's clothes.''
``How did you know I
was talking about clothes,'' demanded Philip. ``You didn't say anything about
clothes, did you?''
``No, sir, I did not;
but you asked me, sir, and I----''
``Were you thinking of
clothes?''
``Well, sir, you might
say, in a way, that I was, answered the valet. ``Seeing as you're leaving, sir,
and they're not over-new, I thought ''
``It's mental
telepathy,'' said Philip.
``I beg your pardon,''
exclaimed Prichard.
``You needn't wait,''
said Philip.
The coincidence puzzled
him; but by the time he had read the morning papers he had forgotten about it,
and it was not until he had emerged into the street that it was forcibly
recalled. The street was crowded with people; and as Philip stepped in among
them, It was as though every one at whom he looked began to talk aloud. Their
lips did not move, nor did any sound issue from between them; but, without
ceasing, broken phrases of thoughts came to him as clearly as when, in passing
in a crowd, snatches of talk are carried to the ears. One man thought of his
debts; another of the weather, and of what disaster it might bring to his silk
hat; another planned his luncheon; another was rejoicing over a telegram he had
but that moment received. To himself he kept repeating the words of the
telegram--``No need to come, out of danger.'' To Philip the message came as
clearly as though he were reading it from the folded slip of paper that the
stranger clutched in his hand.
Confused and somewhat
frightened, and in order that undisturbed he might consider what had befallen
him, Philip sought refuge from the crowded street in the hallway of a building.
His first thought was that for some unaccountable cause his brain for the
moment was playing tricks with him, and he was inventing the phrases he seemed
to hear, that he was attributing thoughts to others of which they were entirely
innocent. But, whatever it was that had befallen him, he knew it was imperative
that he should at once get at the meaning of it.
The hallway in which he
stood opened from Bond Street up a flight of stairs to the studio of a
fashionable photographer, and directly in front of the hallway a young woman of
charming appearance had halted. Her glance was troubled, her manner ill at
ease. To herself she kept repeating: ``Did I tell Hudson to be here at a
quarter to eleven, or a quarter past? Will she get the telephone message to
bring the ruff? Without the ruff it would be absurd to be photographed. Without
her ruff Mary Queen of Scots would look ridiculous!''
Although the young
woman had spoken not a single word, although indeed she was biting impatiently
at her lower lip, Philip had distinguished the words clearly. Or, if he had not
distinguished them, he surely was going mad. It was a matter to be at once
determined, and the young woman should determine it. He advanced boldly to her,
and raised his hat.
``Pardon me,'' he said,
``but I believe you are waiting for your maid Hudson?''
As though fearing an
impertinence, the girl regarded him in silence.
``I only wish to make
sure,'' continued Philip, ``that you are she for whom I have a message. You
have an appointment, I believe, to be photographed in fancy dress as Mary Queen
of Scots?''
``Well?'' assented the
girl.
``And you telephoned
Hudson,'' he continued, ``to bring you your muff.''
The girl exclaimed with
vexation.
``Oh!'' she protested;
``I knew they'd get it wrong! Not muff, ruff! I want my ruff.''
Philip felt a cold
shiver creep down his spine.
``For the love of
Heaven!'' he exclaimed in horror; ``it's true!''
``What's true?''
demanded the young woman in some alarm.
``That I'm a mind
reader,'' declared Philip. ``I've read your mind! I can read everybody's mind.
I know just what you're thinking now. You're thinking I'm mad!''
The actions of the
young lady showed that again he was correct. With a gasp of terror she fled
past him and raced up the stairs to the studio. Philip made no effort to follow
and to explain. What was there to explain? How could he explain that which, to
himself, was unbelievable? Besides, the girl had served her purpose. If he
could read the mind of one, he could read the minds of all. By some
unexplainable miracle, to his ordinary equipment of senses a sixth had been
added. As easily as, before that morning, he could look into the face of a
fellow-mortal, he now could look into the workings of that fellow-mortal's
mind. The thought was appalling. It was like living with one's ear to a key-hole.
In his dismay his first idea was to seek medical advice--the best in London. He
turned instantly in the direction of Harley Street. There, he determined, to
the most skilled alienist in town he would explain his strange plight. For only
as a misfortune did the miracle appear to him. But as he made his way through
the streets his pace slackened.
Was he wise, he asked
himself, in allowing others to know he possessed this strange power? Would they
not at once treat him as a madman? Might they not place him under observation,
or even deprive him of his liberty? At the thought he came to an abrupt halt
His own definition of the miracle as a ``power'' had opened a new line of
speculation. If this strange gift (already he was beginning to consider it more
leniently) were concealed from others, could he not honorably put it to some
useful purpose? For, among the blind, the man with one eye is a god. Was not
he--among all other men the only one able to read the minds of all other men--a
god? Turning into Bruton Street, he paced its quiet length considering the
possibilities that lay within him.
It was apparent that
the gift would lead to countless embarrassments. If it were once known that he
possessed it, would not even his friends avoid him? For how could any one,
knowing his most secret thought was at the mercy of another, be happy in that
other's presence? His power would lead to his social ostracism. Indeed, he
could see that his gift might easily become a curse. He decided not to act
hastily, that for the present he had best give no hint to others of his unique
power.
As the idea of
possessing this power became more familiar, he regarded it with less aversion.
He began to consider to what advantage he could place it. He could see that,
given the right time and the right man, he might learn secrets leading to
far-reaching results. To a statesman, to a financier, such a gift as he
possessed would make him a ruler of men. Philip had no desire to be a ruler of
men; but he asked himself how could he bend this gift to serve his own? What he
most wished was to marry Helen Carey; and, to that end, to possess money. So he
must meet men who possessed money, who were making money. He would put
questions to them. And with words they would give evasive answers; but their
minds would tell him the truth.
The ethics of this
procedure greatly disturbed him. Certainly it was no better than reading other
people's letters. But, he argued, the dishonor in knowledge so obtained would
lie only in the use he made of it. If he used it without harm to him from whom
it was obtained and with benefit to others, was he not justified in trading on
his superior equipment? He decided that each case must be considered separately
in accordance with the principle involved. But, principle or no principle, he
was determined to become rich. Did not the end justify the means? Certainly an
all-wise Providence had not brought Helen Carey into his life only to take her
away from him. It could not be so cruel. But, in selecting them for one another,
the all-wise Providence had overlooked the fact that she was rich and he was
poor. For that oversight Providence apparently was now endeavoring to make
amends. In what certainly was a fantastic and roundabout manner Providence had
tardily equipped him with a gift that could lead to great wealth. And who was
he to fly in the face of Providence? He decided to set about building up a
fortune, and building it in a hurry.
From Bruton Street he
had emerged upon Berkeley Square; and, as Lady Woodcote had invited him to meet
Helen at luncheon at the Ritz, he turned in that direction. He was too early
for luncheon; but in the corridor of the Ritz he knew he would find persons of
position and fortune, and in reading their minds he might pass the time before
luncheon with entertainment, possibly with profit. For, while pacing Bruton
Street trying to discover the principles of conduct that threatened to hamper
his new power, he had found that in actual operation it was quite simple. He
learned that his mind, in relation to other minds, was like the receiver of a
wireless station with an unlimited field. For, while the wireless could receive
messages only from those instruments with which it was attuned, his mind was in
key with all other minds. To read the thoughts of another, he had only to
concentrate his own upon that person; and to shut off the thoughts of that
person, he had only to turn his own thoughts elsewhere. But also he discovered
that over the thoughts of those outside the range of his physical sight he had no
control. When he asked of what Helen Carey was at that moment thinking, there
was no result. But when he asked, ``Of what is that policeman on the corner
thinking?'' he was surprised to find that that officer of the law was
formulating regulations to abolish the hobble skirt as an impediment to
traffic.
As Philip turned into
Berkeley Square, the accents of a mind in great distress smote upon his new and
sixth sense. And, in the person of a young gentleman leaning against the park
railing, he discovered the source from which the mental sufferings emanated.
The young man was a pink-cheeked, yellow-haired youth of extremely boyish
appearance, and dressed as if for the race-track. But at the moment his pink
and babyish face wore an expression of complete misery. With tear-filled eyes
he was gazing at a house of yellow stucco on the opposite side of the street.
And his thoughts were these: ``She is the best that ever lived, and I am the
most ungrateful of fools. How happy were we in the house of yellow stucco! Only
now, when she has closed its doors to me, do I know how happy! If she would
give me another chance, never again would I distress or deceive her.''
So far had the young
man progressed in his thoughts when an automobile of surprising smartness swept
around the corner and drew up in front of the house of yellow stucco, and from
it descended a charming young person. She was of the Dresden-shepherdess type,
with large blue eyes of haunting beauty and innocence.
``My wife!'' exclaimed
the blond youth at the railings. And instantly he dodged behind a horse that,
while still attached to a four-wheeler, was contentedly eating from a nose-bag.
With a key the Dresden
shepherdess opened the door to the yellow house and disappeared.
The calling of the reporter
trains him in audacity, and to act quickly. He shares the troubles of so many
people that to the troubles of other people he becomes callous, and often will
rush in where friends of the family fear to tread. Although Philip was not now
acting as a reporter, he acted quickly. Hardly had the door closed upon the
young lady than he had mounted the steps and rung the visitor's bell. As he did
so, he could not resist casting a triumphant glance in the direction of the
outlawed husband. And, in turn, what the outcast husband, peering from across
the back of the cab horse, thought of Philip, of his clothes, of his general
appearance, and of the manner in which he would delight to alter all of them,
was quickly communicated to the American. They were thoughts of a nature so
violent and uncomplimentary that Philip hastily cut off all connection.
As Philip did not know
the name of the Dresden-china doll, it was fortunate that on opening the door,
the butler promptly announced:
``Her ladyship is not
receiving.''
``Her ladyship will, I
think, receive me,'' said Philip pleasantly, ``when you tell her I come as the
special ambassador of his lordship.''
From a tiny
reception-room on the right of the entrance-hall there issued a feminine
exclamation of surprise, not unmixed with joy; and in the hall the noble lady
instantly appeared.
When she saw herself
confronted by a stranger, she halted in embarrassment. But as, even while she
halted, her only thought had been, ``Oh! if he will only ask me to forgive
him!'' Philip felt no embarrassment whatsoever. Outside, concealed behind a cab
horse, was the erring but bitterly repentant husband; inside, her tenderest
thoughts racing tumultuously toward him, was an unhappy child-wife begging to
be begged to pardon.
For a New York
reporter, and a Harvard graduate of charm and good manners, it was too easy.
``I do not know you,''
said her ladyship. But even as she spoke she motioned to the butler to go away.
``You must be one of his new friends.'' Her tone was one of envy.
``Indeed, I am his
newest friend,'' Philip assured her; ``but I can safely say no one knows his
thoughts as well as I. And they are all of you!''
The china shepherdess
blushed with happiness, but instantly she shook her head.
``They tell me I must
not believe him,'' she announced. ``They tell me----''
``Never mind what they
tell you,'' commanded Philip. ``Listen to me. He loves you. Better than ever
before, he loves you. All he asks is the chance to tell you so. You cannot help
but believe him. Who can look at you, and not believe that he loves you! Let
me,'' he begged, ``bring him to you.'' He started from her when, remembering
the somewhat violent thoughts of the youthful husband, he added hastily: ``Or
perhaps it would be better if you called him yourself.''
``Called him!''
exclaimed the lady. ``He is in Paris-at the races--with her!''
``If they tell you that
sort of thing,'' protested Philip indignantly, ``you must listen to me. He is
not in Paris. He is not with her. There never was a her!''
He drew aside the lace
curtains and pointed. ``He is there--behind that ancient cab horse, praying
that you will let him tell you that not only did he never do it; but, what is
much more important, he will never do it again.''
The lady herself now
timidly drew the curtains apart, and then more boldly showed herself upon the
iron balcony. Leaning over the scarlet geraniums, she beckoned with both hands.
The result was instantaneous. Philip bolted for the front door, leaving it open;
and, as he darted down the steps, the youthful husband, in strides resembling
those of an ostrich, shot past him. Philip did not cease running until he was
well out of Berkeley Square. Then, not ill-pleased with the adventure, he
turned and smiled back at the house of yellow stucco.
``Bless you, my
children,'' he murmured; ``bless you!''
He continued to the
Ritz; and, on crossing Piccadilly to the quieter entrance to the hotel in
Arlington Street, found gathered around it a considerable crowd drawn up on
either side of a red carpet that stretched down the steps of the hotel to a
court carriage. A red carpet in June, when all is dry under foot and the sun is
shining gently, can mean only royalty; and in the rear of the men in the street
Philip halted. He remembered that for a few days the young King of Asturia and
the Queen Mother were at the Ritz incognito; and, as he never had seen the
young man who so recently and so tragically had been exiled from his own
kingdom, Philip raised himself on tiptoe and stared expectantly.
As easily as he could
read their faces could he read the thoughts of those about him. They were
thoughts of friendly curiosity, of pity for the exiles; on the part of the
policemen who had hastened from a cross street, of pride at their temporary
responsibility; on the part of the coachman of the court carriage, of
speculation as to the possible amount of his Majesty's tip. The thoughts were
as harmless and protecting as the warm sunshine.
And then, suddenly and
harshly, like the stroke of a fire bell at midnight, the harmonious chorus of
gentle, hospitable thoughts was shattered by one that was discordant, evil,
menacing. It was the thought of a man with a brain diseased; and its purpose
was murder.
