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  • The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Coming of Bill, by P. G. Wodehouse
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  • Title: The Coming of Bill
  • Author: P. G. Wodehouse
  • Posting Date: August 26, 2012 [EBook #6880]
  • Release Date: November, 2004
  • First Posted: February 6, 2003
  • Last Updated: August 15, 2003
  • Language: English
  • *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE COMING OF BILL ***
  • Produced by Suzanne L. Shell, Charles Franks and the Online
  • Distributed Proofreading Team.
  • The Coming of Bill
  • by P. G. Wodehouse
  • 1920
  • CONTENTS
  • BOOK I
  • Chapter
  • I. A PAWN OF FATE
  • II. RUTH STATES HER INTENTION
  • III. THE MATES MEET
  • IV. TROUBLED WATERS
  • V. WHEREIN OPPOSITES AGREE
  • VI. BREAKING THE NEWS
  • VII. SUFFICIENT UNTO THEMSELVES
  • VIII. SUSPENSE
  • IX. THE WHITE HOPE IS TURNED DOWN
  • X. AN INTERLUDE OF PEACE
  • XI. STUNG TO ACTION
  • XII. A CLIMAX
  • BOOK II
  • Chapter
  • I. EMPTY-HANDED
  • II. AN UNKNOWN PATH
  • III. THE MISADVENTURE OF STEVE
  • IV. THE WIDENING GAP
  • V. THE REAL THING
  • VI. THE OUTCASTS
  • VII. CUTTING THE TANGLED KNOT
  • VIII. STEVE TO THE RESCUE
  • IX. AT ONE IN THE MORNING
  • X. ACCEPTING THE GIFTS OF THE GODS
  • XI. MR. PENWAY ON THE GRILL
  • XII. DOLLS WITH SOULS
  • XIII. PASTURES NEW
  • XIV. THE SIXTY-FIRST STREET CYCLONE
  • XV. MRS. PORTER'S WATERLOO
  • XVI. THE WHITE-HOPE LINK
  • BOOK ONE
  • Chapter I
  • A Pawn of Fate
  • Mrs. Lora Delane Porter dismissed the hireling who had brought her
  • automobile around from the garage and seated herself at the wheel. It
  • was her habit to refresh her mind and improve her health by a daily
  • drive between the hours of two and four in the afternoon.
  • The world knows little of its greatest women, and it is possible that
  • Mrs. Porter's name is not familiar to you. If this is the case, I am
  • pained, but not surprised. It happens only too often that the uplifter
  • of the public mind is baulked by a disinclination on the part of the
  • public mind to meet him or her half-way. The uplifter does his share.
  • He produces the uplifting book. But the public, instead of standing
  • still to be uplifted, wanders off to browse on coloured supplements and
  • magazine stories.
  • If you are ignorant of Lora Delane Porter's books that is your affair.
  • Perhaps you are more to be pitied than censured. Nature probably gave
  • you the wrong shape of forehead. Mrs. Porter herself would have put
  • it down to some atavistic tendency or pre-natal influence. She put
  • most things down to that. She blamed nearly all the defects of the
  • modern world, from weak intellects to in-growing toe-nails, on
  • long-dead ladies and gentlemen who, safe in the family vault, imagined
  • that they had established their alibi. She subpoenaed grandfathers
  • and even great-grandfathers to give evidence to show that the reason
  • Twentieth-Century Willie squinted or had to spend his winters in
  • Arizona was their own shocking health 'way back in the days beyond
  • recall.
  • Mrs. Porter's mind worked backward and forward. She had one eye on the
  • past, the other on the future. If she was strong on heredity, she was
  • stronger on the future of the race. Most of her published works dealt
  • with this subject. A careful perusal of them would have enabled the
  • rising generation to select its ideal wife or husband with perfect
  • ease, and, in the event of Heaven blessing the union, her little
  • volume, entitled "The Hygienic Care of the Baby," which was all about
  • germs and how to avoid them, would have insured the continuance of the
  • direct succession.
  • Unfortunately, the rising generation did not seem disposed to a careful
  • perusal of anything except the baseball scores and the beauty hints in
  • the Sunday papers, and Mrs. Porter's public was small. In fact, her
  • only real disciple, as she sometimes told herself in her rare moods of
  • discouragement, was her niece, Ruth Bannister, daughter of John
  • Bannister, the millionaire. It was not so long ago, she reflected with
  • pride, that she had induced Ruth to refuse to marry Basil Milbank--a
  • considerable feat, he being a young man of remarkable personal
  • attractions and a great match in every way. Mrs. Porter's objection to
  • him was that his father had died believing to the last that he was a
  • teapot.
  • There is nothing evil or degrading in believing oneself a teapot, but
  • it argues a certain inaccuracy of the thought processes; and Mrs.
  • Porter had used all her influence with Ruth to make her reject Basil.
  • It was her success that first showed her how great that influence was.
  • She had come now to look on Ruth's destiny as something for which she
  • was personally responsible--a fact which was noted and resented by
  • others, in particular Ruth's brother Bailey, who regarded his aunt with
  • a dislike and suspicion akin to that which a stray dog feels towards
  • the boy who saunters towards him with a tin can in his hand.
  • To Bailey, his strong-minded relative was a perpetual menace, a sort of
  • perambulating yellow peril, and the fact that she often alluded to him
  • as a worm consolidated his distaste for her.
  • * * * * *
  • Mrs. Porter released the clutch and set out on her drive. She rarely
  • had a settled route for these outings of hers, preferring to zigzag
  • about New York, livening up the great city at random. She always drove
  • herself and, having, like a good suffragist, a contempt for male
  • prohibitions, took an honest pleasure in exceeding a man-made speed
  • limit.
  • One hesitates to apply the term "joy-rider" to so eminent a leader of
  • contemporary thought as the authoress of "The Dawn of Better Things,"
  • "Principles of Selection," and "What of To-morrow?" but candour compels
  • the admission that she was a somewhat reckless driver. Perhaps it was
  • due to some atavistic tendency. One of her ancestors may have been a
  • Roman charioteer or a coach-racing maniac of the Regency days. At any
  • rate, after a hard morning's work on her new book she felt that her
  • mind needed cooling, and found that the rush of air against her face
  • effected this satisfactorily. The greater the rush, the quicker the
  • cooling. However, as the alert inhabitants of Manhattan Island, a hardy
  • race trained from infancy to dodge taxicabs and ambulance wagons, had
  • always removed themselves from her path with their usual agility, she
  • had never yet had an accident.
  • But then she had never yet met George Pennicut. And George, pawn of
  • fate, was even now waiting round the corner to upset her record.
  • George, man of all work to Kirk Winfield, one of the youngest and least
  • efficient of New York's artist colony, was English. He had been in
  • America some little time, but not long enough to accustom his rather
  • unreceptive mind to the fact that, whereas in his native land vehicles
  • kept to the left, in the country of his adoption they kept to the
  • right; and it was still his bone-headed practice, when stepping off the
  • sidewalk, to keep a wary look-out in precisely the wrong direction.
  • The only problem with regard to such a man is who will get him first.
  • Fate had decided that it should be Lora Delane Porter.
  • To-day Mrs. Porter, having circled the park in rapid time, turned her
  • car down Central Park West. She was feeling much refreshed by the
  • pleasant air. She was conscious of a glow of benevolence toward her
  • species, not excluding even the young couple she had almost reduced to
  • mincemeat in the neighbourhood of Ninety-Seventh Street. They had
  • annoyed her extremely at the time of their meeting by occupying till
  • the last possible moment a part of the road which she wanted herself.
  • On reaching Sixty-First Street she found her way blocked by a lumbering
  • delivery wagon. She followed it slowly for a while; then, growing tired
  • of being merely a unit in a procession, tugged at the steering-wheel,
  • and turned to the right.
  • George Pennicut, his anxious eyes raking the middle distance--as
  • usual, in the wrong direction--had just stepped off the kerb. He
  • received the automobile in the small of the back, uttered a yell of
  • surprise and dismay, performed a few improvised Texas Tommy steps, and
  • fell in a heap.
  • In a situation which might have stimulated another to fervid speech,
  • George Pennicut contented himself with saying "Goo!" He was a man of
  • few words.
  • Mrs. Porter stopped the car. From all points of the compass citizens
  • began to assemble, many swallowing their chewing-gum in their
  • excitement. One, a devout believer in the inscrutable ways of
  • Providence, told a friend as he ran that only two minutes before he had
  • almost robbed himself of this spectacle by going into a moving-picture
  • palace.
  • Mrs. Porter was annoyed. She had never run over anything before except
  • a few chickens, and she regarded the incident as a blot on her
  • escutcheon. She was incensed with this idiot who had flung himself
  • before her car, not reflecting in her heat that he probably had a
  • pre-natal tendency to this sort of thing inherited from some ancestor
  • who had played "last across" in front of hansom cabs in the streets of
  • London.
  • She bent over George and passed experienced hands over his portly form.
  • For this remarkable woman was as competent at first aid as at anything
  • else. The citizens gathered silently round in a circle.
  • "It was your fault," she said to her victim severely. "I accept no
  • liability whatever. I did not run into you. You ran into me. I have a
  • jolly good mind to have you arrested for attempted suicide."
  • This aspect of the affair had not struck Mr. Pennicut. Presented to him
  • in these simple words, it checked the recriminatory speech which, his
  • mind having recovered to some extent from the first shock of the
  • meeting, he had intended to deliver. He swallowed his words, awed. He
  • felt dazed and helpless. Mrs. Porter had that effect upon men.
  • Some more citizens arrived.
  • "No bones broken," reported Mrs. Porter, concluding her examination.
  • "You are exceedingly fortunate. You have a few bruises, and one knee is
  • slightly wrenched. Nothing to signify. More frightened than hurt. Where
  • do you live?"
  • "There," said George meekly.
  • "Where?"
  • "Them studios."
  • "No. 90?"
  • "Yes, ma'am." George's voice was that of a crushed worm.
  • "Are you an artist?"
  • "No, ma'am. I'm Mr. Winfield's man."
  • "Whose?"
  • "Mr. Winfield's, ma'am."
  • "Is he in?"
  • "Yes, ma'am."
  • "I'll fetch him. And if the policeman comes along and wants to know why
  • you're lying there, mind you tell him the truth, that you ran into me."
  • "Yes, ma'am."
  • "Very well. Don't forget."
  • "No, ma'am."
  • She crossed the street and rang the bell over which was a card hearing
  • the name of "Kirk Winfield". Mr. Pennicut watched her in silence.
  • Mrs. Porter pressed the button a second time. Somebody came at a
  • leisurely pace down the passage, whistling cheerfully. The door opened.
  • It did not often happen to Lora Delane Porter to feel insignificant,
  • least of all in the presence of the opposite sex. She had well-defined
  • views upon man. Yet, in the interval which elapsed between the opening
  • of the door and her first words, a certain sensation of smallness
  • overcame her.
  • The man who had opened the door was not, judged by any standard of
  • regularity of features, handsome. He had a rather boyish face, pleasant
  • eyes set wide apart, and a friendly mouth. He was rather an outsize in
  • young men, and as he stood there he seemed to fill the doorway.
  • It was this sense of bigness that he conveyed, his cleanness, his
  • magnificent fitness, that for the moment overcame Mrs. Porter. Physical
  • fitness was her gospel. She stared at him in silent appreciation.
  • To the young man, however, her forceful gaze did not convey this
  • quality. She seemed to him to be looking as if she had caught him in
  • the act of endeavouring to snatch her purse. He had been thrown a
  • little off his balance by the encounter.
  • Resource in moments of crisis is largely a matter of preparedness, and
  • a man, who, having opened his door in the expectation of seeing a
  • ginger-haired, bow-legged, grinning George Pennicut, is confronted by a
  • masterful woman with eyes like gimlets, may be excused for not guessing
  • that her piercing stare is an expression of admiration and respect.
  • Mrs. Porter broke the silence. It was ever her way to come swiftly to
  • the matter in hand.
  • "Mr. Kirk Winfield?"
  • "Yes."
  • "Have you in your employment a red-haired, congenital idiot who ambles
  • about New York in an absent-minded way, as if he were on a desert
  • island? The man I refer to is a short, stout Englishman, clean-shaven,
  • dressed in black."
  • "That sounds like George Pennicut."
  • "I have no doubt that that is his name. I did not inquire. It did not
  • interest me. My name is Mrs. Lora Delane Porter. This man of yours has
  • just run into my automobile."
  • "I beg your pardon?"
  • "I cannot put it more lucidly. I was driving along the street when this
  • weak-minded person flung himself in front of my car. He is out there
  • now. Kindly come and help him in."
  • "Is he hurt?"
  • "More frightened than hurt. I have examined him. His left knee appears
  • to be slightly wrenched."
  • Kirk Winfield passed a hand over his left forehead and followed her.
  • Like George, he found Mrs. Porter a trifle overwhelming.
  • Out in the street George Pennicut, now the centre of quite a
  • substantial section of the Four Million, was causing a granite-faced
  • policeman to think that the age of miracles had returned by informing
  • him that the accident had been his fault and no other's. He greeted the
  • relief-party with a wan grin.
  • "Just broke my leg, sir," he announced to Kirk.
  • "You have done nothing of the sort," said Mrs. Porter. "You have
  • wrenched your knee very slightly. Have you explained to the policeman
  • that it was entirely your fault?"
  • "Yes, ma'am."
  • "That's right. Always speak the truth."
  • "Yes, ma'am."
  • "Mr. Winfield will help you indoors."
  • "Thank you, ma'am."
  • She turned to Kirk.
  • "Now, Mr. Winfield."
  • Kirk bent over the victim, gripped him, and lifted him like a baby.
  • "He's got his," observed one interested spectator.
  • "I should worry!" agreed another. "All broken up."
  • "Nothing of the kind," said Mrs. Porter severely. "The man is hardly
  • hurt at all. Be more accurate in your remarks."
  • She eyed the speaker sternly. He wilted.
  • "Yes, ma'am," he mumbled sheepishly.
  • The policeman, with that lionlike courage which makes the New York
  • constabulary what it is, endeavoured to assert himself at this point.
  • "Hey!" he boomed.
  • Mrs. Porter turned her gaze upon him, her cold, steely gaze.
  • "I beg your pardon?"
  • "This won't do, ma'am. I've me report to make. How did this happen?"
  • "You have already been informed. The man ran into my automobile."
  • "But----"
  • "I shall not charge him."
  • She turned and followed Kirk.
  • "But, say----" The policeman's voice was now almost plaintive.
  • Mrs. Porter ignored him and disappeared into the house. The policeman,
  • having gulped several times in a disconsolate way, relieved his
  • feelings by dispersing the crowd with well-directed prods of his locust
  • stick. A small boy who lingered, squeezing the automobile's hooter, in
  • a sort of trance he kicked. The boy vanished. The crowd melted. The
  • policeman walked slowly toward Ninth Avenue. Peace reigned in the
  • street.
  • "Put him to bed," said Mrs. Porter, as Kirk laid his burden on a couch
  • in the studio. "You seem exceedingly muscular, Mr. Winfield. I noticed
  • that you carried him without an effort. He is a stout man, too. Grossly
  • out of condition, like ninety-nine per cent of men to-day."
  • "I'm not so young as I was, ma'am," protested George. "When I was in
  • the harmy I was a fine figure of a man."
  • "The more shame to you that you have allowed yourself to deteriorate,"
  • commented Mrs. Porter. "Beer?"
  • A grateful smile irradiated George's face.
  • "Thank you, ma'am. It's very kind of you, ma'am. I don't mind if I do."
  • "The man appears a perfect imbecile," said Mrs. Porter, turning
  • abruptly to Kirk. "I ask him if he attributes his physical decay to
  • beer and he babbles."
  • "I think he thought you were offering him a drink," suggested Kirk. "As
  • a matter of fact, a little brandy wouldn't hurt him, after the shock he
  • has had."
  • "On no account. The worst thing possible."
  • "This isn't your lucky day, George," said Kirk. "Well, I guess I'll
  • phone to the doctor."
  • "Quite unnecessary."
  • "I beg your pardon?"
  • "Entirely unnecessary. I have made an examination. There is practically
  • nothing the matter with the man. Put him to bed, and let him sponge his
  • knee with warm water."
  • "Are you a doctor, Mrs. Porter?"
  • "I have studied first aid."
  • "Well, I think, if you don't mind, I should like to have your opinion
  • confirmed."
  • This was rank mutiny. Mrs. Porter stared haughtily at Kirk. He met her
  • gaze with determination.
  • "As you please," she snapped.
  • "Thank you," said Kirk. "I don't want to take any risks with George. I
  • couldn't afford to lose him. There aren't any more like him: they've
  • mislaid the pattern."
  • He went to the telephone.
  • Mrs. Porter watched him narrowly. She was more than ever impressed by
  • the perfection of his physique. She appraised his voice as he spoke to
  • the doctor. It gave evidence of excellent lungs. He was a wonderfully
  • perfect physical specimen.
  • An idea concerning this young man came into her mind, startling as all
  • great ideas are at birth. The older it grew, the more she approved of
  • it. She decided to put a few questions to him. She had a habit of
  • questioning people, and it never occurred to her that they might resent
  • it. If it had occurred to her, she would have done it just the same.
  • She was like that.
  • "Mr. Winfield?"
  • "Yes?"
  • "I should like to ask you a few questions."
  • This woman delighted Kirk.
  • "Please do," he said.
  • Mrs. Porter scanned him closely.
  • "You are an extraordinarily healthy man, to all appearances. Have you
  • ever suffered from bad health?"
  • "Measles."
  • "Immaterial."
  • "Very unpleasant, though."
  • "Nothing else?"
  • "Mumps."
  • "Unimportant."
  • "Not to me. I looked like a water-melon."
  • "Nothing besides? No serious illnesses?"
  • "None."
  • "What is your age?"
  • "Twenty-five."
  • "Are your parents living?"
  • "No."
  • "Were they healthy?"
  • "Fit as fiddles."
  • "And your grandparents?"
  • "Perfect bear-cats. I remember my grandfather at the age of about a
  • hundred or something like that spanking me for breaking his pipe. I
  • thought it was a steam-hammer. He was a wonderfully muscular old
  • gentleman."
  • "Excellent."
  • "By the way," said Kirk casually, "my life _is_ insured."
  • "Very sensible. There has been no serious illness in your family at
  • all, then, as far as you know?"
  • "I could hunt up the records, if you like; but I don't think so."
  • "Consumption? No? Cancer? No? As far as you are aware, nothing? Very
  • satisfactory."
  • "I'm glad you're pleased."
  • "Are you married?"
  • "Good Lord, no!"
  • "At your age you should be. With your magnificent physique and
  • remarkable record of health, it is your duty to the future of the race
  • to marry."
  • "I'm not sure I've been worrying much about the future of the race."
  • "No man does. It is the crying evil of the day, men's selfish
  • absorption in the present, their utter lack of a sense of duty with
  • regard to the future. Have you read my 'Dawn of Better Things'?"
  • "I'm afraid I read very few novels."
  • "It is not a novel. It is a treatise on the need for implanting a sense
  • of personal duty to the future of the race in the modern young man."
  • "It sounds a crackerjack. I must get it."
  • "I will send you a copy. At the same time I will send you my
  • 'Principles of Selection' and 'What of To-morrow?' They will make you
  • think."
  • "I bet they will. Thank you very much."
  • "And now," said Mrs. Porter, switching the conversation to the gaping
  • George, "you had better put this man to bed."
  • George Pennicut's opinion of Mrs. Porter, to which he was destined to
  • adhere on closer acquaintance, may be recorded.
  • "A hawful woman, sir," he whispered as Kirk bore him off.
  • "Nonsense, George," said Kirk. "One of the most entertaining ladies I
  • have ever met. Already I love her like a son. But how she escaped from
  • Bloomingdale beats me. There's been carelessness somewhere."
  • The bedrooms attached to the studio opened off the gallery that ran the
  • length of the east wall. Looking over the edge of the gallery before
  • coming downstairs Kirk perceived his visitor engaged in a tour of the
  • studio. At that moment she was examining his masterpiece, "Ariadne in
  • Naxos." He had called it that because that was what it had turned into.
  • At the beginning he had had no definite opinion as to its identity. It
  • was rather a habit with his pictures to start out in a vague spirit of
  • adventure and receive their label on completion. He had an airy and a
  • dashing way in his dealings with the goddess Art.
  • Nevertheless, he had sufficient of the artist soul to resent the fact
  • that Mrs. Porter was standing a great deal too close to the masterpiece
  • to get its full value.
  • "You want to stand back a little," he suggested over the rail.
  • Mrs. Porter looked up.
  • "Oh, there you are!" she said.
  • "Yes, here I am," agreed Kirk affably.
  • "Is this yours?"
  • "It is."
  • "You painted it?"
  • "I did."
  • "It is poor. It shows a certain feeling for colour, but the drawing is
  • weak," said Mrs. Porter. For this wonderful woman was as competent at
  • art criticism as at automobile driving and first aid. "Where did you
  • study?"
  • "In Paris, if you could call it studying. I'm afraid I was not the
  • model pupil."
  • "Kindly come down. You are giving me a crick in the neck."
  • Kirk descended. He found Mrs. Porter still regarding the masterpiece
  • with an unfavourable eye.
  • "Yes," she said, "the drawing is decidedly weak."
  • "I shouldn't wonder," assented Kirk. "The dealers to whom I've tried to
  • sell it have not said that in so many words, but they've all begged me
  • with tears in their eyes to take the darned thing away, so I guess
  • you're right."
  • "Do you depend for a living on the sale of your pictures?"
  • "Thank Heaven, no. I'm the only artist in captivity with a private
  • income."
  • "A large income?"
  • "'Tis not so deep as a well, nor so wide as a church door, but 'tis
  • enough, 'twill serve. All told, about five thousand iron men per
  • annum."
  • "Iron men?"
  • "Bones."
  • "Bones?"
  • "I should have said dollars."
  • "You should. I detest slang."
  • "Sorry," said Kirk.
  • Mrs. Porter resumed her tour of the studio. She was interrupted by the
  • arrival of the doctor, a cheerful little old man with the bearing of
  • one sure of his welcome. He was an old friend of Kirk's.
  • "Well, what's the trouble? I couldn't come sooner. I was visiting a
  • case. _I_ work."
  • "There is no trouble," said Mrs. Porter. The doctor spun round,
  • startled. In the dimness of the studio he had not perceived her. "Mr.
  • Winfield's servant has injured his knee very superficially. There is
  • practically nothing wrong with him. I have made a thorough
  • examination."
  • The doctor looked from one to the other.
  • "Is the case in other hands?" he asked.
  • "You bet it isn't," said Kirk. "Mrs. Porter just looked in for a family
  • chat and a glimpse of my pictures. You'll find George in bed, first
  • floor on the left upstairs, and a very remarkable sight he is. He is
  • wearing red hair with purple pyjamas. Why go abroad when you have not
  • yet seen the wonders of your native land?"
  • * * * * *
  • That night Lora Delane Porter wrote in the diary which, with that
  • magnificent freedom from human weakness that marked every aspect of her
  • life, she kept all the year round instead of only during the first week
  • in January.
  • This is what she wrote:
  • "Worked steadily on my book. It progresses. In the afternoon an
  • annoying occurrence. An imbecile with red hair placed himself in
  • front of my automobile, fortunately without serious injury to the
  • machine--though the sudden application of the brake cannot be good
  • for the tyres. Out of evil, however, came good, for I have made the
  • acquaintance of his employer, a Mr. Winfield, an artist. Mr. Winfield
  • is a man of remarkable physique. I questioned him narrowly, and he
  • appears thoroughly sound. As to his mental attainments, I cannot speak
  • so highly; but all men are fools, and Mr. Winfield is not more so than
  • most. I have decided that he shall marry my dear Ruth. They will make
  • a magnificent pair."
  • Chapter II
  • Ruth States Her Intentions
  • At about the time when Lora Delane Porter was cross-examining Kirk
  • Winfield, Bailey Bannister left his club hurriedly.
  • Inside the club a sad, rabbit-faced young gentleman, who had been
  • unburdening his soul to Bailey, was seeking further consolation in an
  • amber drink with a cherry at the bottom of it. For this young man was
  • one of nature's cherry-chasers. It was the only thing he did really
  • well. His name was Grayling, his height five feet three, his socks
  • pink, and his income enormous.
  • So much for Grayling. He is of absolutely no importance, either to the
  • world or to this narrative, except in so far that the painful story he
  • has been unfolding to Bailey Bannister has so wrought upon that
  • exquisite as to send him galloping up Fifth Avenue at five miles an
  • hour in search of his sister Ruth.
  • Let us now examine Bailey. He is a faultlessly dressed young man of
  • about twenty-seven, who takes it as a compliment when people think
  • him older. His mouth, at present gaping with agitation and the
  • unwonted exercise, is, as a rule, primly closed. His eyes, peering
  • through gold-rimmed glasses, protrude slightly, giving him something
  • of the dumb pathos of a codfish.
  • His hair is pale and scanty, his nose sharp and narrow. He is a junior
  • partner in the firm of Bannister & Son, and it is his unalterable
  • conviction that, if his father would only give him a chance, he could
  • show Wall Street some high finance that would astonish it.
  • The afternoon was warm. The sun beat down on the avenue. Bailey had not
  • gone two blocks before it occurred to him that swifter and more
  • comfortable progress could be made in a taxicab than on his admirably
  • trousered legs. No more significant proof of the magnitude of his
  • agitation could be brought forward than the fact that he had so far
  • forgotten himself as to walk at all. He hailed a cab and gave the
  • address of a house on the upper avenue.
  • He leaned back against the cushions, trying to achieve a coolness of
  • mind and body. But the heat of the day kept him unpleasantly soluble,
  • and dismay, that perspiration of the soul, refused to be absorbed by
  • the pocket-handkerchief of philosophy.
  • Bailey Bannister was a young man who considered the minding of other
  • people's business a duty not to be shirked. Life is a rocky road for
  • such. His motto was "Let _me_ do it!" He fussed about the affairs
  • of Bannister & Son; he fussed about the welfare of his friends at the
  • club; especially, he fussed about his only sister Ruth.
  • He looked on himself as a sort of guardian to Ruth. Their mother had
  • died when they were children, and old Mr. Bannister was indifferently
  • equipped with the paternal instinct. He was absorbed, body and soul, in
  • the business of the firm. He lived practically a hermit life in the
  • great house on Fifth Avenue; and, if it had not been for Bailey, so
  • Bailey considered, Ruth would have been allowed to do just whatever she
  • pleased. There were those who said that this was precisely what she
  • did, despite Brother Bailey.
  • It is a hard world for a conscientious young man of twenty-seven.
  • Bailey paid the cab and went into the house. It was deliciously cool in
  • the hall, and for a moment peace descended on him. But the distant
  • sound of a piano in the upper regions ejected it again by reminding him
  • of his mission. He bounded up the stairs and knocked at the door of his
  • sister's private den.
  • The piano stopped as he entered, and the girl on the music-stool
  • glanced over her shoulder.
  • "Well, Bailey," she said, "you look warm."
  • "I _am_ warm," said Bailey in an aggrieved tone. He sat down
  • solemnly.
  • "I want to speak to you, Ruth."
  • Ruth shut the piano and caused the music-stool to revolve till she
  • faced him.
  • "Well?" she said.
  • Ruth Bannister was an extraordinarily beautiful girl, "a daughter of
  • the gods, divinely tall, and most divinely fair." From her mother she
  • had inherited the dark eyes and ivory complexion which went so well
  • with her mass of dark hair; from her father a chin of peculiar
  • determination and perfect teeth. Her body was strong and supple. She
  • radiated health.
  • To her friends Ruth was a source of perplexity. It was difficult to
  • understand her. In the set in which she moved girls married young; yet
  • season followed season, and Ruth remained single, and this so obviously
  • of her own free will that the usual explanation of such a state of
  • things broke down as soon as it was tested.
  • In shoals during her first two seasons, and lately with less unanimity,
  • men of every condition, from a prince--somewhat battered, but still a
  • prince--to the Bannisters' English butler--a good man, but at the
  • moment under the influence of tawny port, had laid their hearts at her
  • feet. One and all, they had been compelled to pick them up and take
  • them elsewhere. She was generally kind on these occasions, but always
  • very firm. The determined chin gave no hope that she might yield to
  • importunity. The eyes that backed up the message of the chin were
  • pleasant, but inflexible.
  • Generally it was with a feeling akin to relief that the rejected, when
  • time had begun to heal the wound, contemplated their position. There
  • was something about this girl, they decided, which no fellow could
  • understand: she frightened them; she made them feel that their hands
  • were large and red and their minds weak and empty. She was waiting for
  • something. What it was they did not know, but it was plain that they
  • were not it, and off they went to live happily ever after with girls
  • who ate candy and read best-sellers. And Ruth went on her way, cool and
  • watchful and mysterious, waiting.
  • The room which Ruth had taken for her own gave, like all rooms when
  • intelligently considered, a clue to the character of its owner. It was
  • the only room in the house furnished with any taste or simplicity. The
  • furniture was exceedingly expensive, but did not look so. The key-note
  • of the colour-scheme was green and white. All round the walls were
  • books. Except for a few prints, there were no pictures; and the only
  • photograph visible stood in a silver frame on a little table.
  • It was the portrait of a woman of about fifty, square-jawed,
  • tight-lipped, who stared almost threateningly out of the frame;
  • exceedingly handsome, but, to the ordinary male, too formidable
  • to be attractive. On this was written in a bold hand, bristling
  • with emphatic down-strokes and wholly free from feminine flourish:
  • "To my dear Ruth from her Aunt Lora." And below the signature, in
  • what printers call "quotes," a line that was evidently an extract
  • from somebody's published works: "Bear the torch and do not falter."
  • Bailey inspected this photograph with disfavour. It always irritated
  • him. The information, conveyed to him by amused friends, that his Aunt
  • Lora had once described Ruth as a jewel in a dust-bin, seemed to him to
  • carry an offensive innuendo directed at himself and the rest of the
  • dwellers in the Bannister home. Also, she had called him a worm. Also,
  • again, his actual encounters with the lady, though few, had been
  • memorably unpleasant. Furthermore, he considered that she had far too
  • great an influence on Ruth. And, lastly, that infernal sentence about
  • the torch, which he found perfectly meaningless, had a habit of running
  • in his head like a catch-phrase, causing him the keenest annoyance.
  • He pursed his lips disapprovingly and averted his eyes.
  • "Don't sniff at Aunt Lora, Bailey," said Ruth. "I've had to speak to
  • you about that before. What's the matter? What has sent you flying up
  • here?"
  • "I have had a shock," said Bailey. "I have been very greatly disturbed.
  • I have just been speaking to Clarence Grayling."
  • He eyed her accusingly through his gold-rimmed glasses. She remained
  • tranquil.
  • "And what had Clarence to say?"
  • "A great many things."
  • "I gather he told you I had refused him."
  • "If it were only that!"
  • Ruth rapped the piano sharply.
  • "Bailey," she said, "wake up. Either get to the point or go or read a
  • book or do some tatting or talk about something else. You know
  • perfectly well that I absolutely refuse to endure your impressive
  • manner. I believe when people ask you the time you look pained and
  • important and make a mystery of it. What's troubling you? I should have
  • thought Clarence would have kept quiet about insulting me. But
  • apparently he has no sense of shame."
  • Bailey gaped. Bailey was shocked and alarmed.
  • "Insulting you! What do you mean? Clarence is a gentleman. He is
  • incapable of insulting a woman."
  • "Is he? He told me I was a suitable wife for a wretched dwarf with the
  • miserably inadequate intelligence which nature gave him reduced to
  • practically a minus quantity by alcohol! At least, he implied it. He
  • asked me to marry him."
  • "I have just left him at the club. He is very upset."
  • "I should imagine so." A soft smile played over Ruth's face. "I spoke
  • to Clarence. I explained things to him. I lit up Clarence's little mind
  • like a searchlight."
  • Bailey rose, tremulous with just wrath.
  • "You spoke to him in a way that I can only call outrageous and
  • improper, and--er--outrageous."
  • He paced the room with agitated strides. Ruth watched him calmly.
  • "If the overflowing emotion of a giant soul in torment makes you knock
  • over a table or smash a chair," she said, "I shall send the bill for
  • repairs to you. You had far better sit down and talk quietly. What
  • _is_ worrying you, Bailey?"
  • "Is it nothing," demanded her brother, "that my sister should have
  • spoken to a man as you spoke to Clarence Grayling?"
  • With an impassioned gesture he sent a flower-vase crashing to the
  • floor.
  • "I told you so," said Ruth. "Pick up the bits, and don't let the water
  • spoil the carpet. Use your handkerchief. I should say that that would
  • cost you about six dollars, dear. Why will you let yourself be so
  • temperamental? Now let me try and think what it was I said to Clarence.
  • As far as I can remember it was the mere A B C of eugenics."
  • Bailey, on his knees, picking up broken glass, raised a flushed and
  • accusing face.
  • "Ah! Eugenics! You admit it!"
  • "I think," went on Ruth placidly, "I asked him what sort of children he
  • thought we were likely to have if we married."
  • "A nice girl ought not to think about such things."
  • "I don't think about anything else much. A woman can't do a great deal,
  • even nowadays, but she can have a conscience and feel that she owes
  • something to the future of the race. She can feel that it is her duty
  • to bring fine children into the world. As Aunt Lora says, she can carry
  • the torch and not falter."