``When they appear at
the doorway,'' spoke the brain of the maniac, ``I shall lift the bomb from my
pocket. I shall raise it above my head. I shall crash it against the stone
steps. It will hurl them and all of these people into eternity and me with
them. But I shall live--a martyr to the Cause. And the Cause will flourish!''
Through the
unsuspecting crowd, like a football player diving for a tackle, Philip hurled
himself upon a little dark man standing close to the open door of the court
carriage. From the rear Philip seized him around the waist and locked his arms
behind him, elbow to elbow. Philip's face, appearing over the man's shoulder,
stared straight into that of the policeman.
``He has a bomb in his
right-hand pocket!'' yelled Philip. ``I can hold him while you take it! But, for
Heaven's sake, don't drop it!'' Philip turned upon the crowd. ``Run! all of
you!'' he shouted. ``Run like the devil!''
At that instant the boy
King and his Queen Mother, herself still young and beautiful, and cloaked with
a dignity and sorrow that her robes of mourning could not intensify, appeared
in the doorway.
``Go back, sir!''
warned Philip. ``He means to kill you!''
At the words and at
sight of the struggling men, the great lady swayed helplessly, her eyes filled
with terror. Her son sprang protectingly in front of her. But the danger was
past. A second policeman was now holding the maniac by the wrists, forcing his
arms above his head; Philip's arms, like a lariat, were wound around his chest;
and from his pocket the first policeman gingerly drew forth a round, black
object of the size of a glass fire-grenade. He held it high in the air, and
waved his free hand warningly. But the warning was unobserved. There was no one
remaining to observe it. Leaving the would-be assassin struggling and biting in
the grasp of the stalwart policeman, and the other policeman unhappily holding
the bomb at arm's length, Philip sought to escape into the Ritz. But the young
King broke through the circle of attendants and stopped him.
``I must thank you,''
said the boy eagerly; ``and I wish you to tell me how you came to suspect the
man's purpose.''
Unable to speak the
truth, Philip, the would-be writer of fiction, began to improvise fluently.
``To learn their
purpose, sir,'' he said, ``is my business. I am of the International Police,
and in the secret service of your Majesty.''
``Then I must know your
name,'' said the King, and added with a dignity that was most becoming, ``You
will find we are not ungrateful.''
Philip smiled
mysteriously and shook his head.
``I said in your secret
service,'' he repeated. ``Did even your Majesty know me, my usefulness would be
at an end.'' He pointed toward the two policemen. ``If you desire to be just,
as well as gracious, those are the men to reward.''
He slipped past the
King and through the crowd of hotel officials into the hall and on into the
corridor.
The arrest had taken
place so quietly and so quickly that through the heavy glass doors no sound had
penetrated, and of the fact that they had been so close to a possible tragedy
those in the corridor were still ignorant. The members of the Hungarian
orchestra were arranging their music; a waiter was serving two men of middle
age with sherry; and two distinguished-looking elderly gentlemen seated
together on a sofa were talking in leisurely whispers.
One of the two
middle-aged men was well known to Philip, who as a reporter had often, in New
York, endeavored to interview him on matters concerning the steel trust. His
name was Faust. He was a Pennsylvania Dutchman from Pittsburgh, and at one time
had been a foreman of the night shift in the same mills he now controlled. But
with a roar and a spectacular flash, not unlike one of his own blast furnaces,
he had soared to fame and fortune. He recognized Philip as one of the bright
young men of the Republic; but in his own opinion he was far too self-important
to betray that fact.
Philip sank into an
imitation Louis Quatorze chair beside a fountain in imitation of one in the
apartment of the Pompadour, and ordered what he knew would be an execrable
imitation of an American cocktail. While waiting for the cocktail and Lady
Woodcote's luncheon party, Philip, from where he sat, could not help but
overhear the conversation of Faust and of the man with him. The latter was a German
with Hebraic features and a pointed beard. In loud tones he was congratulating
the American many-time millionaire on having that morning come into possession
of a rare and valuable masterpiece, a hitherto unknown and but recently
discovered portrait of Philip IV by Velasquez.
Philip sighed
enviously.
``Fancy,'' he thought,
``owning a Velasquez! Fancy having it all to yourself! It must be fun to be
rich. It certainly is hell to be poor!''
The German, who was
evidently a picture-dealer, was exclaiming in tones of rapture, and nodding his
head with an air of awe and solemnity.
``I am telling you the
truth, Mr. Faust,'' he said. ``In no gallery in Europe, no, not even in the
Prado, is there such another Velasquez. This is what you are doing, Mr. Faust,
you are robbing Spain. You are robbing her of something worth more to her than
Cuba. And I tell you, so soon as it is known that this Velasquez is going to
your home in Pittsburgh, every Spaniard will hate you and every art-collector
will hate you, too. For it is the most wonderful art treasure in Europe. And
what a bargain, Mr. Faust! What a bargain!''
To make sure that the
reporter was within hearing, Mr. Faust glanced in the direction of Philip and,
seeing that he had heard, frowned importantly. That the reporter might hear
still more, he also raised his voice.
``Nothing can be called
a bargain, Baron,'' he said, ``that costs three hundred thousand dollars!''
Again he could not
resist glancing toward Philip, and so eagerly that Philip deemed it would be
only polite to look interested. So he obligingly assumed a startled look, with
which he endeavored to mingle simulations of surprise, awe, and envy.
The next instant an
expression of real surprise overspread his features.
Mr. Faust continued.
``If you will come upstairs,'' he said to the picture-dealer, ``I will give you
your check; and then I should like to drive to your apartments and take a
farewell look at the picture.''
``I am sorry,'' the
Baron said, ``but I have had it moved to my art gallery to be packed.''
``Then let's go to the
gallery,'' urged the patron of art. ``We've just time before lunch.'' He rose
to his feet, and on the instant the soul of the picture-dealer was filled with
alarm.
In actual words he
said: ``The picture is already boxed and in its lead coffin. No doubt by now it
is on its way to Liverpool. I am sorry.'' But his thoughts, as Philip easily
read them, were: ``Fancy my letting this vulgar fool into the Tate Street
workshop! Even he would know that old masters are not found in a half-finished
state on Chelsea-made frames and canvases. Fancy my letting him see those two
half-completed Van Dycks, the new Hals, the half-dozen Corots. He would even
see his own copy of Velasquez next to the one exactly like it--the one
MacMillan finished yesterday and that I am sending to Oporto, where next year,
in a convent, we shall `discover' it.''
Philip's surprise gave
way to intense amusement. In his delight at the situation upon which he had
stumbled, he laughed aloud. The two men, who had risen, surprised at the
spectacle of a young man laughing at nothing, turned and stared. Philip also
rose.
``Pardon me,'' he said
to Faust, ``but you spoke so loud I couldn't help overhearing. I think we've
met before, when I was a reporter on the Republic.''
The Pittsburgh
millionaire made a pretense, of annoyance.
``Really!'' he
protested irritably, ``you reporters butt in everywhere. No public man is safe.
Is there no place we can go where you fellows won't annoy us?''
``You can go to the
devil for all I care,'' said Philip, ``or even to Pittsburgh!''
He saw the waiter
bearing down upon him with the imitation cocktail, and moved to meet it. The
millionaire, fearing the reporter would escape him, hastily changed his tone.
He spoke with effective resignation.
``However, since you've
learned so much,'' he said, ``I'll tell you the whole of it. I don't want the
fact garbled, for it is of international importance. Do you know what a
Velasquez is?''
``Do you?'' asked
Philip.
The millionaire smiled
tolerantly.
``I think I do,'' he
said. ``And to prove it, I shall tell you something that will be news to you. I
have just bought a Velasquez that I am going to place in my art museum. It is
worth three hundred thousand dollars.''
Philip accepted the
cocktail the waiter presented. It was quite as bad as he had expected.
``Now, I shall tell you
something,'' he said, ``that will be news to you. You are not buying a
Velasquez. It is no more a Velasquez than this hair oil is a real cocktail. It
is a bad copy, worth a few dollars.''
``How dare you!''
shouted Faust. ``Are you mad?''
The face of the German
turned crimson with rage.
``Who is this insolent
one?'' he sputtered.
``I will make you a
sporting proposition,'' said Philip. ``You can take it, or leave it. You two
will get into a taxi. You will drive to this man's studio in Tate Street. You
will find your Velasquez is there and not on its way to Liverpool. And you will
find one exactly like it, and a dozen other `old masters' half-finished. I'll
bet you a hundred pounds I'm right! And I'll bet this man a hundred pounds that
he doesn't dare take you to his studio!''
``Indeed, I will not,''
roared the German. ``It would be to insult myself.'' v
``It would be an easy
way to earn a hundred pounds, too,'' said Philip.
``How dare you insult
the Baron?'' demanded Faust. ``What makes you think----''
``I don't think, I
know!'' said Philip. ``For the price of a taxi-cab fare to Tate Street, you win
a hundred pounds.''
``We will all three go
at once,'' cried the German. ``My car is outside. Wait here. I will have it
brought to the door?''
Faust protested
indignantly.
``Do not disturb
yourself, Baron,'' he said; ``just because a fresh reporter----''
But already the German
had reached the hall. Nor did he stop there. They saw him, without his hat,
rush into Piccadilly, spring into a taxi, and shout excitedly to the driver.
The next moment he had disappeared.
``That's the last
you'll see of him,'' said Philip.
``His actions are
certainly peculiar,'' gasped the millionaire. ``He did not wait for us. He
didn't even wait for his hat! I think, after all, I had better go to Tate
Street.''
``Do so,'' said Philip,
``and save yourself three hundred thousand dollars, and from the laughter of
two continents. You'll find me here at lunch. If I'm wrong, I'll pay you a
hundred pounds.''
``You should come with
me,'' said Faust. ``It is only fair to yourself.''
``I'll take your word
for what you find in the studio,'' said Philip. ``I cannot go. This is my busy
day.''
Without further words,
the millionaire collected his hat and stick, and, in his turn, entered a
taxi-cab and disappeared.
Philip returned to the
Louis Quatorze chair and lit a cigarette. Save for the two elderly gentlemen on
the sofa, the lounge was still empty, and his reflections were undisturbed. He
shook his head sadly.
``Surely,'' Philip
thought, ``the French chap was right who said words were given us to conceal
our thoughts. What a strange world it would be if every one possessed my power.
Deception would be quite futile and lying would become a lost art. I wonder,''
he mused cynically, ``is any one quite honest? Does any one speak as he thinks
and think as he speaks?''
At once came a direct
answer to his question. The two elderly gentlemen had risen and, before
separating, had halted a few feet from him.
``I sincerely hope, Sir
John,'' said one of the two, ``that you have no regrets. I hope you believe
that I have advised you in the best interests of all?''
``I do, indeed,'' the
other replied heartily ``We shall be thought entirely selfish; but you know and
I know that what we have done is for the benefit of the shareholders.''
Philip was pleased to
find that the thoughts of each of the old gentlemen ran hand in hand with his
spoken words. ``Here, at least,'' he said to himself, ``are two honest men.''
As though loath to
part, the two gentlemen still lingered.
``And I hope,''
continued the one addressed as Sir John, ``that you approve of my holding back
the public announcement of the combine until the afternoon. It will give the
shareholders a better chance. Had we given out the news in this morning's
papers the stockbrokers would have----''
``It was most wise,''
interrupted the other. ``Most just.''
The one called Sir John
bowed himself away, leaving the other still standing at the steps of the
lounge. With his hands behind his back, his chin sunk on his chest, he
remained, gazing at nothing, his thoughts far away.
Philip found them thoughts
of curious interest. They were concerned with three flags. Now, the gentleman
considered them separately; and Philip saw the emblems painted clearly in
colors, fluttering and flattened by the breeze. Again, the gentleman considered
them in various combinations; but always, in whatever order his mind arranged
them, of the three his heart spoke always to the same flag, as the heart of a
mother reaches toward her firstborn.
Then the thoughts were
diverted; and in his mind's eye the old gentleman was watching the launching of
a little schooner from a shipyard on the Clyde. At her main flew one of the
three flags--a flag with a red cross on a white ground. With thoughts tender
and grateful, he followed her to strange, hot ports, through hurricanes and tidal
waves; he saw her return again and again to the London docks, laden with
odorous coffee, mahogany, red rubber, and raw bullion. He saw sister ships
follow in her wake to every port in the South Sea; saw steam packets take the
place of the ships with sails; saw the steam packets give way to great ocean
liners, each a floating village, each equipped, as no village is equipped, with
a giant power house, thousands of electric lamps, suite after suite of
silk-lined boudoirs, with the floating harps that vibrate to a love message
three hundred miles away, to the fierce call for help from a sinking ship. But
at the main of each great vessel there still flew the same house-flag--the red
cross on the field of white--only now in the arms of the cross there nestled proudly
a royal crown.
Philip cast a scared
glance at the old gentleman, and raced down the corridor to the telephone.
Of all the young
Englishmen he knew, Maddox was his best friend and a stock-broker. In that
latter capacity Philip had never before addressed him. Now he demanded his
instant presence at the telephone.
Maddox greeted him
genially, but Philip cut him short.
``I want you to act for
me,'' he whispered, ``and act quick! I want you to buy for me one thousand
shares of the Royal Mail Line, of the Elder-Dempster, and of the Union
Castle.''
He heard Maddox laugh
indulgently.
``There's nothing in
that yarn of a combine,'' he called. ``It has fallen through. Besides, shares
are at fifteen pounds.''
Philip, having in his
possession a second-class ticket and a five-pound note, was indifferent to
that, and said so.
``I don't care what
they are,'' he shouted. ``The combine is already signed and sealed, and no one
knows it but myself. In an hour everybody will know it!''
``What makes you think
you know it?'' demanded the broker.
``I've seen the
house-flags!'' cried Philip. ``I have--do as I tell you,'' he commanded.
There was a distracting
delay.
``No matter who's back
of you,'' objected Maddox, ``it's a big order on a gamble.''
``It's not a gamble,''
cried Philip. ``It's an accomplished fact. I'm at the Ritz. Call me up there.
Start buying now, and, when you've got a thousand of each, stop!''
Philip was much too
agitated to go far from the telephone booth; so for half an hour he sat in the
reading-room, forcing himself to read the illustrated papers. When he found he
had read the same advertisement five times, he returned to the telephone. The
telephone boy met him half-way with a message.
``Have secured for you
a thousand shares of each,'' he read, ``at fifteen. Maddox.''
Like a man awakening
from a nightmare, Philip tried to separate the horror of the situation from the
cold fact. The cold fact was sufficiently horrible. It was that, without a
penny to pay for them, he had bought shares in three steamship lines, which
shares, added together, were worth two hundred and twenty five thousand
dollars. He returned down the corridor toward the lounge. Trembling at his own
audacity, he was in a state of almost complete panic, when that happened which
made his outrageous speculation of little consequence. It was drawing near to
half-past one; and, in the persons of several smart men and beautiful ladies,
the component parts of different luncheon parties were beginning to assemble.
Of the luncheon to
which Lady Woodcote had invited him, only one guest had arrived; but, so far as
Philip was concerned, that one was sufficient. It was Helen herself, seated
alone, with her eyes fixed on the doors opening from Piccadilly. Philip, his
heart singing with appeals, blessings, and adoration, ran toward her. Her
profile was toward him, and she could not see him; but he could see her. And he
noted that, as though seeking some one, her eyes were turned searchingly upon
each young man as he entered and moved from one to another of those already in
the lounge. Her expression was eager and anxious.
``If only,'' Philip
exclaimed, ``she were looking for me! She certainly is looking for some man. I
wonder who it can be?''
As suddenly as if he
had slapped his face into a wall, he halted in his steps. Why should he wonder?
Why did he not read her mind? Why did he not know? A waiter was hastening
toward him. Philip fixed his mind upon the waiter, and his eyes as well. Mentally
Philip demanded of him: ``Of what are you thinking?''
There was no response.
And then, seeing an unlit cigarette hanging from Philip's lips, the waiter
hastily struck a match and proffered it. Obviously, his mind had worked, first,
in observing the half-burned cigarette; next, in furnishing the necessary
match. And of no step in that mental process had Philip been conscious! The
conclusion was only too apparent. His power was gone. No longer was he a mind
reader!
Hastily Philip reviewed
the adventures of the morning. As he considered them, the moral was obvious.
The moment he had used his power to his own advantage, he had lost it. So long
as he had exerted it for the happiness of the two lovers, to save the life of
the King, to thwart the dishonesty of a swindler, he had been all-powerful; but
when he endeavored to bend it to his own uses, it had fled from him. As he
stood abashed and repentant, Helen turned her eyes toward him; and, at the
sight of him, there leaped to them happiness and welcome and complete content.
It was ``the look that never was on land or sea,'' and it was not necessary to
be a mind reader to understand it. Philip sprang toward her as quickly as a man
dodges a taxi-cab.
``I came early,'' said
Helen, ``because I wanted to talk to you before the others arrived.'' She
seemed to be repeating words already rehearsed, to be following a course of
conduct already predetermined. ``I want to tell you,'' she said, ``that I am
sorry you are going away. I want to tell you that I shall miss you very much.''
She paused and drew a long breath. And she looked at Philip as if she was
begging him to make it easier for her to go on.
Philip proceeded to
make it easier.
``Will you miss me,''
he asked, ``in the Row, where I used to wait among the trees to see you ride
past? Will you miss me at dances, where I used to hide behind the dowagers to
watch you waltzing by? Will you miss me at night, when you come home by
sunrise, and I am not hiding against the railings of the Carlton Club, just to see
you run across the pavement from your carriage, just to see the light on your
window blind, just to see the light go out, and to know that you are
sleeping?''
Helen's eyes were
smiling happily. She looked away from him.
``Did you use to do
that?'' she asked.
``Every night I do
that,'' said Philip. ``Ask the policemen! They arrested me three times.''
``Why?'' said Helen
gently.
But Philip was not yet
free to speak, so he said:
``They thought I was a
burglar.''
Helen frowned. He was
making it very hard for her.
``You know what I
mean,'' she said. ``Why did you keep guard outside my window?''
``It was the policeman
kept guard,'' said Philip. ``I was there only as a burglar. I came to rob. But
I was a coward, or else I had a conscience, or else I knew my own
unworthiness.'' There was a long pause. As both of them, whenever they heard
the tune afterward, always remembered, the Hungarian band, with rare
inconsequence, was playing the ``Grizzly Bear,'' and people were trying to
speak to Helen. By her they were received with a look of so complete a lack of
recognition, and by Philip with a glare of such savage hate, that they
retreated in dismay. The pause seemed to last for many years.
At last Helen said:
``Do you know the story of the two roses? They grew in a garden under a lady's
window. They both loved her. One looked up at her from the ground and sighed
for her; but the other climbed to the lady's window, and she lifted him in and
kissed him --because he had dared to climb.''
Philip took out his
watch and looked at it. But Helen did not mind his doing that, because she saw
that his eyes were filled with tears. She was delighted to find that she was
making it very hard for him, too.
``At any moment,''
Philip said, ``I may know whether I owe two hundred and twenty-five thousand
dollars which I can never pay, or whether I am worth about that sum. I should
like to continue this conversation at the exact place where you last
spoke--after I know whether I am going to jail, or whether I am worth a quarter
of a million dollars.''
Helen laughed aloud
with happiness.
``I knew that was it!''
she cried. ``You don't like my money. I was afraid you did not like me. If you
dislike my money, I will give it away, or I will give it to you to keep for me.
The money does not matter, so long as you don't dislike me.''
What Philip would have
said to that, Helen could not know, for a page in many buttons rushed at him
with a message from the telephone, and with a hand that trembled Philip
snatched it. It read: ``Combine is announced, shares have gone to thirty-one,
shall I hold or sell?''
That at such a crisis
he should permit of any interruption hurt Helen deeply. She regarded him with
unhappy eyes. Philip read the message three times. At last, and not without
uneasy doubts as to his own sanity, he grasped the preposterous truth. He was
worth almost a quarter of a million dollars! At the page he shoved his last and
only five-pound note. He pushed the boy from him.
``Run!'' he commanded.
``Get out of here, Tell him he is to sell!''
He turned to Helen with
a look in his eyes that could not be questioned or denied. He seemed incapable
of speech, and, to break the silence, Helen said: ``Is it good news?''
``That depends entirely
upon you,'' replied Philip soberly. ``Indeed, all my future life depends upon
what you are going to say next.''
Helen breathed deeply
and happily.
``And--what am I going
to say?''
``How can I know
that?'' demanded Philip. ``Am I a mind reader?''
But what she said may
be safely guessed from the fact that they both chucked Lady Woodcotes luncheon,
and ate one of penny buns, which they shared with the bears in Regents Park.
Philip was just able to
pay for the penny buns. Helen paid for the taxi-cab.
IN their home town of
Keepsburg, the Keeps were the reigning dynasty, socially and in every way. Old
man Keep was president of the trolley line, the telephone company, and the Keep
National Bank. But Fred, his son, and the heir apparent, did not inherit the
business ability of his father; or, if he did, he took pains to conceal that
fact. Fred had gone through Harvard, but as to that also, unless he told
people, they would not have known it. Ten minutes after Fred met a man he
generally told him.
When Fred arranged an
alliance with Winnie Platt, who also was of the innermost inner set of
Keepsburg, everybody said Keepsburg would soon lose them. And everybody was
right. When single, each had sighed for other social worlds to conquer, and
when they combined their fortunes and ambitions they found Keepsburg
impossible, and they left it to lay siege to New York. They were too crafty to
at once attack New York itself. A widow lady they met while on their honeymoon
at Palm Beach had told them not to attempt that. And as she was the Palm Beach
correspondent of a society paper they naturally accepted her advice. She warned
them that in New York the waiting-list is already interminable, and that, if
you hoped to break into New York society, the clever thing to do was to lay
siege to it by way of the suburbs and the country clubs. If you went direct to
New York knowing no one, you would at once expose that fact, and the result
would be disastrous.
She told them of a couple
like themselves, young and rich and from the West, who, at the first dance to
which they were invited, asked, ``Who is the old lady in the wig?'' and that
question argued them so unknown that it set them back two years. It was a
terrible story, and it filled the Keeps with misgivings. They agreed with the
lady correspondent that it was far better to advance leisurely; first firmly to
intrench themselves in the suburbs, and then to enter New York, not as the
Keeps from Keepsburg, which meant nothing, but as the Fred Keeps of Long
Island, or Westchester, or Bordentown.
``In all of those
places,'' explained the widow lady, ``our smartest people have country homes,
and at the country club you may get to know them. Then, when winter comes, you
follow them on to the city.''
The point from which
the Keeps elected to launch their attack was Scarboro-on-the-Hudson. They
selected Scarboro because both of them could play golf, and they planned that
their first skirmish should be fought and won upon the golf-links of the Sleepy
Hollow Country Club. But the attack did not succeed. Something went wrong. They
began to fear that the lady correspondent had given them the wrong dope. For,
although three months had passed, and they had played golf together until they
were as loath to clasp a golf club as a red-hot poker, they knew no one, and no
one knew them. That is, they did not know the Van Wardens; and if you lived at
Scarboro and were not recognized by the Van Wardens, you were not to be found
on any map.
Since the days of
Hendrik Hudson the country-seat of the Van Wardens had looked down upon the
river that bears his name, and ever since those days the Van Wardens had looked
down upon everybody else. They were so proud that at all their gates they had
placed signs reading, ``No horses allowed. Take the other road.'' The other
road was an earth road used by tradespeople from Ossining; the road reserved
for the Van Wardens, and automobiles, was of bluestone. It helped greatly to
give the Van Warden estate the appearance of a well kept cemetery. And those
Van Wardens who occupied the country-place were as cold and unsociable as the
sort of people who occupy cemeteries--except ``Harry'' Van Warden, and vhe
lived in New York at the Turf Club.
Harry, according to all
local tradition--for he frequently motored out to Warden Koopf, the Van Warden
country-seat--and, according to the newspapers, was a devil of a fellow and in
no sense cold or unsociable. So far as the Keeps read of him, he was always
being arrested for overspeeding, or breaking his collar-bone out hunting, or
losing his front teeth at polo. This greatly annoyed the proud sisters at
Warden Koopf; not because Harry was arrested or had broken his collar-bone, but
because it dragged the family name into the newspapers.
``If you would only
play polo or ride to hounds instead of playing golf,'' sighed Winnie Keep to
her husband, ``you would meet Harry Van Warden, and he'd introduce you to his
sisters, and then we could break in anywhere.''
``If I was to ride to hounds,''
returned her husband, ``the only thing I'd break would be my neck.''
The country-place of
the Keeps was completely satisfactory, and for the purposes of their social
comedy the stage-setting was perfect. The house was one they had rented from a man
of charming taste and inflated fortune; and with it they had taken over his
well-disciplined butler, his pictures, furniture, family silver, and linen. It
stood upon an eminence, was heavily wooded, and surrounded by many gardens; but
its chief attraction was an artificial lake well stocked with trout that lay
directly below the terrace of the house and also in full view from the road to
Albany.
This latter fact caused
Winnie Keep much concern. In the neighborhood were many Italian laborers, and
on several nights the fish had tempted these born poachers to trespass; and
more than once, on hot summer evenings, small boys from Tarrytown and Ossining
had broken through the hedge, and used the lake as a swimming-pool.
``It makes me
nervous,'' complained Winnie. ``I don't like the idea of people prowling around
so near the house. And think of those twelve hundred convicts, not one mile
away, in Sing Sing. Most of them are burglars, and if they ever get out, our
house is the very first one they'll break into.''
``I haven't caught
anybody in this neighborhood breaking into our house yet,'' said Fred, ``and
I'd be glad to see even a burglar!''
They were seated on the
brick terrace that overlooked the lake. It was just before the dinner hour, and
the dusk of a wonderful October night had fallen on the hedges, the clumps of
evergreens, the rows of close-clipped box. A full moon was just showing itself
above the tree-tops, turning the lake into moving silver. Fred rose from his
wicker chair and, crossing to his young bride, touched her hair fearfully with
the tips of his fingers.
``What if we don't know
anybody, Win,'' he said, ``and nobody knows us? It's been a perfectly good
honeymoon, hasn't it? If you just look at it that way, it works out all right.
We came here really for our honeymoon, to be together, to be alone----''
Winnie laughed shortly.
``They certainly have left us alone!'' she sighed.
``But where else could
we have been any happier?'' demanded the young husband loyally. ``Where will
you find any prettier place than this, just as it is at this minute, so still
and sweet and silent? There's nothing the matter with that moon, is there?
Nothing the matter with the lake? Where's there a better place for a honeymoon?
It's a bower--a bower of peace, solitude a--bower of----''
As though mocking his
words, there burst upon the sleeping countryside the shriek of a giant siren.