  • Bailey shied like a startled horse at the hated phrase. He pointed
  • furiously at the photograph of the great thinker.
  • "You're talking like that--that damned woman!"
  • "Bailey _precious_! You mustn't use such wicked, wicked words."
  • Bailey rose, pink and wrathful.
  • "If you're going to break another vase," said Ruth, "you will really
  • have to go."
  • "Ever since that--that----" cried Bailey. "Ever since Aunt Lora----"
  • Ruth smiled indulgently.
  • "That's more like my little man," she said. "He knows as well as I do
  • how wrong it is to swear."
  • "Be quiet! Ever since Aunt Lora got hold of you, I say, you have become
  • a sort of gramophone, spouting her opinions."
  • "But what sensible opinions!"
  • "It's got to stop. Aunt Lora! My God! Who is she? Just look at her
  • record. She disgraces the family by marrying a grubby newspaper fellow
  • called Porter. He has the sense to die. I will say that for him. She
  • thrusts herself into public notice by a series of books and speeches on
  • subjects of which a decent woman ought to know nothing. And now she
  • gets hold of you, fills you up with her disgusting nonsense, makes a
  • sort of disciple of you, gives you absurd ideas, poisons your mind,
  • and--er--er-----"
  • "Bailey! This is positive eloquence!"
  • "It's got to stop. It's bad enough in her; but every one knows she is
  • crazy, and makes allowances. But in a young girl like you."
  • He choked.
  • "In a young girl like me," prompted Ruth in a low, tragic voice.
  • "It--it's not right. It--it's not proper." He drew a long breath. "It's
  • all wrong. It's got to stop."
  • "He's perfectly wonderful!" murmured Ruth. "He just opens his mouth and
  • the words come out. But I knew he was somebody, directly I saw him, by
  • his forehead. Like a dome!" Bailey mopped the dome.
  • "Perhaps you don't know it," he said, "but you're getting yourself
  • talked about. You go about saying perfectly impossible things to
  • people. You won't marry. You have refused nearly every friend I have."
  • Ruth shuddered.
  • "Your friends are awful, Bailey. They are all turned out on a pattern,
  • like a flock of sheep. They bleat. They have all got little, narrow
  • faces without chins or big, fat faces without foreheads. Ugh!"
  • "None of them good enough for you, is that it?"
  • "Not nearly."
  • Emotion rendered Bailey--for him--almost vulgar.
  • "I guess you hate yourself!" he snapped.
  • "No _sir_" beamed Ruth. "I think I'm perfectly beautiful."
  • Bailey grunted. Ruth came to him and gave him a sisterly kiss. She was
  • very fond of Bailey, though she declined to reverence him.
  • "Cheer up, Bailey boy," she said. "Don't you worry yourself. There's a
  • method in my madness. I'll find him sooner or later, and then you'll be
  • glad I waited."
  • "Him? what do you mean?"
  • "Why, _him_, of course. The ideal young man. That's who--or is it
  • whom?--I'm waiting for. Bailey, shall I tell you something? You're so
  • scarlet already--poor boy, you ought not to rush around in this hot
  • weather--that it won't make you blush. It's this. I'm ambitious. I mean
  • to marry the finest man in the world and have the greatest little old
  • baby you ever dreamed of. By the way, now I remember, I told Clarence
  • that."
  • Bailey uttered a strangled exclamation.
  • "It _has_ made you blush! You turned purple. Well, now you know. I
  • mean my baby to be the most splendid baby that was ever born. He's
  • going to be strong and straight and clever and handsome, and--oh,
  • everything else you can think of. That's why I'm waiting for the ideal
  • young man. If I don't find him I shall die an old maid. But I shall
  • find him. We may pass each other on Fifth Avenue. We may sit next each
  • other at a theatre. Wherever it is, I shall just reach right out and
  • grab him and whisk him away. And if he's married already, he'll have to
  • get a divorce. And I shan't care who he is. He may be any one. I don't
  • mind if he's a ribbon clerk or a prize-fighter or a policeman or a
  • cab-driver, so long as he's the right man."
  • Bailey plied the handkerchief on his streaming forehead. The heat of
  • the day and the horror of this conversation were reducing his weight at
  • the rate of ounces a minute. In his most jaundiced mood he had never
  • imagined these frightful sentiments to be lurking in Ruth's mind.
  • "You can't mean that!" he cried.
  • "I mean every word of it," said Ruth. "I hope, for your sake, he won't
  • turn out to be a waiter or a prize-fighter, but it won't make any
  • difference to me."
  • "You're crazy!"
  • "Well, just now you said Aunt Lora was. If she is, I am."
  • "I knew it! I said she had been putting these ghastly ideas into your
  • head. I'd like to strangle that woman."
  • "Don't you try! Have you ever felt Aunt Lora's biceps? It's like a
  • man's. She does dumb-bells every morning."
  • "I've a good mind to speak to father. Somebody's got to make you stop
  • this insanity."
  • "Just as you please. But you know how father hates to be worried about
  • things that don't concern business."
  • Bailey did. His father, of whom he stood in the greatest awe, was very
  • little interested in any subject except the financial affairs of the
  • firm of Bannister & Son. It required greater courage than Bailey
  • possessed to place this matter before him. He had an uneasy feeling
  • that Ruth knew it.
  • "I would, if it were necessary," he said. "But I don't believe you're
  • serious."
  • "Stick to that idea as long as ever you can, Bailey dear," said Ruth.
  • "It will comfort you."
  • Chapter III
  • The Mates Meet
  • Kirk Winfield was an amiable, if rather weak, young man with whom life,
  • for twenty-five years, had dealt kindly. He had perfect health, an
  • income more than sufficient for his needs, a profession which
  • interested without monopolizing him, a thoroughly contented
  • disposition, and the happy knack of surrounding himself with friends.
  • That he had to contribute to the support of the majority of these
  • friends might have seemed a drawback to some men. Kirk did not object
  • to it in the least. He had enough money to meet their needs, and, being
  • a sociable person who enjoyed mixing with all sorts and conditions of
  • men, he found the Liberty Hall regime pleasant.
  • He liked to be a magnet, attracting New York's Bohemian population. If
  • he had his preferences among the impecunious crowd who used the studio
  • as a chapel of ease, strolling in when it pleased them, drinking his
  • whisky, smoking his cigarettes, borrowing his money, and, on occasion,
  • his spare bedrooms and his pyjamas, he never showed it. He was fully as
  • pleasant to Percy Shanklyn, the elegant, perpetually resting English
  • actor, whom he disliked as far as he was capable of disliking any one,
  • as he was to Hank Jardine, the prospector, and Hank's prize-fighter
  • friend, Steve Dingle, both of whom he liked enormously.
  • It seemed to him sometimes that he had drifted into the absolutely
  • ideal life. He lived entirely in the present. The passage of time left
  • him untouched. Day followed day, week followed week, and nothing seemed
  • to change. He was never unhappy, never ill, never bored.
  • He would get up in the morning with the comfortable knowledge that the
  • day held no definite duties. George Pennicut would produce one of his
  • excellent breakfasts. The next mile-stone would be the arrival of Steve
  • Dingle. Five brisk rounds with Steve, a cold bath, and a rub-down took
  • him pleasantly on to lunch, after which it amused him to play at
  • painting.
  • There was always something to do when he wearied of that until, almost
  • before the day had properly begun, up came George with one of his
  • celebrated dinners. And then began the incursion of his friends. One by
  • one they would drop in, making themselves very much at home, to help
  • their host through till bedtime. And another day would slip into the
  • past.
  • It never occurred to Kirk that he was wasting his life. He had no
  • ambitions. Ambition is born of woman, and no woman that he had ever met
  • had ever stirred him deeply. He had never been in love, and he had come
  • to imagine that he was incapable of anything except a mild liking for
  • women. He considered himself immune, and was secretly glad of it. He
  • enjoyed his go-as-you-please existence too much to want to have it
  • upset. He belonged, in fact, to the type which, when the moment
  • arrives, falls in love very suddenly, very violently, and for all time.
  • Nothing could have convinced him of this. He was like a child lighting
  • matches in a powder-magazine. When the idea of marriage crossed his
  • mind he thrust it from him with a kind of shuddering horror. He could
  • not picture to himself a woman who could compensate him for the loss of
  • his freedom and, still less, of his friends.
  • His friends were men's men; he could not see them fitting into a scheme
  • of life that involved the perpetual presence of a hostess. Hank
  • Jardine, for instance. To Kirk, the great point about Hank was that he
  • had been everywhere, seen everything, and was, when properly stimulated
  • with tobacco and drink, a fountain of reminiscence. But he could not
  • talk unless he had his coat off and his feet up on the back of a chair.
  • No hostess could be expected to relish that.
  • Hank was a bachelor's friend; he did not belong in a married household.
  • The abstract wife could not be reconciled to him, and Kirk, loving Hank
  • like a brother, firmly dismissed the abstract wife.
  • He came to look upon himself as a confirmed bachelor. He had thought
  • out the question of marriage in all its aspects, and decided against
  • it. He was the strong man who knew his own mind and could not be
  • shaken.
  • Yet, on the afternoon of the day following Mrs. Lora Delane Porter's
  • entry into his life, Kirk sat in the studio, feeling, for the first
  • time in recent years, a vague discontent. He was uneasy, almost afraid.
  • The slight dislocation in the smooth-working machinery of his
  • existence, caused by the compulsory retirement of George Pennicut, had
  • made him thoroughly uncomfortable. With discomfort had come
  • introspection, and with introspection this uneasiness that was almost
  • fear.
  • A man, living alone, without money troubles to worry him, sinks
  • inevitably into a routine. Fatted ease is good for no one. It sucks the
  • soul out of a man. Kirk, as he sat smoking in the cool dusk of the
  • studio, was wondering, almost in a panic, whether all was well with
  • himself.
  • This mild domestic calamity had upset him so infernally. It could not
  • be right that so slight a change in his habits should have such an
  • effect upon him. George had been so little hurt--the doctor gave him a
  • couple of days before complete recovery--that it had not seemed worth
  • while to Kirk to engage a substitute. It was simpler to go out for his
  • meals and make his own bed. And it was the realization that this
  • alteration in his habits had horribly disturbed and unsettled him that
  • was making Kirk subject himself now to an examination of quite unusual
  • severity.
  • He hated softness. Physically, he kept himself always in perfect
  • condition. Had he become spiritually flabby? Certainly this unexpected
  • call on his energies would appear to have found him unprepared. It
  • spoiled his whole day, knowing, when he got out of bed in the morning,
  • that he must hunt about and find his food instead of sitting still and
  • having it brought to him. It frightened him to think how set he had
  • become.
  • Forty-eight hours ago he would have scorned the suggestion that he
  • coddled himself. He would have produced as evidence to the contrary his
  • cold baths, his exercises, his bouts with Steve Dingle. To-day he felt
  • less confidence. For all his baths and boxing, the fact remained that
  • he had become, at the age of twenty-six, such a slave to habit that a
  • very trifling deviation from settled routine had been enough to poison
  • life for him.
  • Bachelors have these black moments, and it is then that the abstract
  • wife comes into her own. To Kirk, brooding in the dusk, the figure of
  • the abstract wife seemed to grow less formidable, the fact that she
  • might not get on with Hank Jardine of less importance.
  • The revolutionary thought that life was rather a bore, and would become
  • more and more of a bore as the years went on, unless he had some one to
  • share it with, crept into his mind and stayed there.
  • He shivered. These were unpleasant thoughts, and in his hour of clear
  • vision he knew whence they came. They were entirely due to the
  • knowledge that, instead of sitting comfortably at home, he would be
  • compelled in a few short hours to go out and get dinner at some
  • restaurant. To such a pass had he come in the twenty-sixth year of his
  • life.
  • Once the gods have marked a bachelor down, they give him few chances of
  • escape. It was when Kirk's mood was at its blackest, and the figure of
  • the abstract wife had ceased to be a menace and become a shining angel
  • of salvation, that Lora Delane Porter, with Ruth Bannister at her side,
  • rang the studio bell.
  • Kirk went to the door. He hoped it was a tradesman; he feared it was a
  • friend. In his present state of mind he had no use for friends. When he
  • found himself confronting Mrs. Porter he became momentarily incapable
  • of speech. It had not entered his mind that she would pay him a second
  • visit. Possibly it was joy that rendered him dumb.
  • "Good afternoon, Mr. Winfield," said Mrs. Porter. "I have come to
  • inquire after the man Pennicut. Ruth, this is Mr. Winfield. Mr.
  • Winfield, my niece, Miss Bannister."
  • And Kirk perceived for the first time that his visitor was not alone.
  • In the shadow behind her a girl was standing. He stood aside to let
  • Mrs. Porter pass, and Ruth came into the light.
  • If there are degrees in speechlessness, Kirk's aphasia became doubled
  • and trebled at the sight of her. It seemed to him that he went all to
  • pieces, as if he had received a violent blow. Curious physical changes
  • were taking place in him. His legs, which only that morning he had
  • looked upon as eminently muscular, he now discovered to be composed of
  • some curiously unstable jelly.
  • He also perceived--a fact which he had never before suspected--that he
  • had heart-disease. His lungs, too, were in poor condition; he found it
  • practically impossible to breathe. The violent trembling fit which
  • assailed him he attributed to general organic weakness.
  • He gaped at Ruth.
  • Ruth, outwardly, remained unaffected by the meeting, but inwardly she
  • was feeling precisely the same sensation of smallness which had come to
  • Mrs. Porter on her first meeting with Kirk. If this sensation had been
  • novel to Mrs. Porter, it was even stranger to Ruth.
  • To think humbly of herself was an experience that seldom happened to
  • her. She was perfectly aware that her beauty was remarkable even in a
  • city of beautiful women, and it was rarely that she permitted her
  • knowledge of that fact to escape her. Her beauty, to her, was a natural
  • phenomenon, impossible to overlook. The realization of it did not
  • obtrude itself into her mind, it simply existed subconsciously.
  • Yet for an instant it ceased to exist. She was staggered by a sense of
  • inferiority.
  • It lasted but a pin-point of time, this riotous upheaval of her nature.
  • She recovered herself so swiftly that Kirk, busy with his own emotions,
  • had no suspicion of it.
  • A moment later he, too, was himself again. He was conscious of feeling
  • curiously uplifted and thrilled, as if the world had suddenly become
  • charged with ozone and electricity, and for some reason he felt capable
  • of great feats of muscle and energy; but the aphasia had left him, and
  • he addressed himself with a clear brain to the task of entertaining his
  • visitors.
  • "George is better to-day," he reported.
  • "He never was bad," said Mrs. Porter succinctly.
  • "He doesn't think so."
  • "Possibly not. He is hopelessly weak-minded."
  • Ruth laughed. Kirk thrilled at the sound.
  • "Poor George!" she observed.
  • "Don't waste your sympathy, my dear," said Mrs. Porter. "That he is
  • injured at all is his own fault. For years he has allowed himself to
  • become gross and flabby, with the result that the collision did damage
  • which it would not have done to a man in hard condition. You, Mr.
  • Winfield," she added, turning abruptly to Kirk, "would scarcely have
  • felt it. But then you," went on Mrs. Porter, "are in good condition.
  • Cold baths!"
  • "I beg your pardon?"
  • "Do you take cold baths?"
  • "I do."
  • "Do you do Swedish exercises?"
  • "I go through a series of evolutions every morning, with the utmost
  • loathing. I started them as a boy, and they have become a habit like
  • dram-drinking. I would leave them off if I could, but I can't."
  • "Do nothing of the kind. They are invaluable."
  • "But undignified."
  • "Let me feel your biceps, Mr. Winfield," said Mrs. Porter. She nodded
  • approvingly. "Like iron." She poised a finger and ran a meditative
  • glance over his form. Kirk eyed her apprehensively. The finger darted
  • forward and struck home in the region of the third waistcoat button.
  • "Wonderful!" she exclaimed. "Ruth!"
  • "Yes, aunt."
  • "Prod Mr. Winfield where my finger is pointing. He is extraordinarily
  • muscular."
  • "I say, really!" protested Kirk. He was a modest young man, and this
  • exploration of his more intimate anatomy by the finger-tips of the girl
  • he loved was not to be contemplated.
  • "Just as you please," said Mrs. Porter. "If I were a man of your
  • physique, I should be proud of it."
  • "Wouldn't you like to go up and see George?" asked Kirk. It was hard on
  • George, but it was imperative that this woman be removed somehow.
  • "Very well. I have brought him a little book to read, which will do him
  • good. It is called 'Elementary Rules for the Preservation of the
  • Body'."
  • "He has learned one of them, all right, since yesterday," said Kirk.
  • "Not to walk about in front of automobiles."
  • "The rules I refer to are mainly concerned with diet and wholesome
  • exercise," explained Mrs. Porter. "Careful attention to them may yet
  • save him. His case is not hopeless. Ruth, let Mr. Winfield show you his
  • pictures. They are poor in many respects, but not entirely without
  • merit."
  • Ruth, meanwhile, had been sitting on the couch, listening to the
  • conversation without really hearing it. She was in a dreamy, contented
  • mood. She found herself curiously soothed by the atmosphere of the
  • studio, with its shaded lights and its atmosphere of peace. That was
  • the keynote of the place, peace.
  • From outside came the rumble of an elevated train, subdued and
  • softened, like faintly heard thunder. Somebody passed the window,
  • whistling. A barrier seemed to separate her from these noises of the
  • city. New York was very far away.
  • "I believe I could be wonderfully happy in a place like this," she
  • thought.
  • She became suddenly aware, in the midst of her meditations, of eyes
  • watching her intently. She looked up and met Kirk's.
  • She could read the message in them as clearly as if he had spoken it,
  • and she was conscious of a little thrill of annoyance at the thought of
  • all the tiresome formalities which must be gone through before he could
  • speak it. They seemed absurd.
  • It was all so simple. He wanted her; she wanted him. She had known it
  • from the moment of their meeting. The man had found his woman, the
  • woman her man. Nature had settled the whole affair in an instant. And
  • now civilization, propriety, etiquette, whatever one cared to call it,
  • must needs step in with the rules and regulations and precedents.
  • The goal was there, clear in sight, but it must be reached by the
  • winding road appointed. She, being a woman and, by virtue of her sex,
  • primeval, scorned the road, and would have ignored it. But she knew
  • men, and especially, at that moment as their eyes met, she knew Kirk;
  • and she understood that to him the road was a thing that could not be
  • ignored. The mere idea of doing so would seem grotesque and impossible,
  • probably even shocking, to him. Men were odd, formal creatures, slaves
  • to precedent.
  • He must have time, it was the prerogative of the male; time to reveal
  • himself to her, to strut before her, to go through the solemn comedy of
  • proving to her, by the exhibition of his virtues and the careful
  • suppression of his defects, what had been clear to her from the first
  • instant, that here was her mate, the man nature had set apart for her.
  • He would begin by putting on a new suit of clothes and having his hair
  • cut.
  • She smiled. It was silly and tiresome, but it was funny.
  • "Will you show me your pictures, Mr. Winfield?" she asked.
  • "If you'd really care to see them. I'm afraid they're pretty bad."
  • "Exhibit A. Modesty," thought Ruth.
  • The journey had begun.
  • Chapter IV
  • Troubled Waters
  • It is not easy in this world to take any definite step without annoying
  • somebody, and Kirk, in embarking on his wooing of Ruth Bannister,
  • failed signally to do so. Lora Delane Porter beamed graciously upon
  • him, like a pleased Providence, but the rest of his circle of
  • acquaintances were ill at ease.
  • The statement does not include Hank Jardine, for Hank was out of New
  • York; but the others--Shanklyn, the actor; Wren, the newspaper-man;
  • Bryce, Johnson, Willis, Appleton, and the rest--sensed impending change
  • in the air, and were uneasy, like cattle before a thunder-storm. The
  • fact that the visits of Mrs. Porter and Ruth to inquire after George,
  • now of daily occurrence, took place in the afternoon, while they,
  • Kirk's dependents, seldom or never appeared in the studio till drawn
  • there by the scent of the evening meal, it being understood that during
  • the daytime Kirk liked to work undisturbed, kept them ignorant of the
  • new development.
  • All they knew was that during the last two weeks a subtle change had
  • taken place in Kirk. He was less genial, more prone to irritability
  • than of old. He had developed fits of absent-mindedness, and was
  • frequently to be found staring pensively at nothing. To slap him on the
  • back at such moments, as Wren ventured to do on one occasion, Wren
  • belonging to the jovial school of thought which holds that nature gave
  • us hands in order to slap backs, was to bring forth a new and
  • unexpected Kirk, a Kirk who scowled and snarled and was hardly to be
  • appeased with apology. Stranger still, this new Kirk could be summoned
  • into existence by precisely the type of story at which, but a few weeks
  • back, he would have been the first to laugh.
  • Percy Shanklyn, whose conversation consisted of equal parts of
  • autobiography and of stories of the type alluded to, was the one to
  • discover this. His latest, which he had counted on to set the table in
  • a roar, produced from Kirk criticism so adverse and so crisply
  • delivered that he refrained from telling his latest but one and spent
  • the rest of the evening wondering, like his fellow visitors, what had
  • happened to Kirk and whether he was sickening for something.
  • Not one of them had the faintest suspicion that these symptoms
  • indicated that Kirk, for the first time in his easy-going life, was in
  • love. They had never contemplated such a prospect. It was not till his
  • conscientious and laborious courtship had been in progress for over two
  • weeks and was nearing the stage when he felt that the possibility of
  • revealing his state of mind to Ruth was not so remote as it had been,
  • that a chance visit of Percy Shanklyn to the studio during the
  • afternoon solved the mystery.
  • One calls it a chance visit because Percy had not been meaning to
  • borrow twenty dollars from Kirk that day at all. The man slated for the
  • loan was one Burrows, a kindly member of the Lambs Club. But fate and a
  • telegram from a manager removed Burrows to Chicago, while Percy was
  • actually circling preparatory to the swoop, and the only other man in
  • New York who seemed to Percy good for the necessary sum at that precise
  • moment was Kirk.
  • He flew to Kirk and found him with Ruth. Kirk's utter absence of any
  • enthusiasm at the sight of him, the reluctance with which he made
  • the introduction, the glumness with which he bore his share of the
  • three-cornered conversation--all these things convinced Percy that
  • this was no ordinary visitor.
  • Many years of living by his wits had developed in Percy highly
  • sensitive powers of observation. Brief as his visit was, he came away
  • as certain that Kirk was in love with this girl, and the girl was in
  • love with Kirk, as he had ever been of anything in his life.
  • As he walked slowly down-town he was thinking hard. The subject
  • occupying his mind was the problem of how this thing was to be stopped.
  • Percy Shanklyn was a sleek, suave, unpleasant youth who had been
  • imported by a theatrical manager two years before to play the part of
  • an English dude in a new comedy. The comedy had been what its
  • enthusiastic backer had described in the newspaper advertisements as a
  • "rousing live-wire success." That is to say, it had staggered along for
  • six weeks on Broadway to extremely poor houses, and after three weeks
  • on the road, had perished for all time, leaving Percy out of work.
  • Since then, no other English dude part having happened along, he had
  • rested, living in the mysterious way in which out-of-work actors do live.
  • He had a number of acquaintances, such as the amiable Burrows, who were
  • good for occasional loans, but Kirk Winfield was the king of them all.
  • There was something princely about the careless open-handedness of Kirk's
  • methods, and Percy's whole soul rose in revolt against the prospect of
  • being deprived of this source of revenue, as something, possibly Ruth's
  • determined chin, told him that he would be, should Kirk marry this girl.
  • He had placed Ruth at once, directly he had heard her name. He
  • remembered having seen her photograph in the society section of the
  • Sunday paper which he borrowed each week. This was the daughter of old
  • John Bannister. There was no doubt about that. How she had found her
  • way to Kirk's studio he could not understand; but there she certainly
  • was, and Percy was willing to bet the twenty dollars which, despite the
  • excitement of the moment, he had not forgotten to extract from Kirk in a
  • hurried conversation at the door, that her presence there was not known
  • and approved by her father.
  • The only reasonable explanation that Kirk was painting her portrait he
  • dismissed. There had been no signs of any portrait, and Kirk's
  • embarrassment had been so obvious that, if there had been any such
  • explanation, he would certainly have given it. No, Ruth had been there
  • for other reasons than those of art.
  • "Unchaperoned, too, by Jove!" thought Percy virtuously, ignorant of
  • Mrs. Lora Delane Porter, who at the time of his call, had been busily
  • occupied in a back room instilling into George Pennicut the gospel of
  • the fit body. For George, now restored to health, had ceased to be a
  • mere student of "Elementary Rules for the Preservation of the Body" and
  • had become an active, though unwilling, practiser of its precepts.
  • Every morning Mrs. Porter called and, having shepherded him into the
  • back room, put him relentlessly through his exercises. George's groans,
  • as he moved his stout limbs along the dotted lines indicated in the
  • book's illustrated plates, might have stirred a faint heart to pity.
  • But Lora Delane Porter was made of sterner stuff. If George so much as
  • bent his knees while touching his toes he heard of it instantly, in no
  • uncertain voice.
  • Thus, in her decisive way, did Mrs. Porter spread light and sweetness
  • with both hands, achieving the bodily salvation of George while, at the
  • same time, furthering the loves of Ruth and Kirk by leaving them alone
  • together to make each other's better acquaintance in the romantic
  • dimness of the studio.
  • * * * * *
  • Percy proceeded down-town, pondering. His first impulse, I regret to
  • say, was to send Ruth's father an anonymous letter. This plan he
  • abandoned from motives of fear rather than of self-respect. Anonymous
  • letters are too frequently traced to their writers, and the prospect of
  • facing Kirk in such an event did not appeal to him.
  • As he could think of no other way of effecting his object, he had begun
  • to taste the bitterness of futile effort, when fortune, always his
  • friend, put him in a position to do what he wanted in the easiest
  • possible way with the minimum of unpleasantness.
  • Bailey Bannister, that strong, keen Napoleon of finance, was not above
  • a little relaxation of an evening when his father happened to be out of
  • town. That giant mind, weary with the strain of business, needed
  • refreshment.
  • And so, at eleven thirty that night, his father being in Albany, and
  • not expected home till next day, Bailey might have been observed,
  • beautifully arrayed and discreetly jovial, partaking of lobster at one
  • of those Broadway palaces where this fish is in brisk demand. He was in
  • company with his rabbit-faced friend, Clarence Grayling, and two
  • members of the chorus of a neighbouring musical comedy.
  • One of the two, with whom Clarence was conversing in a lively manner
  • that showed his heart had not been irreparably broken as the result of
  • his recent interview with Ruth, we may dismiss. Like Clarence, she is
  • of no importance to the story. The other, who, not finding Bailey's
  • measured remarks very gripping, was allowing her gaze to wander idly
  • around the room, has this claim to a place in the scheme of things,
  • that she had a wordless part in the comedy in which Percy Shanklyn had
  • appeared as the English dude and was on terms of friendship with him.
  • Consequently, seeing him enter the room, as he did at that moment, she
  • signalled him to approach.
  • "It's a little feller who was with me in 'The Man from Out West'," she
  • explained to Bailey as Percy made his way toward them. At which
  • Bailey's prim mouth closed with an air of disapproval.
  • The feminine element of the stage he found congenial to his
  • business-harassed brain, but with the "little fellers" who helped them
  • to keep the national drama sizzling he felt less in sympathy; and he
  • resented extremely his companion's tactlessness in inciting this
  • infernal mummer to intrude upon his privacy.
  • He prepared to be cold and distant with Percy. And when Bailey, never a
  • ray of sunshine, deliberately tried to be chilly, those with him at the
  • time generally had the sensation that winter was once more in their
  • midst.
  • Percy, meanwhile, threaded his way among the tables, little knowing
  • that fate had already solved the problem which had worried him the
  • greater part of the day.
  • He had come to the restaurant as a relief from his thoughts. If he
  • could find some kind friend who would invite him to supper, well and
  • good. If not, he was feeling so tired and depressed that he was ready
  • to take the bull by the horns and pay for his meal himself. He had
  • obeyed Miss Freda Reece's signal because it was impossible to avoid
  • doing so; but one glance at Bailey's face had convinced him that not
  • there was his kind host.
  • "Why, Perce," said Miss Reece, "I ain't saw you in years. Where you
  • been hiding yourself?"
  • Percy gave a languid gesture indicative of the man of affairs whose
  • time is not his own.
  • "Percy," continued Miss Reece, "shake hands with my friend Mr.
  • Bannister. I been telling him about how you made such a hit as the pin
  • in 'Pinafore'!"
  • The name galvanized Percy like a bugle-blast.
  • "Mr. Bannister!" he exclaimed. "Any relation to Mr. John Bannister, the
  • millionaire?"
  • Bailey favoured him with a scrutiny through the gold-rimmed glasses
  • which would have frozen his very spine.
  • "My father's name is--ah--John, and he is a millionaire."
  • Percy met the scrutiny with a suave smile.
  • "By Jove!" he said. "I know your sister quite well, Mr. Bannister. I
  • meet her frequently at the studio of my friend Kirk Winfield. Very
  • frequently. She is there nearly every day. Well, I must be moving on.
  • Got a date with a man. Goodbye, Freda. Glad you're going strong. Good
  • night, Mr. Bannister. Delighted to have made your acquaintance. You
  • must come round to the studio one of these days. Good night."
  • He moved softly away. Miss Reece watched him go with regret.
  • "He's a good little feller, Percy," she said. "And so he knows your
  • sister. Well, ain't that nice!"
  • Bailey did not reply. And to the feast of reason and flow of soul that
  • went on at the table during the rest of the meal he contributed so
  • little that Miss Reece, in conversation that night with her friend
  • alluded to him, not without justice, first as "that stiff," and, later,
  • as "a dead one."
  • * * * * *
  • If Percy Shanklyn could have seen Bailey in the small hours of that
  • night he would have been satisfied that his words had borne fruit. Like
  • a modern Prometheus, Bailey writhed, sleepless, on his bed till
  • daylight appeared. The discovery that Ruth was in the habit of paying
  • clandestine visits to artists' studios, where she met men like the
  • little bounder who had been thrust upon him at supper, rent his haughty
  • soul like a bomb.
  • He knew no artists, but he had read novels of Bohemian life in Paris,
  • and he had gathered a general impression that they were, as a class,
  • shock-headed, unwashed persons of no social standing whatever,
  • extremely short of money and much addicted to orgies. And his sister
  • had lowered herself by association with one of these.
  • He rose early. His appearance in the mirror shocked him. He looked
  • positively haggard.
  • Dressing with unwonted haste, he inquired for Ruth, and was told that a
  • telephone message had come from her late the previous evening to say
  • that she was spending the night at the apartment of Mrs. Lora Delane
  • Porter. The hated name increased Bailey's indignation. He held Mrs.
  • Porter responsible for the whole trouble. But for her pernicious
  • influence, Ruth would have been an ordinary sweet American girl,
  • running as, Bailey held, a girl should, in a decent groove.
  • It increased his troubles that his father was away from New York.
  • Bailey, who enjoyed the dignity of being temporary head of the firm of
  • Bannister & Son, had approved of his departure. But now he would have
  • given much to have him on the spot. He did not doubt his own ability to
  • handle this matter, but he felt that his father ought to know what was
  • going on.
  • His wrath against this upstart artist who secretly entertained his
  • sister in his studio grew with the minutes. It would be his privilege
  • very shortly to read that scrubby dauber a lesson in deportment which
  • he would remember.
  • In the interests of the family welfare he decided to stay away from the
  • office that day. The affairs of Bannister & Son would be safe for the
  • time being in the hands of the head clerk. Having telephoned to Wall
  • Street to announce his decision, he made a moody breakfast and then
  • proceeded, as was his custom of a morning, to the gymnasium for his
  • daily exercise.
  • The gymnasium was a recent addition to the Bannister home. It had been
  • established as the result of a heart-to-heart talk between old John
  • Bannister and his doctor. The doctor spoke earnestly of nervous
  • prostration and stated without preamble the exact number of months
  • which would elapse before Mr. Bannister living his present life, would
  • make first-hand acquaintance with it. He insisted on a regular routine
  • of exercise. The gymnasium came into being, and Mr. Steve Dingle,
  • physical instructor at the New York Athletic Club, took up a position
  • in the Bannister household which he was wont to describe to his
  • numerous friends as a soft snap.
  • Certainly his hours were not long. Thirty minutes with old Mr.
  • Bannister and thirty minutes with Mr. Bailey between eight and nine in
  • the morning and his duties were over for the day. But Steve was
  • conscientious and checked any disposition on the part of his two
  • clients to shirk work with a firmness which Lora Delane Porter might
  • have envied.
  • There were moments when he positively bullied old Mr. Bannister. It
  • would have amazed the clerks in his Wall Street office to see the
  • meekness with which the old man obeyed orders. But John Bannister was a
  • man who liked to get his money's worth, and he knew that Steve was
  • giving it to the last cent.
  • Steve at that time was twenty-eight years old. He had abandoned an
  • active connection with the ring, which had begun just after his
  • seventeenth birthday, twelve months before his entry into the Bannister
  • home, leaving behind him a record of which any boxer might have been
  • proud. He personally was exceedingly proud of it, and made no secret of
  • the fact.