It was raucous, virulent, insulting. It came as sharply as a scream of terror,
it continued in a bellow of rage. Then, as suddenly as it had cried aloud, it
sank to silence; only after a pause of an instant, as though giving a signal,
to shriek again in two sharp blasts. And then again it broke into the hideous
long drawn scream of rage, insistent, breathless, commanding; filling the soul
of him who heard it, even of the innocent, with alarm.
``In the name of
Heaven!'' gasped Keep, ``what's that?''
Down the terrace the
butler was hastening toward them. When he stopped, he spoke as though he were
announcing dinner. ``A convict, sir,'' he said, ``has escaped from Sing Sing. I
thought you might not understand the whistle. I thought perhaps you would wish
Mrs. Keep to come in-doors.''
``Why?'' asked Winnie
Keep.
``The house is near the
road, madam,'' said the butler. ``And there are so many trees and bushes. Last
summer two of them hid here, and the keepers--there was a fight.'' The man
glanced at Keep. Fred touched his wife on the arm.
``It's time to dress
for dinner, Win,'' he said.
``And what are you
going to do?'' demanded Winnie.
I'm going to finish
this cigar first. It doesn't take me long to change.'' He turned to the butler.
``And I'll have a cocktail, too I'll have it out here.''
The servant left them,
but in the French window that opened from the terrace to the library Mrs. Keep
lingered irresolutely. ``Fred,'' she begged, ``you--you're not going to poke
around in the bushes, are you?--just because you think I'm frightened?''
Her husband laughed at
her. ``I certainly am not!'' he said. ``And you're not frightened, either. Go
in. I'll be with you in a minute.''
But the girl hesitated.
Still shattering the silence of the night the siren shrieked relentlessly; it
seemed to be at their very door, to beat and buffet the window-panes. The bride
shivered and held her fingers to her ears.
``Why don't they stop
it!'' she whispered. ``Why don't they give him a chance!''
When she had gone, Fred
pulled one of the wicker chairs to the edge of the terrace, and, leaning
forward with his chin in his hands, sat staring down at the lake. The moon had
cleared the tops of the trees, had blotted the lawns with black, rigid squares,
had disguised the hedges with wavering shadows. Somewhere near at hand a
criminal--a murderer, burglar, thug--was at large, and the voice of the prison
he had tricked still bellowed in rage, in amazement, still clamored not only
for his person but perhaps for his life. The whole countryside heard it: the
farmers bedding down their cattle for the night; the guests of the Briar Cliff
Inn, dining under red candle shades; the joy riders from the city, racing their
cars along the Albany road. It woke the echoes of Sleepy Hollow. It crossed the
Hudson. The granite walls of the Palisades flung it back against the granite
walls of the prison. Whichever way the convict turned, it hunted him, reaching
for him, pointing him out--stirring in the heart of each who heard it the lust
of the hunter, which never is so cruel as when the hunted thing is a man.
``Find him!'' shrieked
the siren. ``Find him! He's there, behind your hedge! He's kneeling by the
stone wall. That's he running in the moonlight. That's he crawling through the
dead leaves! Stop him! Drag him down! He's mine! Mine!''
But from within the
prison, from within the gray walls that made the home of the siren, each of
twelve hundred men cursed it with his soul. Each, clinging to the bars of his
cell, each, trembling with a fearful joy, each, his thumbs up, urging on with
all the strength of his will the hunted, rat-like figure that stumbled panting
through the crisp October night, bewildered by strange lights, beset by
shadows, staggering and falling, running like a mad dog in circles, knowing that
wherever his feet led him the siren still held him by the heels.
As a rule, when Winnie
Keep was dressing for dinner, Fred, in the room adjoining, could hear her
unconsciously and light-heartedly singing to herself. It was a habit of hers
that he loved. But on this night, although her room was directly above where he
sat upon the terrace, he heard no singing. He had been on the terrace for a
quarter of an hour. Gridley, the aged butler who was rented with the house, and
who for twenty years had been an inmate of it, had brought the cocktail and
taken away the empty glass. And Keep had been alone with his thoughts. They
were entirely of the convict. If the man suddenly confronted him and begged his
aid, what would he do? He knew quite well what he would do. He considered even
the means by which he would assist the fugitive to a successful get-away.
The ethics of the
question did not concern Fred. He did not weigh his duty to the State of New
York, or to society. One day, when he had visited ``the institution,'' as a
somewhat sensitive neighborhood prefers to speak of it, he was told that the
chance of a prisoner's escaping from Sing Sing and not being at once retaken
was one out of six thousand. So with Fred it was largely a sporting
proposition. Any man who could beat a six-thousand-to-one shot commanded his
admiration.
And, having settled his
own course of action, he tried to imagine himself in the place of the man who
at that very moment was endeavoring to escape. Were he that man, he would
first, he decided, rid himself of his tell-tale clothing. But that would leave
him naked, and in Westchester County a naked man would be quite as conspicuous
as one in the purple-gray cloth of the prison. How could he obtain clothes? He
might hold up a passer-by, and, if the passer-by did not flee from him or punch
him into insensibility, he might effect an exchange of garments; he might by
threats obtain them from some farmer; he might despoil a scarecrow.
But with none of these
plans was Fred entirely satisfied. The question deeply perplexed him. How best
could a naked man clothe himself? And as he sat pondering that point, from the
bushes a naked man emerged. He was not entirely undraped. For around his
nakedness he had drawn a canvas awning. Fred recognized it as having been torn
from one of the row-boats in the lake. But, except for that, the man was naked
to his heels. He was a young man of Fred's own age. His hair was cut close, his
face smooth-shaven, and above his eye was a half-healed bruise. He had the sharp,
clever, rat-like face of one who lived by evil knowledge. Water dripped from
him, and either for that reason or from fright the young man trembled, and,
like one who had been running, breathed in short, hard gasps.
Fred was surprised to
find that he was not in the least surprised. It was as though he had been
waiting for the man, as though it had been an appointment.
Two thoughts alone
concerned him: that before he could rid himself of his visitor his wife might
return and take alarm, and that the man, not knowing his friendly intentions,
and in a state to commit murder, might rush him. But the stranger made no
hostile move, and for a moment in the moonlight the two young men eyed each
other warily.
Then, taking breath and
with a violent effort to stop the chattering of his teeth, the stranger
launched into his story.
``I took a bath in your
pond,'' he blurted forth, ``and--and they stole my clothes! That's why I'm like
this!''
Fred was consumed with
envy. In comparison with this ingenious narrative how prosaic and commonplace
became his own plans to rid himself of accusing garments and explain his
nakedness. He regarded the stranger with admiration. But even though he
applauded the other's invention, he could not let him suppose that he was deceived
by it.
``Isn't it rather a
cold night to take a bath?'' he said.
As though in hearty
agreement, the naked man burst into a violent fit of shivering.
``It wasn't a bath,''
he gasped. ``It was a bet!''
``A what!'' exclaimed
Fred. His admiration was increasing. ``A bet? Then you are not alone?''
``I am now--damn
them!'' exclaimed the naked one. He began again reluctantly. ``We saw you from
the road, you and a woman, sitting here in the light from that room. They bet
me I didn't dare strip and swim across your pond with you sitting so near. I
can see now it was framed up on me from the start. For when I was swimming back
I saw them run to where I'd left my clothes, and then I heard them crank up,
and when I got to the hedge the car was gone!''
Keep smiled
encouragingly. ``The car!'' he assented. ``So you've been riding around in the
moonlight?''
The other nodded, and
was about to speak when there burst in upon them the roaring scream of the
siren. The note now was of deeper rage, and came in greater volume. Between his
clinched teeth the naked one cursed fiercely, and then, as though to avoid
further questions, burst into a fit of coughing. Trembling and shaking, he drew
the canvas cloak closer to him. But at no time did his anxious, prying eyes
leave the eyes of Keep.
``You--you couldn't
lend me a suit of clothes could you?'' he stuttered. ``Just for to-night? I'll
send them back. It's all right,'' he added; reassuringly. ``I live near here.''
With a start Keep
raised his eyes, and distressed by his look, the young man continued less
confidently.
``I don't blame you if
you don't believe it,'' he stammered, ``seeing me like this; but I do live
right near here. Everybody around here knows me, and I guess you've read about
me in the papers, too. I'm--that is, my name--'' like one about to take a
plunge he drew a short breath, and the rat-like eyes regarded Keep
watchfully--``my name is Van Warden. I'm the one you read about--Harry--I'm
Harry Van Warden!''
After a pause, slowly
and reprovingly Fred shook his head; but his smile was kindly even regretful,
as though he were sorry he could not longer enjoy the stranger's confidences.
``My boy!'' he
exclaimed, ``you're more than Van Warden! You're a genius!'' He rose and made a
peremptory gesture. ``Sorry,'' he said, ``but this isn't safe for either of us.
Follow me, and I'll dress you up and send you where you want to go.'' He turned
and whispered over his shoulder: ``Some day let me hear from you. A man with
your nerve----''
In alarm the naked one
with a gesture commanded silence.
The library led to the
front hall. In this was the coat-room. First making sure the library and hall
were free of servants, Fred tiptoed to the coat-room and, opening the door,
switched: on the electric light. The naked man, leaving in his wake a trail of
damp footprints, followed at his heels.
Fred pointed at
golf-capes, sweaters, greatcoats hanging from hooks, and on the floor at boots
and overshoes.
``Put on that motor-coat
and the galoshes,'' he commanded. ``They'll cover you in case you have to run
for it. I'm going to leave you here while I get you some clothes. If any of the
servants butt in, don't lose your head. Just say you're waiting to see me--Mr.
Keep. I won't be long. Wait.''
``Wait!'' snorted the
stranger. ``You bet I'll wait!'
As Fred closed the door
upon him, the naked one was rubbing himself violently with Mrs. Keep's yellow
golf-jacket.
In his own room Fred
collected a suit of blue serge, a tennis shirt, boots, even a tie. Underclothes
he found ready laid out for him, and he snatched them from the bed. From a roll
of money in his bureau drawer he counted out a hundred dollars. Tactfully he
slipped the money in the trousers pocket of the serge suit and with the bundle
of clothes in his arms raced downstairs and shoved them into the coat-room.
``Don't come out until
I knock,'' he commanded. ``And,'' he added in a vehement vwhisper, ``don't come
out at all unless you have clothes on!''
The stranger grunted.
Fred rang for Gridley
and told him to have his car brought around to the door. He wanted it to start
at once within two minutes. When the butler had departed, Fred, by an inch,
again opened the coat-room door. The stranger had draped himself in the
underclothes and the shirt, and at the moment was carefully arranging the tie.
``Hurry!'' commanded
Keep. ``The car'll be here in a minute. Where shall I tell him to take you?''
The stranger chuckled
excitedly; his confidence seemed to be returning. ``New York,'' he whispered,
``fast as he can get there! Look here,'' he added doubtfully, ``there's a roll
of bills in these clothes.''
``They're yours,'' said
Fred.
The stranger exclaimed
vigorously. ``You're all right!'' he whispered. ``I won't forget this, or you
either. I'll send the money back same time I send the clothes.''
``Exactly!'' said Fred.
The wheels of the
touring-car crunched on the gravel drive, and Fred slammed to the door, and
like a sentry on guard paced before it. After a period which seemed to stretch
over many minutes there came from the inside a cautious knocking. With equal
caution Fred opened the door of the width of a finger, and put his ear to the
crack.
``You couldn't find me
a button-hook, could you?'' whispered the stranger.
Indignantly Fred shut
the door and, walking to the veranda, hailed the chauffeur. James, the
chauffeur, was a Keepsburg boy, and when Keep had gone to Cambridge James had
accompanied him. Keep knew the boy could be trusted.
``You're to take a man
to New York,'' he said, ``or wherever he wants to go. Don't talk to him. Don't
ask any questions. So, if you're questioned, you can say you know nothing.
That's for your own good!''
The chauffeur
mechanically touched his cap and started down the steps. As he did so, the
prison whistle, still unsatisfied, still demanding its prey, shattered the
silence. As though it had hit him a physical blow, the youth jumped. He turned
and lifted startled, inquiring eyes to where Keep stood above him.
``I told you,'' said
Keep, ``to ask no questions. v
As Fred re-entered the
hall, Winnie Keep was coming down the stairs toward him. She had changed to one
of the prettiest evening gowns of her trousseau, and so outrageously lovely was
the combination of herself and the gown that her husband s excitement and
anxiety fell from him, and he was lost in admiration. But he was not for long
lost. To his horror; the door of the coat-closet opened toward his wife and out
of the closet the stranger emerged. Winnie, not accustomed to seeing young men
suddenly appear from among the dust-coats, uttered a sharp shriek.
With what he considered
great presence of mind, Fred swung upon the visitor
``Did you fix it?'' he
demanded.
The visitor did not
heed him. In amazement in abject admiration, his eyes were fastened upon the
beautiful and radiant vision presented by Winnie Keep. But he also still
preserved sufficient presence of mind to nod his head dully.
``Come,'' commanded
Fred. ``The car is waiting.''
Still the stranger did
not move. As though he had never before seen a woman, as though her dazzling
loveliness held him in a trance, he stood still, gazing, gaping, devouring
Winnie with his eyes. In her turn, Winnie beheld a strange youth who looked
like a groom out of livery, so overcome by her mere presence as to be struck
motionless and inarticulate. For protection she moved in some alarm toward her
husband.
The stranger gave a
sudden jerk of his body that might have been intended for a bow. Before Keep could
interrupt him, like a parrot reciting its lesson, he exclaimed explosively:
``My name's Van Warden.
I'm Harry Van Warden.''
He seemed as little
convinced of the truth of his statement as though he had announced that he was
the Czar of Russia. It was as though a stage-manager had drilled him in the
lines.
But upon Winnie, as her
husband saw to his dismay, the words produced an instant and appalling effect.
She fairly radiated excitement and delight. How her husband had succeeded in
capturing the social prize of Scarboro she could not imagine, but, for doing
so, she flashed toward him a glance of deep and grateful devotion.
Then she beamed upon
the stranger. ``Won't Mr. Van Warden stay to dinner?'' she asked.
Her husband emitted a
howl. ``He will not!'' he cried. ``He's not that kind of a Van Warden. He's a
plumber. He's the man that fixes the telephone!''
He seized the visitor
by the sleeve of the long motor-coat and dragged him down the steps.
Reluctantly, almost resistingly, the visitor stumbled after him, casting
backward amazed glances at the beautiful lady. Fred thrust him into the seat
beside the chauffeur. Pointing at the golf-cap and automobile goggles which the
stranger was stupidly twisting in his hands, Fred whispered fiercely:
``Put those on! Cover
your face! Don't speak! The man knows what to do.''
With eager eyes and
parted lips James the chauffeur was waiting for the signal. Fred nodded
sharply, and the chauffeur stooped to throw in the clutch. But the car did not
start. From the hedge beside the driveway, directly in front of the wheels,
something on all fours threw Itself upon the gravel; something in a suit of
purple-gray; something torn and bleeding, smeared with sweat and dirt;
something that cringed and crawled, that tried to rise and sank back upon its
knees, lifting to the glare of the head-lights the white face and white hair of
a very old, old man. The kneeling figure sobbed; the sobs rising from far down
in the pit of the stomach, wrenching the body like waves of nausea. The man
stretched his arms toward them. From long disuse his voice cracked and broke.
``I'm done!'' he
sobbed. ``I can't go no farther! I give myself up!''
Above the awful silence
that held the four young people, the prison siren shrieked in one long, mocking
howl of triumph.
It was the stranger who
was the first to act. Pushing past Fred, and slipping from his own shoulders
the long motor-coat, he flung it over the suit of purple-gray. The goggles he
clapped upon the old man's frightened eyes, the golf-cap he pulled down over
the white hair. With one arm he lifted the convict, and with the other dragged
and pushed him into the seat beside the chauffeur. Into the hands of the
chauffeur he thrust the roll of bills.
``Get him away!'' he
ordered. ``It's only twelve miles to the Connecticut line. As soon as you're
across, buy him clothes and a ticket to Boston. Go through White Plains to
Greenwich--and then you're safe!''
As though suddenly
remembering the presence of the owner of the car, he swung upon Fred. ``Am I
right?'' he demanded.
``Of course!'' roared
Fred. He flung his arm at the chauffeur as though throwing him into space.
``Get-to-hell-out-of-here!''
he shouted.
The chauffeur, by
profession a criminal, but by birth a human being, chuckled savagely and this
time threw in the clutch. With a grinding of gravel the racing-car leaped into
the night, its ruby rear lamp winking in farewell, its tiny siren answering the
great siren of the prison in jeering notes of joy and victory.
Fred had supposed that
at the last moment the younger convict proposed to leap to the running-board,
but instead the stranger remained motionless.
Fred shouted impotently
after the flying car. In dismay he seized the stranger by the arm.
``But you?'' he demanded.
``How are you going to get away?''
The stranger turned
appealingly to where upon the upper step stood Winnie Keep.
``I don't want to get
away,'' he said. ``I was hoping, maybe, you'd let me stay to dinner.''
A terrible and icy
chill crept down the spine of Fred Keep. He moved so that the light from the
hall fell full upon the face of the stranger.
``Will you kindly tell
me,'' Fred demanded, ``who the devil you are?''
The stranger exclaimed
peevishly. ``I've been telling you all evening,'' he protested. ``I'm Harry Van
Warden!''
Gridley, the ancient
butler, appeared in the open door.
``Dinner is served,
madam,'' he said.
The stranger gave an
exclamation of pleasure. ``Hello, Gridley!'' he cried. ``Will you please tell
Mr. Keep who I am? Tell him, if he'll ask me to dinner, I won't steal the
spoons.''
Upon the face of
Gridley appeared a smile it never had been the privilege of Fred Keep to
behold. The butler beamed upon the stranger fondly, proudly, by the right of
long acquaintanceship, with the affection of an old friend. Still beaming, he
bowed to Keep.
``If Mr. Harry--Mr. Van
Warden,'' he said, ``is to stay to dinner, might I suggest, sir, he is very
partial to the Paul Vibert, '84.''
Fred Keep gazed
stupidly from his butler to the stranger and then at his wife. She was again
radiantly beautiful and smilingly happy.
Gridley coughed
tentatively. ``Shall I open a bottle, sir?'' he asked.
Hopelessly Fred tossed
his arms heavenward.
``Open a case!'' he
roared.
At ten o'clock, when
they were still at table and reaching a state of such mutual appreciation that
soon they would be calling each other by their first names, Gridley brought in
a written message he had taken from the telephone. It was a long-distance call
from Yonkers, sent by James, the faithful chauffeur.
Fred read it aloud.
``I got that party the
articles he needed,'' it read, ``and saw him safe on a train to Boston. On the
way back I got arrested for speeding the car on the way down. Please send
money. I am in a cell in Yonkers.''
BEFORE he finally
arrested him, ``Jimmie'' Sniffen had seen the man with the golf-cap, and the
blue eyes that laughed at you, three times. Twice, unexpectedly, he had come
upon him in a wood road and once on Round Hill where the stranger was
pretending to watch the sunset. Jimmie knew people do not climb hills merely to
look at sunsets, so he was not deceived. He guessed the man was a German spy
seeking gun sites, and secretly vowed to ``stalk'' him. From that moment, had
the stranger known it, he was as good as dead. For a boy scout with badges on
his sleeve for ``stalking'' and ``path-finding,'' not to boast of others for
``gardening'' and ``cooking,'' can outwit any spy. Even had, General
Baden-Powell remained in Mafeking and not invented the boy scout, Jimmie
Sniffen would have been one. Because, by birth he was a boy, and by
inheritance, a scout. In Westchester County the Sniffens are one of the county
families. If it isn't a Sarles, it's a Sniffen; and with Brundages, Platts, and
Jays, the Sniffens date back to when the acres of the first Charles Ferris ran
from the Boston post road to the coach road to Albany, and when the first
Gouverneur Morris stood on one of his hills and saw the Indian canoes in the
Hudson and in the Sound and rejoiced that all the land between belonged to him.
If you do not believe
in heredity, the fact that Jimmie's great-great-grandfather was a scout for
General Washington and hunted deer, and even bear, over exactly the same hills
where Jimmie hunted weasles will count for nothing. It will not explain why to
Jimmie, from Tarrytown to Port Chester, the hills, the roads, the woods, and
the cow-paths, caves, streams, and springs hidden in the woods were as familiar
as his own kitchen garden,
Nor explain why, when
you could not see a Pease and Elliman ``For Sale'' sign nailed to a tree,
Jimmie could see in the highest branches a last year's bird's nest.
Or why, when he was out
alone playing Indians and had sunk his scout's axe into a fallen log and then
scalped the log, he felt that once before in those same woods he had trailed
that same Indian, and with his own tomahawk split open his skull. Sometimes
when he knelt to drink at a secret spring in the forest, the autumn leaves
would crackle and he would raise his eyes fearing to see a panther facing him.
But there ain't no
panthers in Westchester,'' Jimmie would reassure himself. And in the distance
the roar of an automobile climbing a hill with the muffler open would seem to
suggest he was right. But still Jimmie remembered once before he had knelt at
that same spring, and that when he raised his eyes he had faced a crouching
panther. ``Mebbe dad told me it happened to grandpop,'' Jimmie would explain,
``or I dreamed it, or, mebbe, I read it in a story book.''
The ``German spy''
mania attacked Round Hill after the visit to the boy scouts of Clavering Gould,
the war correspondent. He was spending the week end with ``Squire'' Harry Van
Vorst, and as young Van Vorst, besides being a justice of the peace and a
Master of Beagles and President of the Country Club, was also a local
``councilman'' for the Round Hill Scouts, he brought his guest to a camp-fire
meeting to talk to them. In deference to his audience, Gould told them of the
boy scouts he had seen in Belgium and of the part they were playing in the
great war. It was his peroration that made trouble.
``And any day,'' he
assured his audience, ``this country may be at war with Germany; and every one
of you boys will be expected to do his bit. You can begin now. When the Germans
land it will be near New Haven, or New Bedford. They will first capture the
munition works at Springfield, Hartford, and Watervliet so as to make sure of
their ammunition, and then they will start for New York City. They will follow
the New Haven and New York Central railroads, and march straight through this
village. I haven't the least doubt,'' exclaimed the enthusiastic war prophet,
``that at this moment German spies are as thick in Westchester as blackberries.
They are here to select camp sites and gun positions, to find out which of
these hills enfilade the others and to learn to what extent their armies can
live on the country. They are counting the cows, the horses, the barns where
fodder is stored; and they are marking down on their maps the wells and
streams.''
As though at that
moment a German spy might be crouching behind the door, Mr. Gould spoke in a
whisper. ``Keep your eyes open!'' he commanded. ``Watch every stranger. If he
acts suspiciously, get word quick to your sheriff, or to Judge Van Vorst here.
Remember the scouts' motto, `Be prepared!' ''
That night as the
scouts walked home, behind each wall and hayrick they saw spiked helmets.
Young Van Vorst was
extremely annoyed.
``Next time you talk to
my scouts,'' he declared, you'll talk on `Votes for Women.' After what you said
to-night every real estate agent who dares open a map will be arrested. We're
not trying to drive people away from Westchester, we're trying to sell them
building sites.''
``You are not!''
retorted his friend, ``you own half the county now, and you're trying to buy
the other half.''
``I'm a justice of the
peace,'' explained Van Vorst. ``I don't know why I am, except that they wished
it on me. All I get out of it is trouble. The Italians make charges against my
best friends for overspeeding and I have to fine them, and my best friends
bring charges against the Italians for poaching, and when I fine the Italians, they
send me Black Hand letters. And now every day I'll be asked to issue a warrant
for a German spy who is selecting gun sites. And he will turn out to be a
millionaire who is tired of living at the Ritz-Carlton and wants to `own his
own home' and his own golf-links. And he'll be so hot at being arrested that
he'll take his millions to Long Island and try to break into the Piping Rock
Club. And, vit will be your fault!''
The young justice of
the peace was right. At least so far as Jimmie Sniffen was concerned, the words
of the war prophet had filled one mind with unrest. In the past Jimmie's idea
of a holiday had been to spend it scouting in the woods. In this pleasure he
was selfish. He did not want companions who talked, and trampled upon the dead
leaves so that they frightened the wild animals and gave the Indians warning.
Jimmie liked to pretend. He liked to fill the woods with wary and hostile
adversaries. It was a game of his own inventing. If he crept to the top of a
hill and on peering over it, surprised a fat woodchuck, he pretended the
woodchuck was a bear, weighing two hundred pounds; if, himself unobserved, he
could lie and watch, off its guard, a rabbit, squirrel, or, most difficult of
all, a crow, it became a deer and that night at supper Jimmie made believe he
was eating venison. Sometimes he was a scout of the Continental Army and
carried despatches to General Washington. The rules of that game were that if
any man ploughing in the fields, or cutting trees in the woods, or even
approaching along the same road, saw Jimmie before Jimmie saw him, Jimmie was
taken prisoner, and before sunrise was shot as a spy. He was seldom shot. Or
else why on his sleeve was the badge for ``stalking.'' But always to have to
make believe became monotonous. Even ``dry shopping'' along the Rue de la Paix
when you pretend you can have anything you see in any window, leaves one just
as rich, but unsatisfied. So the advice of the war correspondent to seek out
German spies came to Jimmie like a day at the circus, like a week at the
Danbury Fair. It not only was a call to arms, to protect his flag and home, but
a chance to play in earnest the game in which he most delighted. No longer need
he pretend. No longer need he waste his energies in watching, unobserved, a
greedy rabbit rob a carrot field. The game now was his fellow-man and his
enemy; not only his enemy, but the enemy of his country.
In his first effort
Jimmie was not entirely successful. The man looked the part perfectly; he wore
an auburn beard, disguising spectacles, and he carried a suspicious knapsack.
But he turned out to be a professor from the Museum of Natural History, who
wanted to dig for Indian arrow-heads. And when Jimmie threatened to arrest him,
the indignant gentleman arrested Jimmie. Jimmie escaped only by leading the
professor to a secret cave of his own, though on some one else's property,
where one not only could dig for arrow-heads, but find them. The professor was
delighted, but for Jimmie it was a great disappointment. The week following Jimmie
was again disappointed.
On the bank of the
Kensico Reservoir, he came upon a man who was acting in a mysterious and v
suspicious manner. He was making notes in a book, and his runabout which he had
concealed in a wood road was stuffed with blue-prints. It did not take Jimmie
long to guess his purpose. He was planning to blow up the Kensico dam, and cut
off the water supply of New York City. Seven millions of people without water!
With out firing a shot, New York must surrender! At the thought Jimmie shuddered,
and at the risk of his life by clinging to the tail of a motor truck, he
followed the runabout into White Plains. But there it developed the mysterious
stranger, so far from wishing to destroy the Kensico dam, was the State
Engineer who had built it, and, also, a large part of the Panama Canal. Nor in
his third effort was Jimmie more successful. From the heights of Pound Ridge he
discovered on a hilltop below him a man working alone upon a basin of concrete.