  • He was a man in private life of astonishingly even temper. The only
  • thing that appeared to have the power to ruffle him to the slightest
  • extent was the contemplation of what he described as the bunch of
  • cheeses who pretended to fight nowadays. He would have considered it a
  • privilege, it seemed, to be allowed to encounter all the middle-weights
  • in the country in one ring in a single night without training. But it
  • appeared that he had promised his mother to quit, and he had quit.
  • Steve's mother was an old lady who in her day had been the best
  • washerwoman on Cherry Hill. She was, moreover, completely lacking in
  • all the qualities which go to make up the patroness of sport. Steve had
  • been injudicious enough to pay her a visit the day after his celebrated
  • unpleasantness with that rugged warrior, Pat O'Flaherty (_ne_
  • Smith), and, though he had knocked Pat out midway through the second
  • round, he bore away from the arena a black eye of such a startling
  • richness that old Mrs. Dingle had refused to be comforted until he had
  • promised never to enter the ring again. Which, as Steve said, had come
  • pretty hard, he being a man who would rather be a water-bucket in a
  • ring than a president outside it.
  • But he had given the promise, and kept it, leaving the field to the
  • above-mentioned bunch of cheeses. There were times when the temptation
  • to knock the head off Battling Dick this and Fighting Jack that became
  • almost agony, but he never yielded to it. All of which suggests that
  • Steve was a man of character, as indeed he was.
  • Bailey, entering the gymnasium, found Steve already there, punching
  • the bag with a force and precision which showed that the bunch of
  • cheeses ought to have been highly grateful to Mrs. Dingle for her
  • anti-pugilistic prejudices.
  • "Good morning, Dingle," said Bailey precisely.
  • Steve nodded. Bailey began to don his gymnasium costume. Steve gave the
  • ball a final punch and turned to him. He was a young man who gave the
  • impression of being, in a literal sense, perfectly square. This was due
  • to the breadth of his shoulders, which was quite out of proportion to
  • his height. His chest was extraordinarily deep, and his stomach and
  • waist small, so that to the observer seeing him for the first time in
  • boxing trunks, he seemed to begin as a big man and, half-way down,
  • change his mind and become a small one.
  • His arms, which were unusually long and thick, hung down nearly to his
  • knees and were decorated throughout with knobs and ridges of muscle
  • that popped up and down and in and out as he moved, in a manner both
  • fascinating and frightening. His face increased the illusion of
  • squareness, for he had thick, straight eyebrows, a straight mouth, and
  • a chin of almost the minimum degree of roundness. He inspected Bailey
  • with a pair of brilliant brown eyes which no detail of his appearance
  • could escape. And Bailey, that morning, as has been said, was not
  • looking his best.
  • "You're lookin' kind o' sick, bo," was Steve's comment. "I guess you
  • was hittin' it up with the gang last night in one of them lobster
  • parlours."
  • Bailey objected to being addressed as "bo," and he was annoyed that
  • Steve should have guessed the truth respecting his overnight movements.
  • Still more was he annoyed that Steve's material mind should attribute
  • to a surfeit of lobster a pallor that was superinduced by a tortured
  • soul.
  • "I did--ah--take supper last night, it is true," he said. "But if I am
  • a little pale to-day, that is not the cause. Things have occurred to
  • annoy me intensely."
  • "You should worry!" advised Steve. "Catch!"
  • The heavy medicine-ball struck Bailey in the chest before he could
  • bring up his hands and sent him staggering back.
  • "Damn it, Dingle," he gasped. "Kindly give me warning before you do
  • that sort of thing."
  • Steve was delighted. It amused his simple, honest soul to catch Bailey
  • napping, and the incident gave him a text on which to hang a lecture.
  • And, next to fighting, he loved best the sound of his own voice.
  • "Warning? Nix!" he said. "Ain't it just what I been telling you every
  • day for weeks? You gotta be ready _always_. You seen me holding
  • the pellet. You should oughter have been saying to yourself: 'I gotta
  • keep an eye on that gink, so's he don't soak me one with that thing
  • when I ain't looking.' Then you would have caught it and whizzed it
  • back at me, and maybe, if I hadn't been ready for it, you might have
  • knocked the breeze out of me."
  • "I should have derived no pleasure-----"
  • "Why, say, suppose a plug-ugly sasshays up to you on the street to take
  • a crack at your pearl stick-pin, do you reckon he's going to drop you a
  • postal card first? You gotta be _ready_ for him. See what I mean?"
  • "Let us spar," said Bailey austerely. He had begun to despair of ever
  • making Steve show him that deference and respect which he considered
  • due to the son of the house. The more frigid he was, the more genial
  • and friendly did Steve become. The thing seemed hopeless.
  • It was a pleasing sight to see Bailey spar. He brought to the task the
  • measured dignity which characterized all his actions. A left jab from
  • him had all the majesty of a formal declaration of war. If he was a
  • trifle slow in his movements for a pastime which demands a certain
  • agility from its devotees he at least got plenty of exercise and did
  • himself a great deal of good.
  • He was perspiring freely as he took off the gloves. A shower-bath,
  • followed by brisk massage at the energetic hands of Steve, made him
  • feel better than he had imagined he could feel after that night of
  • spiritual storm and stress. He was glowing as he put on his clothes,
  • and a certain high resolve which had come to him in the night watches
  • now returned with doubled force.
  • "Dingle," he said, "how did I seem to-day?"
  • "Fine," answered Steve courteously. "You're gettin' to be a regular
  • terror."
  • "You think I shape well?"
  • "Sure."
  • "I am glad. This morning I am going to thrash a man within an inch of
  • his life."
  • "What!"
  • Steve spun round. Bailey's face was set and determined.
  • "You are?" said Steve feebly.
  • "I am."
  • "What's he been doing to you?"
  • "I am afraid I cannot tell you that. But he richly deserves what he
  • will get."
  • Steve eyed him with affectionate interest.
  • "Well, ain't you the wildcat!" he said. "Who'd have thought it? I'd
  • always had you sized up as a kind o' placid guy."
  • "I can be roused."
  • "Gee, can't I see it! But, say, what sort of a gook is this gink,
  • anyway?"
  • "In what respect?"
  • "Well, I mean is he a heavy or a middle or a welter or what? It makes a
  • kind o' difference, you know."
  • "I cannot say. I have not seen him."
  • "What! Not seen him? Then how's there this fuss between you?"
  • "That is a matter into which I cannot go."
  • "Well, what's his name, then? Maybe I know him. I know a few good
  • people in this burg."
  • "I have no objection to telling you that. He is an artist, and his name
  • is--his name is----"
  • Wrinkles appeared in Bailey's forehead. His eyes bulged anxiously
  • behind their glasses.
  • "I've forgotten," he said blankly.
  • "For the love of Mike! Know where he lives?"
  • "I am afraid not."
  • Steve patted him kindly on the shoulder.
  • "Take my advice, bo," he said. "Let the poor fellow off this time."
  • And so it came about that Bailey, instead of falling upon Kirk
  • Winfield, hailed a taxicab and drove to the apartment of Mrs. Lora
  • Delane Porter.
  • Chapter V
  • Wherein Opposites Agree
  • The maid who opened the door showed a reluctance to let Bailey in. She
  • said that Mrs. Porter was busy with her writing and had given orders
  • that she was not to be disturbed.
  • Nothing could have infuriated Bailey more. He, Bailey Bannister, was to
  • be refused admittance because this preposterous woman wished to write!
  • It was the duty of all decent citizens to stop her writing. If it had
  • not been for her and her absurd books Ruth would never have made it
  • necessary for him to pay this visit at all.
  • "Kindly take my card to Mrs. Porter and tell her that I must see her at
  • once on a matter of the utmost urgency," he directed.
  • The domestic workers of America had not been trained to stand up
  • against Bailey's grand manner. The maid vanished meekly with the card,
  • and presently returned and requested him to step in.
  • Bailey found himself in a comfortable room, more like a man's study
  • than a woman's boudoir. Books lined the walls. The furniture was strong
  • and plain. At the window, on a swivel-chair before a roll-top desk,
  • Mrs. Porter sat writing, her back to the door.
  • "The gentleman, ma'am," announced the maid.
  • "Sit down," said his aunt, without looking round or ceasing to write.
  • The maid went out. Bailey sat down. The gentle squeak of the quill pen
  • continued.
  • Bailey coughed.
  • "I have called this morning----"
  • The left hand of the writer rose and waggled itself irritably above her
  • left shoulder.
  • "Aunt Lora," spoke Bailey sternly.
  • "Shish!" said the authoress. Only that and nothing more. Bailey,
  • outraged, relapsed into silence. The pen squeaked on.
  • After what seemed to Bailey a considerable time, the writing ceased. It
  • was succeeded by the sound of paper vigorously blotted. Then, with
  • startling suddenness, Mrs. Porter whirled round on the swivel-chair,
  • tilted it back, and faced him.
  • "Well, Bailey?" she said.
  • She looked at Bailey. Bailey looked at her. Her eyes had the curious
  • effect of driving out of his head what he had intended to say.
  • "Well?" she said again.
  • He tried to remember the excellent opening speech which he had prepared
  • in the cab.
  • "Good gracious, Bailey!" cried Mrs. Porter, "you have not come here and
  • ruined my morning's work for the pleasure of looking at me surely? Say
  • something."
  • Bailey found his voice.
  • "I have called to see Ruth, who, I am informed, is with you."
  • "She is in her room. I made her breakfast in bed. Is there any message
  • I can give her?"
  • Bailey suddenly remembered the speech he had framed in the cab.
  • "Aunt Lora," he said, "I am sorry to have to intrude upon you at so
  • early an hour, but it is imperative that I see Ruth and ask her to
  • explain the meaning of a most disturbing piece of news that has come to
  • my ears."
  • Mrs. Porter did not appear to have heard him.
  • "A man of your height should weigh more," she said. "What is your
  • weight?"
  • "My weight; beside the point----"
  • "Your weight is under a hundred and forty pounds, and it ought to be
  • over a hundred and sixty. Eat more. Avoid alcohol. Keep regular hours."
  • "Aunt Lora!"
  • "Well?"
  • "I wish to see my sister."
  • "You will have to wait. What did you wish to see her about?"
  • "That is a matter that concerns----No! I will tell you, for I believe
  • you to be responsible for the whole affair."
  • "Well?"
  • "Last night, quite by chance, I found out that Ruth has for some time
  • been paying visits to the studio of an artist."
  • Mrs. Porter nodded.
  • "Quite right. Mr. Kirk Winfield. She is going to marry him."
  • Bailey's hat fell to the floor. His stick followed. His mouth opened
  • widely. His glasses shot from his nose and danced madly at the end of
  • their string.
  • "What!"
  • "It will be a most suitable match in every way," said Mrs. Porter.
  • Bailey bounded to his feet.
  • "It's incredible!" he shouted. "It's ridiculous! It's abominable!
  • It's--it's incredible!"
  • Mrs. Porter gazed upon his transports with about the same amount of
  • interest which she would have bestowed upon a whirling dervish at Coney
  • Island.
  • "You have not seen Mr. Winfield, I gather?"
  • "When I do, he will have reason to regret it. I----"
  • "Sit down."
  • Bailey sat down.
  • "Ruth and Mr. Winfield are both perfect types. Mr. Winfield is really a
  • splendid specimen of a man. As to his intelligence, I say nothing. I
  • have ceased to expect intelligence in man, and I am grateful for the
  • smallest grain. But physically, he is magnificent. I could not wish
  • dear Ruth a better husband."
  • Bailey had pulled himself together with a supreme effort and had
  • achieved a frozen calm.
  • "Such a marriage is, of course, out of the question," he said.
  • "Why?"
  • "My sister cannot marry a--a nobody, an outsider----"
  • "Mr. Winfield is not a nobody. He is an extraordinarily healthy young
  • man."
  • "Are you aware that Ruth, if she had wished, could have married a
  • prince?"
  • "She told me. A little rat of a man, I understand. She had far too much
  • sense to do any such thing. She has a conscience. She knows what she
  • owes to the future of the----"
  • "Bah!" cried Bailey rudely.
  • "I suppose," said Mrs. Porter, "that, like most men, you care nothing
  • for the future of the race? You are not interested in eugenics?"
  • Bailey quivered with fury at the word, but said nothing.
  • "If you have ever studied even so elementary a subject as the colour
  • heredity of the Andalusian fowl----"
  • The colour heredity of the Andalusian fowl was too much for Bailey.
  • "I decline to discuss any such drivel," he said, rising. "I came here
  • to see Ruth, and--"
  • "And here she is," said Mrs. Porter.
  • The door opened, and Ruth appeared. She looked, to Bailey, insufferably
  • radiant and pleased with herself.
  • "Bailey!" she cried. "Whatever brings my little Bailey here, when he
  • ought to be working like a good boy in Wall Street?"
  • "I will tell you," Bailey's demeanour was portentous.
  • "He's frowning," said Ruth. "You have been stirring his hidden depths,
  • Aunt Lora!"
  • Bailey coughed.
  • "Ruth!"
  • "Bailey, _don't_! You don't know how terrible you look when you're
  • roused."
  • "Ruth, kindly answer me one question. Aunt Lora informs me that you are
  • going to marry this man Winfield. Is it or is it not true?"
  • "Of course it's true."
  • Bailey drew in his breath. He gazed coldly at Ruth, bowed to Mrs.
  • Porter, and smoothed the nap of his hat.
  • "Very good," he said stonily. "I shall now call upon this Mr. Winfield
  • and thrash him." With that he walked out of the room.
  • He directed his cab to the nearest hotel, looked up Kirk's address in
  • the telephone-book, and ten minutes later was ringing the studio bell.
  • A look of relief came into George Pennicut's eyes as he opened the
  • door. To George, nowadays, every ring at the bell meant a possible
  • visit from Lora Delane Porter.
  • "Is Mr. Kirk Winfield at home?" inquired Bailey.
  • "Yes, sir. Who shall I say, sir?"
  • "Kindly tell Mr. Winfield that Mr. Bannister wishes to speak to him."
  • "Yes, sir. Will you step this way, sir?"
  • Bailey stepped that way.
  • * * * * *
  • While Bailey was driving to the studio in his taxicab, Kirk, in boxing
  • trunks and a sleeveless vest, was engaged on his daily sparring
  • exercise with Steve Dingle.
  • This morning Steve seemed to be amused at something. As they rested, at
  • the conclusion of their fifth and final round, Kirk perceived that he
  • was chuckling, and asked the reason.
  • "Why, say," explained Steve, "I was only thinking that it takes all
  • kinds of ivory domes to make a nuttery. I ran across a new brand of
  • simp this morning. Just before I came to you I'm scheduled to show up
  • at one of these Astorbilt homes t'other side of the park. First I mix
  • it with the old man, then son and heir blows in and I attend to him.
  • "Well, this morning, son acts like he's all worked up. He's one of
  • these half-portion Willie-boys with Chippendale legs, but he throws out
  • a line of talk that would make you wonder if it's safe to let him run
  • around loose. Says his mind's made up; he's going to thrash a gink
  • within an inch of his life; going to muss up his features so bad he'll
  • have to have 'em replanted.
  • "'Why?' I says. 'Never you mind,' says he. 'Well, who is he?' I asks.
  • What do you think happens then? He thinks hard for a spell, rolls his
  • eyes, and says: 'Search me. I've forgotten.' 'Know where he lives?' I
  • asks him. 'Nope,' he says.
  • "Can you beat it! Seems to me if I had a kink in my coco that big I'd
  • phone to an alienist and have myself measured for a strait-jacket. Gee!
  • You meet all kinds, going around the way I do."
  • Kirk laughed and lit a cigarette.
  • "If you want to use the shower, Steve," he said, "you'd better get up
  • there now. I shan't be ready yet awhile. Then, if this is one of your
  • energetic mornings and you would care to give me a rub-down----"
  • "Sure," said Steve obligingly. He picked up his clothes and went
  • upstairs to the bathroom, which, like the bedrooms, opened on to the
  • gallery. Kirk threw himself on the couch, fixed his eyes on the
  • ceiling, and began to think of Ruth.
  • "Mr. Bannister," announced George Pennicut at the door.
  • Kirk was on his feet in one bound. The difference, to a man whose mind
  • is far away, between "Mr. Bannister" and "Miss Bannister" is not great,
  • and his first impression was that it was Ruth who had arrived.
  • He was acutely conscious of his costume, and was quite relieved when he
  • saw, not Ruth, but a severe-looking young man, who advanced upon him in
  • a tight-lipped, pop-eyed manner that suggested dislike and hostility.
  • The visitor was a complete stranger to him, but, his wandering wits
  • returning to their duties, he deduced that this must be one of Ruth's
  • relatives.
  • It is a curious fact that the possibility of Ruth having other
  • relatives than Mrs. Porter had not occurred to him till now. She
  • herself filled his mind to such an extent that he had never speculated
  • on any possible family that might be attached to her. To him Ruth was
  • Ruth. He accepted the fact that she was Mrs. Porter's niece. That she
  • might also be somebody's daughter or sister had not struck him. The
  • look on Bailey's face somehow brought it home to him that the world was
  • about to step in and complicate the idyllic simplicity of his wooing.
  • Bailey, meanwhile, as Kirk's hundred and eighty pounds of bone and
  • muscle detached themselves from the couch and loomed up massively
  • before him, was conscious of a weakening of his determination to
  • inflict bodily chastisement. The truth of Steve's remark, that it made
  • a difference whether one's intended victim is a heavyweight, a middle,
  • or a welter, came upon him with some force.
  • Kirk, in a sleeveless vest that showed up his chest and shoulders was
  • not an inviting spectacle for a man intending assault and battery.
  • Bailey decided to confine himself to words. There was nothing to be
  • gained by a vulgar brawl. A dignified man of the world avoided
  • violence.
  • "Mr. Winfield?"
  • "Mr. Bannister?"
  • It was at this point that Steve, having bathed and dressed, came out on
  • the gallery. The voices below halted him, and the sound of Bailey's
  • decided him to remain where he was. Steve was not above human
  • curiosity, and he was anxious to know the reason for Bailey's sudden
  • appearance.
  • "That is my name. It is familiar to you. My sister," said Bailey
  • bitterly, "has made it so."
  • "Won't you sit down?" said Kirk.
  • "No, thank you. I will not detain you long, Mr. Winfield."
  • "My dear fellow! There's no hurry. Will you have a cigarette?"
  • "No, thank you."
  • Kirk was puzzled by his visitor's manner. So, unseen in the shadows of
  • the gallery, was Steve.
  • "I can say what I wish to say in two words, Mr. Winfield," said Bailey.
  • "This marriage is quite out of the question."
  • "Eh?"
  • "My father would naturally never consent to it. As soon as he hears of
  • what has happened he will forbid it absolutely. Kindly dismiss from
  • your mind entirely the idea that my sister will ever be permitted to
  • marry you, Mr. Winfield."
  • Steve, in the gallery, with difficulty suppressed a whoop of surprise.
  • Kirk laughed ruefully.
  • "Aren't you a little premature, Mr. Bannister? Aren't you taking a good
  • deal for granted?"
  • "In what way?"
  • "Well, that Miss Bannister cares the slightest bit for me, for
  • instance; that I've one chance in a million of ever getting her to care
  • the slightest bit for me?"
  • Bailey was disgusted at this futile attempt to hide the known facts of
  • the case from him.
  • "You need not trouble to try and fool me, Mr. Winfield," he said
  • tartly. "I know everything. I have just seen my sister, and she told me
  • herself in so many words that she intended to marry you."
  • To his amazement he found his hand violently shaken.
  • "My dear old man!" Kirk was stammering in his delight. "My dear old
  • sport, you don't know what a weight you've taken off my mind. You know
  • how it is. A fellow falls in love and instantly starts thinking he
  • hasn't a chance on earth. I hadn't a notion she felt that way about me.
  • I'm not fit to shine her shoes. My dear old man, if you hadn't come and
  • told me this I never should have had the nerve to say a word to her.
  • "You're a corker. You've changed everything. You'll have to excuse me.
  • I must go to her. I can't wait a minute. I must rush and dress. Make
  • yourself at home here. Have you breakfasted? George! George! Say,
  • George, I've got to rush away. See that Mr. Bannister has everything he
  • wants. Get him some breakfast. Good-bye, old man." He gripped Bailey's
  • hand once more. "You're all right. Good-bye!"
  • He sprang for the staircase. George Pennicut turned to the speechless
  • Bailey.
  • "How would it be if I made you a nice cup of hot tea and a rasher of
  • 'am, sir?" he inquired with a kindly smile.
  • Bailey eyed him glassily, then found speech.
  • "Go to hell!" he shouted. He strode to the door and shot into the
  • street, a seething volcano.
  • George, for his part, was startled, but polite.
  • "Yes, sir," he said. "Very good, sir," and withdrew.
  • Kirk, having reached the top of the stairs, had to check the wild rush
  • he was making for the bathroom in order not to collide with Steve, whom
  • he found waiting for him with outstretched hand and sympathetic
  • excitement writ large upon his face.
  • "Excuse _me_, squire," said Steve, "I've been playing the part of
  • Rubberneck Rupert in that little drama you've just been starring in. I
  • just couldn't help listening. Say, this mitt's for you. Shake it! So
  • you're going to marry Bailey's sister, Ruth, are you? You're the lucky
  • guy. She's a queen!"
  • "Do _you_ know her, Steve?"
  • "Do I know her! Didn't I tell you I was the tame physical instructor in
  • that palace? I wish I had a dollar for every time I've thrown the
  • medicine-ball at her. Why, I'm the guy that gave her that figure of
  • hers. She don't come to me regular, like Bailey and the old man, but do
  • I know her? I should say I did know her."
  • Kirk shook his hand.
  • "You're all right, Steve!" he said huskily, and vanished into the
  • bathroom. A sound as of a tropical deluge came from within.
  • Steve hammered upon the door. The downpour ceased.
  • "Say!" called Steve.
  • "Hello?"
  • "I don't want to discourage you, squire, but----"
  • The door opened and Kirk's head appeared.
  • "What's the matter?"
  • "Well, you heard what Bailey said?"
  • "About his father?"
  • "Sure. It goes."
  • Kirk came out into the gallery, towelling himself vigorously.
  • "Who _is_ her father?" he asked, seating himself on the rail.
  • "He's a son of a gun," said Steve with emphasis. "As rich as John D.
  • pretty nearly and about as chummy as a rattlesnake. Were you thinking
  • of calling and asking him for a father's blessing?"
  • "Something of the sort, I suppose."
  • "Forget it! He'd give you the hook before you'd got through asking if
  • you might call him daddy."
  • "You're comforting, Steve. They call you Little Sunbeam at home, don't
  • they?"
  • "Hell!" said Steve warmly, "I'm not shooting this at you just to make
  • you feel bad. I gotta reason. I want to make you see this ain't going
  • to be no society walk-over, with the Four Hundred looking on from the
  • pews and poppa signing cheques in the background. Say, did I ever tell
  • you how I beat Kid Mitchell?"
  • "Does it apply to the case in hand?"
  • "Does it what to the which?"
  • "Had it any bearing on my painful position? I only ask, because that's
  • what is interesting me most just now, and, if you're going to change
  • the subject, there's a chance that my attention may wander."
  • "Sure it does. It's a--what d'you call it when you pull something
  • that's got another meaning tucked up its sleeve?"
  • "A parable?"
  • "That's right. A--what you said. Well, this Kid Mitchell was looked on
  • as a coming champ in those days. He had cleaned up some good boys,
  • while I had only gotten a rep about as big as a nickel with a hole in
  • it. I guess I looked pie to him. He turkey-trotted up to me for the
  • first round and stopped in front of me as if he was wondering what had
  • blown in and whether the Gerry Society would stand for his hitting it.
  • I could see him thinking 'This is too easy' as plain as if he'd said
  • it. And then he took another peek at me, as much as to say, 'Well,
  • let's get it over. Where shall I soak him first?' And while he's doing
  • this I get in range and I put my left pretty smart into his lunch-wagon
  • and I pick up my right off the carpet and hand it to him, and down he
  • goes. And when he gets up again it's pretty nearly to-morrow morning and
  • I've drawn the winner's end and gone home."
  • "And the moral?"
  • "Why, don't spar. Punch! Don't wait for the wallop. Give it."
  • "You mean?"
  • "Why, when old man Bannister says: 'Nix! You shall never marry my
  • child!' come back at him by saying: 'Thanks very much, but I've just
  • done it!'"
  • "Good heavens, Steve!"
  • "You'll never win out else. You don't know old man Bannister. I do."
  • "But----"
  • The door-bell rang.
  • "Who on earth's that?" said Kirk. "It can't be Bailey back again."
  • "Good morning, Pennicut," spoke the clear voice of Mrs. Lora Delane
  • Porter. "I wish to see Mr. Winfield."
  • "Yes, ma'am. He's upstairs in 'is bath!"
  • "I will wait in the studio."
  • "Good Lord!" cried Kirk, bounding from his seat on the rail. "For
  • Heaven's sake, Steve, go and talk to her while I dress. I'll be down in
  • a minute."
  • "Sure. What's her name?"
  • "Mrs. Porter. You'll like her. Tell her all about yourself--where you
  • were born, how much you are round the chest, what's your favourite
  • breakfast food. That's what she likes to chat about. And tell her I'll
  • be down in a second."
  • Steve, reaching the studio, found Mrs. Porter examining the
  • boxing-gloves which had been thrown on a chair.
  • "Eight-ounce, ma'am," he said genially, by way of introduction.
  • "Kirk'll be lining up in a moment. He's getting into his rags."
  • Mrs. Porter looked at him with the gimlet stare which made her so
  • intensely disliked by practically every man she knew.
  • "Are you a friend of Mr. Winfield?" she said.
  • "Sure. We just been spieling together up above. He sent me down to tell
  • you he won't be long."
  • Mrs. Porter concluded her inspection.
  • "What is your name?"
  • "Dingle, ma'am."
  • "You are extraordinarily well developed. You have unusually long arms
  • for a man of your height."
  • "Yep. I got a pretty good reach."
  • "Are you an artist?"
  • "A which?"
  • "An artist. A painter."
  • Steve smiled broadly.
  • "I've been called a good many things, but no one's ever handed me that.
  • No, ma'am, I'm a has-been."
  • "I beg your pardon."
  • "Granted."
  • "What did you say you were?" asked Mrs. Porter after a pause.
  • "A has-been. I used to be a middle, but mother kicked, and I quit. All
  • through taking a blue eye home! Wouldn't that jar you?"
  • "I have no doubt you intend to be explicit----"
  • "Not on your life!" protested Steve. "I may be a rough-neck, but I've
  • got me manners. I wouldn't get explicit with a lady."
  • Mrs. Porter sat down.
  • "We appear to be talking at cross-purposes," she said. "I still do not
  • gather what your profession is or was."
  • "Why, ain't I telling you? I used to be a middle----"
  • "What is a middle?"
  • "Why, it's in between the light-heavies and the welters. I was a welter
  • when I broke into the fighting game, but----"
  • "Now I understand. You are a pugilist?"
  • "Used to be. But mother kicked."
  • "Kicked whom?"
  • "You don't get me, ma'am. When I say she kicked, I mean my blue eye
  • threw a scare into her, and she put a crimp in my career. Made me quit
  • when I should have been champ in another couple of fights."
  • "I am afraid I cannot follow these domestic troubles of yours. And why
  • do you speak of your blue eye? Your eyes are brown."
  • "This one wasn't. It was the fattest blue eye you ever seen. I ran up
  • against a short right hook. I put him out next round, ma'am, mind you,
  • but that didn't help me any with mother. Directly she seen me blue eye
  • she said: 'That'll be all from you, Steve. You stop it this minute.' So
  • I quit. But gee! It's tough on a fellow to have to sit out of the game
  • and watch a bunch of cheeses like this new crop of middle-weights
  • swelling around and calling themselves fighters when they couldn't lick
  • a postage-stamp, not if it was properly trained. Hell! Beg pardon,
  • ma'am."
  • "I find you an interesting study, Mr. Dingle," said Mrs. Porter
  • thoughtfully. "I have never met a pugilist before. Do you box with Mr.
  • Winfield?"
  • "Sure. Kirk and me go five rounds every morning."
  • "You have been boxing with him to-day? Then perhaps you can tell me if
  • an absurd young man in eye-glasses has called here yet? He is wearing a
  • grey----"
  • "Do you mean Bailey, ma'am. Bailey Bannister?"
  • "You know my nephew, Mr. Dingle?"
  • "Sure. I box with him every morning."
  • "I never expected to hear that my nephew Bailey did anything so
  • sensible as to take regular exercise. He does not look as if he did."
  • "He certainly is a kind o' half-portion, ma'am. But say, if he's your
  • nephew, Miss Ruth's your niece."
  • "Perfectly correct."
  • "Then you know all about this business?"
  • "Which business, Mr. Dingle?"
  • "Why, Kirk and Miss Ruth."
  • Mrs. Porter raised her eyebrows.
  • "Really, Mr. Dingle! Has Mr. Winfield made you his confidant?"
  • "How's that?"
  • "Has Mr. Winfield told you about my niece and himself?"
  • "Hell, no! You don't find a real person like Kirk shooting his head
  • about that kind of thing. I had it from Bailey."
  • "From Bailey?"
  • "Surest thing you know. He blew in here and shouted it all out at the
  • top of his voice."
  • "Indeed! I was wondering if he had arrived yet. He left my apartment
  • saying he was going to thrash Mr. Winfield. I came here to save him
  • from getting hurt. Was there any trouble?"
  • "Not so's you could notice it. I guess when he'd taken a slant at Kirk
  • he thought he wouldn't bother to swat him. Say, ma'am--"
  • "Well?"
  • "Whose corner are you in for this scrap?"
  • "I don't understand you."
  • "Well, are you rooting for Kirk, or are you holding the towel for old
  • man Bannister?"
  • "You mean, do I wish Mr. Winfield to marry my niece?"
  • "You're hep."
  • "Most certainly I do. It was I who brought them together."
  • "Bully for you! Well, say, I just been shooting the dope into Kirk
  • upstairs. I been--you didn't happen to read the report of a scrap I
  • once had with a gazook called Kid Mitchell, did you, ma'am?"
  • "I seldom, I may say never, read the sporting section of the daily
  • papers."
  • Steve looked at her in honest wonder.
  • "For the love of Pete! What else do you find to read in 'em?" he said.
  • "Well, I was telling Kirk about it. The Kid came at me to soak me, but
  • I soaked him first and put him out. It's the only thing to do, ma'am,
  • when you're up against it. Get in the first wallop before the other guy
  • can get himself set for his punch. 'Kirk,' I says, 'don't you wait for
  • old man Bannister to tell you you can't marry Miss Ruth. Marry her
  • before he can say it.' I wish you'd tell him the same thing, ma'am. You
  • know the old man as well as I do--better, I guess--and you know that
  • Kirk ain't got a chance in a million with him if he don't rush him.
  • Ain't that right?"
  • "Mr. Dingle," said Mrs. Porter, "I should like to shake you by the
  • hand. It is amazing to me to find such sound sense in a man. You have
  • expressed my view exactly. If I have any influence with Mr. Winfield,
  • he shall marry my niece to-day. You are a man of really exceptional
  • intelligence, Mr. Dingle."
  • "Aw, check it with your hat, ma'am!" murmured Steve modestly. "Nix on
  • the bouquets! I'm only a roughneck. But I fall for Miss Ruth, and there
  • ain't many like Kirk, so I'd like to see them happy. It would sure get
  • my goat the worst way to have the old man gum the game for them."
  • "I cannot understand a word you say," said Mrs. Porter, "but I fancy we
  • mean the same thing. Here comes Mr. Winfield at last. I will speak to
  • him at once."
  • "Spiel away, ma'am," said Steve. "The floor's yours."
  • Kirk entered the studio.
  • Chapter VI
  • Breaking the News
  • Old John Bannister returned that night. Learning from Bailey's
  • trembling lips the tremendous events that had been taking place in his
  • absence, he was first irritated, then coldly amused. His coolness
  • dampened, while it comforted, Bailey.
  • A bearer of sensational tidings likes to spread a certain amount of
  • dismay and terror; but, on the other hand, it was a relief to him to
  • find that his father appeared to consider trivial a crisis which, to
  • Bailey, had seemed a disaster without parallel in the annals of
  • American social life.
  • "She said she was going to _marry_ him!"
  • Old Bannister opened the nut-cracker mouth that always had the
  • appearance of crushing something. His pale eyes glowed for an instant.
  • "Did she?" he said.
  • "She seemed very--ah--determined."
  • "_Did_ she!"
  • Silence falling like a cloud at this point, Bailey rightly conjectured
  • that the audience was at an end and left the room. His father bit the
  • end off a cigar and began to smoke.
  • Smoking, he reviewed the situation, and his fighting spirit rose to
  • grapple with it. He was not sorry that this had happened. His was a
  • patriarchal mind, and he welcomed opportunities of exercising his
  • authority over his children. It had always been his policy to rule them
  • masterfully, and he had often resented the fact that his daughter, by
  • the nature of things, was to a great extent outside his immediate rule.
  • During office hours business took him away from her. The sun never set
  • on his empire over Bailey, but it needed a definite crisis like the
  • present one to enable him to jerk at the reins which guided Ruth, and
  • he was glad of the chance to make his power felt.
  • The fact that this affair brought him into immediate contact with Mrs.