The man was a German-American, and already on Jimmie's list of ``suspects.''
That for the use of the German artillery he was preparing a concrete bed for a
siege gun was only too evident. But closer investigation proved that the
concrete was only two inches thick. And the hyphenated one explained that the
basin was built over a spring, in the waters of which he planned to erect a
fountain and raise gold fish. It was a bitter blow. Jimmie became discouraged.
Meeting Judge Van Vorst one day in the road he told him his troubles. The young
judge proved unsympathetic. ``My advice to you, Jimmie,'' he said, ``is to go
slow. Accusing everybody of espionage is a very serious matter. If you call a
man a spy, it's sometimes hard for him to disprove it; and the name sticks. So,
go slow--very slow. Before you arrest any more people, come to me first for a
warrant.''
So, the next time
Jimmie proceeded with caution.
Besides being a farmer
in a small way, Jimmie's father was a handy man with tools. He had no union
card, but, in laying shingles along a blue chalk line, few were as expert. It
was August, there was no school, and Jimmie was carrying a dinner-pail to where
his father was at work on a new barn. He made a cross-cut through the woods,
and came upon the young man in the golf-cap. The stranger nodded, and his eyes,
which seemed to be always laughing, smiled pleasantly. But he was deeply
tanned, and, from the waist up, held himself like a soldier, so, at once,
Jimmie mistrusted him. Early the next morning Jimmie met him again. It had not
been raining, but the clothes of the young man were damp. Jimmie guessed that
while the dew was still on the leaves the young man had been forcing his way
through underbrush. The stranger must have remembered Jimmie, for he laughed
and exclaimed:
``Ah, my friend with the
dinner-pail! It's luck you haven't got it now, or I'd hold you up. I'm
starving!''
Jimmie smiled in
sympathy. ``It's early to be hungry,'' said Jimmie; ``when did you have your
breakfast?''
``I didn't,'' laughed
the young man. ``I went out to walk up an appetite, and I lost myself. But, I
haven't lost my appetite. Which is the shortest way back to Bedford?''
``The first road to
your right,'' said Jimmie.
``Is it far?'' asked
the stranger anxiously. That he was very hungry was evident.
``It's a half-hour's
walk,'' said Jimmie
``If I live that
long,'' corrected the young man; and stepped out briskly.
Jimmie knew that within
a hundred yards a turn in the road would shut him from sight. So, he gave the
stranger time to walk that distance, and, then, diving into the wood that lined
the road, ``stalked'' him. From behind a tree he saw the stranger turn and look
back, and seeing no one in the road behind him, also leave it and plunge into
the woods.
He had not turned
toward Bedford; he had turned to the left. Like a runner stealing bases, Jimmie
slipped from tree to tree. Ahead of him he heard the stranger trampling upon
dead twigs, moving rapidly as one who knew his way. At times through the
branches Jimmie could see the broad shoulders of the stranger, and again could
follow his progress only by the noise of the crackling twigs. When the noises
ceased, Jimmie guessed the stranger had reached the wood road, grass-grown and
moss-covered, that led to Middle Patent. So, he ran at right angles until he
also reached it, and as now he was close to where it entered the main road, he
approached warily. But, he was too late. There was a sound like the whir of a
rising partridge, and ahead of him from where it had been hidden, a gray
touring-car leaped into the highway. The stranger was at the wheel. Throwing
behind it a cloud of dust, the car raced toward Greenwich. Jimmie had time to
note only that it bore a Connecticut State license; that in the wheel-ruts the
tires printed little V's, like arrow-heads.
For a week Jimmie saw
nothing of the spy, but for many hot and dusty miles he stalked arrow-heads.
They lured him north, they lured him south, they were stamped in soft asphalt,
in mud, dust, and fresh-spread tarvia. Wherever Jimmie walked, arrow-heads ran before.
In his sleep as in his copy-book, he saw endless chains of V's. But not once
could he catch up with the wheels that printed them. A week later, just at
sunset as he passed below Round Hill, he saw the stranger on top of it. On the
skyline, in silhouette against the sinking sun, he was as conspicuous as a
flagstaff. But to approach him was impossible. For acres Round Hill offered no
other cover than stubble. It was as bald as a skull. Until the stranger chose
to descend, Jimmie must wait. And the stranger was in no haste. The sun sank
and from the vwest Jimmie saw him turn his face east toward the Sound. A storm
was gathering, drops of rain began to splash and as the sky grew black the
figure on the hilltop faded into the darkness. And then, at the very spot where
Jimmie had last seen it, there suddenly flared two tiny flashes of fire. Jimmie
leaped from cover. It was no longer to be endured. The spy was signalling. The
time for caution had passed, now was the time to act. Jimmie raced to the top
of the hill, and found it empty. He plunged down it, vaulted a stone wall,
forced his way through a tangle of saplings, and held his breath to listen.
Just beyond him, over a jumble of rocks, a hidden stream was tripping and
tumbling. Joyfully, it laughed and gurgled. Jimmie turned hot. It sounded as
though from the darkness the spy mocked him. Jimmie shook his fist at the
enshrouding darkness. Above the tumult of the coming storm and the tossing
tree-tops, he raised his voice.
``You wait!'' he
shouted. ``I'll get you yet! Next time, I'll bring a gun.''
Next time, was the next
morning. There had been a hawk hovering over the chicken yard, and Jimmie used
that fact to explain his borrowing the family shotgun. He loaded it with
buckshot, and, in the pocket of his shirt buttoned his license to ``hunt,
pursue and kill, to take with traps or other devices.''
He remembered that
Judge Van Vorst had warned him, before he arrested more spies, to come to him
for a warrant. But with an impatient shake of the head Jimmie tossed the
recollection from him. After what he had seen he could not possibly be again
mistaken. He did not need a warrant. What he had seen was his warrant--plus the
shotgun.
As a ``pathfinder''
should, he planned to take up the trail where he had lost it, but, before he
reached Round Hill, he found a warmer trail. Before him, stamped clearly in the
road still damp from the rain of the night before, two lines of little
arrow-heads pointed the way. They were so fresh that at each twist in the road,
lest the car should be just beyond him, Jimmie slackened his steps. After half
a mile the scent grew hot. The tracks were deeper, the arrow-heads more clearly
cut, and Jimmie broke into a run. Then, the arrow-heads swung suddenly to the
right, and in a clearing at the edge of a wood, were lost. But the tires had
pressed deep into the grass, and just inside the wood, he found the car. It was
empty. Jimmie was drawn two ways. Should he seek the spy on the nearest
hilltop, or, until the owner returned, wait by the car. Between lying in ambush
and action, Jimmie preferred action. But, he did not climb the hill nearest the
car; he climbed the hill that overlooked that hill.
Flat on the ground,
hidden in the golden-rod he lay motionless. Before him, for fifteen miles
stretched hills and tiny valleys. Six miles away to his right rose the stone
steeple, and the red roofs of Greenwich. Directly before him were no signs of
habitation, only green forests, green fields, gray stone walls, and, where a
road ran up-hill, a splash of white, that quivered in the heat. The storm of
the night before had washed the air. Each leaf stood by itself. Nothing
stirred; and in the glare of the August sun every detail of the landscape was
as distinct as those in a colored photograph; and as still.
In his excitement the
scout was trembling.
``If he moves,'' he
sighed happily, ``I've got him!''
Opposite, across a
little valley was the hill at the base of which he had found the car. The slope
toward him was bare, but the top was crowned with a thick wood; and along its
crest, as though establishing an ancient boundary, ran a stone wall,
moss-covered and wrapped in poison-ivy. In places, the branches of the trees,
reaching out to the sun, overhung the wall and hid it in black shadows. Jimmie
divided the hill into sectors. He began at the right, and slowly followed the
wall. With his eyes he took it apart, stone by stone. Had a chipmunk raised his
head, Jimmie would have seen him. So, when from the stone wall, like the
reflection of the sun upon a window-pane, something flashed, Jimmie knew he had
found his spy. A pair of binoculars had betrayed him. Jimmie now saw him
clearly. He sat on the ground at the top of the hill opposite, in the deep
shadow of an oak, his back against the stone wall. With the binoculars to his
eyes he had leaned too far forward, and upon the glass the sun had flashed a
warning.
Jimmie appreciated that
his attack must be made from the rear. Backward, like a crab he wriggled free
of the golden-rod, and hidden by the contour of the hill, raced down it and
into the woods on the hill opposite. When he came to within twenty feet of the
oak beneath which he had seen the stranger, he stood erect, and as though
avoiding a live wire, stepped on tip-toe to the wall. The stranger still sat
against it. The binoculars hung from a cord around his neck. Across his knees
was spread a map. He was marking it with a pencil, and as he worked, he hummed
a tune.
Jimmie knelt, and
resting the gun on the top of the wall, covered him.
``Throw up your
hands!'' he commanded.
The stranger did not
start. Except that he raised his eyes he gave no sign that he had heard. His
eyes stared across the little sun-filled valley. They were half closed as
though in study, as though perplexed by some deep and intricate problem. They
appeared to see beyond the sun-filled valley some place of greater moment, some
place far distant.
Then the eyes smiled,
and slowly, as though his neck were stiff, but still smiling, the stranger
turned his head. When he saw the boy, his smile was swept away in waves of
surprise, amazement, and disbelief. These were followed instantly by an
expression of the most acute alarm. ``Don't point that thing at me!'' shouted
the stranger. ``Is it loaded?'' With his cheek pressed to the stock and his eye
squinted down the length of the brown barrel, Jimmie nodded. The stranger flung
up his open palms. They accented his expression of amazed incredulity. He
seemed to be exclaiming, ``Can such things be?''
``Get up!'' commanded
Jimmie.
With alacrity the
stranger rose.
``Walk over there,''
ordered the scout. ``Walk backward. Stop! Take off those field-glasses and
throw them to me.'' Without removing his eyes from the gun the stranger lifted
the binoculars from his neck and tossed them to the stone wall. ``See here!''
he pleaded, ``if you'll only point that damned blunderbuss the other way, you
can have the glasses, and my watch, and clothes, and all my money; only
don't----''
Jimmie flushed crimson.
``You can't bribe me,'' he growled. At least, he tried to growl, but because
his voice was changing, or because he was excited the growl ended in a high
squeak. With mortification, Jimmie flushed a deeper crimson. But the stranger
was not amused. At Jimmie's words he seemed rather the more amazed.
``I'm not trying to
bribe you,'' he protested. ``If you don't want anything, why are you holding me
up?''
``I'm not,'' returned
Jimmie, ``I'm arresting you!''
The stranger laughed
with relief. Again his eyes smiled. ``Oh,'' he cried, ``I see! Have I been
trespassing?''
With a glance Jimmie
measured the distance between himself and the stranger. Reassured, he lifted
one leg after the other over the wall. ``If you try to rush me,'' he warned,
``I'll shoot you full of buckshot.''
The stranger took a
hasty step backward. ``Don't worry about that,'' he exclaimed. ``I'll not rush
you. Why am I arrested?''
Hugging the shotgun
with his left arm, Jimmie stopped and lifted the binoculars. He gave them a
swift glance, slung them over his shoulder, and again clutched his weapon. His
expression was now stern and menacing.
``The name on them'' he
accused, ``is `Weiss, Berlin.' Is that your name?'' The stranger smiled, but
corrected himself, and replied gravely, ``That's the name of the firm that
makes them.''
Jimmie exclaimed in
triumph. ``Hah!'' he cried, ``made in Germany!''
The stranger shook his
head.
``I don't understand,''
he said. ``Where would a Weiss glass be made?'' With polite insistence he
repeated, ``Would you mind telling me why I am arrested, and who you might
happen to be?''
Jimmie did not answer.
Again he stooped and picked up the map, and as he did so, for the first time
the face of the stranger showed that he was annoyed. Jimmie was not at home
with maps. They told him nothing. But the penciled notes on this one made easy
reading. At his first glance he saw, ``Correct range, 1,800 yards''; ``this
stream not fordable''; ``slope of hill 15 degrees inaccessible for artillery.''
``Wire entanglements here''; ``forage for five squadrons.''
Jimmie's eyes flashed.
He shoved the map inside his shirt, and with the gun motioned toward the base
of the hill. ``Keep forty feet ahead of me,'' he commanded, ``and walk to your
car.'' The stranger did not seem to hear him. He spoke with irritation.
``I suppose,'' he said,
``I'll have to explain to you about that map.''
``Not to me, you
won't,'' declared his captor. ``You're going to drive straight to Judge Van
Vorst's, and explain to him!''
The stranger tossed his
arms even higher. ``Thank God!'' he exclaimed gratefully.
With his prisoner
Jimmie encountered no further trouble. He made a willing captive. And if in
covering the five miles to Judge Van Vorst's he exceeded the speed limit, the
fact that from the rear seat Jimmie held the shotgun against the base of his
skull was an extenuating circumstance.
They arrived in the
nick of time. In his own car young Van Vorst and a bag of golf clubs were just
drawing away from the house. Seeing the car climbing the steep driveway that
for a half-mile led from his lodge to his front door, and seeing Jimmie
standing in the tonneau brandishing a gun, the Judge hastily descended. The
sight of the spy hunter filled him with misgiving, but the sight of him gave
Jimmie sweet relief. Arresting German spies for a small boy is no easy task.
For Jimmie the strain was great. And now that he knew he had successfully
delivered him into the hands of the law, Jimmie's heart rose with happiness.
The added presence of a butler of magnificent bearing and of an athletic
looking chauffeur increased his sense of security. Their presence seemed to
afford a feeling of security to the prisoner also. As he brought the car to a
halt, he breathed a sigh. It was a sigh of deep relief.
Jimmie fell from the
tonneau. In concealing his sense of triumph, he was not entirety successful.
``I got him!'' he
cried. ``I didn't make no mistake about this one!''
``What one?'' demanded
Van Vorst.
Jimmie pointed
dramatically at his prisoner. With an anxious expression the stranger was
tenderly fingering the back of his head. He seemed to wish to assure himself
that it was still there.
``That one!'' cried
Jimmie. ``He's a German spy!''
The patience of Judge
Van Vorst fell from him. In his exclamation was indignation, anger, reproach.
``Jimmie!'' he cried.
Jimmie thrust into his
hand the map. It vwas his ``Exhibit A.'' ``Look what he's wrote,'' commanded
the scout. ``It's all military words. And these are his glasses. I took 'em off
him. They're made in Germany! I been stalking him for a week. He's a spy!''
When Jimmie thrust the
map before his face, Van Vorst had glanced at it. Then he regarded it more
closely. As he raised his eyes they showed that he was puzzled.
But he greeted the
prisoner politely.
``I'm extremely sorry
you've been annoyed,'' he said. ``I'm only glad it's no worse. He might have
shot you. He's mad over the idea that every stranger he sees----''
The prisoner quickly
interrupted.
``Please!'' he begged,
``Don't blame the boy. He behaved extremely well. Might I speak with
you--alone?'' he asked.
Judge Van Vorst led the
way across the terrace, and to the smoking-room, that served also as his
office, and closed the door. The stranger walked directly to the mantelpiece
and put his finger on a gold cup.
``I saw your mare win
that at Belmont Park,'' he said. ``She must have been a great loss to you?''
``She was,'' said Van
Vorst. ``The week before she broke her back, I refused three thousand for her.
Will you have a cigarette?''
The stranger waved
aside the cigarettes.
``I brought you
inside,'' he said, ``because I didn't want your servants to hear; and because I
don't want to hurt that boy's feelings. He's a fine boy; and he's a damned
clever scout. I knew he was following me and I threw him off twice, but to-day
he caught me fair. If I really had been a German spy, I couldn't have got away
from him. And I want him to think he has captured a German spy. Because he
deserves just as much credit as though he had, and because it's best he
shouldn't know whom he did capture.''
Van Vorst pointed to
the map. ``My bet is,'' he said, ``that you're an officer of the State militia,
taking notes for the fall manuvres. Am I right?''
The stranger smiled in
approval, but shook his head.
``You're warm,'' he
said, ``but it's more serious than manuvres. It's the Real Thing.'' From his
pocketbook he took a visiting card and laid it on the table. ``I'm `Sherry'
McCoy,'' he said, ``Captain of Artillery in the United States Army.'' He nodded
to the hand telephone on the table.
``You can call up
Governor's Island and get General Wood or his aide, Captain Dorey, on the
phone. They sent me here. Ask them. I'm not picking out gun sites for the
Germans; I'm picking out positions of defense for Americans when the Germans
come!''
Van Vorst laughed
derisively.
``My word!'' he
exclaimed. ``You're as bad as Jimmie!''
Captain McCoy regarded
him with disfavor.
``And you, sir,'' he
retorted, ``are as bad as ninety million other Americans. You won't believe!
When the Germans are shelling this hill, when they're taking your hunters to
pull their cook-wagons, maybe, you'll believe then.''
``Are you serious?''
demanded Van Vorst. ``And you an army officer?''
``That's why I am
serious,'' returned McCoy. ``WE know. But when we try to prepare for what is
coming, we must do it secretly--in underhand ways, for fear the newspapers will
get hold of it and ridicule us, and accuse us of trying to drag the country
into war. That's why we have to prepare under cover. That's why I've had to
skulk around these hills like a chicken thief. And,'' he added sharply,
``that's why that boy must not know who I am. If he does, the General Staff
will get a calling down at Washington, and I'll have my ears boxed.''
Van Vorst moved to the
door.
``He will never learn
the truth from me,'' he said. ``For I will tell him you are to be shot at
sunrise.''
``Good!'' laughed the
Captain. ``And tell me his name. If ever we fight over Westchester County, I
want that lad for my chief of scouts. And give him this. Tell him to buy a new
scout uniform. Tell him it comes from you.''
But no money could
reconcile Jimmie to the sentence imposed upon his captive. He received the news
with a howl of anguish. ``You mustn't,'' he begged; ``I never knowed you'd
shoot him! I wouldn't have caught him, if I'd knowed that. I couldn't sleep if
I thought he was going to be shot at sunrise.'' At the prospect of unending
nightmares Jimmie's voice shook with terror. ``Make it for twenty years,'' he
begged. ``Make it for ten,'' he coaxed, ``but, please, promise you won't shoot
him.''
When Van Vorst returned
to Captain McCoy, he was smiling, and the butler who followed, bearing a tray
and tinkling glasses, was trying not to smile.
``I gave Jimmie your
ten dollars,'' said Van Vorst, ``and made it twenty, and he has gone home. You
will be glad to hear that he begged me to spare your life, and that your
sentence vhas been commuted to twenty years in a fortress. I drink to your good
fortune.''
``No!'' protested
Captain McCoy, ``We will drink to Jimmie!''
When Captain McCoy had
driven away, and his own car and the golf clubs had again been brought to the
steps, Judge Van Vorst once more attempted to depart; but he was again delayed.
Other visitors were
arriving.
Up the driveway a
touring-car approached, and though it limped on a flat tire, it approached at
reckless speed. The two men in the front seat were white with dust; their
faces, masked by automobile glasses, were indistinguishable. As though
preparing for an immediate exit, the car swung in a circle until its nose
pointed down the driveway up which it had just come. Raising his silk mask the
one beside the driver shouted at Judge Van Vorst. His throat was parched, his
voice was hoarse and hot with anger.
``A gray touring-car,''
he shouted. ``It stopped here. We saw it from that hill. Then the damn tire
burst, and we lost our way. Where did he go?''
``Who?'' demanded Van
Vorst, stiffly, ``Captain McCoy?''
The man exploded with
an oath. The driver with a shove of his elbow, silenced him.
``Yes, Captain McCoy,''
assented the driver eagerly. ``Which way did he go?''
``To New York,'' said
Van Vorst.
The driver shrieked at
his companion.
``Then, he's doubled
back,'' he cried. ``He's gone to New Haven.'' He stooped and threw in the
clutch. The car lurched forward.
A cold terror swept
young Van Vorst.
``What do you want with
him?'' he called ``Who are you?''
Over one shoulder the
masked face glared at him. Above the roar of the car the words of the driver
were flung back. ``We're Secret Service from Washington,'' he shouted. ``He's
from their embassy. He's a German spy!''
Leaping and throbbing
at sixty miles an hour, the car vanished in a curtain of white, whirling dust.
I HAD looked forward to
spending Christmas with some people in Suffolk, and every one in London assured
me that at their house there would be the kind of a Christmas house party you
hear about but see only in the illustrated Christmas numbers. They promised
mistletoe, snapdragon, and Sir Roger de Coverley. On Christmas morning we would
walk to church, after luncheon we would shoot, after dinner we would eat plum
pudding floating in blazing brandy, dance with the servants, and listen to the
waits singing ``God rest you, merry gentlemen, let nothing you dismay.''
To a lone American
bachelor stranded in London it sounded fine. And in my gratitude I had already
shipped to my hostess, for her children, of whose age, number, and sex I was
ignorant, half of Gamage's dolls, skees, and cricket bats, and those crackers
that, when you pull them, sometimes explode. But it was not to be. Most
inconsiderately my wealthiest patient gained sufficient courage to consent to
an operation, and in all New York would permit no one to lay violent hands upon
him save myself. By cable I advised postponement. Having lived in lawful
harmony with his appendix for fifty years, I thought, for one week longer he
might safely maintain the status quo. But his cable in reply was an ultimatum.
So, on Christmas eve, instead of Hallam Hall and a Yule log, I was in a gale
plunging and pitching off the coast of Ireland, and the only log on board was
the one the captain kept to himself.
I sat in the
smoking-room, depressed and cross, and it must have been on the principle that
misery loves company that I foregathered with Talbot, or rather that Talbot
foregathered with me. Certainty, under happier conditions and in haunts of men
more crowded, the open-faced manner in which he forced himself upon me would
have put me on my guard. But, either out of deference to the holiday spirit, as
manifested in the fictitious gayety of our few fellow-passengers, or because
the young man in a knowing, impertinent way was most amusing, I listened to him
from dinner time until midnight, when the chief officer, hung with snow and
icicles, was blown in from the deck and wished all a merry Christmas.
Even after they
unmasked Talbot I had neither the heart nor the inclination to turn him down.
Indeed, had not some of the passengers testified that I belonged to a different
profession, the smoking-room crowd would have quarantined me as his accomplice.
On the first night I met him I was not certain whether he was English or giving
an imitation. All the outward and visible signs were English, but he told me
that, though he had been educated at Oxford and since then had spent most of
his years in India, playing polo, he was an American. He seemed to have spent
much time, and according to himself much money, at the French watering-places
and on the Riviera. I felt sure that it was in France I had already seen him,
but where I could not recall. He was hard to place. Of people at home and in
London well worth knowing he talked glibly, but in speaking of them he made
several slips. It was his taking the trouble to cover up the slips that first
made me wonder if his talking about himself was not mere vanity, but had some
special object. I felt he was presenting letters of introduction in order that
later he might ask a favor. Whether he was leading up to an immediate loan, or
in New York would ask for a card to a club, or an introduction to a banker, I
could not tell. But in forcing himself upon me, except in self-interest, I
could think of no other motive. The next evening I discovered the motive.
He was in the
smoking-room playing solitaire, and at once I recalled that it was at
Aix-les-Bains I had first seen him, and that he held a bank at baccarat. When
he asked me to sit down I said: ``I saw you last summer at Aix-les-Bains.''
His eyes fell to the
pack in his hands and apparently searched it for some particular card.
``What was I doing?''
he asked.
``Dealing baccarat at
the Casino des Fleurs.''
With obvious relief he
laughed.
``Oh, yes,'' he
assented; ``jolly place, Aix. But I lost a pot of money there. I'm a rotten hand
at cards. Can't win, and can't leave 'em alone.'' As though for this weakness,
so frankly confessed, he begged me to excuse him, he smiled appealingly.
``Poker, bridge, chemin de fer, I like 'em all,'' he rattled on, ``but they
don't like me. So I stick to solitaire. It's dull, but cheap.'' He shuffled the
cards clumsily. As though making conversation, he asked: ``You care for cards
yourself?''
I told him truthfully I
did not know the difference between a club and a spade and had no curiosity to
learn. At this, when he found he had been wasting time on me, I expected him to
show some sign of annoyance, even of irritation, but his disappointment struck
far deeper. As though I had hurt him physically, he shut his eyes, and when
again he opened them I saw in them distress. For the moment I believe of my
presence he was utterly unconscious. His hands lay idle upon the table; like a
man facing a crisis, he stared before him. Quite improperly, I felt sorry for
him. In me he thought he had found a victim; and that the loss of the few
dollars he might have won should so deeply disturb him showed his need was
great. Almost at once he abandoned me and I went on deck. When I returned an
hour later to the smoking-room he was deep in a game of poker.
As I passed he hailed
me gayly.
``Don't scold, now,''
he laughed; ``you know I can't keep away from it.''
From his manner those
at the table might have supposed we were friends of long and happy
companionship. I stopped behind his chair, but he thought I had passed, and in
reply to one of the players answered: ``Known him for years; he's set me right
many a time. When I broke my right femur `chasin,' he got me back in the saddle
in six weeks. All my people swear by him.''
One of the players
smiled up at me, and Talbot turned. But his eyes met mine with perfect
serenity. He even held up his cards for me to see. ``What would you draw?'' he
asked.
His audacity so
astonished me that in silence I could only stare at him and walk on.
When on deck he met me
he was not even apologetic. Instead, as though we were partners in crime, he
chuckled delightedly.
``Sorry,'' he said.
``Had to do it. They weren't very keen at my taking a hand, so I had to use
your name. But I'm all right now,'' he assured me. ``They think you vouched for
me, and to-night they're going to raise the limit. I've convinced them I'm an
easy mark.''
``And I take it you are
not,'' I said stiffly.
He considered this
unworthy of an answer and only smiled. Then the smile died, and again in his
eyes I saw distress, infinite weariness, and fear.
As though his thoughts
drove him to seek protection, he came closer.
``I'm `in bad,'
doctor,'' he said. His voice was frightened, bewildered, like that of a child.
``I can't sleep; nerves all on the loose. I don't think straight. I hear
voices, and no one around. I hear knockings at the door, and when I open it, no
one there. If I don't keep fit I can't work, and this trip I got to make
expenses. You couldn't help me, could you-- couldn't give me something to keep
my head straight?''
The need of my keeping
his head straight that he might the easier rob our fellow-passengers raised a
pretty question of ethics. I meanly dodged it. I told him professional
etiquette required I should leave him to the ship's surgeon.
``But I don't know
him,'' he protested.
Mindful of the use he
had made of my name, I objected strenuously:
``Well, you certainly
don't know me.''
My resentment obviously
puzzled him.
``I know who you are,''
he returned. ``You and I--'' With a deprecatory gesture, as though good taste
forbade him saying who we were, he stopped. ``But the ship's surgeon!'' he
protested, ``he's an awful bounder! Besides,'' he added quite simply, ``he's
watching me.''