  • Porter added to his enjoyment. Of all the people, men or women, with
  • whom his business or social life had brought him into conflict, she
  • alone had fought him squarely and retired with the honours of war. When
  • his patriarchal mind had led him to bully his late wife, it was Mrs.
  • Porter who had fought her cause. It was Mrs. Porter who openly
  • expressed her contempt for his money and certain methods of making it.
  • She was the only person in his immediate sphere over whom he had no
  • financial hold.
  • He was a man who liked to be surrounded by dependents, and Mrs. Porter
  • stoutly declined to be a dependent. She moved about the world, blunt
  • and self-sufficing, and he hated her as he hated no one else. The
  • thought that she had now come to grips with him and that he could best
  • her in open fight was pleasant to him. All his life, except in his
  • conflicts with her, he had won. He meant to win now.
  • Bailey's apprehensions amused him. He had a thorough contempt for all
  • actors, authors, musicians, and artists, whom he classed together in
  • one group as men who did not count, save in so far as they gave mild
  • entertainment to the men who, like himself, did count. The idea of
  • anybody taking them seriously seemed too fantastic to be considered.
  • Of affection for his children he had little. Bailey was useful in the
  • office, and Ruth ornamental at home. They satisfied him. He had never
  • troubled to study their characters. It had never occurred to him to
  • wonder if they were fond of him. They formed a necessary part of his
  • household, and beyond that he was not interested in them. If he had
  • ever thought about Ruth's nature, he had dismissed her as a feminine
  • counterpart of Bailey, than whom no other son and heir in New York
  • behaved so exactly as a son and heir should.
  • That Ruth, even under the influence of Lora Delane Porter, should have
  • been capable of her present insubordination, was surprising, but the
  • thing was too trivial to be a source of anxiety. The mischief could be
  • checked at once before it amounted to anything.
  • Bailey had not been gone too long before Ruth appeared. She stood in
  • the doorway looking at him for a moment. Her face was pale and her eyes
  • bright. She was breathing quickly.
  • "Are you busy, father? I--I want to tell you something."
  • John Bannister smiled. He had a wintry smile, a sort of muscular
  • affection of the mouth, to which his eyes contributed nothing. He had
  • made up his mind to be perfectly calm and pleasant with Ruth. He had
  • read in novels and seen on the stage situations of this kind, where the
  • father had stormed and blustered. The foolishness of such a policy
  • amused him. A strong man had no need to behave like that.
  • "I think I have heard it already," he said. "I have just been seeing
  • Bailey."
  • "What did Bailey tell you, father?"
  • "That you fancied yourself in love with some actor or artist or other
  • whose name I have forgotten."
  • "It is not fancy. I do love him."
  • "Yes?"
  • There was a pause.
  • "Are you very angry, father?"
  • "Why should I be? Let's talk it over quietly. There's no need to make a
  • tragedy of it."
  • "I'm glad you feel like that, father."
  • John Bannister lit another cigar.
  • "Tell me all about it," he said.
  • Ruth found herself surprisingly near tears. She had come into the room
  • with every nerve in her body braced for a supreme struggle. Her
  • father's unexpected gentleness weakened her, exactly as he had
  • foreseen. The plan of action which he had determined upon was that of
  • the wrestler who yields instead of resisting, in order to throw an
  • antagonist off his balance.
  • "How did it begin?" he asked.
  • "Well," said Ruth, "it began when Aunt Lora took me to his studio."
  • "Yes, I heard that it was she who set the whole thing going. She is a
  • friend of this fellow--what is his name?"
  • "Kirk Winfield. Yes, she seemed to know him quite well."
  • "And then?"
  • In spite of her anxiety, Ruth smiled.
  • "Well, that's all," she said. "I just fell in love with him."
  • Mr. Bannister nodded.
  • "You just fell in love with him," he repeated. "Pretty quick work,
  • wasn't it?"
  • "I suppose it was."
  • "You just took one look at him and saw he was the affinity, eh?"
  • "I suppose so."
  • "And what did he do? Was he equally sudden?"
  • Ruth laughed. She was feeling quite happy now.
  • "He would have liked to be, poor dear, but he felt he had to be
  • cautious and prepare the way before telling me. If it hadn't been for
  • Bailey, he might be doing it still. Apparently, Bailey went to him and
  • said I had said I was going to marry him, and Kirk came flying round,
  • and--well, then it was all right."
  • Mr. Bannister drew thoughtfully at his cigar. He was silent for a few
  • moments.
  • "Well, my dear," he said at last. "I think you had better consider the
  • engagement broken off."
  • Ruth looked at him quickly. He still smiled, but his eyes were cold and
  • hard. She realized suddenly that she had been played with, that all his
  • kindliness and amiability had been merely a substitute for the storm
  • which she had expected. After all, it was to be war between them, and
  • she braced herself for it!
  • "Father!" she cried.
  • Mr. Bannister continued to puff serenely at his cigar.
  • "We needn't get worked up about it," he said. "Let's keep right on
  • talking it over quietly."
  • "Very well," said Ruth. "But, after what you have just said, what is
  • there to talk over?"
  • "You might be interested to hear my reasons for saying it."
  • "And I will argue my side."
  • Mr. Bannister waved his hand gently.
  • "You don't have to argue. You just listen."
  • Ruth bit her lip.
  • "Well?"
  • "In the first place," said her father, "about this young man. What is
  • he? Bailey says he is an artist. Well, what has he ever done? Why don't
  • I know his name? I buy a good many pictures, but I don't remember ever
  • signing a cheque for one of his. I read the magazines now and then, but
  • I can't recall seeing his signature to any of the illustrations. How
  • does he live, anyway, without going into the question of how he intends
  • to support a wife?"
  • "Aunt Lora told me he had private means."
  • "How much?"
  • "Five thousand dollars a year."
  • "Exactly the amount necessary to let him live without working. I have
  • him placed now. I know his type. I could show you a thousand men in
  • this city in exactly the same position. They don't starve and they
  • don't work. This young man of yours is a loafer."
  • "Well?"
  • Ruth's voice was quiet, but a faint colour had crept into her face and
  • her eyes were blazing.
  • "Now perhaps you would care to hear what I think of his principles. How
  • do you feel that he comes out of this business? Does he show to
  • advantage? Isn't there just a suspicion of underhandedness about his
  • behaviour?"
  • "No."
  • "No? He lets you pay these secret visits----"
  • Ruth interrupted.
  • "There was nothing secret about them--to him. Aunt Lora brought me to
  • the studio in the first place, and she kept on bringing me. I don't
  • suppose it ever occurred to Kirk to wonder who I was and who my father
  • might be. He has been perfectly straight. If you like to say I have
  • been underhanded, I admit it. I have. More so than you imagine. I just
  • wanted him, and I didn't care for anything except that."
  • "It did not strike you that you owed anything to me, for instance?"
  • "No."
  • "I should have thought that, as your father, I had certain claims."
  • Ruth was silent.
  • Mr. Bannister sighed.
  • "I thought you were fond of me, Ruth," he said wistfully. It was the
  • wrestler yielding instead of resisting. Ruth's hard composure melted
  • instantly. She flung her arms round his neck in a burst of remorseful
  • affection.
  • "Of course I am, father dear. You're making this awfully hard for me."
  • Mr. Bannister chuckled inwardly. It seemed to him that victory was in
  • sight. He always won, he told himself, always.
  • "I only want you to be sensible."
  • Ruth stiffened at the word. It jarred upon her. She felt that they were
  • leagues apart, that they could never be in sympathy with each other.
  • "Father," she said.
  • "Yes?"
  • "Would you like to see Kirk?"
  • "I have been wondering when he was going to appear on the scene. I
  • always thought it was customary on these occasions for the young man to
  • present himself in person, and not let the lady fight his battles for
  • him. Is this Mr. Winfield a little deficient in nerve?"
  • Ruth flushed angrily.
  • "I particularly asked Kirk not to come here before I had seen you. I
  • insisted on it. Naturally, he wanted to."
  • "Of course!"
  • There was a sneer in his voice which he did not try to hide. It flicked
  • Ruth like a whip. Her painfully preserved restraint broke up under it.
  • "Do you think Kirk is afraid of you, father?"
  • "It crossed my mind."
  • "He is not."
  • "I have only your word for it."
  • "You can have his if you want it. There is the telephone. You can have
  • him here in ten minutes if you want to see him."
  • "A very good idea. But, as it happens, I do not want to see him. There
  • is no necessity. His views on this matter do not interest me. I----"
  • There was a hurried knock at the door. Bailey burst in, ruffled and
  • wild as to the eyes.
  • "Father," he cried, "I don't want to interrupt you, but that infernal
  • woman, Aunt Lora, has arrived, and says she won't go till she has seen
  • you. She's downstairs now."
  • "Not now," said Lora Delane Porter, moving him to one side and entering
  • the room. "I thought it would be a comfort to you, Ruth, to have me
  • with you to help explain exactly how matters stand. Good evening, John.
  • Go away, Bailey. Now let us discuss things quietly."
  • "She is responsible for the whole thing, father," cried Bailey.
  • Mr. Bannister rose.
  • "There is nothing to discuss," he said shortly. "I have no wish to
  • speak to you at all. As you appear to have played a large part in this
  • affair, I may as well tell you that it is settled. Ruth will not marry
  • Mr. Winfield."
  • Lora Delane Porter settled herself comfortably in a chair. She drew off
  • her gloves and placed them on the table.
  • "Please ask that boy Bailey to go," she said. "He annoys me. I cannot
  • marshal my thoughts in his presence."
  • Quelled by her eye, Bailey removed himself. His father remained
  • standing. Ruth, who had risen at her aunt's entry, sat down again. Mrs.
  • Porter looked round the room with some approval.
  • "You have a nice taste in pictures, John," she said. "That is a Corot,
  • surely, above the mantelpiece?"
  • "Will you----"
  • "But about this little matter. You dislike the idea of Ruth marrying
  • Mr. Winfield? Have you seen Mr. Winfield?"
  • "I have not."
  • "Then how can you possibly decide whether he is a fit husband for
  • Ruth?"
  • "I know all about him."
  • "What do you know?"
  • "What Ruth has told me. That he is a loafer who pretends to be an
  • artist."
  • "He is a poor artist. I grant you that. His drawing is weak. But are
  • you aware that he is forty-three inches round the chest, six feet tall,
  • and in perfect physical condition?"
  • "What has that got to do with it?"
  • "Everything. You have not read my 'Principles of Selection'?"
  • "I have not."
  • "I will send you a copy to-morrow."
  • "I will burn it directly it arrives."
  • "Then you will miss a great deal of valuable information," said Mrs.
  • Porter tranquilly.
  • There was a pause. John Bannister glared furiously at Mrs. Porter, but
  • her gaze was moving easily about the room, taking in each picture in
  • turn in a leisurely inspection.
  • An exclamation from Ruth broke the silence, a sharp cry like that of an
  • animal in pain. She sprang up, her face working, her eyes filled with
  • tears.
  • "I can't stand it!" she cried. "I can't stand it any longer! Father,
  • Kirk and I were married this afternoon."
  • Mrs. Porter went quickly to her and put her arm round her. Ruth was
  • sobbing helplessly. The strain had broken her. John Bannister's face
  • was leaden. The veins stood out on his forehead. His mouth twisted
  • dumbly.
  • Mrs. Porter led Ruth gently to the door and pushed her out. Then she
  • closed it and turned to him.
  • "So now you know, John," she said. "Well, what are you going to do
  • about it?"
  • Self-control was second nature with John Bannister. For years he had
  • cultivated it as a commercial asset. Often a fortune had depended on
  • his mastery of his emotions. Now, in an instant, he had himself under
  • control once more. His face resumed its normal expression of cold
  • impassiveness. Only his mouth twitched a little.
  • "Well?" asked Mrs. Porter.
  • "Take her away," he said quietly. "Take her out of here. Let her go to
  • him. I have done with her."
  • "I suppose so," said Mrs. Porter, and left the room.
  • Chapter VII
  • Sufficient Unto Themselves
  • Some months after John Bannister had spoken his ultimatum in the
  • library two drought-stricken men met on the Rialto. It was a close June
  • evening, full of thirst.
  • "I could do with a drink," said the first man. "Several."
  • "My tongue is black clear down to the roots," said the second.
  • "Let's go up to Kirk Winfield's," proposed the first man, inspired.
  • "Not for me," said the other briefly. "Haven't you heard about Kirk?
  • He's married!"
  • "I know--but----"
  • "And when I say married, I mean _married_. She's old John
  • Bannister's daughter, you know, and I guess she inherits her father's
  • character. She's what I call a determined girl. She seems to have made
  • up her mind that the old crowd that used to trail around the studio
  • aren't needed any longer, and they've been hitting the sidewalk on one
  • ear ever since the honeymoon.
  • "If you want to see her in action, go up there now. She'll be perfectly
  • sweet and friendly, but somehow you'll get the notion that you don't
  • want to go there again, and that she can bear up if you don't. It's
  • something in her manner. I guess it's a trick these society girls
  • learn. You've seen a bouncer handling a souse. He doesn't rough-house
  • him. He just puts his arm round his waist and kind of suggests he
  • should leave the place. Well, it's like that."
  • "But doesn't Kirk kick? He used to like having us around."
  • His friend laughed.
  • "Kick? Kirk? You should see him! He just sits there waiting for you to
  • go, and, when you do go, shuts the door on you so quick you have to
  • jump to keep from getting your coat caught in it. I tell you, those two
  • are about all the company either of them needs. They've got the
  • Newly-weds licked to a whisper."
  • "It's always the best fellows that get it the worse," said the other
  • philosophically, "and it's always the fellows you think are safe too. I
  • could have bet on Kirk. Six months ago I'd have given you any odds you
  • wanted that he would never marry."
  • "And I wouldn't have taken you. It's always the way."
  • The criticisms of the two thirsty men, though prejudiced, were
  • accurate. Marriage had undeniably wrought changes in Kirk Winfield. It
  • had blown up, decentralized, and re-arranged his entire scheme of life.
  • Kirk's was one of those natures that run to extremes. He had been a
  • whole-hearted bachelor, and he was assuredly a much-married man. For
  • the first six months Ruth was almost literally his whole world. His
  • friends, the old brigade of the studio, had dropped away from him in a
  • body. They had visited the studio once or twice at first, but after
  • that had mysteriously disappeared. He was too engrossed in his
  • happiness to speculate on the reasons for this defection: he only knew
  • that he was glad of it.
  • Their visits had not been a success.
  • Conversation had flowed fitfully. Some sixth sense told him that Ruth,
  • though charming to them all, had not liked them; and he himself was
  • astonished to find what bull dogs they really were. It was odd how out
  • of sympathy he felt with them. They seemed so unnecessary: yet what a
  • large part of his life they had once made up!
  • Something had come between him and them. What it was he did not know.
  • Ruth could have told him. She was the angel with the flaming sword who
  • guarded their paradise. Marriage was causing her to make unexpected
  • discoveries with regard to herself. Before she had always looked on
  • herself as a rather unusually reasonable, and certainly not a jealous,
  • woman. But now she was filled with an active dislike for these quite
  • harmless young men who came to try and share Kirk with her.
  • She knew it was utterly illogical. A man must have friends. Life could
  • not be forever a hermitage of two. She tried to analyse her objection
  • to these men, and came to the conclusion that it was the fact that they
  • had known Kirk before she did that caused it.
  • She made a compromise with herself. Kirk should have friends, but they
  • must be new ones. In a little while, when this crazy desire to keep
  • herself and him alone together in a world of their own should have left
  • her, they would begin to build up a circle. But these men whose
  • vocabulary included the words "Do you remember?" must be eliminated one
  • and all.
  • Kirk, blissfully unconscious that his future was being arranged for him
  • and the steering-wheel of his life quietly taken out of his hands,
  • passed his days in a state of almost painful happiness. It never
  • crossed his mind that he had ceased to be master of his fate and
  • captain of his soul. The reins were handled so gently that he did not
  • feel them. It seemed to him that he was travelling of his own free will
  • along a pleasant path selected by himself.
  • He saw his friends go from him without a regret. Perhaps at the bottom
  • of his heart he had always had a suspicion of contempt for them. He had
  • taken them on their surface value, as amusing fellows who were good
  • company of an evening. There was not one of them whom he had ever known
  • as real friends know each other--not one, except Hank Jardine; and
  • Hank had yet to be subjected to the acid test of the new conditions.
  • There were moments when the thought of Hank threw a shadow across his
  • happiness. He could let these others go, but Hank was different. And
  • something told him that Ruth would not like Hank.
  • But these shadows were not frequent. Ruth filled his life too
  • completely to allow him leisure to brood on possibilities of future
  • trouble.
  • Looking back, it struck him that on their wedding-day they had been
  • almost strangers. They had taken each other blindly, trusting to
  • instinct. Since then he had been getting to know her. It was
  • astonishing how much there was to know. There was a fresh discovery to
  • be made about her every day. She was a perpetually recurring miracle.
  • The futility of his old life made him wince whenever he dared think of
  • it. How he had drifted, a useless log on a sluggish current!
  • He was certainly a whole-hearted convert. As to Saul of Tarsus, so to
  • him there had come a sudden blinding light. He could hardly believe
  • that he was the same person who had scoffed at the idea of a man giving
  • up his life to one woman and being happy. But then the abstract wife
  • had been a pale, bloodless phantom, and Ruth was real.
  • It was the realness of her that kept him in a state of perpetual
  • amazement. To see her moving about the studio, to touch her, to look at
  • her across the dinner-table, to wake in the night and hear her
  • breathing at his side.... It seemed to him that centuries might pass,
  • yet these things would still be wonderful.
  • And always in his heart there was the gratitude for what she had done
  • for him. She had given up everything to share his life. She had weighed
  • him in the balance against wealth and comfort and her place among the
  • great ones of the world, and had chosen him. There were times when the
  • thought filled him with a kind of delirious pride: times, again, when
  • he felt a grateful humility that made him long to fall down and worship
  • this goddess who had stooped to him.
  • In a word, he was very young, very much in love, and for the first time
  • in his life was living with every drop of blood in his veins.
  • * * * * *
  • Hank returned to New York in due course. He came to the studio the same
  • night, and he had not been there five minutes before a leaden weight
  • descended on Kirk's soul. It was as he had feared. Ruth did not like
  • him.
  • Hank was not the sort of man who makes universal appeal. Also, he was
  • no ladies' man. He was long and lean and hard-bitten, and his supply of
  • conventional small talk was practically non-existent. To get the best
  • out of Hank, as has been said, you had to let him take his coat off and
  • put his feet up on the back of a second chair and reconcile yourself to
  • the pestiferous brand of tobacco which he affected.
  • Ruth conceded none of these things. Throughout the interview Hank sat
  • bolt upright, tucking a pair of shoes of the dreadnought class coyly
  • underneath his chair, and drew suspiciously at Turkish cigarettes from
  • Kirk's case. An air of constraint hung over the party. Again and again
  • Kirk hoped that Hank would embark on the epic of his life, but shyness
  • kept Hank dumb.
  • He had heard, on reaching New York, that Kirk was married, but he had
  • learned no details, and had conjured up in his mind the vision of a
  • jolly little girl of the Bohemian type, who would make a fuss over him
  • as Kirk's oldest friend. Confronted with Ruth, he lost a nerve which
  • had never before failed him. This gorgeous creature, he felt, would
  • never put up with those racy descriptions of wild adventures which had
  • endeared him to Kirk. As soon as he could decently do so, he left, and
  • Kirk, returning to the studio after seeing him out, sat down moodily,
  • trying to convince himself against his judgment that the visit had not
  • been such a failure after all.
  • Ruth was playing the piano softly. She had turned out all the lights
  • except one, which hung above her head, shining on her white arms as
  • they moved. From where he sat Kirk could see her profile. Her eyes were
  • half closed.
  • The sight of her, as it always did, sent a thrill through him, but he
  • was conscious of an ache behind it. He had hoped so much that Hank
  • would pass, and he knew that he had not. Why was it that two people so
  • completely one as Ruth and himself could not see Hank with the same
  • eyes?
  • He knew that she had thought him uncouth and impossible. Why could not
  • Hank have exerted himself more, instead of sitting there in that
  • stuffed way? Why could not Ruth have unbent? Why had not he himself
  • done something to save the situation? Of the three, he blamed himself
  • most. He was the one who should have taken the lead and made things
  • pleasant for everybody instead of forcing out conversational
  • platitudes.
  • Once or twice he had caught Hank's eye, and had hated himself for
  • understanding what it said and not being able to deny it. He had marked
  • the end of their old relationship, the parting of the ways, and that a
  • tragedy had been played out that night.
  • He found himself thinking of Hank as of a friend who had died. What
  • times they had had! How smoothly they had got on together! He could not
  • recall a single occasion on which they had fallen out, from the time
  • when they had fought as boys at the prep. school and cemented their
  • friendship the next day. After that there had been periods when they
  • had parted, sometimes for more than a year, but they had always come
  • together again and picked up the threads as neatly as if there had been
  • no gap in their intimacy.
  • He had gone to college: Hank had started on the roving life which
  • suited his temperament. But they had never lost touch with each other.
  • And now it was all over. They would meet again, but it would not be the
  • same. The angel with the flaming sword stood between them.
  • For the first time since the delirium of marriage had seized upon him,
  • Kirk was conscious of a feeling that all was not for the best in a best
  • of all possible worlds, a feeling of regret, not that he had married--the
  • mere thought would have been a blasphemy--but that marriage was such a
  • complicated affair. He liked a calm life, free from complications, and
  • now they were springing up on every side.
  • There was the matter of the models. Kirk had supposed that it was only
  • in the comic papers that the artist's wife objected to his employing
  • models. He had classed it with the mother-in-law joke, respecting it
  • for its antiquity, but not imagining that it ever really happened. And
  • Ruth had brought this absurd situation into the sphere of practical
  • politics only a few days ago.
  • Since his marriage Kirk had dropped his work almost entirely. There had
  • seemed to be no time for it. He liked to spend his days going round the
  • stores with Ruth, buying her things, or looking in at the windows of
  • Fifth Avenue shops and choosing what he would buy her when he had made
  • his fortune. It was agreed upon between them that he was to make his
  • fortune some day.
  • Kirk's painting had always been more of a hobby with him than a
  • profession. He knew that he had talent, but talent without hard work is
  • a poor weapon, and he had always shirked hard work. He had an instinct
  • for colour, but his drawing was uncertain. He hated linework, while
  • knowing that only through steady practice at linework could he achieve
  • his artistic salvation. He was an amateur, and a lazy amateur.
  • But once in a while the work fever would grip him. It had gripped him a
  • few days before Hank's visit. An idea for a picture had come to him,
  • and he had set to work upon it with his usual impulsiveness.
  • This had involved the arrival of Miss Hilda Vince at the studio. There
  • was no harm in Miss Vince. Her morals were irreproachable. She
  • supported a work-shy father, and was engaged to be married to a young
  • gentleman who travelled for a hat firm. But she was of a chatty
  • disposition and no respecter of persons. She had posed frequently for
  • Kirk in his bachelor days, and was accustomed to call him by his first
  • name--a fact which Kirk had forgotten until Ruth, who had been out in
  • the park, came in.
  • Miss Vince was saying at the moment: "So I says to her, 'Kirk's just
  • phoned to me to sit.' 'What! Kirk!' she says. 'Is _he_ doin' a bit
  • of work for a change? Well, it's about time.' 'Aw, Kirk don't need to
  • work,' I says. 'He's a plute. He's got it in gobs.' So----"
  • "I didn't know you were busy, dear," said Ruth. "I won't interrupt
  • you."
  • She went out.
  • "Was that your wife?" inquired Miss Vince. "She's got a sweet face.
  • Say, I read the piece about you and her in the paper. You certainly got
  • a nerve, Kirk, breaking in on the millionaires that way."
  • That night Ruth spoke her mind about Miss Vince. It was in vain that
  • Kirk touched on the work-shy father, dwelt feelingly on the young
  • gentleman who travelled in hats. Ruth had made up her mind. It was
  • thumbs down for Miss Vince.
  • "But if I'm to paint," said Kirk, "I must have models."
  • "There must be hundreds who don't call you by your Christian name."
  • "After about five minutes they all do," said Kirk. "It's a way they've
  • got. They mean no harm."
  • Ruth then made this brilliant suggestion: "Kirk, dear, why don't you
  • paint landscapes?"
  • In spite of his annoyance, he laughed.
  • "Why don't I paint landscapes, Ruth? Because I'm not a landscape
  • painter, that's why."
  • "You could learn."
  • "It's a different branch of the trade altogether. You might just as
  • well tell a catcher to pitch."
  • "Well, anyhow," reported Ruth with spirit, "I won't have that Vince
  • creature in the place again."
  • It was the first time she had jerked at the reins or given any sign
  • that she was holding them, and undoubtedly this was the moment at which
  • Kirk should have said: "My dearest, the time has come for me to state
  • plainly that my soul is my own. I decline to give in to this absurd
  • suggestion. Marriage is an affair of give and take, not a circus where
  • one party holds the hoop while the other jumps through and shams dead.
  • We shall be happier later on if we get this clearly into our heads
  • now."
  • What he did say was: "Very well, dear. I'll write and tell her not to
  • come."
  • He knew he was being abominably weak, but he did not care. He even felt
  • a certain pleasure in his surrender. Big, muscular men are given to
  • this feebleness with women. Hercules probably wore an idiotic grin of
  • happiness when he spun wool for Omphale.
  • Since then the picture had been laid aside, but Kirk's desire to be up
  • and at it had grown with inaction. When a lazy man does make up his
  • mind to assail a piece of work, he is like a dog with a bone.
  • * * * * *
  • The music had stopped. Ruth swung round.
  • "What are you dreaming about Kirk?"
  • Kirk came to himself with a start.
  • "I was thinking of a lot of things. For one, about that picture of
  • mine."
  • "What about it?"
  • "Well, when I was going to finish it."
  • "Why don't you?"
  • Kirk laughed.
  • "Where's my model? You've scared her up a tree, and I can't coax her
  • down."
  • Ruth came over to him and sat down on a low chair at his side. She put
  • her arm round his waist and rested her head in the hollow of his
  • shoulder.
  • "Is he pining for his horrid Vince girl, the poor boy?"
  • "He certainly is," said Kirk. "Or at any rate, for some understudy to
  • her."
  • "We must think. Do they _all_ call you Kirk?"
  • "I've never met one who didn't."
  • "What horrible creatures you artists are!"
  • "My dear kid, you don't understand the thing at all. When you're
  • painting a model she ceases to be a girl at all. You don't think of her
  • as anything except a sort of lay-figure."
  • "Good gracious! Does your lay-figure call you Kirk too?"
  • "It always looks as if it were going to."
  • Ruth shuddered.
  • "It's a repulsive thing. I hate it. It gives me the creeps. I came in
  • here last night and switched on the light, and there it was, goggling
  • at me."
  • "Are you getting nervous?"
  • Ruth's face grew grave.
  • "Do you know, Kirk, I really believe I am. This morning as I was
  • dressing, I suddenly got the most awful feeling that something terrible
  • was going to happen. I don't know what. It was perfectly vague. I just
  • felt a kind of horror. It passed off in a moment or two; but, while it
  • lasted--ugh!"
  • "How ghastly! Why didn't you tell me before? You must be run down. Look
  • here, let's shut up this place and get out to Florida or somewhere for
  • the winter!"
  • "Let's don't do anything of the kind. Florida indeed! For the love of
  • Mike, as Steve would say, it's much too expensive. You know, Kirk, we
  • are both frightfully extravagant. I'm sure we are spending too much
  • money as it is. You know you sold out some of your capital only the
  • other day."
  • "It was only that once. And you had set your heart on that pendant.
  • Surely to goodness, if I drag you away from a comfortable home to live
  • in a hovel, the least I can do is to----"
  • "You didn't drag me. I just walked in and sat down, and you couldn't
  • think how to get rid of me, so in despair you married me."
  • "That was it. And now I've got to set to work and make a fortune
  • and--what do you call it?--support you in the style to which you have
  • been accustomed. Which brings us back to the picture. I don't suppose I
  • shall get ten dollars for it, but I feel I shall curl up and die if I
  • don't get it finished. Are you _absolutely_ determined about the
  • Vince girl?"
  • "I'm adamant. I'm granite. I'm chilled steel. Oh! Kirk, can't you find
  • a nice, motherly old model, with white hair and spectacles? I shouldn't
  • mind _her_ calling you by your first name."
  • "But it's absurd. I told you just now that an artist doesn't look on
  • his models as human beings while----"
  • "I know. I've read all about that in books, and I believed it then.
  • Why, when I married you, I said to myself: 'I mustn't be foolish.
  • Kirk's an artist, I mustn't be a comic-supplement wife and object to
  • his using models!' Oh, I was going to be so good and reasonable. You
  • would have loved me! And then, when it came to the real thing, I found
  • I just could not stand it. I know it's silly of me. I know just as well
  • as you do that Miss Vince is quite a nice girl really, and is going to
  • make a splendid Mrs. Travelling Salesman, but that doesn't help me.
  • It's my wicked nature, I suppose. I'm just a plain cat, and that's all
  • there is to it. Look at the way I treat your friends!"
  • Kirk started.
  • "You jumped!" said Ruth. "You jerked my head. Do you think I didn't
  • know you had noticed it? I knew how unhappy you were when Mr. Jardine
  • was here, and I just hated myself."
  • "Didn't you like Hank?" asked Kirk.
  • Ruth was silent for a moment.
  • "I wish you would," Kirk went on. "You don't know what a real white man
  • old Hank is. You didn't see him properly that night. He was nervous.
  • But he's one of the very best God ever made. We've known each other all
  • our lives. He and I----"
  • "Don't tell me!" cried Ruth. "Don't you see that that's just the reason
  • why I can't like him? Don't tell me about the things you and he did
  • together, unless you want me to hate him. Don't you understand, dear?
  • It's the same with all your friends. I'm jealous of them for having
  • known you before I did. And I hate these models because they come into
  • a part of your life into which I can't. I want you all to myself. I
  • want to be your whole life. I know it's idiotic and impossible, but I
  • do."
  • "You are my whole life," said Kirk seriously. "I wasn't born till I met
  • you. There isn't a single moment when you are not my whole life."
  • She pressed her head contentedly against his arm.
  • "Kirk."
  • "Yes?"
  • "Let _me_ pose for your picture."
  • "What! You couldn't!"
  • "Why not?"
  • "It's terribly hard work. It's an awful strain."
  • "I'm sure I'm as strong as that Vince girl. You ask Steve; he's seen me
  • throw the medicine-ball."
  • "But posing is different. Hilda Vince has been trained for it."
  • "Well let me try, at any rate."
  • "But----"
  • "Do! And I'll promise to like your Hank and not put on my grand manner
  • when he begins telling me what fun you and he used to have in the good
  • old days before I was born or thought of. May I?"
  • "But----"
  • "Quick! Promise!"
  • "Very well."
  • "You dear! I'll be the best model you ever had. I won't move a muscle,
  • and I'll stand there till I drop."
  • "You'll do nothing of the kind. You'll come right down off that
  • model-throne the instant you feel the least bit tired."
  • * * * * *
  • The picture which Kirk was painting was one of those pictures which
  • thousands of young artists are working on unceasingly every day. Kirk's
  • ideas about it were in a delightfully vague state. He had a notion that
  • it might turn out in the end as "Carmen." On the other hand, if
  • anything went wrong and he failed to insert a sufficient amount of wild
  • devilry into it, he could always hedge by calling it "A Reverie" or
  • "The Spanish Maiden."
  • Possibly, if the thing became too pensive and soulful altogether,
  • he might give it some title suggestive of the absent lover at the
  • bull-fight--"The Toreador's Bride"--or something of that sort. The
  • only point on which he was solid was that it was to strike the Spanish
  • note; and to this end he gave Ruth a costume of black and orange and
  • posed her on the model-throne with a rose in her hair.
  • Privately he had decided that ten minutes would be Ruth's limit. He
  • knew something of the strain of sitting to an artist.
  • "Tired?" he asked at the end of this period.
  • Ruth shook her head and smiled.
  • "You must be. Come and sit down and take a rest."
  • "I'm quite all right, dear. Go on with your work."
  • "Well, shout out the moment you feel you've had enough."
  • He began to paint again. The minutes went by and Ruth made no movement.
  • He began to grow absorbed in his work. He lost count of time. Ruth
  • ceased to be Ruth, ceased even to be flesh and blood. She was just
  • something he was painting.
  • "Kirk!"
  • The sharp suddenness of the cry brought him to his feet, quivering.
  • Ruth was swaying on the model-throne. Her eyes were staring straight
  • before her and her face was twisted with fear.
  • As he sprang forward she fell, pitching stiffly head foremost, as he
  • had seen men fall in the ring, her arms hanging at her sides; and he
  • caught her.
  • He carried her to the couch and laid her down. He hung for an instant
  • in doubt whether to go for water or telephone for the doctor. He
  • decided on the telephone.
  • He hung up the receiver and went back to Ruth. She stirred and gave a
  • little moan. He flew upstairs and returned with a pitcher of water.
  • When he got back Ruth was sitting up. The look of terror was gone from
  • her face. She smiled at him, a faint, curiously happy smile. He flung
  • himself on his knees beside her, his arm round her waist, and burst
  • into a babble of self-reproach.
  • He cursed himself for being such a brute, such a beast as to let her
  • stand there, tiring herself to death. She must never do it again. He
  • was a devil. He ought to have known she could not stand it. He was not
  • fit to be married. He was not fit to live.
  • Ruth ruffled his hair.
  • "Stop abusing my husband," she said. "I'm fond of him. Did you catch
  • me, Kirk?"
  • "Yes, thank God. I got to you just in time."
  • "That's the last thing I remember, wondering if you would. You seemed
  • such miles and miles away. It was like looking at something in a mist
  • through the wrong end of a telescope. Oh, Kirk!"
  • "Yes, honey?"
  • "It came again, that awful feeling as if something dreadful was going
  • to happen. And then I felt myself going." She paused. "Kirk, I think I
  • know now. I understand; and oh, I'm so happy!"
  • She buried her face on his shoulder, and they stayed there silent, till
  • there came a ring at the bell. Kirk got up. George Pennicut ushered in
  • the doctor. It was the same little old doctor who had ministered to
  • George in his hour of need.
  • "Feeling better, Mrs. Winfield?" he said, as he caught sight of Ruth.
  • "Your husband told me over the 'phone that you were unconscious."
  • "She fainted," cried Kirk. "It was all through me. I-----"
  • The doctor took him by the shoulders. He had to stretch to do it.
  • "You go away, young man," he said. "Take a walk round the block. You
  • aren't on in this scene."
  • * * * * *
  • Kirk was waiting in the hall when he left a few minutes later.
  • "Well?" he said anxiously.
  • "Well?" said the little doctor.
  • "Is she all right? There's nothing wrong, is there?"
  • The doctor grinned a friendly grin.
  • "On the contrary," he said. "You ought to be very pleased."
  • "What do you mean?"
  • "It's quite a commonplace occurrence, though I suppose it will seem
  • like a miracle to you. But, believe me, it has happened before. If it
  • hadn't, you and I wouldn't be here now."
  • Kirk looked at him in utter astonishment. His words seemed meaningless.
  • And then, suddenly, he understood, and his heart seemed to stand still.
  • "You don't mean-----" he said huskily.
  • "Yes, I do," said the doctor. "Good-bye, my boy. I've got to hurry off.
  • You caught me just as I was starting for the hospital."
  • * * * * *
  • Kirk went back to the studio, his mind in a whirl. Ruth was lying on
  • the couch. She looked up as the door opened. He came quickly to her
  • side.
  • "Ruth!" he muttered.
  • Her eyes were shining with a wonderful light of joy. She drew his head
  • down and kissed him.
  • "Oh, Kirk," she whispered. "I'm happy. I'm happy. I've wanted this so."
  • He could not speak. He sat on the edge of the couch and looked at her.
  • She had been wonderful to him before. She was a thousand times more
  • wonderful now.
  • Chapter VIII
  • Suspense
  • It seemed to Kirk, as the days went by, that a mist of unreality fell
  • like a curtain between him and the things of this world. Commonplace
  • objects lost their character and became things to marvel at. There was
  • a new bond of sympathy between the world and himself.
  • A citizen walking in the park with his children became a kind of
  • miracle. Here was a man who had travelled the road which he was
  • travelling now, who had had the same hopes and fear and wonder. Once he
  • encountered a prosperous looking individual moving, like a liner among
  • tugs, in the midst of no fewer than six offspring. Kirk fixed him with
  • such a concentrated stare of emotion and excitement that the other was
  • alarmed and went on his way alertly, as one in the presence of danger.
  • It is probable that, if Kirk had happened to ask him the time at that
  • moment, or indeed addressed him at all, he would have screamed for the
  • police.
  • The mystery of childbirth and the wonder of it obsessed Kirk as time
  • crept on. And still more was he conscious of the horrible dread that
  • was gathering within him. Ruth's unvarying cheerfulness was to him
  • almost uncanny. None of the doubts and fears which blackened his life
  • appeared to touch her. Once he confided these to his friend, the little
  • doctor, and was thoroughly bullied by him for his foolishness. But in
  • spite of ridicule the fear crept back, cringingly, like a whipped dog.
  • And then, time moving on its leisurely but businesslike fashion, the
  • day arrived, and for the first time in his life Kirk knew what fear
  • really meant. All that he had experienced till now had, he saw, been a
  • mild apprehension, not worthy of a stronger name. His flesh crawled
  • with the thoughts which rose in his mind like black bubbles in a pond.
  • There were moments when the temptation to stupefy himself with drink
  • was almost irresistible.
  • It was his utter uselessness that paralysed him. He seemed destined to
  • be of no help to Ruth at just those crises when she needed him most.
  • When she was facing her father with the news of the marriage he had not
  • been at her side. And now, when she was fighting for her life, he could
  • do nothing but pace the empty, quiet studio and think.
  • The doctor had arrived at eight o'clock, cheery as ever, and had come
  • downstairs after seeing Ruth to ask him to telephone to Mrs. Porter. In
  • his overwrought state, this had jarred upon Kirk. Here, he felt, was
  • somebody who could help where he was useless.
  • Mrs. Porter had appeared in a cab and had had the cold brutality to ask
  • for a glass of sherry and a sandwich before going upstairs. She put
  • forward the lame excuse that she had not dined. Kirk gave her the
  • sherry and sandwich and resumed his patrol in a glow of indignation.
  • The idea of any one requiring food at this moment struck him as gross
  • and revolting.
  • His wrath did not last. In a short while fear came back into its own.
  • The hands of the clock pointed to ten before he stooped to following
  • Mrs. Porter's example. George Pennicut had been sent out, so he went
  • into the little kitchen, where he found eggs, which he mixed with milk
  • and swallowed. After this he was aware of a momentary excess of
  • optimism. The future looked a little brighter. But not for long.
  • Presently he was prowling the studio as restlessly as ever.
  • Men of Kirk's type are not given to deep thought. Until now he had
  • probably never spent more than a couple of minutes consecutively in
  • self-examination. This vigil forced him upon himself and caused him to
  • pass his character under review, with strange and unsatisfactory
  • results. He had never realised before what a curiously contemptible and
  • useless person he was. It seemed to him that this was all he was fit
  • for--to hang about doing nothing while everybody else was busy and
  • proving his or her own worth.
  • A door opened and the little doctor came quietly down the stairs. Kirk
  • sprang at him.
  • "Well?"
  • "My dear man, everything's going splendidly. Couldn't be better." The
  • doctor's eyes searched his face. "When did you have anything to eat
  • last?"
  • "I don't know. I had some eggs and milk. I don't know when."
  • The doctor took him by the shoulders and hustled him into the kitchen,
  • where he searched and found meat and bread.
  • "Eat that," he said. "I'll have some, too."
  • "I couldn't."
  • "And some whisky. Where do you keep it?"
  • After the first few mouthfuls Kirk ate wolfishly. The doctor munched a
  • sandwich with the placidity of a summer boarder at a picnic. His
  • calmness amazed and almost shocked Kirk.
  • "You can't help her by killing yourself," said the doctor
  • philosophically. "I like that woman with the gimlet eyes. At least I
  • don't, but she's got sense. Go on. You haven't done yet. Another
  • highball won't hurt you." He eyed Kirk with some sympathy. "It's a bad
  • time for you, of course."
  • "For _me_? Good God!"
  • "You want to keep your nerve. Nothing awful is going to happen."
  • "If only there was something I could do."
  • "'They also serve who only stand and wait,'" quoted the doctor
  • sententiously. "There is something you can do."
  • "What?"
  • "Light your pipe and take it easy."
  • Kirk snorted.
  • "I mean it. In a very short while now you will be required to take the
  • stage and embrace your son or daughter, as the case may be. You don't
  • want to appear looking as if you had been run over by an automobile
  • after a night out. You want your appearance to give Mrs. Winfield as
  • little of a shock as possible. Bear that in mind. Well, I must be
  • going."
  • And Kirk was alone again.
  • The food and the drink and the doctor's words had a good effect. His
  • mind became quieter. He sat down and filled his pipe. After a few puffs
  • he replaced it in his pocket. It seemed too callous to think of smoking
  • now. The doctor was a good fellow, but he did not understand. All the
  • same, he was glad that he had had that whisky. It had certainly put
  • heart into him for the moment.
  • What was happening upstairs? He strained his ears, but could hear
  • nothing.
  • Gradually, as he waited, his mood of morbid self-criticism returned. He
  • had sunk once more into the depths when he was aware of a soft tapping.
  • The door bell rang very gently. He went to the door and opened it.
  • "I kinder thought I'd look in and see how things were getting along,"
  • said a voice.
  • It was Steve. A subdued and furtive Steve. Kirk's heart leaped at the
  • sight of him. It was as if he had found something solid to cling to in
  • a shifting world.
  • "Come in, Steve."
  • He spoke huskily. Steve sidled into the studio, embarrassment written
  • on every line of him.
  • "Don't mind my butting in, do you? I've been walking up and down and
  • round the block till every cop on the island's standing by waiting for
  • me to pull something. Another minute and they'd have pinched me on
  • suspicion. I just felt I had to come and see how Miss Ruth was making
  • out."
  • "The doctor was down here just now. He said everything was going well."
  • "I guess he knows his business."
  • There was a silence. Kirk's ears were straining for sounds from above.
  • "It's hell," said Steve.
  • Kirk nodded. This kind of talk was more what he wanted. The doctor
  • meant well, but he was too professional. Steve was human.
  • "Go and get yourself a drink, Steve. I expect you need one."
  • Steve shook his head.
  • "Waggon," he said briefly. And there was silence again.
  • "Say, Kirk."
  • "Yes?"
  • "What a wonder she is. Miss Ruth, I mean. I've helped her throw that
  • medicine-ball--often--you wouldn't believe. She's a wonder." He paused.
  • "Say, this is hell, ain't it?"
  • Kirk did not answer. It was very quiet in the studio now. In the street
  • outside a heavy waggon rumbled part. Somebody shouted a few words of a
  • popular song. Steve sprang to his feet.
  • "I'll fix that guy," he said. But the singing ceased, and he sat down
  • again.
  • Kirk got up and began to walk quickly up and down. Steve watched him
  • furtively.
  • "You want to take your mind off it," he said. "You'll be all in if you
  • keep on worrying about it in that way."
  • Kirk stopped in his stride.
  • "That's what the doctor said," he snapped savagely. "What do you two
  • fools think I'm made of?" He recovered himself quickly, ashamed of the
  • outburst. "I'm sorry, Steve. Don't mind anything I say. It's awfully
  • good of you to have come here, and I'm not going to forget it."
  • Steve scratched his chin reflectively.
  • "Say, I'll tell you something," he said. "My mother told me once that
  • when I was born my old dad took it just like you. Found he was getting
  • all worked up by having to hang around and do nothing, so he says to
  • himself: 'I've got to take my mind off this business, or it's me for
  • the foolish-house.'
  • "Well, sir, there was a big guy down on that street who'd been picking
  • on dad good and hard for a mighty long while. And this guy suddenly
  • comes into dad's mind. He felt of his muscle, dad did. 'Gee!' he says
  • to himself, 'I believe the way I'm feeling, I could just go and eat up
  • that gink right away.' And the more he thought of it, the better it
  • looked to him, so all of a sudden he grabs his hat and beats it like a
  • streak down to the saloon on the corner, where he knew the feller would
  • be at that time, and he goes straight up to him and hands him one.
  • "Back comes the guy at him--he was a great big son of a gun, weighing
  • thirty pounds more than dad--and him and dad mixes it right there in
  • the saloon till the barkeep and about fifty other fellers throws them
  • out, and they goes off to a vacant lot to finish the thing. And dad's
  • so worked up that he gives the other guy his till he hollers that
  • that's all he'll want. And then dad goes home and waits quite quiet and
  • happy and peaceful till they tell him I'm there."
  • Steve paused.
  • "Kirk," he said then, "how would you like a round or two with the small
  • gloves, just to get things off your mind for a spell and pass the time?
  • My dad said he found it eased him mighty good."
  • Kirk stared at him.
  • "Just a couple of rounds," urged Steve. "And you can go all out at
  • that. I shan't mind. Just try to think I'm some guy that's been picking
  • on you and let me have it. See what I mean?"
  • For the first time that day the faint ghost of a grin appeared on
  • Kirk's face.
  • "I wonder if you're right, Steve?"
  • "I know I'm right. And, say, don't think I don't need it, too. I ain't
  • known Miss Ruth all this time for nothing. You'll be doing me a
  • kindness if you knock my face in."
  • The small gloves occupied a place of honour to themselves in a lower
  • drawer. It was not often that Kirk used them in his friendly bouts with
  • Steve. For ordinary occasions the larger and more padded species met
  • with his approval. Steve, during these daily sparring encounters, was
  • amiability itself; but he could not be counted upon not to forget
  • himself for an occasional moment in the heat of the fray; and though
  • Kirk was courageous enough, he preferred to preserve the regularity of
  • his features at the expense of a little extra excitement.
  • Once, after a brisk rally, he had gone about the world looking as if he
  • was suffering from mumps, owing to a right hook which no one regretted
  • more than Steve himself.
  • But to-day was different; and Kirk felt that even a repetition of that
  • lethal punch would be welcome.
  • Steve, when the contest opened, was disposed to be consolatory in word
  • as well as deed. He kept up a desultory conversation as he circled and
  • feinted.
  • "You gotta look at it this way," he began, side-stepping a left, "it
  • ain't often you hear of anything going wrong at times like this. You
  • gotta remember"--he hooked Kirk neatly on the jaw--"that" he concluded.
  • Kirk came back with a swing at the body which made his adversary grunt.
  • "That's true," he said.
  • "Sure," rejoined Steve a little breathlessly, falling into a clinch.
  • They moved warily round each other.
  • "So," said Steve, blocking a left, "that ought to comfort you some."
  • Kirk nodded. He guessed correctly that the other was alluding to his
  • last speech, not to the counter which had just made the sight of his
  • left eye a little uncertain.
  • Gradually, as the bout progressed, Kirk began to lose the slight
  • diffidence which had hampered him at the start. He had been feeling so
  • wonderfully friendly toward Steve, so grateful for his presence, and
  • his sympathy, that it had been hard, in spite of the other's
  • admonitions, to enter into the fray with any real conviction. Moreover,
  • subconsciously, he was listening all the time for sounds from above
  • which never came.
  • These things gave a certain lameness to his operations. It was
  • immediately after this blow in the eye, mentioned above, that he ceased
  • to be an individual with private troubles and a wandering mind, and
  • became a boxer pure and simple, his whole brain concentrated on the
  • problem of how to get past his opponent's guard.
  • Steve, recognizing the change in an instant, congratulated himself on
  • the success of his treatment. It had worked even more quickly than he
  • had hoped. He helped the cure with another swift jab which shot over
  • Kirk's guard.
  • Kirk came in with a rush. Steve slipped him. Kirk rushed again. Steve,
  • receiving a hard punch on a nose which, though accustomed to such
  • assaults, had never grown really to enjoy them, began to feel a slight
  • diminution of his detached attitude toward this encounter. Till now his
  • position had been purely that of the kindly physician soothing a
  • patient. The rapidity with which the patient was permitting himself to
  • be soothed rendered the post of physician something of a sinecure; and
  • Steve, as Kirk had done, began to slip back into the boxer.
  • It was while he was in what might be called a transition stage that an
  • unexpected swing sent him with some violence against the wall; and from
  • that moment nature asserted itself. A curious, set look appeared on his
  • face; wrinkles creased his forehead; his jaw protruded slightly.
  • Kirk made another rush. This time Steve did not slip; he went to meet
  • it, head down and hands busy.
  • * * * * *
  • Mrs. Lora Delane Porter came downstairs with the measured
  • impressiveness of one who bears weighty news. Her determined face was
  • pale and tired, as it had every right to be; but she bore herself
  • proudly, as one who has fought and not been defeated.
  • "Mr. Winfield," she said.
  • There was no answer. Looking about her, she found the studio empty.
  • Then, from behind the closed door of the inner room, she was aware of a
  • strange, shuffling sound. She listened, astonished. She heard a gasp,
  • then curious thuds, finally a bump louder than the thuds. And then
  • there was silence.
  • These things surprised Mrs. Porter. She opened the door and looked in.
  • It says much for her iron self-control that she remained quiet at this
  • point. A lesser person, after a far less tiring ordeal than she had
  • passed through, would have found relief in some cry or
  • exclamation--possibly even in a scream.
  • Against the far wall, breathing hard and fondling his left eye with a
  • four-ounce glove, leaned Steve Dingle. His nose was bleeding somewhat
  • freely, but this he appeared to consider a trifle unworthy of serious
  • attention. On the floor, an even more disturbing spectacle, Kirk lay at
  • full length. To Mrs. Porter's startled gaze he appeared to be dead. He
  • too, was bleeding, but he was not in a position to notice it.
  • "It's all right, ma'am," said Steve, removing the hand from his face
  • and revealing an eye which for spectacular dilapidation must have
  • rivalled the epoch-making one which had so excited his mother on a
  • famous occasion. "It's nothing serious."
  • "Has Mr. Winfield fainted?"
  • "Not exactly fainted, ma'am. It's like this. He'd got me clear up in a
  • corner, and I seen it's up to me if I don't want to be knocked through
  • the wall, so I has to cross him. Maybe I'd gotten a little worked up
  • myself by then. But it was my fault. I told him to go all out, and he
  • sure did. This eye's going to be a pippin to-morrow."
  • Mrs. Porter examined the wounded organ with interest.
  • "That, I suppose Mr. Dingle, is what you call a blue eye?"
  • "It sure is, ma'am."
  • "What has been happening?"
  • "Well, it's this way. I see he's all worked up, sitting around doing
  • nothing except wait, so I makes him come and spar a round to take his
  • mind off it. My old dad, ma'am, when I was coming along, found that
  • dope fixed him all right, so I reckoned it would do as much good here.
  • My old dad went and beat the block off a fellow down our street, and it
  • done him a lot of good."
  • Mrs. Porter shook his gloved hand.
  • "Mr. Dingle," she said with enthusiasm, "I really believe that you are
  • the only sensible man I have ever met. Your common sense is
  • astonishing. I have no doubt you saved Mr. Winfield from a nervous
  • break-down. Would you be kind enough, when you are rested, to fetch
  • some water and bring him to and inform him that he is the father of a
  • son?"
  • Chapter IX
  • The White Hope is Turned Down
  • William Bannister Winfield was the most wonderful child. Of course,
  • you had to have a certain amount of intelligence to see this. To the
  • vapid and irreflective observer he was not much to look at in the early
  • stages of his career, having a dough-like face almost entirely devoid
  • of nose, a lack-lustre eye, and the general appearance of a poached
  • egg. His immediate circle of intimates, however, thought him a model of
  • manly beauty; and there was the undeniable fact that he had come into
  • the world weighing nine pounds. Take him for all in all, a lad of
  • promise.
  • Kirk's sense of being in a dream continued. His identity seemed to have
  • undergone a change. The person he had known as Kirk Winfield had
  • disappeared, to be succeeded by a curious individual bubbling over with
  • an absurd pride for which it was not easy to find an outlet. Hitherto a
  • rather reserved man, he was conscious now of a desire to accost perfect
  • strangers in the street and inform them that he was not the ordinary
  • person they probably imagined, but a father with an intensely unusual
  • son at home, and if they did not believe him they could come right
  • along and see for themselves.
  • The only flaw in his happiness at the moment was the fact that his
  • circle of friends was so small. He had not missed the old brigade of
  • the studio before, but now the humblest of them would have been
  • welcome, provided he would have sat still and listened. Even Percy
  • Shanklyn would have been acceptable as an audience.
  • Steve, excellent fellow, was always glad to listen to him on his
  • favourite subject. He had many long talks with Steve on the question of
  • William's future. Steve, as the infant's godfather, which post he had
  • claimed and secured at an early date, had definite views on the matter.
  • Here, held Steve, was the chance of a lifetime. With proper training, a
  • baby of such obvious muscular promise might be made the greatest
  • fighter that ever stepped into the ring. He was the real White Hope. He
  • advised Kirk to direct William's education on the lines which would
  • insure his being, when the time was ripe, undisputed heavy-weight
  • champion of the world. To Steve life outside the ring was a poor
  • affair, practically barren of prizes for the ambitious.
  • Mrs. Lora Delane Porter, eyeing William's brow, of which there was
  • plenty, he being at this time extremely short of hair, predicted a less
  • robust and more intellectual future for him. Something more on the
  • lines of president of some great university or ambassador at some
  • important court struck her as his logical sphere.
  • Kirk's view was that he should combine both careers and be an
  • ambassador who took a few weeks off every now and then in order to
  • defend his champion's belt. In his spare time he might paint a picture
  • or two.
  • Ruth hesitated between the army, the navy, the bar, and business. But
  • every one was agreed that William was to be something special.
  • This remarkable child had a keen sense of humour. Thus he seldom began
  • to cry in his best vein till the small hours of the morning; and on
  • these occasions he would almost invariably begin again after he had
  • been officially pronounced to be asleep. His sudden grab at the hair of
  • any adult who happened to come within reach was very droll, too.
  • As to his other characteristics, he was of rather an imperious nature.
  • He liked to be waited on. He wanted what he wanted when he wanted it.
  • The greater part of his attention being occupied at this period with
  • the important duty of chewing his thumb, he assigned the drudgery of
  • life to his dependants. Their duties were to see that he got up in the
  • morning, dressed, and took his tub; and after that to hang around on
  • the chance of general orders.
  • Any idea Kirk may have had of resuming his work was abandoned during
  • these months. No model, young and breezy or white-haired and motherly,
  • passed the studio doors. Life was far too interesting for work. The
  • canvas which might have become "Carmen" or "A Reverie" or even "The
  • Toreador's Bride" lay unfinished and neglected in a corner.
  • It astonished Kirk to find how strong the paternal instinct was in him.
  • In the days when he had allowed his mind to dwell upon the abstract
  • wife he had sometimes gone a step further and conjured up the abstract
  • baby. The result had always been to fill him with a firm conviction
  • that the most persuasive of wild horses should not drag him from his
  • bachelor seclusion. He had had definite ideas on babies as a class. And
  • here he was with his world pivoting on one of them. It was curious.
  • The White Hope, as Steve called his godson--possibly with the idea of
  • influencing him by suggestion--grew. The ailments which attacked lesser
  • babies passed him by. He avoided croup, and even whooping-cough paid
  • him but a flying visit hardly worth mentioning. His first tooth gave
  • him a little trouble, but that is the sort of thing which may happen to
  • anyone; and the spirited way in which he protested against the
  • indignity of cutting it was proof of a high soul.
  • Such was the remarkableness of this child that it annoyed Kirk more and
  • more that he should be obliged to give the exhibition of his
  • extraordinary qualities to so small an audience. Ruth felt the same;
  • and it was for this reason that the first overtures were made to the
  • silent camp which contained her father and her brother Bailey.
  • Since that evening in the library there had come no sign from the house
  • on Fifth Avenue that its inmates were aware of her existence. Life had
  • been too full till now to make this a cause of trouble to her; but with
  • William Bannister becoming every day more amazing the desire came to
  • her to try and heal the breach. Her father had so ordered his life in
  • his relation to his children that Ruth's affection was not so deep as
  • it might have been; but, after all, he was William Bannister's
  • grandfather, and, as such, entitled to consideration.
  • It was these reflections that led to Steve's state visit to John
  • Bannister--probably the greatest fiasco on record.
  • Steve had been selected for the feat on the strength of his having the
  • right of entry to the Fifth Avenue house, for John Bannister was still
  • obeying his doctor's orders and taking his daily spell of exercise with
  • the pugilist--and Steve bungled it hopelessly.
  • His task was not a simple one. He was instructed to employ tact, to
  • hint rather than to speak, to say nothing to convey the impression that
  • Ruth in any way regretted the step she had taken, to give the idea that
  • it was a matter of complete indifference to her whether she ever saw
  • her father again or not, yet at the same time to make it quite clear
  • that she was very anxious to see him as soon as possible.
  • William Bannister, grown to maturity and upholding the interests of his
  • country as ambassador at some important court, might have jibbed at the
  • mission.
  • William Bannister was to accompany Steve and be produced dramatically
  • to support verbal arguments. It seemed to Ruth that for her father to
  • resist William when he saw him was an impossibility. William's position
  • was that of the ace of trumps in the cards which Steve was to play.
  • Steve made a few objections. His chief argument against taking up the
  • post assigned to him was that he was a roughneck, and that the job in
  • question was one which no roughneck, however gifted in the matter of
  • left hooks, could hope to carry through with real success. But he
  • yielded to pressure, and the expedition set out.
  • William Bannister at this time was at an age when he was beginning to
  • talk a little and walk a little and take a great interest in things.
  • His walking was a bit amateurish, and his speech rather hard to follow
  • unless you had the key to it. But nobody could have denied that his
  • walk, though staggery, was a genuine walk, and his speech, though
  • limited, genuine speech, within the meaning of the act.
  • He made no objections to the expedition. On being told that he was
  • going to see his grandpa he nodded curtly and said: "Gwa-wah," after
  • his custom. For, as a conversationalist, perhaps the best description
  • of him is to say that he tried hard. He rarely paused for a word. When
  • in difficulties he said something; he did not seek refuge in silence.
  • That the something was not always immediately intelligible was the
  • fault of his audience for not listening more carefully.
  • Perhaps the real mistake of the expedition was the nature of its
  • baggage. William Bannister had stood out for being allowed to take with
  • him his wheelbarrow, his box of bricks, and his particular favourite,
  • the dying pig, which you blew out and then allowed to collapse with a
  • pleasing noise. These properties had struck his parents as excessive,
  • but he was firm; and when he gave signs of being determined to fight it
  • out on these lines if it took all the summer, they gave in.
  • Steve had no difficulty in smuggling William into his grandfather's
  • house. He was a great favourite below stairs there. His great ally was
  • the English butler, Keggs.
  • Keggs was a stout, dignified, pigeon-toed old sinner, who cast off the
  • butler when not on duty and displayed himself as something of a
  • rounder. He was a man of many parts. It was his chief relaxation to
  • look in at Broadway hotels while some big fight was in progress out
  • West to watch the ticker and assure himself that the man he had backed
  • with a portion of the loot which he had accumulated in the form of tips
  • was doing justice to his judgment, for in private Keggs was essentially
  • the sport.
  • It was this that so endeared Steve to him. A few years ago Keggs had
  • won considerable sums by backing Steve, and the latter was always given
  • to understand that, as far as the lower regions of it were concerned,
  • the house on Fifth Avenue was open to him at all hours.
  • To-day he greeted Steve with enthusiasm and suggested a cigar in the
  • pantry before the latter should proceed to his work.
  • "He ain't ready for you yet, Mr. Dingle. He's lookin' over some papers
  • in--for goodness' sake, who's this?"
  • He had caught sight of William Bannister, who having wriggled free of
  • Steve, was being made much of by the maids.
  • "The kid," said Steve briefly.
  • "Not----"
  • Steve nodded.
  • "Sure. His grandson."
  • Keggs' solemnity increased.
  • "You aren't going to take him upstairs with you?"
  • "Surest thing you know. That's why I brought him."
  • "Don't you do it, Mr. Dingle. 'E's in an awful temper this morning--he
  • gets worse and worse--he'll fire you as soon as look at you."
  • "Can't be helped. I've got me instructions."
  • "You always were game," said Keggs admiringly. "I used to see that
  • quick enough before you retired from active work. Well, good luck to
  • you, Mr. Dingle."
  • Steve gathered up William Bannister, the wheelbarrow, the box of
  • bricks, and the dying pig and made his way to the gymnasium.
  • The worst of these pre-arranged scenes is that they never happen just
  • as one figured them in one's mind. Steve had expected to have to wait a
  • few minutes in the gymnasium, then there would be a step outside and
  • the old man would enter. The beauty of this, to Steve's mind, was that
  • he himself would be "discovered," as the stage term is; the onus of
  • entering and opening the conversation would be on Mr. Bannister. And,
  • as everybody who has ever had an awkward interview knows, this makes
  • all the difference.
  • But the minutes passed, and still no grandfather. The nervousness which
  • he had with difficulty expelled began to return to Steve. This was
  • exactly like having to wait in the ring while one's opponent tried to
  • get one's goat by dawdling in the dressing room.
  • An attempt to relieve himself by punching the ball was a dismal
  • failure. At the first bang of the leather against the wood William
  • Bannister, who had been working in a pre-occupied way at the dying pig,
  • threw his head back and howled, and would not be comforted till Steve
  • took out the rope and skipped before him, much as dancers used to dance
  • before oriental monarchs in the old days.
  • Steve was just saying to himself for the fiftieth time that he was a
  • fool to have come, when Keggs arrived with the news that Mr. Bannister
  • was too busy to take his usual exercise this morning and that Steve was
  • at liberty to go.
  • It speaks well for Steve's character that he did not go. He would have
  • given much to retire, for the old man was one of the few people who
  • inspired in him anything resembling fear. But he could not return
  • tamely to the studio with his mission unaccomplished.
  • "Say, ask him if he can see me for a minute. Say it is important."
  • Keggs' eye rested on William Bannister, and he shook his head.
  • "I shouldn't, Mr. Dingle. Really I shouldn't. You don't know what an
  • ugly mood he's in. Something's been worrying him. It's what you might
  • call courting disaster."
  • "Gee! Do you think I _want_ to do it? I've just got to. That's all
  • there is to it."
  • A few moments later Keggs returned with the news that Mr. Bannister
  • would see Dingle in the library.
  • "Come along, kid," said Steve. "Gimme hold of the excess baggage, and
  • let's get a move on."
  • So in the end it was Mr. Bannister who was discovered and Steve who
  • made the entrance. And, as Steve pointed out to Kirk later, it just
  • made all the difference.
  • The effect of the change on Steve was to make him almost rollicking in
  • his manner, as if he and Mr. Bannister were the nucleus of an Old Home
  • Week celebration or two old college chums meeting after long absence.
  • Nervousness, on the rare occasions when he suffered from it, generally
  • had that effect on him.
  • He breezed into the library, carrying the wheelbarrow, the box of
  • bricks, and the dying pig, and trailing William in his wake. William's
  • grandfather was seated with his back to the door, dictating a letter to
  • one of his secretaries.
  • He looked up as Steve entered. He took in Steve and William in a rapid
  • glance and guessed the latter's identity in an instant. He had expected
  • something of this sort ever since he had heard of his grandson's birth.
  • Indeed, he had been somewhat surprised that the visit had not occurred
  • before.
  • He betrayed no surprise.
  • "One moment, Dingle," he said, and turned to the secretary again. A
  • faint sneer came and went on his face.
  • The delay completed Steve's discomfiture. He placed the wheel harrow on
  • the floor, the box of bricks on the wheelbarrow, and the dying pig on
  • the box of bricks, whence it was instantly removed and inflated by
  • William.
  • "'Referring to your letter of the eighth--'" said Mr. Bannister in his
  • cold, level voice.
  • He was interrupted by the incisive cry of the dying pig.
  • "Ask your son to be quiet, Dingle," he said impassively.
  • Steve was staggered.
  • "Say, this ain't my son, squire," he began breezily.
  • "Your nephew, then, or whatever relation he happens to be to you."
  • He resumed his dictation. Steve wiped his forehead and looked
  • helplessly at the White Hope, who, having discarded the dying pig, was
  • now busy with the box of bricks.
  • Steve wished he had not come. He was accustomed to the primitive
  • exhibition of emotions, having moved in circles where the wrathful
  • expressed their wrath in a normal manner.
  • Anger which found its expression in an exaggerated politeness was out
  • of his line and made him uncomfortable.
  • After what seemed to him a century, John Bannister dismissed the
  • secretary. Even then, however, he did not come immediately to Steve. He
  • remained for a few moments writing, with his back turned. Then, just
  • when Steve had given up hope of ever securing his attention, he turned
  • suddenly.
  • "Well?"
  • "Say, it's this way, colonel," Steve had begun, when a triumphant cry
  • from the direction of the open window stopped him. The White Hope was
  • kneeling on a chair, looking down into the street.
  • "Bix," he explained over his shoulder.
  • "Kindly ring the bell, Dingle," said Mr. Bannister, unmoved. "Your
  • little nephew appears to have dropped his bricks into Fifth Avenue."
  • In answer to the summons Keggs appeared. He looked anxious.
  • "Keggs,"
  • said Mr. Bannister, "tell one of the footmen to go out into the avenue
  • and pick up some wooden bricks which he will find there. Dingle's
  • little brother has let some fall."
  • As Keggs left the room Steve's pent-up nervousness exploded in a whirl
  • of words.
  • "Aw say, boss, quit yer kiddin'. You know this kid ain't anything to do
  • with me. Why, say, how would he be any relation of a roughneck like me?
  • Come off the roof, bo. You know well enough who he is. He's your
  • grandson. On the level."
  • Mr. Bannister looked at William, now engaged in running the wheelbarrow
  • up and down the room, emitting the while a curious sound, possibly to
  • encourage an imaginary horse. The inspection did not seem to excite him
  • or afford him any pleasure.
  • "Oh!" he said.
  • Steve was damped, but resumed gamely:
  • "Say, boss, this is the greatest kid on earth. I'm not stringing you,
  • honest. He's a wonder. On the level, did you ever see a kid that age
  • with a pair of shoulders on him like what this kid's got? Say, squire,
  • what's the matter with calling the fight off and starting fair? Miss
  • Ruth would be tickled to death if you would. Can the rough stuff,
  • colonel. I know you think you've been given a raw deal, Kirk chipping
  • in like that and copping off Miss Ruth, but for the love of Mike, what
  • does it matter? You seen for yourself what a dandy kid this is. Well,
  • then, check your grouch with your hat. Do the square thing. Have out
  • the auto and come right round to the studio and make it up. What's
  • wrong with that, colonel? Honest, they'd be tickled clean through."