``As a doctor,'' I
asked, ``or watching you play cards?''
``Play cards,'' the
young man answered. ``I'm afraid he was ship's surgeon on the P. & O. I
came home on. There was trouble that voyage, and I fancy he remembers me.''
His confidences were
becoming a nuisance.
``But you mustn't tell
me that,'' I protested. ``I can't have you making trouble on this ship, too.
How do you know I won't go straight from here to the captain?''
As though the
suggestion greatly entertained him, he laughed.
He made a mock
obeisance.
``I claim the seal of
your profession,'' he said. ``Nonsense,'' I retorted. ``It's a professional
secret that your nerves are out of hand, but that you are a card-sharp is not.
Don't mix me up with a priest.''
For a moment Talbot, as
though fearing he had gone too far, looked at me sharply; he bit his lower lip
and frowned.
``I got to make
expenses,'' he muttered. ``And, besides, all card games are games of chance,
and a card-sharp is one of the chances. Anyway,'' he repeated, as though
disposing of all argument, ``I got to make expenses.''
After dinner, when I
came to the smoking-room, the poker party sat waiting, and one of them asked if
I knew where they could find ``my friend.'' I should have said then that Talbot
was a steamer acquaintance only; but I hate a row, and I let the chance pass.
``We want to give him
his revenge,'' one of them volunteered.
``He's losing, then?''
I asked.
The man chuckled
complacently.
``The only loser,'' he
said.
``I wouldn't worry,'' I
advised. ``He'll come for his revenge.''
That night after I had
turned in he knocked at my door. I switched on the lights and saw him standing
at the foot of my berth. I saw also that with difficulty he was holding himself
in hand.
``I'm scared,'' he
stammered, ``scared!''
I wrote out a
requisition on the surgeon for a sleeping-potion and sent it to him by the
steward, giving the man to understand I wanted it for myself. Uninvited, Talbot
had seated himself on the sofa. His eyes were closed, and as though he were
cold he was shivering and hugging himself in his arms.
``Have you been
drinking?'' I asked.
In surprise he opened
his eyes.
``I can't drink,'' he
answered simply. ``It's nerves and worry. I'm tired.''
He relaxed against the
cushions; his arms fell heavily at his sides; the fingers lay open.
``God,'' he whispered,
``how tired I am!''
In spite of his
tan--and certainly he had led the out-of-door life--his face showed white. For
the moment he looked old, worn, finished.
``They're crowdin'
me,'' the boy whispered. ``They're always crowdin' me.'' His voice was
querulous, uncomprehending, like that of a child complaining of something
beyond his experience. ``I can't remember when they haven't been crowdin' me.
Movin' me on, you understand? Always movin' me on. Moved me out of India, then
Cairo, then they closed Paris, and now they've shut me out of London. I opened
a club there, very quiet, very exclusive, smart neighborhood, too--a flat in
Berkeley Street--roulette and chemin de fer. I think it was my valet sold me
out; anyway, they came in and took us all to Bow Street. So I've plunged on
this. It's my last chance!''
``This trip?''
``No; my family in New
York. Haven't seen 'em in ten years. They paid me to live abroad. I'm gambling
on them; gambling on their takin' me back. I'm coming home as the Prodigal Son,
tired of filling my belly with the husks that the swine do eat; reformed
character, repentant and all that; want to follow the straight and narrow; and
they'll kill the fatted calf.'' He laughed sardonically. ``Like hell they will!
They'd rather see me killed.''
It seemed to me, if he
wished his family to believe he were returning repentant, his course in the
smoking-room would not help to reassure them. I suggested as much.
``If you get into
`trouble,' as you call it,'' I said, ``and they send a wireless to the police
to be at the wharf, your people would hardly----''
``I know,'' he
interrupted; ``but I got to chance that. I got to make enough to go on
with--until I see my family.''
``If they won't see
you?'' I asked. ``What then?''
He shrugged his
shoulders and sighed lightly, almost with relief, as though for him the
prospect held no terror.
``Then it's
`Good-night, nurse,' '' he said. ``And I won't be a bother to anybody any
more.''
I told him his nerves
were talking, and talking rot, and I gave him the sleeping-draft and sent him
to bed.
It was not until after
luncheon the next day when he made his first appearance on deck that I again saw
my patient. He was once more a healthy picture of a young Englishman of
leisure; keen, smart, and fit; ready for any exercise or sport. The particular
sport at which he was so expert I asked him to avoid.
``Can't be done!'' he
assured me. ``I'm the loser, and we dock to-morrow morning. So tonight I've got
to make my killing.''
It was the others who
made the killing.
I came into the
smoking-room about nine o'clock. Talbot alone was seated. The others were on
their feet, and behind them in a wider semicircle were passengers, the
smoking-room stewards and the ship's purser.
Talbot sat with his
back against the bulkhead, his hands in the pockets of his dinner coat; from
the corner of his mouth his long cigarette-holder was cocked at an impudent
angle. There was a tumult of angry voices, and the eyes of all were turned upon
him. Outwardly at least he met them with complete indifference. The voice of
one of my countrymen, a noisy pest named Smedburg, was raised in excited
accusation.
``When the ship's surgeon
first met you,'' he cried, ``you called yourself Lord Ridley.''
``I'll call myself
anything I jolly well like,'' returned Talbot. ``If I choose to dodge
reporters, that's my pidgin. I don't have to give my name to every meddling
busybody that----''
``You'll give it to the
police, all right,'' chortled Mr. Smedburg. In the confident, bullying tones of
the man who knows the crowd is with him, he shouted: ``And in the meantime
you'll keep out of this smoking-room!''
The chorus of assent
was unanimous. It could not be disregarded. Talbot rose and with fastidious
concern brushed the cigarette ashes from his sleeve. As he moved toward the
door he called back: ``Only too delighted to keep out. The crowd in this room
makes a gentleman feel lonely.''
But he was not to
escape with the last word.
His prosecutor pointed
his finger at him.
``And the next time you
take the name of Adolph Meyer,'' he shouted, ``make sure first he hasn't a
friend on board; some one to protect him from sharpers and swindlers----''
Talbot turned savagely
and then shrugged his shoulders.
``Oh, go to the
devil!'' he called, and walked out into the night.
The purser was standing
at my side and, catching my eye, shook his head.
``Bad business,'' he
exclaimed.
``What happened?'' I
asked.
``I'm told they caught
him dealing from the wrong end of the pack,'' he said. ``I understand they
suspected him from the first--seems our surgeon recognized him--and to-night
they had outsiders watching him. The outsiders claim they saw him slip himself
an ace from the bottom of the pack. It's a pity! He's a nice-looking lad.''
I asked what the
excited Smedburg had meant by telling Talbot not to call himself Meyer.
``They accused him of
travelling under a false name,'' explained the purser, ``and he told 'em he did
it to dodge the ship's news reporters. Then he said he really was a brother of
Adolph Meyer, the banker; but it seems Smedburg is a friend of Meyer's, and he
called him hard! It was a silly ass thing to do,'' protested the purser.
``Everybody knows Meyer hasn't a brother, and if he hadn't made that break he
might have got away with the other one. But now this Smedburg is going to
wireless ahead to Mr. Meyer and to the police.''
``Has he no other way
of spending his money?'' I asked.
``He's a confounded
nuisance!'' growled the purser. ``He wants to show us he knows Adolph Meyer;
wants to put Meyer under an obligation. It means a scene on the wharf, and
newspaper talk; and,'' he added with disgust, ``these smoking-room rows never
helped any line.''
I went in search of
Talbot; partly because I knew he was on the verge of a collapse, partly, as I
frankly admitted to myself, because I was sorry the young man had come to
grief. I searched the snow-swept decks, and then, after threading my way
through faintly lit tunnels, I knocked at his cabin. The sound of his voice
gave me a distinct feeling of relief. But he would not admit me. Through the
closed door he declared he was ``all right,'' wanted no medical advice, and
asked only to resume the sleep he claimed I had broken. I left him, not without
uneasiness, and the next morning the sight of him still in the flesh was a
genuine thrill. I found him walking the deck carrying himself nonchalantly and
trying to appear unconscious of the glances--amused, contemptuous,
hostile--that were turned toward him. He would have passed me without speaking,
but I took his arm and led him to the rail. We had long passed quarantine and a
convoy of tugs were butting us into the dock.
``What are you going to
do?'' I asked.
``Doesn't depend on
me,'' he said. ``Depends on Smedburg. He's a busy little body!''
The boy wanted me to
think him unconcerned, but beneath the flippancy I saw the nerves jerking. Then
quite simply he began to tell me. He spoke in a low, even monotone,
dispassionately, as though for him the incident no longer was of interest.
``They were watching
me,'' he said. ``But I knew they were, and besides, no matter how close they
watched I could have done what they said I did and they'd never have seen it.
But I didn't.''
My scepticism must have
been obvious, for he shook his head.
``I didn't!'' he
repeated stubbornly. ``I didn't have to! I was playing in luck--wonderful
luck--sheer, dumb luck. I couldn't help winning. But because I was winning and
because they were watching, I was careful not to win on my own deal. I laid
down, or played to lose. It was the cards they gave me I won with. And when
they jumped me I told 'em that. I could have proved it if they'd listened. But
they were all up in the air, shouting and spitting at me. They believed what
they wanted to believe; they didn't want the facts.''
It may have been
credulous of me, but I felt the boy was telling the truth, and I was deeply
sorry he had not stuck to it. So, rather harshly, I said:
``They didn't want you
to tell them you were a brother to Adolph Meyer, either. Why did you think you
could get away with anything like that?''
Talbot did not answer.
``Why?'' I insisted.
The boy laughed
impudently.
``How the devil was I
to know he hadn't a brother?'' he protested. ``It was a good name, and he's a
Jew, and two of the six who were in the game are Jews. You know how they stick
together. I thought they might stick by me.''
``But you,'' I retorted
impatiently, ``are not a Jew!''
``I am not,'' said
Talbot, ``but I've often said I was. It's helped--lots of times. If I'd told
you my name was Cohen, or Selinsky, or Meyer, instead of Craig Talbot, you'd
have thought I was a Jew.'' He smiled and turned his face toward me. As though
furnishing a description for the police, he began to enumerate:
``Hair, dark and curly;
eyes, poppy; lips, full; nose, Roman or Hebraic, according to taste. Do you
see?''
He shrugged his
shoulders.
``But it didn't work,''
he concluded. ``I picked the wrong Jew.''
His face grew serious.
``Do you suppose that Smedburg person has wirelessed that banker?''
I told him I was afraid
he had already sent the message.
``And what will Meyer
do?'' he asked. ``Will he drop it or make a fuss? What sort is he?''
Briefly I described
Adolph Meyer. I explained him as the richest Hebrew in New York; given to
charity, to philanthropy, to the betterment of his own race.
``Then maybe,'' cried
Talbot hopefully, ``he won't make a row, and my family won't hear of it!''
He drew a quick breath
of relief. As though a burden had been lifted, his shoulders straightened.
And then suddenly,
harshly, in open panic, he exclaimed aloud:
``Look!'' he whispered.
``There, at the end of the wharf--the little Jew in furs!''
I followed the
direction of his eyes. Below us on the dock, protected by two obvious members
of the strong-arm squad, the great banker, philanthropist, and Hebrew, Adolph
Meyer, was waiting.
We were so close that I
could read his face. It was stern, set; the face of a man intent upon his duty,
unrelenting. Without question, of a bad business Mr. Smedburg had made the
worst. I turned to speak to Talbot and found him gone.
His silent slipping
away filled me with alarm. I fought against a growing fear. How many minutes I
searched for him I do not know. It seemed many hours. His cabin, where first I
sought him, was empty and dismantled, and by that I was reminded that if for
any desperate purpose Talbot were seeking to conceal himself there now were
hundreds of other empty, dismantled cabins in which he might hide. To my
inquiries no one gave heed. In the confusion of departure no one had observed
him; no one was in a humor to seek him out; the passengers were pressing to the
gangway, the stewards concerned only in counting their tips. From deck to deck,
down lane after lane of the great floating village, I raced blindly, peering
into half-opened doors, pushing through groups of men, pursuing some one in the
distance who appeared to be the man I sought, only to find he was unknown to
me. When I returned to the gangway the last of the passengers was leaving it.
I was about to follow
to seek for Talbot in the customs shed when a white-faced steward touched my
sleeve. Before he spoke his look told me why I was wanted.
``The ship's surgeon,
sir,'' he stammered, ``asks you please to hurry to the sick-bay. A passenger
has shot himself!''
On the bed, propped up
by pillows, young Talbot, with glazed, shocked eyes, stared at me. His shirt
had been cut away; his chest lay bare. Against his left shoulder the doctor
pressed a tiny sponge which quickly darkened.
I must have exclaimed
aloud, for the doctor turned his eyes.
``It was he sent for
you,'' he said, ``but he doesn't need you. Fortunately, he's a damned bad shot!''
The boy's eyes opened
wearily; before we could prevent it he spoke.
``I was so tired,'' he
whispered. ``Always moving me on. I was so tired!''
Behind me came heavy
footsteps, and though with my arm I tried to bar them out, the two detectives
pushed into the doorway. They shoved me to one side and through the passage
made for him came the Jew in the sable coat, Mr. Adolph Meyer.
For an instant the
little great man stood with wide, owl-like eyes, staring at the face on the
pillow.
Then he sank softly to
his knees. In both his hands he caught the hand of the card-sharp.
``Heine!'' he begged.
``Don't you know me? It is your brother Adolph; your little brother Adolph!''