  • At this point Keggs entered, followed by a footman carrying wooden
  • bricks.
  • "Keggs," said Mr. Bannister, "telephone for the automobile at once--"
  • "That's the talk, colonel," cried Steve joyfully. "I know you were a
  • sport."
  • "----to take me down to Wall Street."
  • Keggs bowed.
  • "Oh Keggs," said Mr. Bannister, as he turned to leave.
  • "Sir?"
  • "Another thing. See that Dingle does not enter the house again."
  • And Mr. Bannister resumed his writing, while Steve, gathering up the
  • wheelbarrow, the box of bricks, and the dying pig, took William by the
  • hand and retreated.
  • * * * * *
  • That terminated Ruth's attempts to conciliate her father.
  • There remained Bailey. From Bailey she was prepared to stand no
  • nonsense. Meeting him on the street, she fairly kidnapped him, driving
  • him into a taxicab and pushing him into the studio, where he was
  • confronted by his nephew.
  • Bailey came poorly through the ordeal. William Bannister, a stern
  • critic, weighed him up in one long stare, found him wanting, and
  • announced his decision with all the strength of powerful lungs. In the
  • end he had to be removed, hiccupping, and Bailey, after lingering a few
  • uneasy moments making conversation to Kirk, departed, with such a look
  • about the back of him as he sprang into his cab that Ruth felt that the
  • visit was one which would not be repeated.
  • She went back into the studio with a rather heavy heart. She was fond
  • of Bailey.
  • The sight of Kirk restored her. After all, what had happened was only
  • what she had expected. She had chosen her path, and she did not regret
  • it.
  • Chapter X
  • An Interlude of Peace
  • Two events of importance in the small world which centred round William
  • B. Winfield occurred at about this time. The first was the entrance of
  • Mamie, the second the exit of Mrs. Porter.
  • Mamie was the last of a series of nurses who came and went in somewhat
  • rapid succession during the early years of the White Hope's life. She
  • was introduced by Steve, who, it seemed, had known her since she was a
  • child. She was the nineteen-year-old daughter of a compositor on one of
  • the morning papers, a little, mouselike thing, with tiny hands and
  • feet, a soft voice, and eyes that took up far more than their fair
  • share of her face.
  • She had had no professional experience as a nursery-maid; but, as Steve
  • pointed out, the fact that, in the absence of her mother, who had died
  • some years previously, she had had sole charge of three small brothers
  • at the age when small brothers are least easily handled, and had
  • steered them through to the office-boy age without mishap, put her
  • extremely high in the class of gifted amateurs. Mamie was accordingly
  • given a trial, and survived it triumphantly. William Bannister, that
  • discerning youth, took to her at once. Kirk liked the neat way she
  • moved about the studio, his heart being still sore at the performance
  • of one of her predecessors, who had upset and put a substantial foot
  • through his masterpiece, that same "Ariadne in Naxos" which Lora Delane
  • Porter had criticised on the occasion of her first visit to the studio.
  • Ruth, for her part, was delighted with Mamie.
  • As for Steve, though as an outside member of the firm he cannot be
  • considered to count, he had long ago made up his mind about her. Some
  • time before, when he had found it impossible for him to be in her
  • presence, still less to converse with her, without experiencing a warm,
  • clammy, shooting sensation and a feeling of general weakness similar to
  • that which follows a well-directed blow at the solar plexus, he had
  • come to the conclusion that he must be in love. The furious jealousy
  • which assailed him on seeing her embraced by and embracing a stout
  • person old enough to be her father convinced him of this.
  • The discovery that the stout man actually was her father's brother
  • relieved his mind to a certain extent, but the episode left him shaken.
  • He made up his mind to propose at once and get it over. When Mamie
  • joined the garrison of No. 90 a year later the dashing feat was still
  • unperformed. There was that about Mamie which unmanned Steve. She was
  • so small and dainty that the ruggedness which had once been his pride
  • seemed to him, when he thought of her, an insuperable defect. The
  • conviction that he was a roughneck deepened in him and tied his tongue.
  • The defection of Mrs. Porter was a gradual affair. From a very early
  • period in the new regime she had been dissatisfied. Accustomed to rule,
  • she found herself in an unexpectedly minor position. She had definite
  • views on the hygienic upbringing of children, and these she imparted to
  • Ruth, who listened pleasantly, smiled, and ignored them.
  • Mrs. Porter was not used to such treatment. She found Ruth considerably
  • less malleable than she had been before marriage, and she resented the
  • change.
  • Kirk, coming in one afternoon, found Ruth laughing.
  • "It's only Aunt Lora," she said. "She will come in and lecture me on
  • how to raise babies. She's crazy about microbes. It's the new idea.
  • Sterilization, and all that. She thinks that everything a child touches
  • ought to be sterilized first to kill the germs. Bill's running awful
  • risks being allowed to play about the studio like this."
  • Kirk looked at his son and heir, who was submitting at that moment to
  • be bathed. He was standing up. It was a peculiarity of his that he
  • refused to sit down in a bath, being apparently under the impression,
  • when asked to do so, that there was a conspiracy afoot to drown him.
  • "I don't see how the kid could be much fitter."
  • "It's not so much what he is now. She is worrying about what might
  • happen to him. She can talk about bacilli till your flesh creeps.
  • Honestly, if Bill ever did get really ill, I believe Aunt Lora could
  • talk me round to her views about them in a minute. It's only the fact
  • that he is so splendidly well that makes it seem so absurd."
  • Kirk laughed.
  • "It's all very well to laugh. You haven't heard her. I've caught myself
  • wavering a dozen times. Do you know, she says a child ought not to be
  • kissed?"
  • "It has struck me," said Kirk meditatively, "that your Aunt Lora, if I
  • may make the suggestion, is the least bit of what Steve would call a
  • shy-dome. Is there anything else she had mentioned?'
  • "Hundreds of things. Bill ought to be kept in a properly sterilized
  • nursery, with sterilized toys and sterilized everything, and the
  • temperature ought to be just so high and no higher, and just so low and
  • no lower. Get her to talk about it to you. She makes you wonder why
  • everybody is not dead."
  • "This is a new development, surely? Has she ever broken out in this
  • place before?"
  • "Oh, yes. In the old days she often used to talk about it. She has
  • written books about it."
  • "I thought her books were all about the selfishness of the modern young
  • man in not marrying."
  • "Not at all. Some of them are about how to look after the baby. It's no
  • good the modern young man marrying if he's going to murder his baby
  • directly afterward, is it?"
  • "Something in that. There's just one objection to this sterilized
  • nursery business, though, which she doesn't seem to have detected. How
  • am I going to provide these things on an income of five thousand and at
  • the same time live in that luxury which the artist soul demands? Bill,
  • my lad, you'll have to sacrifice yourself for your father's good. When
  • I'm a millionaire we'll see about it. Meanwhile--"
  • "Meanwhile," said Ruth, "come and be dried before you catch your death
  • of cold." She gathered William Bannister into her lap.
  • "I pity any germ that tries to play catch-as-catch-can with that
  • infant," remarked Kirk. "He'd simply flatten it out in a round. Did you
  • ever see such a chest on a kid of that age?"
  • It was after the installation of Whiskers at the studio that the
  • diminution of Mrs. Porter's visits became really marked. There was
  • something almost approaching a battle over Whiskers, who was an Irish
  • terrier puppy which Hank Jardine had presented to William Bannister as
  • a belated birthday present.
  • Mrs. Porter utterly excommunicated Whiskers. Nothing, she maintained,
  • was so notoriously supercharged with bacilli as a long-haired dog. If
  • this was true, William Bannister certainly gave them every chance to
  • get to work upon himself. It was his constant pleasure to clutch
  • Whiskers to him in a vice-like clinch, to bury his face in his shaggy
  • back, and generally to court destruction. Yet the more he clutched, the
  • healthier did he appear to grow, and Mrs. Porter's demand for the dog's
  • banishment was overruled.
  • Mrs. Porter retired in dudgeon. She liked to rule, and at No. 90 she
  • felt that she had become merely among those present. She was in the
  • position of a mother country whose colony has revolted. For years she
  • had been accustomed to look on Ruth as a disciple, a weaker spirit whom
  • she could mould to her will, and now Ruth was refusing to be moulded.
  • So Mrs. Porter's visits ceased. Ruth still saw her at the apartment
  • when she cared to go there, but she kept away from the studio. She
  • considered that in the matter of William Bannister her claim had been
  • jumped, that she had been deposed; and she withdrew.
  • "I shall bear up," said Kirk, when this fact was brought home to him.
  • "I mistrust your Aunt Lora as I should mistrust some great natural
  • force which may become active at any moment and give you yours. An
  • earthquake, for instance. I have no quarrel with your Aunt Lora in her
  • quiescent state, but I fear the developments of that giant mind. We are
  • better off without her."
  • "All the same," said Ruth loyally, "she's rather a dear. And we ought
  • to remember that, if it hadn't been for her, you and I would never have
  • met."
  • "I do remember it. And I'm grateful. But I can't help feeling that a
  • woman capable of taking other people's lives and juggling with them as
  • if they were india-rubber balls as she did with ours, is likely at any
  • moment to break out in a new place. My gratitude to her is the sort of
  • gratitude you would feel toward a cyclone if you were walking home late
  • for dinner and it caught you up and deposited you on your doorstep.
  • Your Aunt Lora is a human cyclone. No, on the whole, she's more like an
  • earthquake. She has a habit of splitting up and altering the face of
  • the world whenever she feels like it, and I'm too well satisfied with
  • my world at present to relish the idea of having it changed."
  • Little by little the garrison of the studio had been whittled down.
  • Except for Steve, the community had no regular members outside the
  • family itself. Hank was generally out of town. Bailey paid one more
  • visit, then seemed to consider that he could now absent himself
  • altogether. And the members of Kirk's bachelor circle stayed away to a
  • man.
  • Their isolation was rendered more complete by the fact that Ruth, when
  • she had ornamented New York society, had made few real friends. Most of
  • the girls she had known bored her. They were gushing creatures with a
  • passion for sharing and imparting secrets, and Ruth's cool reserve had
  • alienated her from them.
  • When she married she dropped out. The romance of her wedding gave
  • people something to talk about for a few days, and then she was
  • forgotten.
  • And so it came about that she had her desire and was able practically
  • to monopolize Kirk. He and she and William Bannister lived in a kind of
  • hermit's cell for three and enjoyed this highly unnatural state of
  • things enormously. Life had never seemed so full either to Kirk or
  • herself. There was always something to do, something to think about,
  • something to look forward to, if it was only a visit to a theatre or
  • the inspection of William Bannister's bath.
  • Chapter XI
  • Stung to Action
  • It was in the third year of the White Hope's life that the placid
  • evenness of Kirk's existence began to be troubled. The orderly
  • procession of the days was broken by happenings of unusual importance,
  • one at least of them extraordinarily unpleasant. This was the failure
  • of a certain stock in which nearly half of Kirk's patrimony was
  • invested, that capital which had always seemed to him as solid a part
  • of life as the asphalt on which he walked, as unchangeable a part of
  • nature as the air he breathed. He had always had it, and he could
  • hardly bring himself to realize that he was not always to have it.
  • It gave him an extraordinary feeling of panic and discomfort when at
  • length he faced the fact squarely that his private means, on the
  • possession of which he had based the whole lazy scheme of his life,
  • were as much at the mercy of fate as the stake which a gambler flings
  • on the green cloth. He did not know enough of business to understand
  • the complicated processes by which a stock hitherto supposed to be as
  • impregnable as municipal bonds had been hammered into a ragged remnant
  • in the course of a single day; but the result of them was unpleasantly
  • clear and easily grasped.
  • His income was cut in half, and instead of being a comfortably off
  • young man, idly watching the pageant of life from a seat in the grand
  • stand, he must now plunge into the crowd and endeavour to earn a living
  • as others did.
  • For his losses did not begin and end with the ruin of this particular
  • stock. At intervals during the past two years he had been nibbling at
  • his capital, and now, forced to examine his affairs frankly and
  • minutely, he was astonished at the inroads he had made upon it.
  • There had been the upkeep of the summer shack he had bought in
  • Connecticut. There had been expenses in connection with William
  • Bannister. There had been little treats for Ruth. There had been cigars
  • and clothes and dinners and taxi-cabs and all the other trifles which
  • cost nothing but mount up and make a man wander beyond the bounds of
  • his legitimate income.
  • It was borne in upon Kirk, as he reflected upon these things, that the
  • only evidence he had shown of the possession of the artistic
  • temperament had been the joyous carelessness of his extravagance. In
  • that only had he been the artist. It shocked him to think how little
  • honest work he had done during the past two years. He had lived in a
  • golden haze into which work had not entered.
  • He was to be shocked still more very soon.
  • Stung to action by his thoughts, he embarked upon a sweeping attack on
  • the stronghold of those who exchange cash for artists' dreams. He
  • ransacked the studio and set out on his mission in a cab bulging with
  • large, small, and medium-sized canvases. Like a wave receding from a
  • breakwater he returned late in the day, a branded failure.
  • The dealers had eyed his canvases, large, small, and medium-sized, and,
  • in direct contravention of their professed object in life, had refused
  • to deal. Only one of them, a man with grimy hands but a moderately
  • golden heart, after passing a sepia thumb over some of the more
  • ambitious works, had offered him fifteen dollars for a little sketch
  • which he had made in an energetic moment of William Bannister crawling
  • on the floor. This, the dealer asserted, was the sort of "darned mushy
  • stuff" the public fell for, and he held it to be worth the fifteen, but
  • not a cent more. Kirk, humble by now, accepted three battered-looking
  • bills and departed.
  • He had a long talk with Ruth that night, and rose from it in the frame
  • of mind which in some men is induced by prayer. Ruth was quite
  • marvellously sensible and sympathetic.
  • "I wanted you," she said in answer to his self-reproaches, "and here we
  • are, together. It's simply nonsense to talk about ruining my life and
  • dragging me down. What _does_ it matter about this money? We have
  • got plenty left."
  • "We've got about as much left as you used to spend on hats in the old
  • days."
  • "Well, we can easily make it do. I've thought for some time that we
  • were growing too extravagant. And talking of hats, I had no right to
  • have that last one you bought me. It was wickedly expensive. We can
  • economize there, at any rate. We can get along splendidly on what you
  • have now. Besides, directly you settle down and start to paint, we
  • shall be quite rich again."
  • Kirk laughed grimly.
  • "I wish you were a dealer," he said. "Fifteen dollars is what I have
  • managed to extract from them so far. One of the Great Unwashed on Sixth
  • Avenue gave me that for that sketch I did of Bill on the floor."
  • "Which took you about three minutes to do," Ruth pointed out
  • triumphantly. "You see! You're bound to make a fortune if you stick to
  • it."
  • Kirk put his arm round her and gave her a silent hug of gratitude. He
  • had dreaded this talk, and lo! it was putting new life into him.
  • They sat for a few moments in silence.
  • "I don't deserve it," said Kirk at last. "Instead of comforting me like
  • this, and making me think I'm rather a fine sort of a fellow, you ought
  • to be lashing me with scorpions. I don't suppose any man has ever made
  • such a criminal idiot of himself in this city before."
  • "You couldn't tell that this stock was going to fail."
  • "No; but I could have done some work these last three years and made
  • it not matter whether it failed or not. You can't comfort me out of
  • that knowledge. I knew all along that I was being a waster and a loafer,
  • but I was so happy that I didn't mind. I was so interested in seeing
  • what you and the kid would do next that I didn't seem to have time to
  • work. And the result is that I've gone right back.
  • "There was a time when I really could paint a bit. Not much, it's true,
  • but enough to get along with. Well, I'm going to start it again in
  • earnest now, and if I don't make good, well, there's always Hank's
  • offer."
  • Ruth turned a little pale. They had discussed Hank's offer before, but
  • then life had been bright and cloudless and Hank's offer a thing to
  • smile at. Now it had assumed an uncomfortably practical aspect.
  • "You will make good," said Ruth.
  • "I'll do my best," said Kirk. But even as he spoke his mind was
  • pondering on the proposition which Hank had made.
  • Hank, always flitting from New York into the unknown and back again,
  • had called at the studio one evening, after a long absence, looking
  • sick and tired. He was one of those lean, wiry men whom it is unusual
  • to see in this condition, and Kirk was sympathetic and inquisitive.
  • Hank needed no pressing. He was full of his story.
  • "I've been in Colombia," he said. "I got back on a fruit-steamer this
  • morning. Do you know anything of Colombia?"
  • Kirk reflected.
  • "Only that there's generally a revolution there," he said.
  • "There wasn't anything of that kind this trip, except in my interior."
  • Hank pulled thoughtfully at his pipe. The odour of his remarkable brand
  • of tobacco filled the studio. "I've had a Hades of a time," he said
  • simply.
  • Kirk looked at him curiously. Hank was in a singularly chastened mood
  • to-night.
  • "What took you there?"
  • "Gold."
  • "Gold? Mining?"
  • Hank nodded.
  • "I didn't know there were gold-mines in that part of the world," said
  • Kirk.
  • "There are. The gold that filled the holds of Spanish galleons in the
  • sixteenth century came from Colombia. The place is simply stiff with
  • old Spanish relics."
  • "But surely the mines must have been worked out ages ago."
  • "Only on the surface."
  • Kirk laughed.
  • "How do you mean, only on the surface? Explain. I don't know a thing
  • about gold, except that getting it out of picture-dealers is like
  • getting blood out of a turnip."
  • "It's simple enough. The earth hoards its gold in two ways. There's
  • auriferous rock and auriferous dirt. If the stuff is in the rock, you
  • crush it. If it's in the dirt, you wash it."
  • "It sounds simple."
  • "It is. The difficult part is finding it."
  • "And you have done that?"
  • "I have. Or I'm practically certain I have. At any rate, I know that I
  • have discovered the ditches made by the Spaniards three hundred years
  • ago. If there was gold there in those days there is apt to be gold
  • there now. Only it isn't on the surface any longer. They cleaned up as
  • far as the surface is concerned, so I have to sink shafts and dig
  • tunnels."
  • "I see. It isn't so simple as it used to be."
  • "It is, practically, if you have any knowledge of mining."
  • "Well, what's your trouble?" asked Kirk. "Why did you come back? Why
  • aren't you out there grabbing it with both hands and getting yourself
  • into shape to be a walking gold-mine to your friends? I don't like to
  • see this idle spirit in you, Hank."
  • Hank smoked long and thoughtfully.
  • "Kirk," he said suddenly.
  • "Well?"
  • Hank shook his head.
  • "No, it's no good."
  • "What is no good? What do you mean?"
  • "I came back," said Hank, suddenly lucid, "with a wild notion of
  • getting you to come in with me on this thing."
  • "What! Go to Colombia with you?"
  • Hank nodded.
  • "But, of course, it's not possible. It's no job for a married man."
  • "Why not? If this gold of yours is just lying about in heaps it seems
  • to me that a married man is exactly the man who ought to be around
  • grabbing it. Or do you believe that old yarn about two being able to
  • live as cheaply as one? Take it from me, it's not so. If there is gold
  • waiting to be gathered up in handfuls, me for it. When do we start? Can
  • I bring Ruth and the kid?"
  • "I wish we could start. If I could have had you with me these last few
  • months I'd never have quit. But I guess it's out of the question.
  • You've no idea what sort of an inferno it is, and I won't let you come
  • into it with your eyes shut. But if ever you are in a real tight corner
  • let me know. It might be worth your while then to take a few risks."
  • "Oh! there are risks?"
  • "Risks! My claims are located along the Atrato River in the Choco
  • district. Does that convey anything to you?"
  • "Not a thing."
  • "The workings are three hundred miles inland. Just three hundred miles
  • of pure Hades. You can get all the fevers you ever heard of, and a few
  • more, I got most of them last trip."
  • "I thought you were looking pretty bad."
  • "I ought to be. I've swallowed so much quinine since I saw you last
  • that my ears are buzzing still. And then there are the insects. They
  • all bite. Some bite worse than others, but not much. Darn it! even the
  • butterflies bite out there. Every animal in the country has some other
  • animal constantly chasing it until a white man comes along, when they
  • call a truce and both chase him. And the vegetation is so thick and
  • grows so quickly that you have to cut down the jungle about the
  • workings every few days or so to avoid being swamped by it. Otherwise,"
  • finished Hank, refilling his pipe and lighting it, "the place is a
  • pretty good kind of summer resort."
  • "And you're going back to it? Back to the quinine and the beasts and
  • the butterflies?"
  • "Sure. The gold runs up to twenty dollars the cubic yard and is worth
  • eighteen dollars an ounce."
  • "When are you going?"
  • "I'm in no hurry. This year, next year, some time, never. No, not
  • never. Call it some time."
  • "And you want me to come, too?"
  • "I would give half of whatever there is in the mine to have you come.
  • But things being as they are, well, I guess we can call it off. Is
  • there any chance in the world, Kirk, of your ever ceasing to be a
  • bloated capitalist? Could any of your stocks go back on you?"
  • "I doubt it. They're pretty gilt-edged, I fancy, though I've never
  • studied the question of stocks. My little gold-mine isn't in the same
  • class with yours, but it's as solid as a rock, and no fevers and
  • insects attached to it, either."
  • * * * * *
  • And now the gold-mine had proved of less than rock-like solidity. The
  • most gilt-edged of all the stocks had failed. The capitalist had become
  • in one brief day the struggling artist.
  • Hank's proposal seemed a good deal less fantastic now to Kirk as he
  • prepared for his second onslaught, the grand attack, on the stronghold
  • of those who bought art with gold.
  • Chapter XII
  • A Climax
  • One afternoon, about two weeks later, Kirk, returning to the studio
  • from an unprofitable raid into the region of the dealers, found on the
  • table a card bearing the name of Mrs. Robert Wilbur. This had been
  • crossed out, and beneath it, in a straggly hand, the name Miss Wilbur
  • had been written.
  • The phenomenon of a caller at the cell of the two hermits was so
  • strange that he awaited Ruth's arrival with more than his customary
  • impatience. She would be able to identify the visitor. George Pennicut,
  • questioned on the point, had no information of any value to impart. A
  • very pretty young lady she was, said George, with what you might call a
  • lively manner. She had seemed disappointed at finding nobody at home.
  • No, she had left no message.
  • Ruth, arriving a few moments later, was met by Kirk with the card in
  • his hand.
  • "Can you throw any light on this?" he said. "Who is Miss Wilbur, who
  • has what you might call a lively manner and appears disappointed when
  • she does not find us at home?"
  • Ruth looked at the card.
  • "Sybil Wilbur? I wonder what she wants."
  • "Who is she? Let's get that settled first."
  • "Oh, she's a girl I used to know. I haven't seen her for two years. I
  • thought she had forgotten my existence."
  • "Call her up on the phone. If we don't solve this mystery we shan't
  • sleep to-night. It's like _Robinson Crusoe_ and the footprint."
  • Ruth went to the telephone. After a short conversation she turned to
  • Kirk with sparkling eyes and the air of one with news to impart.
  • "Kirk! She wants you to paint her portrait!"
  • "What!"
  • "She's engaged to Bailey! Just got engaged! And the first thing she
  • does is to insist on his letting her come to you for her portrait,"
  • Ruth bubbled with laughter. "It's to be a birthday present for Bailey,
  • and Bailey has got to pay for it. That's so exactly like Sybil."
  • "I hope the portrait will be. She's taking chances."
  • "I think it's simply sweet of her. She's a real friend."
  • "At fairly long intervals, apparently. Did you say you had not seen her
  • for two years?"
  • "She is an erratic little thing with an awfully good heart. I feel
  • touched at her remembering us. Oh, Kirk, you must do a simply wonderful
  • portrait, something that everybody will talk about, and then our
  • fortune will be made! You will become the only painter that people will
  • go to for their portraits."
  • Kirk did not answer. His experiences of late had developed in him an
  • unwonted mistrust of his powers. To this was added the knowledge that,
  • except for an impressionist study of Ruth for private exhibition only,
  • he had never attempted a portrait. To be called upon suddenly like this
  • to show his powers gave him much the same feeling which he had
  • experienced when called upon as a child to recite poetry before an
  • audience. It was a species of stage fright.
  • But it was certainly a chance. Portrait-painting was an uncommonly
  • lucrative line of business. His imagination, stirred by Ruth's, saw
  • visions of wealthy applicants turned away from the studio door owing to
  • pressure of work on the part of the famous man for whose services they
  • were bidding vast sums.
  • "By Jove!" he said thoughtfully.
  • Another aspect of the matter occurred to him.
  • "I wonder what Bailey thinks about it!"
  • "Oh, he's probably so much in love with her that he doesn't mind what
  • she does. Besides, Bailey likes you."
  • "Does he?"
  • "Oh, well, if he doesn't, he will. This will bring you together."
  • "I suppose he knows about it?"
  • "Oh, yes. Sybil said he did. It's all settled. She will be here
  • to-morrow for the first sitting."
  • Kirk spoke the fear that was in his mind.
  • "Ruth, old girl, I'm horribly nervous about this. I am taken with a
  • sort of second sight. I see myself making a ghastly failure of this job
  • and Bailey knocking me down and refusing to come across with the
  • cheque."
  • "Sybil is bringing the cheque with her to-morrow," said Ruth simply.
  • "Is she?" said Kirk. "Now I wonder if that makes it worse or better.
  • I'm trying to think!"
  • Sybil Wilbur fluttered in next day at noon, a tiny, restless creature
  • who darted about the studio like a humming-bird. She effervesced with
  • the joy of life. She uttered little squeaks of delight at everything
  • she saw. She hugged Ruth, beamed at Kirk, went wild over William
  • Bannister, thought the studio too cute for words, insisted on being
  • shown all over it, and talked incessantly.
  • It was about two o'clock before she actually began to sit, and even
  • then she was no statue. A thought would come into her small head and
  • she would whirl round to impart it to Ruth, destroying in a second the
  • pose which it had taken Kirk ten painful minutes to fix.
  • Kirk was too amused to be irritated. She was such a friendly little
  • soul and so obviously devoted to Ruth that he felt she was entitled to
  • be a nuisance as a sitter. He wondered more and more what weird
  • principle of selection had been at work to bring Bailey and this
  • butterfly together. He had never given any deep thought to the study of
  • his brother-in-law's character; but, from his small knowledge of him,
  • he would have imagined some one a trifle more substantial and serious
  • as the ideal wife for him. Life, he conceived, was to Bailey a stately
  • march. Sybil Wilbur evidently looked on it as a mad gallop.
  • Ruth felt the same. She was fond of Sybil, but she could not see her as
  • the fore-ordained Mrs. Bailey.
  • "I suppose she swept him off his feet," she said. "It just shows that
  • you never really get to know a person even if you're their sister.
  • Bailey must have all sorts of hidden sides to his character which I
  • never noticed--unless _she_ has. But I don't think there is much
  • of that about Sybil. She's just a child. But she's very amusing, isn't
  • she? She enjoys life so furiously."
  • "I think Bailey will find her rather a handful. Does she ever sit
  • still, by the way? If she is going to act right along as she did to-day
  • this portrait will look like that cubist picture of the 'Dance at the
  • Spring'."
  • As the sittings went on Miss Wilbur consented gradually to simmer down
  • and the portrait progressed with a fair amount of speed. But Kirk was
  • conscious every day of a growing sensation of panic. He was trying his
  • very hardest, but it was bad work, and he knew it.
  • His hand had never had very much cunning, but what it had had it had
  • lost in the years of his idleness. Every day showed him more clearly
  • that the portrait of Miss Wilbur, on which so much depended, was an
  • amateurish daub. He worked doggedly on, but his heart was cold with
  • that chill that grips the artist when he looks on his work and sees it
  • to be bad.
  • At last it was finished. Ruth thought it splendid. Sybil Wilbur
  • pronounced it cute, as she did most things. Kirk could hardly bear to
  • look at it. In its finished state it was worse than he could have
  • believed possible.
  • In the old days he had been a fair painter with one or two bad faults.
  • Now the faults seemed to have grown like weeds, choking whatever of
  • merit he might once have possessed. This was a horrible production, and
  • he was profoundly thankful when it was packed up and removed from the
  • studio. But behind his thankfulness lurked the feeling that all was not
  • yet over, that there was worse to come.
  • It came.
  • It was heralded by a tearful telephone call from Miss Wilbur, who rang
  • up Ruth with the agitated information that "Bailey didn't seem to like
  • it." And on the heels of the message came Bailey in person, pink from
  • forehead to collar, and almost as wrathful as he had been on the great
  • occasion of his first visit to the studio. His annoyance robbed his
  • speech of its normal stateliness. He struck a colloquial note unusual
  • with him.
  • "I guess you know what I've come about," he said.
  • He had found Kirk alone in the studio, as ill luck would have it. In
  • the absence of Ruth he ventured to speak more freely than he would have
  • done in her presence.
  • "It's an infernal outrage," he went on. "I've been stung, and you know
  • it."
  • Kirk said nothing. His silence infuriated Bailey.
  • "It's the portrait I'm speaking about--the portrait, if you have the
  • nerve to call it that, of Miss Wilbur. I was against her sitting to you
  • from the first, but she insisted. Now she's sorry."
  • "It's as bad as all that, is it?" said Kirk dully. He felt curiously
  • indisposed to fight. A listlessness had gripped him. He was even a
  • little sorry for Bailey. He saw his point of view and sympathized with
  • it.
  • "Yes," said Bailey fiercely. "It is, and you know it."
  • Kirk nodded. Bailey was quite right. He did know it.
  • "It's a joke," went on Bailey shrilly. "I can't hang it up. People
  • would laugh at it. And to think that I paid you all that money for it.
  • I could have got a real artist for half the price."
  • "That is easily remedied," said Kirk. "I will send you a cheque
  • to-morrow."
  • Bailey was not to be appeased. The venom of more than three years cried
  • out for utterance. He had always held definite views upon Kirk, and
  • Heaven had sent him the opportunity of expressing them.
  • "Yes, I dare say," he said contemptuously. "That would settle the whole
  • thing, wouldn't it? What do you think you are--a millionaire? Talking
  • as if that amount of money made no difference to you? Where does my
  • sister come in? How about Ruth? You sneak her away from her home and
  • then-----"
  • Kirk's lethargy left him. He flushed.
  • "I think that will be about all, Bannister?" he said. He spoke quietly,
  • but his voice trembled.
  • But Bailey's long-dammed hatred, having at last found an outlet, was
  • not to be checked in a moment.
  • "Will it? Will it? The hell it will. Let me tell you that I came here
  • to talk straight to you, and I'm going to do it. It's about time you
  • had your darned dime-novel romance shown up to you the way it strikes
  • somebody else. You think you're a tremendous dashing twentieth-century
  • _Young Lochinvar_, don't you? You thought you had done a pretty
  • smooth bit of work when you sneaked Ruth away! You! You haven't enough
  • backbone in you even to make a bluff at working to support her. You're
  • just what my father said you were--a loafer who pretends to be an
  • artist. You've got away with it up to now, but you've shown yourself up
  • at last. You damned waster!"
  • Kirk walked to the door and flung it open.
  • "You're perfectly right, Bannister," he said quietly. "Everything you
  • have said is quite true. And now would you mind going?"
  • "I've not finished yet."
  • "Yes, you have."
  • Bailey hesitated. The first time frenzy had left him, and he was
  • beginning to be a little ashamed of himself for having expressed his
  • views in a manner which, though satisfying, was, he felt, less
  • dignified than he could have wished.
  • He looked at Kirk, who was standing stiffly by the door. Something in
  • his attitude decided Bailey to leave well alone. Such had been his
  • indignation that it was only now that for the first time it struck him
  • that his statement of opinion had not been made without considerable
  • bodily danger to himself. Jarred nerves had stood him in the stead of
  • courage; but now his nerves were soothed and he saw things clearly.
  • He choked down what he had intended to say and walked out. Kirk closed
  • the door softly behind him and began to pace the studio floor as he had
  • done on that night when Ruth had fought for her life in the room
  • upstairs.
  • His mind worked slowly at first. Then, as it cleared, he began to think
  • more and more rapidly, till the thoughts leaped and ran like tongues of
  • fire scorching him.
  • It was all true. That was what hurt. Every word that Bailey had flung
  • at him had been strictly just.
  • He had thought himself a fine, romantic fellow. He was a waster and a
  • loafer who pretended to be an artist. He had thrown away the little
  • talent he had once possessed. He had behaved shamefully to Ruth,
  • shirking his responsibilities and idling through life. He realized it
  • now, when it was too late.
  • Suddenly through the chaos of his reflections there shone out clearly
  • one coherent thought, the recollection of what Hank Jardine had offered
  • to him. "If ever you are in a real tight corner----"
  • * * * * *
  • His brain cleared. He sat down calmly to wait for Ruth. His mind was
  • made up. Hank's offer was the way out, the only way out, and he must
  • take it.
  • BOOK TWO
  • Chapter I
  • Empty-handed
  • The steamship _Santa Barbara_, of the United Fruit Line, moved
  • slowly through the glittering water of the bay on her way to dock. Out
  • at quarantine earlier in the morning there had been a mist, through
  • which passing ships loomed up vague and shapeless; but now the sun had
  • dispersed it and a perfect May morning welcomed the _Santa
  • Barbara_ home.
  • Kirk leaned on the rail, looking with dull eyes on the city he had left
  • a year before. Only a year! It seemed ten. As he stood there he felt an
  • old man.
  • A drummer, a cheery soul who had come aboard at Porto Rico, sauntered
  • up, beaming with well-being and good-fellowship.
  • "Looks pretty good, sir," said he.
  • Kirk did not answer. He had not heard.
  • "Some burg," ventured the drummer.
  • Again encountering silence, he turned away, hurt. This churlish
  • attitude on the part of one returning to God's country on one of God's
  • own mornings surprised and wounded him.
  • To him all was right with the world. He had breakfasted well; he was
  • smoking a good cigar; and he was strong in the knowledge that he had
  • done well by the firm this trip and that bouquets were due to be handed
  • to him in the office on lower Broadway. He was annoyed with Kirk for
  • having cast even a tiny cloud upon his contentment.
  • He communicated his feelings to the third officer, who happened to come
  • on deck at that moment.
  • "Say, who _is_ that guy?" he asked complainingly. "The big son of
  • a gun leaning on the rail. Seems like he'd got a hangover this morning.
  • Is he deaf and dumb or just plain grouchy?"
  • The third officer eyed Kirk's back with sympathy.
  • "I shouldn't worry him, Freddie," he said. "I guess if you had been up
  • against it like him you'd be shy on the small talk. That's a fellow
  • called Winfield. They carried him on board at Colon. He was about all
  • in. Got fever in Colombia, inland at the mines, and nearly died. His
  • pal did die. Ever met Hank Jardine?"
  • "Long, thin man?"
  • The other nodded.
  • "One of the best. He made two trips with us."
  • "And he's dead?"
  • "Died of fever away back in the interior, where there's nothing much
  • else except mosquitoes. He and Winfield went in there after gold."
  • "Did they get any?" asked the drummer, interested.
  • The third officer spat disgustedly over the rail.
  • "You ask Winfield. Or, rather, don't, because I guess it's not his pet
  • subject. He told me all about it when he was getting better. There was
  • gold there, all right, in chunks. It only needed to be dug for. And
  • somebody else did the digging. Of all the skin games! It made me pretty
  • hot under the collar, and it wasn't _me_ that was stung.
  • "Out there you can't buy land if you're a foreigner; you have to lease
  • it from the natives. Poor old Hank leased his bit, all right, and when
  • he'd got to his claim he found somebody else working on it. It seemed
  • there had been a flaw in his agreement and the owners had let it over
  • his head to these other guys, who had slipped them more than what Hank
  • had done."
  • "What did he do?"
  • "He couldn't do anything. They were the right side of the law, or what
  • they call law out there. There was nothing to do except beat it back
  • again three hundred miles to the coast. That's where they got the fever
  • which finished Hank. So you can understand," concluded the third
  • officer, "that Mr. Winfield isn't in what you can call a sunny mood. If
  • I were you, I'd go and talk to someone else, if conversation's what you
  • need."
  • Kirk stood motionless at the rail, thinking. It was not what was past
  • that occupied his thoughts, as the third officer had supposed; it was
  • the future.
  • The forlorn hope had failed; he was limping back to Ruth wounded and
  • broken. He had sent her a wireless message. She would be at the dock to
  • meet him. How could he face her? Fate had been against him, it was
  • true, but he was in no mood to make excuses for himself. He had failed.
  • That was the beginning and the end of it. He had set out to bring back
  • wealth and comfort to her, and he was returning empty-handed.
  • That was what the immediate future held, the meeting with Ruth. And
  • after? His imagination was not equal to the task of considering that.
  • He had failed as an artist. There was no future for him there. He must
  • find some other work. But he was fit for no other work. He had no
  • training. What could he do in a city where keenness of competition is a
  • tradition? It would be as if an unarmed man should attack a fortress.
  • The thought of the years he had wasted was very bitter. Looking back,
  • he could see how fate had tricked him into throwing away his one
  • talent. He had had promise. With hard work he could have become an
  • artist, a professional--a man whose work was worth money in the open
  • market. He had never had it in him to be a great artist, but he had had
  • the facility which goes to make a good worker of the second class. He
  • had it still. Given the time for hard study, it was still in him to
  • take his proper place among painters.
  • But time for study was out of his reach now. He must set to work at
  • once, without a day's delay, on something which would bring him
  • immediate money. The reflection brought his mind back abruptly to the
  • practical consideration of the future.
  • Before him, as he stood there, the ragged battlements of New York
  • seemed to frown down on him with a cold cruelty that paralysed his
  • mind. He had seen them a hundred times before. They should have been
  • familiar and friendly. But this morning they were strange and sinister.
  • The skyline which daunts the emigrant as he comes up the bay to his new
  • home struck fear into Kirk's heart.
  • He turned away and began to walk up and down the deck.
  • He felt tired and lonely. For the first time he realized just what it
  • meant to him that he should never see Hank again. It had been hard,
  • almost impossible, till now to force his mind to face that fact. He had
  • winced away from it. But now it would not be avoided. It fell upon him
  • like a shadow.
  • Hank had filled a place of his own in Kirk's life. Theirs had been one
  • of those smooth friendships which absence cannot harm. Often they had
  • not seen each other for months at a time. Indeed, now that he thought
  • of it, Hank was generally away; and he could not remember that they had
  • ever exchanged letters. Yet even so there had been a bond between them
  • which had never broken. And now Hank had dropped out.
  • Kirk began to think about death. As with most men of his temperament,
  • it was a subject on which his mind had seldom dwelt, never for any
  • length of time. His parents had died when he was too young to
  • understand; and circumstances had shielded him from the shadow of the
  • great mystery. Birth he understood; it had forced itself into the
  • scheme of his life; but death till now had been a stranger to him.
  • The realization of it affected him oddly. In a sense, he found it
  • stimulating; not stimulating as birth had been, but more subtly. He
  • could recall vividly the thrill that had come to him with the birth of
  • his son. For days he had walked as one in a trance. The world had
  • seemed unreal, like an opium-smoker's dream. There had been magic
  • everywhere.
  • But death had exactly the opposite effect. It made everything curiously
  • real--himself most of all. He had the sensation, as he thought of Hank,
  • of knowing himself for the first time. Somehow he felt strengthened,
  • braced for the fight, as a soldier might who sees his comrade fall at
  • his side.
  • There was something almost vindictive in the feeling that came to him.
  • It was too vague to be analysed, but it filled him with a desire to
  • fight, gave him a sense of determination of which he had never before
  • been conscious. It toughened him, and made the old, easy-going Kirk
  • Winfield seem a stranger at whom he could look with detachment and a
  • certain contempt.
  • As he walked back along the deck the battlements of the city met his
  • gaze once more. But now they seemed less formidable.
  • In the leisurely fashion of the home-coming ship the _Santa
  • Barbara_ slid into her dock. The gangplank was thrust out. Kirk
  • walked ashore.
  • For a moment he thought that Ruth had not come to meet him. Then his
  • heart leaped madly. He had seen her.
  • * * * * *
  • There are worse spots in the world than the sheds of the New York
  • customs, but few more desolate; yet to Kirk just then the shadowy
  • vastness seemed a sunlit garden. A flame of happiness blazed up in his
  • mind, blotting out in an instant the forebodings which had lurked there
  • like evil creatures in a dark vault. The future, with its explanations
  • and plans, could take care of itself. Ruth was a thing of the present.
  • He put his arms round her and held her. The friendly drummer, who
  • chanced to be near, observed them with interest and a good deal of
  • pleasure. The third officer's story had temporarily destroyed his
  • feeling that all was right with the world, and his sympathetic heart
  • welcomed this evidence that life held compensations even for men who
  • had been swindled out of valuable gold-mines.
  • "I guess he's not feeling so worse, after all," he mused, and went on
  • his way with an easy mind to be fawned upon by his grateful firm.
  • Ruth was holding Kirk at arm's length, her eyes full of tears at the
  • sight.
  • "You poor boy, how thin you are!"
  • "I had fever. It's an awful place for fever out there."
  • "Kirk!"
  • "Oh, I'm all right now. The voyage set me up. They made a great fuss
  • over me on board."
  • Ruth's hand was clinging to his arm. He squeezed it against his side.
  • It was wonderful to him, this sense of being together again after these
  • centuries of absence. It drove from his mind the thought of all the
  • explanations which sooner or later he had got to make. Whatever might
  • come after, he would keep this moment in his memory golden and
  • untarnished.
  • "Don't you worry about me," he said. "Now that I've found you again I'm
  • feeling better than I ever did in my life. You wait till you see me
  • sparring with Steve to-morrow. By the way, how is Steve?"
  • "Splendid."
  • "And Bill?"
  • Ruth drew herself up haughtily.
  • "You dare to ask about your son after Steve? How clumsy that sounds! I
  • mean you dare to put Steve before your son. I believe you've only just
  • realized that you have a son."
  • "I've only just realized there's anybody or anything in the world
  • except my wife."
  • "Well, after that I suppose I've got to forgive you. Since you have
  • asked after Bill at last, I may tell you that he's very well indeed."
  • Kirk's eyes glowed.
  • "He ought to be a great kid by now."
  • "He is."
  • "And Mamie? Have you still got her?"
  • "I wouldn't lose her for a million."
  • "And Whiskers?"
  • "I'm afraid Whiskers is gone."
  • "Not dead?"
  • "No. I gave him away."
  • "For Heaven's sake! Why?"
  • "Well, dear, the fact is, I've come around to Aunt Lora's way of
  • thinking."
  • "Eh?"
  • "About germs."
  • Kirk laughed, the first real laugh he had had for a year.
  • "That insane fad of hers!"
  • Ruth was serious.
  • "I have," she said. "We're taking a great deal more care of Bill than
  • in the old days. I hate to think of the way I used to let him run
  • around wild then. He might have died."
  • "What nonsense! He was simply bursting with health all the time."
  • "I had a horrible shock after you left," Ruth went on. "The poor little
  • fellow was awfully ill with some kind of a fever. The doctor almost
  • gave him up."
  • "Good heavens!"
  • "Aunt Lora helped me to nurse him, and she made me see how I had been
  • exposing him to all sorts of risks, and--well, now we guard against
  • them."
  • There was a silence.
  • "I grew to rely on her a great deal, Kirk, when you were away. You know
  • I always used to before we were married. She's so wonderfully strong.
  • And then when your letters stopped coming----"
  • "There aren't any postal arrangements out there in the interior. It was
  • the worst part of it--not being able to write to you or hear from you.
  • Heavens, what an exile I've been this last year! Anything may have
  • happened!"
  • "Perhaps something has," said Ruth mysteriously.
  • "What do you mean?"
  • "Wait and see. Oh, I know one thing that has happened. I've been
  • looking at you all this while trying to think what it was. You've grown
  • a beard, and it looks perfectly horrid."
  • "Sheer laziness. It shall come off this very day. I knew you would hate
  • it."
  • "I certainly do. It makes you look so old."
  • Kirk's face clouded.
  • "I feel old."
  • For the first time since he had left the ship the memory of Hank had
  • come back to him. The sight of Ruth had driven it away, but now it
  • swept back on him. The golden moment was over. Life with all its
  • troubles and its explanations and its burdening sense of failure must
  • be faced.
  • "What's the matter?" asked Ruth, startled by the sudden change.
  • "I was thinking of poor old Hank."
  • "Where is Mr. Jardine? Didn't he come back with you?"
  • "He's dead, dear," said Kirk gently. "He died of fever while we were
  • working our way back to the coast."
  • "Oh!"
  • It was the idea of death that shocked Ruth, not the particular
  • manifestation of it. Hank had not touched her life. She had begun by
  • disliking him and ended by feeling for him the tolerant sort of
  • affection which she might have bestowed upon a dog or a cat. Hank as a
  • man was nothing to her, and she could not quite keep her indifference
  • out of her voice.
  • It was only later, when he looked back on this conversation, that Kirk
  • realized this. At the moment he was unconscious of it, significant as
  • it was of the fact that there were points at which his mind and Ruth's
  • did not touch.
  • When Ruth spoke again it was to change the subject.
  • "Well, Kirk," she said, "have you come back with your trunk crammed
  • with nuggets? You haven't said a word about the mine yet, and I'm dying
  • to know."
  • He groaned inwardly. The moment he had been dreading had arrived more
  • swiftly than he had expected. It was time for him to face facts.
  • "No," he said shortly.
  • Ruth looked at him curiously. She met his eyes and saw the pain in
  • them, and intuition told her in an instant what Kirk, stumbling through
  • his story, could not have told her in an hour. She squeezed his arm
  • affectionately.
  • "Don't tell me," she said. "I understand. And it doesn't matter. It
  • doesn't matter a bit."
  • "Doesn't matter? But----"
  • Ruth's eyes were dancing.
  • "Kirk, dear, I've something to tell you. Wait till we get outside."
  • "What do you mean?"
  • "You'll soon see?"
  • They went out into the street. Against the kerb a large red automobile
  • was standing. The chauffeur touched his cap as he saw them. Kirk stared
  • at him dumbly.
  • "In you get, dear," said Ruth.
  • She met his astonished gaze with a smile of triumph. This was her
  • moment, the moment for which she had been waiting. The chauffeur
  • started the machine.
  • "I don't understand. Whose car is this?"
  • "Mine. Yours. Ours. Oh, Kirk, darling, I was so afraid that you would
  • come back bulging with a fortune that would make my little one look
  • like nothing. But you haven't, you haven't, and it's just splendid."
  • She caught his hand and pressed it. "It's simply sweet of you to look
  • so astonished. I was hoping you would. This car belongs to us, and
  • there's another just as big besides, and a house, and--oh--everything
  • you can think of. Kirk, dear, we've nothing to worry us any longer.
  • We're rich!"
  • Chapter II
  • An Unknown Path
  • Kirk blinked. He closed his eyes and opened them again. The automobile
  • was still there, and he was still in it. Ruth was still gazing at him
  • with the triumphant look in her eyes. The chauffeur, silent emblem of a
  • substantial bank-balance, still sat stiffly at the steering-wheel.
  • "Rich?" Kirk repeated.
  • "Rich," Ruth assured him.
  • "I don't understand."
  • Ruth's smile faded.
  • "Poor father----"
  • "Your father?"
  • "He died just after you sailed. Just before Bill got ill." She gave a
  • little sigh. "Kirk, how odd life is!"
  • "But-----"
  • "It was terrible. It was some kind of a stroke. He had been working too
  • hard and taking no exercise. You know when he sent Steve away that time
  • he didn't engage anybody else in his place. He went back to his old way
  • of living, which the doctor had warned him against. He worked and
  • worked, until one day, Bailey says, he fainted at the office. They
  • brought him home, and he just went out like a burned-out candle. I--I
  • went to him, but for a long time he wouldn't see me.
  • "Oh, Kirk, the hours I spent in the library hoping that he would let me
  • come to him! But he never did till right at the end. Then I went up,
  • and he was dying. He couldn't speak. I don't know now how he felt
  • toward me at the last. I kissed him. He was all shrunk to nothing. I
  • had a horrible feeling that I had never been a real daughter to him.
  • But--but--you know, he made it difficult, awfully difficult. And then
  • he died; Bailey was on one side of the bed and I was on the other, and
  • the nurse and the doctor were whispering outside the door. I could hear
  • them through the transom."
  • She slipped her hand into Kirk's and sat silent while the car slid into
  • the traffic of Fifth Avenue. For the second time the shadow of the
  • Great Mystery had fallen on the brightness of the perfect morning.
  • The car had stopped at Thirty-Fourth Street to allow the hurrying
  • crowds to cross the avenue. Kirk looked at them with a feeling of
  • sadness. It was not caused by John Bannister's death. He was too honest
  • to be able to plunge himself into false emotion at will. His feeling
  • was more a vague uneasiness, almost a presentiment. Things changed so
  • quickly in this world. Old landmarks shifted as the crowd of strangers
  • was shifting before him now, hurrying into his life and hurrying out of
  • it.
  • He, too, had changed. Ruth, though he had detected no signs of it,
  • must be different from the Ruth he had left a year ago. The old life
  • was dead. What had the new life in store for him? Wealth for one
  • thing--other standards of living--new experiences.
  • An odd sensation of regret that this stream of gold had descended upon
  • him deepened his momentary depression. They had been so happy, he and
  • Ruth and the kid, in the old days of the hermit's cell. Something that
  • was almost a superstitious fear of this unexpected legacy came upon
  • him.
  • It was unlucky money, grudgingly given at the eleventh hour. He seemed
  • to feel John Bannister watching him with a sneer, and he was afraid of
  • him. His nerves were still a little unstrung from the horror of his
  • wanderings, and the fever had left him weak. It seemed to him that
  • there was a curse on the old man's wealth, that somehow it was destined
  • to bring him unhappiness.
  • The policeman waved his hand. The car jerked forward. The sudden
  • movement brought him to himself. He smiled, a little ashamed of having
  • been so fanciful; the sky was blue; the sun shone; a cool breeze put
  • the joy of life into him; and at his side Ruth sat, smiling now. From
  • her, too, the cloud had been lifted.
  • "It seems like a fairy-story," said Kirk, breaking the silence that had
  • fallen between them.
  • "I think it must have been the thought of Bill that made him do it,"
  • said Ruth. "He left half his money to Bailey and half to me during my
  • lifetime. Bailey's married now, by the way." She paused. "I'm afraid
  • father never forgave you, dear," she added. "He made Bailey the trustee
  • for the money, and it goes to Bill in trust after my death."
  • She looked at him rather nervously it seemed to Kirk. The terms of the
  • will had been the cause of some trouble to her. Especially had she
  • speculated on his reception of the news that Bailey was to play so
  • important a part in the administration of the money. Kirk had never
  • told her what had passed between him and Bailey that afternoon in the
  • studio, but her quick intelligence had enabled her to guess at the
  • truth; and she was aware that the minds of the two men, their
  • temperaments, were naturally antagonistic.
  • Kirk's reception of the news relieved her.
  • "Of course," he said. "He couldn't do anything else. He knew nothing of
  • me except that I was a kind of man with whom he was quite out of
  • sympathy. He mistrusted all artists, I expect, in a bunch. And, anyway,
  • an artist is pretty sure to be a bad man of business. He would know
  • that. And--and, well, what I mean is, it strikes me as a very sensible
  • arrangement. Why are we stopping here?"
  • The car had drawn up before a large house on the upper avenue, one of
  • those houses which advertise affluence with as little reticence as a
  • fat diamond solitaire.
  • "We live here," said Ruth, laughing.
  • Kirk drew a long breath.
  • "Do we? By George!" he exclaimed. "I see it's going to take me quite a
  • while to get used to this state of things."
  • A thought struck him.
  • "How about the studio? Have you got rid of it?"
  • "Of course not. The idea! After the perfect times we had there! We're
  • going to keep it on as an annex. Every now and then, when we are tired
  • of being rich, we'll creep off there and boil eggs over the gas-stove
  • and pretend we are just ordinary persons again."
  • "And oftener than every now and then this particular plutocrat is going
  • to creep off there and try to teach himself to paint pictures."
  • Ruth nodded.
  • "Yes, I think you ought to have a hobby. It's good for you."
  • Kirk said nothing. But it was not as a hobby that he was regarding his
  • painting. He had come to a knowledge of realities in the wilderness and
  • to an appreciation of the fact that he had a soul which could not be
  • kept alive except by honest work.
  • He had the decent man's distaste for living on his wife's money. He
  • supposed it was inevitable that a certain portion of it must go to his
  • support, but he was resolved that there should be in the sight of the
  • gods who look down on human affairs at least a reasonable excuse for
  • his existence. If work could make him anything approaching a real
  • artist, he would become one.
  • Meanwhile he was quite willing that Ruth should look upon his life-work
  • as a pleasant pastime to save him from ennui. Even to his wife a man is
  • not always eager to exhibit his soul in its nakedness.
  • "By the way," said Ruth, "you won't find George Pennicut at the studio.
  • He has gone back to England."
  • "I'm sorry. I liked George."
  • "He liked you. He left all sorts of messages. He nearly wept when he
  • said good-bye. But he wouldn't stop. In a burst of confidence he told
  • me what the trouble was. Our blue sky had got on his nerves. He wanted
  • a London drizzle again. He said the thought of it made him homesick."
  • Kirk entered the house thoughtfully. Somehow this last piece of news
  • had put the coping-stone on the edifice of his--his what? Depression? It
  • was hardly that. No, it was rather a kind of vague regret for the life
  • which had so definitely ended, the feeling which the Romans called
  • _desiderium_ and the Greeks _pathos_. The defection of George
  • Pennicut was a small thing in itself, but it meant the removal of
  • another landmark.
  • "We had some bully good times in that studio," he said.
  • The words were a requiem.
  • The first person whom he met in this great house, in the kingdom of
  • which he was to be king-consort, was a butler of incredible
  • stateliness. This was none other than Steve's friend Keggs. But round
  • the outlying portions of this official he had perceived, as the door
  • opened, a section of a woman in a brown dress.
  • The butler moving to one side, he found himself confronting Mrs. Lora
  • Delane Porter.
  • If other things in Kirk's world had changed, time had wrought in vain
  • upon the great authoress. She looked as masterful, as unyielding, and
  • as efficient as she had looked at the time of his departure. She took
  • his hand without emotion and inspected him keenly.
  • "You are thinner," she remarked.
  • "I said that, Aunt Lora," said Ruth. "Poor boy, he's a skeleton."
  • "You are not so robust."
  • "I have been ill."
  • Ruth interposed.
  • "He's had fever, Aunt Lora, and you are not to tease him."
  • "I should be the last person to tease any man. What sort of fever?"
  • "I think it was a blend of all sorts," replied Kirk. "A kind of Irish
  • stew of a fever."
  • "You are not infectious?"
  • "Certainly not."
  • Mrs. Porter checked Ruth as she was about to speak.
  • "We owe it to William to be careful," she explained. "After all the
  • trouble we have taken to exclude him from germs it is only reasonable
  • to make these inquiries."
  • "Come along, dear," said Ruth, "and I'll show you the house. Don't mind
  • Aunt Lora," she whispered; "she means well, and she really is splendid
  • with Bill."
  • Kirk followed her. He was feeling chilled again. His old mistrust of
  • Mrs. Porter revived. If their brief interview was to be taken as
  • evidence, she seemed to have regained entirely her old ascendancy over
  • Ruth. He felt vaguely uneasy, as a man might who walks in a powder
  • magazine.
  • "Aunt Lora lives here now," observed Ruth casually, as they went
  • upstairs.
  • Kirk started.
  • "Literally, do you mean? Is this her home?"
  • Ruth smiled at him over her shoulder.
  • "She won't interfere with you," she said. "Surely this great house is
  • large enough for the three of us. Besides, she's so devoted to Bill.
  • She looks after him all the time; of course, nowadays I don't get quite
  • so much time to be with him myself. One has an awful lot of calls on
  • one. I feel Bill is so safe with Aunt Lora on the premises."
  • She stopped at a door on the first floor.
  • "This is Bill's nursery. He's out just now. Mamie takes him for a drive
  • every morning when it's fine."
  • Something impelled Kirk to speak.
  • "Don't you ever take him for walks in the morning now?" he asked. "He
  • used to love it."
  • "Silly! Of course I do, when I can manage it. For drives, rather. Aunt
  • Lora is rather against his walking much in the city. He might so easily
  • catch something, you know."
  • She opened the door.
  • "There!" she said. "What do you think of that for a nursery?"
  • If Kirk had spoken his mind he would have said that of all the ghastly
  • nurseries the human brain could have conceived this was the ghastliest.
  • It was a large, square room, and to Kirk's startled eyes had much the
  • appearance of an operating theatre at a hospital.
  • There was no carpet on the tiled floor. The walls, likewise tiled, were
  • so bare that the eye ached contemplating them. In the corner by the
  • window stood the little white cot. Beside it on the wall hung a large
  • thermometer. Various knobs of brass decorated the opposite wall. At the
  • farther end of the room was a bath, complete with shower and all the
  • other apparatus of a modern tub.
  • It was probably the most horrible room in all New York.
  • "Well, what do you think of it?" demanded Ruth proudly.
  • Kirk gazed at her, speechless. This, he said to himself, was Ruth, his
  • wife, who had housed his son in the spare bedroom of the studio and
  • allowed a shaggy Irish terrier to sleep on his bed; who had permitted
  • him to play by the hour in the dust of the studio floor, who had even
  • assisted him to do so by descending into the dust herself in the role
  • of a bear or a snake.
  • What had happened to this world from which he had been absent but one
  • short year? Was everybody mad, or was he hopelessly behind the times?
  • "Well?" Ruth reminded him.
  • Kirk eyed the dreadful room.
  • "It looks clean," he said at last.
  • "It is clean," said the voice of Lora Delane Porter proudly behind him.
  • She had followed them up the stairs to do the honours of the nursery,
  • the centre of her world. "It is essentially clean. There is not an
  • object in that room which is not carefully sterilized night and morning
  • with a weak solution of boric acid!"
  • "Even Mamie?" inquired Kirk.
  • It had been his intention to be mildly jocular, but Mrs. Porter's reply
  • showed him that in jest he had spoken the truth.
  • "Certainly. Have you any idea, Kirk, of the number of germs there are
  • on the surface of the human body? It runs into billions. You"--she
  • fixed him with her steely eye--"you are at the present moment one mass
  • of microbes."
  • "I sneaked through quarantine all right."
  • "To the adult there is not so much danger in these microbes, provided
  • he or she maintains a reasonable degree of personal cleanliness. That
  • is why adults may be permitted to mix with other adults without
  • preliminary sterilization. But in the case of a growing child it is
  • entirely different. No precaution is excessive. So----"
  • From below at this point there came the sound of the front-door bell.
  • Ruth went to the landing and looked over the banisters.
  • "That ought to be Bill and Mamie back from their drive," she said.
  • The sound of a child's voice came to Kirk as he stood listening; and as
  • he heard it all the old feeling of paternal pride and excitement, which
  • had left him during his wanderings, swept over him like a wave. He
  • reproached himself that, while the memory of Ruth had been with him
  • during every waking moment of the past year, there had been occasions
  • when that of William Bannister had become a little faded.
  • He ran down the stairs.
  • "Hello, Mamie!" he said. "How are you? You're looking well."
  • Mamie greeted him with the shy smile which was wont to cause such havoc
  • in Steve's heart.
  • "And who's this you've got with you? Mamie, you know you've no business
  • going about with young men like this. Who is he?"
  • He stood looking at William Bannister, and William Bannister stood
  • looking at him, Kirk smiling, William staring with the intense gravity
  • of childhood and trying to place this bearded stranger among his circle
  • of friends. He seemed to be thinking that the familiarity of the
  • other's manner indicated a certain amount of previous acquaintanceship.
  • "Watch that busy brain working," said Kirk. "He's trying to place me.
  • It's all right, Bill, old man; it's my fault. I had no right to spring
  • myself on you with eight feet of beard. It isn't giving you a square
  • deal. Never mind, it's coming off in a few minutes, never to return,
  • and then, perhaps, you'll remember that you've a father."
  • "Fa-a-a-ar!" shrieked William Bannister triumphantly, taking the cue
  • with admirable swiftness.
  • He leaped at Kirk, and Kirk swung him up in
  • the air. It was quite an effort, for William Bannister had grown
  • astonishingly in the past year.
  • "Pop," said he firmly, as if resolved to prevent any possibility of
  • mistake. "Daddy," he added, continuing to play upon the theme. He
  • summed up. "You're my pop."
  • Then, satisfied that this was final and that there could now be no
  • chance for Kirk to back out of the contract, he reached out a hand and
  • gave a tug at the beard which had led to all the confusion.
  • "What's this?"
  • "You may well ask," said Kirk. "I got struck that way because I left
  • you and mummy for a whole year. But now I'm back I'm going to be
  • allowed to take it off and give it away. Whom shall I give it to?
  • Steve? Do you think Steve would like it? Yes, you can go on pulling it;
  • it won't break. On the other hand, I should just like to mention that
  • it's hurting something fierce, my son. It's fastened on at the other
  • end, you know."
  • "Why?"
  • "Don't ask me. That's the way it's built."
  • William Bannister obligingly disentangled himself from the beard.
  • "Where you been?" he inquired.
  • "Miles and miles away. You know the Battery?"
  • William Bannister nodded.
  • "Well, a long way past that. First I took a ship and went ever so many
  • miles. Then I landed and went ever so many more miles, with all sorts
  • of beasts trying to bite pieces out of me."
  • This interested William Bannister.
  • "Tigers?" he inquired.
  • "I didn't actually see any tigers, but I expect they were sneaking
  • round. There were mosquitoes, though. You know what a mosquito is?"
  • William nodded.
  • "Bumps," he observed crisply.
  • "That's right. You see this lump here, just above my mouth? Well,
  • that's not a mosquito-bite; that's my nose; but think of something
  • about that size and you'll have some idea of what a mosquito-bite is
  • like out there. But why am I boring you with my troubles? Tell me all
  • about yourself. You've certainly been growing, whatever else you may
  • have been doing while I've been away; I can hardly lift you. Has Steve
  • taught you to box yet?"
  • At this moment he was aware that he had become the centre of a small
  • group. Looking round he found himself gazing into a face so stiff with
  • horror and disapproval that he was startled almost into dropping
  • William. What could have happened to induce Mrs. Porter to look like
  • that he could not imagine; but her expression checked his flow of light
  • conversation as if it had been turned off with a switch. He lowered
  • Bill to the ground.
  • "What on earth's the matter?" he asked. "What has happened?"
  • Without replying, Mrs. Porter made a gesture in the direction of the
  • nursery, which had the effect of sending Mamie and her charge off again
  • on the journey upstairs which Kirk's advent had interrupted. Bill
  • seemed sorry to go, but he trudged sturdily on without remark. Kirk
  • followed him with his eyes till he disappeared at the bend of the
  • stairway.
  • "What's the matter?" he repeated.
  • "Are you mad, Kirk?" demanded Mrs. Porter in a tense voice.
  • Kirk turned helplessly to Ruth.
  • "You had better let me explain, Aunt Lora," she said. "Of course Kirk
  • couldn't be expected to know, poor boy. You seem to forget that he has
  • only this minute come into the house."
  • Aunt Lora was not to be appeased.
  • "That is absolutely no excuse. He has just left a ship where he cannot
  • have failed to pick up bacilli of every description. He has himself
  • only recently recovered from a probably infectious fever. He is wearing
  • a beard, notoriously the most germ-ridden abomination in existence."
  • Kirk started. He was not proud of his beard, but he had not regarded it
  • as quite the pestilential thing which it seemed to be in the eyes of
  • Mrs. Porter.
  • "And he picks up the child!" she went on. "Hugs him! Kisses him! And
  • you say he could not have known better! Surely the most elementary
  • common sense--"
  • "Aunt Lora!" said Ruth.
  • She spoke quietly, but there was a note in her voice which acted on
  • Mrs. Porter like magic. Her flow of words ceased abruptly. It was a
  • small incident, but it had the effect of making Kirk, grateful as he
  • was for the interruption, somehow vaguely uneasy for a moment.
  • It seemed to indicate some subtle change in Ruth's character, some new
  • quality of hardness added to it. The Ruth he had left when he sailed
  • for Colombia would, he felt, have been incapable of quelling her
  • masterful aunt so very decisively and with such an economy of words. It
  • suggested previous warfare, in which the elder women had been subdued
  • to a point where a mere exclamation could pull her up when she forgot
  • herself.
  • Kirk felt uncomfortable. He did not like these sudden discoveries about
  • Ruth.
  • "I will explain to Kirk," she said. "You go up and see that everything
  • is right in the nursery."
  • And--amazing spectacle!--off went Mrs. Porter without another word.
  • Ruth put her arm in Kirk's and led him off to the smoking-room.
  • "You may smoke a cigar while I tell you all about Bill," she said.
  • Kirk lit a cigar, bewildered. It is always unpleasant to be the person
  • to whom things have to be explained.
  • "Poor old boy," Ruth went on, "you certainly are thin. But about Bill.
  • I am afraid you are going to be a little upset about Bill, Kirk. Aunt
  • Lora has no tact, and she will make a speech on every possible
  • occasion; but she was right just now. It really was rather dangerous,
  • picking Bill up like that and kissing him."
  • Kirk stared.
  • "I don't understand. Did you expect me to wave my hand to him? Or would
  • it have been more correct to bow?"
  • "Don't be so satirical, Kirk; you wither me. No, seriously, you really
  • mustn't kiss Bill. I never do. Nobody does."
  • "What!"
  • "I dare say it sounds ridiculous to you, but you were not here when he
  • was so ill and nearly died. You remember what I was telling you at the
  • dock? About giving Whiskers away? Well, this is all part of it. After
  • what happened I feel, like Aunt Lora, that we simply can't take too
  • many precautions. You saw his nursery. Well, it would be simply a waste
  • of money giving him a nursery like that if he was allowed to be exposed
  • to infection when he was out of it."
  • "And I am supposed to be infectious?"
  • "Not more than anybody else. There's no need to be hurt about it. It's
  • just as much a sacrifice for me."
  • "So nobody makes a fuss over Bill now--is that it?"
  • "Well, no. Not in the way you mean."
  • "Pretty dreary outlook for the kid, isn't it?"
  • "It's all for his good."
  • "What a ghastly expression!"
  • Ruth left her chair and came and sat on the arm of Kirk's. She ruffled
  • his hair lightly with the tips of her fingers. Kirk, who had been
  • disposed to be militant, softened instantly. The action brought back
  • a flood of memories. It conjured up recollections of peaceful evenings
  • in the old studio, for this had been a favourite habit of Ruth's. It
  • made him feel that he loved her more than he had ever done in his life;
  • and--incidentally--that he was a brute to try and thwart her in anything
  • whatsoever.
  • "I know it's horrid for you, dear old boy," said Ruth coaxingly; "but
  • do be good and not make a fuss about it. Not kissing Bill doesn't mean
  • that you need be any the less fond of him. I know it will be strange at
  • first--I didn't get used to it for ever so long--but, honestly, it is
  • for his good, however ghastly the expression of the thing may sound."
  • "It's treating the kid like a wretched invalid," grumbled Kirk.
  • "You wait till you see him playing, and then you'll know if he's a
  • wretched invalid or not!"
  • "May I see him playing?"
  • "Don't be silly. Of course."
  • "I thought I had better ask. Being the perambulating plague-spot I am,
  • I was not taking any risks."
  • "How horribly self-centred you are! You will talk as if you were in
  • some special sort of quarantine. I keep on telling you it's the same
  • for all of us."
  • "I suppose when I'm with him I shall have to be sterilized?"
  • "I don't think it necessary myself, but Aunt Lora does, so it's always
  • done. It humours her, and it really isn't any trouble. Besides, it may
  • be necessary after all. One never knows, and it's best to be on the
  • safe side."
  • Kirk laid down his cigar firmly, the cold cigar which stress of emotion
  • had made him forget to keep alight.
  • "Ruth, old girl," he said earnestly, "this is pure lunacy."
  • Ruth's fingers wandered idly through his hair. She did not speak for
  • some moments.
  • "You will be good about it, won't you, Kirk dear?" she said at last.
  • It is curious what a large part hair and its treatment may play in the
  • undoing of strong men. The case of Samson may be recalled in this
  • connection. Kirk, with Ruth ruffling the wiry growth that hid his
  • scalp, was incapable of serious opposition. He tried to be morose and
  • resolute, but failed miserably.
  • "Oh, very well," he grunted.
  • "That's a good boy. And you promise you won't go hugging Bill again?"
  • "Very well."
  • "There's an angel for you. Now I'll fix you a cocktail as a reward."
  • "Well, mind you sterilize it carefully."
  • Ruth laughed. Having gained her point she could afford to. She made the
  • cocktail and brought it to him.
  • "And now I'll be off and dress, and then you can take me out to lunch
  • somewhere."
  • "Aren't you dressed?"
  • "My goodness, no. Not for going to restaurants. You forget that I'm one
  • of the idle rich now. I spend my whole day putting on different kinds
  • of clothes. I've a position to keep up now, Mr. Winfield."
  • Kirk lit a fresh cigar and sat thinking. The old feeling of desolation
  • which had attacked him as he came up the bay had returned. He felt like
  • a stranger in a strange world. Life was not the same. Ruth was not the
  • same. Nothing was the same.
  • The more he contemplated the new regulations affecting Bill the
  • chillier and more unfriendly did they seem to him. He could not bring
  • himself to realize Ruth as one of the great army of cranks preaching
  • and carrying out the gospel of Lora Delane Porter. It seemed so at
  • variance with her character as he had known it. He could not seriously
  • bring himself to believe that she genuinely approved of these absurd
  • restrictions. Yet, apparently she did.
  • He looked into the future. It had a grey and bleak aspect. He seemed to
  • himself like a man gazing down an unknown path full of unknown perils.
  • Chapter III
  • The Misadventure of Steve
  • Kirk was not the only person whom the sudden change in the financial
  • position of the Winfield family had hit hard. The blighting effects of
  • sudden wealth had touched Steve while Kirk was still in Colombia.
  • In a sense, it had wrecked Steve's world. Nobody had told him to stop
  • or even diminish the number of his visits, but the fact remained that,
  • by the time Kirk returned to New York, he had practically ceased to go
  • to the house on Fifth Avenue.
  • For all his roughness, Steve possessed a delicacy which sometimes
  • almost amounted to diffidence; and he did not need to be told that
  • there was a substantial difference, as far as he was concerned, between
  • the new headquarters of the family and the old. At the studio he had
  • been accustomed to walk in when it pleased him, sure of a welcome; but
  • he had an idea that he did not fit as neatly into the atmosphere of
  • Fifth Avenue as he had done into that of Sixty-First Street; and nobody
  • disabused him of it.
  • It was perhaps the presence of Mrs. Porter that really made the
  • difference. In spite of the compliments she had sometimes paid to his
  • common sense, Mrs. Porter did not put Steve at his ease. He was almost
  • afraid of her. Consequently, when he came to Fifth Avenue, he remained
  • below stairs, talking pugilism with Keggs.
  • It was from Keggs that he first learned of the changes that had taken
  • place in the surroundings of William Bannister.
  • "I've 'ad the privilege of serving in some of the best houses in
  • England," said the butler one evening, as they sat smoking in the
  • pantry, "and I've never seen such goings on. I don't hold with the
  • pampering of children."
  • "What do you mean, pampering?" asked Steve.
  • "Well, Lord love a duck!" replied the butler, who in his moments of
  • relaxation was addicted to homely expletives of the lower London type.
  • "If you don't call it pampering, what do you call pampering? He ain't
  • allowed to touch nothing that ain't been--it's slipped my memory what
  • they call it, but it's got something to do with microbes. They sprinkle
  • stuff on his toys and on his clothes and on his nurse; what's more, and
  • on any one who comes to see him. And his nursery ain't what _I_
  • call a nursery at all. It's nothing more or less than a private
  • 'ospital, with its white tiles and its antiseptics and what not, and
  • the temperature just so and no lower nor higher. I don't call it 'aving
  • a proper faith in Providence, pampering and fussing over a child to
  • that extent."
  • "You're stringing me!"
  • "Not a bit of it, Mr. Dingle. I've seen the nursery with my own eyes,
  • and I 'ave my information direct from the young person who looks after
  • the child."
  • "But, say, in the old days that kid was about the dandiest little sport
  • that ever came down the pike. You seen him that day I brought him round
  • to say hello to the old man. He didn't have no nursery at all then, let
  • alone one with white tiles. I've seen him come up off the studio floor
  • looking like a coon with the dust. And Miss Ruth tickled to see him
  • like that, too. For the love of Mike, what's come to her?"
  • "It's all along of this Porter," said Keggs morosely. "She's done it
  • all. And if," he went on with sudden heat, "she don't break her 'abit
  • of addressing me in a tone what the 'umblest dorg would resent, I'm
  • liable to forget my place and give her a piece of my mind. Coming round
  • and interfering!"
  • "Got _your_ goat, has she?" commented Steve, interested. "She's
  • what you'd call a tough proposition, that dame. I used to have my eye
  • on her all the time in the old days, waiting for her to start
  • something. But say, I'd like to see this nursery you've been talking
  • about. Take me up and let me lamp it."
  • Keggs shook his head.
  • "I daren't, Mr. Dingle. It 'ud be as much as my place is worth."
  • "But, darn it! I'm the kid's godfather."
  • "That wouldn't make no difference to that Porter. She'd pick on me just
  • the same. But, if you care to risk it, Mr. Dingle, I'll show you where
  • it is. You'll find the young person up there. She'll tell you more
  • about the child's 'abits and daily life than I can."
  • "Good enough," said Steve.
  • He had not seen Mamie for some time, and absence had made the heart
  • grow fonder. It embittered him that his meetings with her were all too
  • rare nowadays. She seemed to have abandoned the practice of walking
  • altogether, for, whenever he saw her now she was driving in the
  • automobile with Bill. Keggs' information about the new system threw
  • some light upon this and made him all the more anxious to meet her now.
  • It was a curious delusion of Steve's that he was always going to pluck
  • up courage and propose to Mamie the very next time he saw her. This had
  • gone on now for over two years, but he still clung to it. Repeated
  • failures to reveal his burning emotions never caused him to lose the
  • conviction that he would do it for certain next time.
  • It was in his customary braced-up, do-or-die frame of mind that he
  • entered the nursery now.
  • His visit to Keggs had been rather a late one and had lasted some time
  • before the subject of the White Hope had been broached, with the result
  • that, when Steve arrived among the white tiles and antiseptics, he
  • found his godson in bed and asleep. In a chair by the cot Mamie sat
  • sewing.
  • Her eyes widened with surprise when she saw who the visitor was, and
  • she put a finger to her lip and pointed to the sleeper. And, as we have
  • to record another of the long list of Steve's failures to propose we
  • may say here, in excuse, that this reception took a great deal of the
  • edge off the dashing resolution which had been his up to that moment.
  • It made him feel self-conscious from the start.
  • "Whatever brings you up here, Steve?" whispered Mamie.
  • It was not a very tactful remark, perhaps, considering that Steve was
  • the child's godfather, and, as such, might reasonably expect to be
  • allowed a free pass to his nursery; but Mamie, like Keggs, had fallen
  • so under the domination of Lora Delane Porter that she had grown to
  • consider it almost a natural law that no one came to see Bill unless
  • approved of and personally conducted by her.
  • Steve did not answer. He was gaping at the fittings of the place in
  • which he found himself. It was precisely as Keggs had described it,
  • white tiles and all.
  • He was roused from his reflections by the approach of Mamie, or,
  • rather, not so much by her approach as by the fact that at this moment
  • she suddenly squirted something at him. It was cold and wet and hit him
  • in the face before, as he put it to Keggs later, he could get his guard
  • up.
  • "For the love of----"
  • "Sh!" said Mamie warningly.
  • "What's the idea? What are you handing me?"
  • "I've got to. It's to sterilize you. I do it to every one."
  • "Gee! You've got a swell job! Well, go to it, then. Shoot! I'm ready."
  • "It's boric acid," explained Mamie.
  • "I shouldn't wonder. Is this all part of the Porter circus?"
  • "Yes."
  • "Where is she?" inquired Steve in sudden alarm. "Is she likely to butt
  • in?"
  • "No. She's out."
  • "Good," said Steve, and sat down, relieved, to resume his inspection of
  • the room.
  • When he had finished he drew a deep breath.
  • "Well!" he said softly. "Say, Mamie, what do you think about it?"
  • "I'm not paid to think about it, Steve."
  • "That means you agree with me that it's the punkest state of things you
  • ever struck. Well, you're quite right. It is. It's a shame to think of
  • that innocent kid having this sort of deal handed to him. Why, just
  • think of him at the studio!"
  • But Mamie, whatever her private views, was loyal to her employers. She
  • refused to be drawn into a discussion on the subject.
  • "Have you been downstairs with Mr. Keggs, Steve?"
  • "Yes. It was him that told me about all this. Say, Mame, we ain't seen
  • much of each other lately."
  • "No."
  • "Mighty little."
  • "Yes."
  • Having got as far as this, Steve should, of course, have gone
  • resolutely ahead. After all, it is not a very long step from telling a
  • girl in a hushed whisper with a shake in it that you have not seen much
  • of her lately to hinting that you would like to see a great deal more
  • of her in the future.
  • Steve was on the right lines, and he knew it; but that fatal lack of
  • nerve which had wrecked him on all the other occasions when he had got
  • as far as this undid him now. He relapsed into silence, and Mamie went
  • on sewing.
  • In a way, if you shut your eyes to the white tiles and the thermometer
  • and the brass knobs and the shower-bath, it was a peaceful scene; and
  • Steve, as he sat there and watched Mamie sew, was stirred by it. Remove
  • the white tiles, the thermometer the brass knobs, and the shower-bath,
  • and this was precisely the sort of scene his imagination conjured up
  • when the business of life slackened sufficiently to allow him to dream
  • dreams.
  • There he was, sitting in one chair; there was Mamie, sitting in
  • another; and there in the corner was the little white cot--well,
  • perhaps that was being a shade too prophetic; on the other hand, it
  • always came into these dreams of his. There, in short, was everything
  • arranged just as he pictured it; and all that was needed to make the
  • picture real was for him to propose and Mamie to accept him.
  • It was the disturbing thought that the second condition did not
  • necessarily follow on to the first that had kept Steve from taking the
  • plunge for the last two years. Unlike the hero of the poem, he feared
  • his fate too much to put it to the touch, to win or lose it all.
  • Presently the silence began to oppress Steve. Mamie had her needlework,
  • and that apparently served her in lieu of conversation; but Steve had
  • nothing to occupy him, and he began to grow restless. He always
  • despised himself thoroughly for his feebleness on these occasions; and
  • he despised himself now. He determined to make a big effort.
  • "Mamie!" he said.
  • As he was nervous and had been silent so long that his vocal cords had
  • gone off duty under the impression that their day's work was over, the
  • word came out of him like a husky gunshot. Mamie started, and the White
  • Hope, who had been sleeping peacefully, stirred and muttered.
  • "S-sh!" hissed Mamie.
  • Steve collapsed with the feeling that it was not his lucky night, while
  • Mamie bent anxiously over the cot. The sleeper, however, did not wake.
  • He gurgled, gave a sigh, then resumed his interrupted repose. Mamie
  • returned to her seat.
  • "Yes?" she said, as if nothing had occurred, and as if there had been
  • no interval between Steve's remark and her reply.
  • Steve could not equal her calmness. He had been strung up when he
  • spoke, and the interruption had undone him. He reflected ruefully that
  • he might have said something to the point if he had been allowed to go
  • straight on; now he had forgotten what he had meant to say.
  • "Oh, nothing," he replied.
  • Silence fell once more on the nursery.
  • Steve was bracing himself up for another attack when suddenly there
  • came a sound of voices from the stairs. One voice was a mere murmur,
  • but the other was sharp and unmistakable, the incisive note of Lora
  • Delane Porter. It brought Steve and Mamie to their feet simultaneously.
  • "What's it matter?" said Steve stoutly, answering the panic in Mamie's
  • eyes. "It's not her house, and I got a perfect right to be here."
  • "You don't know her. I shall get into trouble."
  • Mamie was pale with apprehension. She knew her Lora Delane Porter, and
  • she knew what would happen if Steve were to be discovered there. It
  • was, as Keggs put it, as much as her place was worth.
  • For a brief instant Mamie faced a future in which she was driven from
  • Bill's presence into outer darkness, dismissed, and told never to
  • return. That was what would happen. Sitting and talking with Steve in
  • the sacred nursery at this time of night was a crime, and she had known
  • it all the time. But she had been glad to see Steve again after all
  • this while--if Steve had known how glad, he would certainly have found
  • courage and said what he had so often failed to say--and, knowing that
  • Mrs. Porter was out, she had thought the risk of his presence worth
  • taking. Now, with discovery imminent, panic came upon her.
  • The voices were quite close now. There was no doubt of the destination
  • of the speakers. They were heading slowly but directly for the nursery.
  • Steve, not being fully abreast of the new rules and regulations of the
  • sacred apartment, could not read Mamie's mind completely. He did not
  • know that, under Mrs. Porter's code, the admission of a visitor during
  • the hours of sleep was a felony in the first degree, punishable by
  • instant dismissal. But Mamie's face and her brief reference to trouble
  • were enough to tell him that the position was critical, and with the
  • instinct of the trapped he looked round him for cover.
  • But the White Hope's nursery was not constructed with a view to
  • providing cover for bulky gentlemen who should not have been there. It
  • was as bare as a billiard-table as far as practicable hiding-places
  • were concerned.
  • And then his eye caught the water-proof sheet of the shower-bath.
  • Behind that there was just room for concealment.
  • With a brief nod of encouragement to Mamie, he leaped at it. The door
  • opened as he disappeared.
  • Mrs. Porter's rules concerning visitors, though stringent as regarded
  • Mamie, were capable of being relaxed when she herself was the person to
  • relax them. She had a visitor with her now--a long, severe-looking lady
  • with a sharp nose surmounted by spectacles, who, taking in the white
  • tiles, the thermometer, the cot, and the brass knobs in a single
  • comprehensive glance, observed: "Admirable!"
  • Mrs. Porter was obviously pleased with this approval. Her companion was
  • a woman doctor of great repute among the advanced apostles of hygiene;
  • and praise from her was praise indeed. She advanced into the room with
  • an air of suppressed pride.
  • "These tiles are thoroughly cleaned twice each day with an antiseptic
  • solution."
  • "Just so," said the spectacled lady.
  • "You notice the thermometer."
  • "Exactly."
  • "Those knobs you see on the wall have various uses."
  • "Quite."
  • They examined the knobs with an air of profound seriousness, Mrs.
  • Porter erect and complacent, the other leaning forward and peering
  • through her spectacles. Mamie took advantage of their backs and turned
  • to cast a hurried glance at the water-proof curtain. It was certainly
  • an admirable screen; no sign of Steve was visible; but nevertheless she
  • did not cease to quake.
  • "This," said Mrs. Porter, "controls the heat. This, this, and this are
  • for the ventilation."
  • "Just so, just so, just so," said the doctor. "And this, of course, is
  • for the shower-bath? I understand!"
  • And, extending a firm finger, she gave the knob a forceful push.
  • Mrs. Porter nodded.
  • "That is the cold shower," she said. "This is the hot. It is a very
  • ingenious arrangement, one of Malcolmson's patents. There is a
  • regulator at the side of the bath which enables the nurse to get just
  • the correct temperature. I will turn on both, and then----"
  • It was as Mrs. Porter's hand was extended toward the knob that the
  • paralysis which terror had put upon Mamie relaxed its grip. She had
  • stood by without a movement while the cold water splashed down upon the
  • hidden Steve. Her heart had ached for him, but she had not stirred. But
  • now, with the prospect of allowing him to be boiled alive before her,
  • she acted.
  • It is generally only on the stage that a little child comes to the
  • rescue of adults at critical moments; but William Bannister was
  • accorded the opportunity of doing so off it. It happened that at the
  • moment of Mrs. Porter's entry Mamie had been standing near his cot, and
  • she had not moved since. The consequence was that she was within easy
  • reach of him; and, despair giving her what in the circumstances
  • amounted to a flash of inspiration, she leaned quickly forward, even as
  • Mrs. Porter's finger touched the knob, and gave the round head on the
  • pillow a rapid push.
  • William Bannister sat up with a grunt, rubbed his eyes, and, seeing
  • strangers, began to cry.
  • It was so obvious to Mrs. Porter and her companion, both from the
  • evidence of their guilty consciences and the look of respectful
  • reproach on Mamie's face, that the sound of their voices had disturbed
  • the child, that they were routed from the start.
  • "Oh, dear me! He is awake," said the lady doctor.
  • "I am afraid we did not lower our voices," added Mrs. Porter. "And yet
  • William is usually such a sound sleeper. Perhaps we had better----"
  • "Just so," said the doctor.
  • "----go downstairs while the nurse gets him off to sleep again."
  • "Quite."
  • The door closed behind them.
  • * * * * *
  • "Oh, Steve!" said Mamie.
  • The White Hope had gone to sleep again with the amazing speed of
  • childhood, and Mamie was looking pityingly at the bedraggled object
  • which had emerged cautiously from behind the waterproof.
  • "I got mine," muttered Steve ruefully. "You ain't got a towel anywhere,
  • have you, Mame?"
  • Mamie produced a towel and watched him apologetically as he attempted
  • to dry himself.
  • "I'm so sorry, Steve."
  • "Cut it out. It was my fault. I oughtn't to have been there. Say, it
  • was a bit of luck the kid waking just then."
  • "Yes," said Mamie.
  • Observe the tricks that conscience plays us. If Mamie had told Steve
  • what had caused William to wake he would certainly have been so charmed
  • by her presence of mind, exerted on his behalf to save him from the
  • warm fate which Mrs. Porter's unconscious hand had been about to bring
  • down upon him, that he would have forgotten his diffidence then and
  • there and, as the poet has it, have eased his bosom of much perilous
  • stuff.
  • But conscience would not allow Mamie to reveal the secret. Already she
  • was suffering the pangs of remorse for having, in however good a cause,
  • broken her idol's rest with a push that might have given the poor lamb
  • a headache. She could not confess the crime even to Steve.
  • And if Steve had had the pluck to tell Mamie that he loved her, as
  • he stood before her dripping with the water which he had suffered
  • in silence rather than betray her, she would have fallen into his
  • arms. For Steve at that moment had all the glamour for her of the
  • self-sacrificing hero of a moving-picture film. He had not actually
  • risked death for her, perhaps, but he had taken a sudden cold
  • shower-bath without a murmur--all for her.
  • Mamie was thrilled. She looked at him with the gleaming eyes of
  • devotion.
  • But Steve, just because he knew that he was wet and fancied that he
  • must look ridiculous, held his peace.
  • And presently, his secret still locked in his bosom, and his collar
  • sticking limply to his neck, he crept downstairs, avoiding the society
  • of his fellow man, and slunk out into the night where, if there was no
  • Mamie, there were, at any rate, dry clothes.
  • Chapter IV
  • The Widening Gap
  • The new life hit Kirk as a wave hits a bather; and, like a wave, swept
  • him off his feet, choked him, and generally filled him with a feeling
  • of discomfort.
  • He should have been prepared for it, but he was not. He should have
  • divined from the first that the money was bound to produce changes
  • other than a mere shifting of headquarters from Sixty-First Street to
  • Fifth Avenue. But he had deluded himself at first with the idea that
  • Ruth was different from other women, that she was superior to the
  • artificial pleasures of the Society which is distinguished by the big
  • S.
  • In a moment of weakness, induced by hair-ruffling, he had given in on
  • the point of the hygienic upbringing of William Bannister; but there,
  • he had imagined, his troubles were to cease. He had supposed that he
  • was about to resume the old hermit's-cell life of the studio and live
  • in a world which contained only Ruth, Bill, and himself.
  • He was quickly undeceived. Within two days he was made aware of the
  • fact that Ruth was in the very centre of the social whirlpool and that
  • she took it for granted that he would join her there. There was nothing
  • of the hermit about Ruth now. She was amazingly undomestic.
  • Her old distaste for the fashionable life of New York seemed to have
  • vanished absolutely. As far as Kirk could see, she was always
  • entertaining or being entertained. He was pitched head-long into a
  • world where people talked incessantly of things which bored him and did
  • things which seemed to him simply mad. And Ruth, whom he had thought he
  • understood, revelled in it all.
  • At first he tried to get at her point of view, to discover what she
  • found to enjoy in this lunatic existence of aimlessness and futility.
  • One night, as they were driving home from a dinner which had bored him
  • unspeakably, he asked the question point-blank. It seemed to him
  • incredible that she could take pleasure in an entertainment which had
  • filled him with such depression.
  • "Ruth," he said impulsively, as the car moved off, "what do you see in
  • this sort of thing? How can you stand these people? What have you in
  • common with them?"
  • "Poor old Kirk. I know you hated it to-night. But we shan't be dining
  • with the Baileys every night."
  • Bailey Bannister had been their host on that occasion, and the dinner
  • had been elaborate and gorgeous. Mrs. Bailey was now one of the leaders
  • of the younger set. Bailey, looking much more than a year older than
  • when Kirk had seen him last, had presided at the head of the table with
  • great dignity, and the meeting with him had not contributed to the
  • pleasure of Kirk's evening.
  • "Were you awfully bored? You seemed to be getting along quite well with
  • Sybil."
  • "I like her. She's good fun."
  • "She's certainly having good fun. I'd give anything to know what Bailey
  • really thinks of it. She is the most shockingly extravagant little
  • creature in New York. You know the Wilburs were quite poor, and poor
  • Sybil was kept very short. I think that marrying Bailey and having all
  • this money to play with has turned her head."
  • It struck Kirk that the criticism applied equally well to the critic.
  • "She does the most absurd things. She gave a freak dinner when you were
  • away that cost I don't know how much. She is always doing something.
  • Well, I suppose Bailey knows what he is about; but at her present pace
  • she must be keeping him busy making money to pay for all her fads. You
  • ought to paint a picture of Bailey, Kirk, as the typical patient
  • American husband. You couldn't get a better model."
  • "Suggest it to him, and let me hide somewhere where I can hear what he
  • says. Bailey has his own opinion of my pictures."
  • Ruth laughed a little nervously. She had always wondered exactly what
  • had taken place that day in the studio, and the subject was one which
  • she was shy of exhuming. She turned the conversation.
  • "What did you ask me just now? Something about----"
  • "I asked you what you had in common with these people."
  • Ruth reflected.
  • "Oh, well, it's rather difficult to say if you put it like that.
  • They're just people, you know. They are amusing sometimes. I used to
  • know most of them. I suppose that is the chief thing which brings us
  • together. They happen to be there, and if you're travelling on a road
  • you naturally talk to your fellow travellers. But why? Don't you like
  • them? Which of them didn't you like?"
  • It was Kirk's turn to reflect.
  • "Well, that's hard to answer, too. I don't think I actively liked or
  • disliked any of them. They seemed to me just not worth while. My point
  • is, rather, why are we wasting a perfectly good evening mixing with
  • them? What's the use? That's my case in a nut-shell."
  • "If you put it like that, what's the use of anything? One must do
  • something. We can't be hermits."
  • A curious feeling of being infinitely far from Ruth came over Kirk. She
  • dismissed his dream as a whimsical impossibility not worthy of serious
  • consideration. Why could they not be hermits? They had been hermits
  • before, and it had been the happiest period of both their lives. Why,
  • just because an old man had died and left them money, must they rule
  • out the best thing in life as impossible and plunge into a nightmare
  • which was not life at all?
  • He had tried to deceive himself, but he could do so no longer. Ruth had
  • changed. The curse with which his sensitive imagination had invested
  • John Bannister's legacy was, after all no imaginary curse. Like a
  • golden wedge, it had forced Ruth and himself apart.
  • Everything had changed. He was no longer the centre of Ruth's life. He
  • was just an encumbrance, a nuisance who could not be got rid of and
  • must remain a permanent handicap, always in the way.
  • So thought Kirk morbidly as the automobile passed through the silent
  • streets. It must be remembered that he had been extremely bored for a
  • solid three hours, and was predisposed, consequently, to gloomy
  • thoughts.
  • Whatever his faults, Kirk rarely whined. He had never felt so miserable
  • in his life, but he tried to infuse a tone of lightness into the
  • conversation. After all, if Ruth's intuition fell short of enabling her
  • to understand his feelings, nothing was to be gained by parading them.
  • "I guess it's my fault," he said, "that I haven't got abreast of the
  • society game as yet. You had better give me a few pointers. My trouble
  • is that, being new to them, I can't tell whether these people are types
  • or exceptions. Take Clarence Grayling, for instance. Are there any more
  • at home like Clarence?"
  • "My dear child, _all_ Bailey's special friends are like Clarence,
  • exactly like. I remember telling him so once."
  • "Who was the specimen with the little black moustache who thought
  • America crude and said that the only place to live in was southern
  • Italy? Is he an isolated case or an epidemic?"
  • "He is scarcer than Clarence, but he's quite a well-marked type. He is
  • the millionaire's son who has done Europe and doesn't mean you to
  • forget it."
  • "There was a chesty person with a wave of hair coming down over his
  • forehead. A sickeningly handsome fellow who looked like a poet. I think
  • they called him Basil. Does he run around in flocks, or is he unique?"
  • Ruth did not reply for a moment. Basil Milbank was a part of the past
  • which, in the year during which Kirk had been away, had come rather
  • startlingly to life.
  • There had been a time when Basil had been very near and important to
  • her. Indeed, but for the intervention of Mrs. Porter, described in an
  • earlier passage, she would certainly have married Basil. Then Kirk had
  • crossed her path and had monopolized her. During the studio period the
  • recollection of Basil had grown faint. After that, just at the moment
  • when Kirk was not there to lend her strength, he had come back into her
  • life. For nearly a year she had seen him daily; and gradually--at first
  • almost with fear--she had realized that the old fascination was by no
  • means such a thing of the past as she had supposed.
  • She had hoped for Kirk's return as a general, sorely pressed, hopes for
  • reinforcements. With Kirk at her side she felt Basil would slip back
  • into his proper place in the scheme of things. And, behold! Kirk had
  • returned and still the tension remained unrelaxed.
  • For Kirk had changed. After the first day she could not conceal it from
  • herself. That it was she who had changed did not present itself to her
  • as a possible explanation of the fact that she now felt out of touch
  • with her husband. All she knew was that they had been linked together
  • by bonds of sympathy, and were so no longer.
  • She found Kirk dull. She hated to admit it, but the truth forced itself
  • upon her. He had begun to bore her.
  • She collected her thoughts and answered his question.
  • "Basil Milbank? Oh, I should call him unique."
  • She felt a wild impulse to warn him, to explain the real significance
  • of this man whom he classed contemptuously with Clarence Grayling and
  • that absurd little Dana Ferris as somebody of no account. She wanted to
  • cry out to him that she was in danger and that only he could help her.
  • But she could not speak, and Kirk went on in the same tone of
  • half-tolerant contempt:
  • "Who is he?"
  • She controlled herself with an effort, and answered indifferently.
  • "Oh, Basil? Well, you might say he's everything. He plays polo, leads
  • cotillions, yachts, shoots, plays the piano wonderfully--everything.
  • People usually like him very much." She paused. "Women especially."
  • She had tried to put something into her tone which might serve to
  • awaken him, something which might prepare the way for what she wanted
  • to say--and what, if she did not say it now--when the mood was on her,
  • she could never say. But Kirk was deaf.
  • "He looks that sort of man," he said.
  • And, as he said it, the accumulated boredom of the past three hours
  • found vent in a vast yawn.
  • Ruth set her teeth. She felt as if she had received a blow.
  • When he spoke again it was on the subject of street-paving defects in
  • New York City.
  • * * * * *
  • It was true, as Ruth had said, that they did not dine with the Baileys
  • every night, but that seemed to Kirk, as the days went on, the one and
  • only bright spot in the new state of affairs. He could not bring
  • himself to treat life with a philosophical resignation. His was not
  • open revolt. He was outwardly docile, but inwardly he rebelled
  • furiously.
  • Perhaps the unnaturally secluded life which he had led since his
  • marriage had unfitted him for mixing in society even more than nature
  • had done. He had grown out of the habit of mixing. Crowds irritated
  • him. He hated doing the same thing at the same time as a hundred other
  • people.
  • Like most Bohemians, he was at his best in a small circle. He liked his
  • friends as single spies, not in battalions. He was a man who should
  • have had a few intimates and no acquaintances; and his present life was
  • bounded north, south, east, and west by acquaintances. Most of the men
  • to whom he spoke he did not even know by name.
  • He would seek information from Ruth as they drove home.
  • "Who was the pop-eyed second-story man with the bald head and the
  • convex waistcoat who glued himself to me to-night?"
  • "If you mean the fine old gentleman with the slightly prominent eyes
  • and rather thin hair, that was Brock Mason, the vice-president of
  • consolidated groceries. You mustn't even think disrespectfully of a man
  • as rich as that."
  • "He isn't what you would call a sparkling talker."
  • "He doesn't have to be. His time is worth a hundred dollars a minute,
  • or a second--I forget which."
  • "Put me down for a nickel's worth next time."
  • And then they began to laugh over Ruth's suggestion that they should
  • save up and hire Mr. Mason for an afternoon and make him keep quiet all
  • the time; for Ruth was generally ready to join him in ridiculing their
  • new acquaintances. She had none of that reverence for the great and the
  • near-great which, running to seed, becomes snobbery.
  • It was this trait in her which kept alive, long after it might have
  • died, the hope that her present state of mind was only a phase, and
  • that, when she had tired of the new game, she would become the old Ruth
  • of the studio. But, when he was honest with himself, he was forced to
  • admit that she showed no signs of ever tiring of it.
  • They had drifted apart. They were out of touch with each other. It was
  • not an uncommon state of things in the circle in which Kirk now found
  • himself. Indeed, it seemed to him that the semi-detached couple was the
  • rule rather than the exception.
  • But there was small consolation in this reflection. He was not at all
  • interested in the domestic troubles of the people he mixed with. His
  • own hit him very hard.
  • Ruth had criticized little Mrs. Bailey, but there was no doubt that she
  • herself had had her head turned quite as completely by the new life.
  • The first time that Kirk realized this was when he came upon an article
  • in a Sunday paper, printed around a blurred caricature which professed
  • to be a photograph of Mrs. Kirk Winfield, in which she was alluded to
  • with reverence and gusto as one of society's leading hostesses. In the
  • course of the article reference was made to no fewer than three freak
  • dinners of varying ingenuity which she had provided for her delighted
  • friends.
  • It was this that staggered Kirk. That Mrs. Bailey should indulge in
  • this particular form of insanity was intelligible. But that Ruth should
  • have descended to it was another thing altogether.
  • He did not refer to the article when he met Ruth, but he was more than
  • ever conscious of the gap between them--the gap which was widening
  • every day.
  • The experiences he had undergone during the year of his wandering had
  • strengthened Kirk considerably, but nature is not easily expelled; and
  • the constitutional weakness of character which had hampered him through
  • life prevented him from making any open protests or appeal. Moreover,
  • he could understand now her point of view, and that disarmed him.
  • He saw how this state of things had come about. In a sense, it was the
  • natural state of things. Ruth had been brought up in certain
  • surroundings. Her love for him, new and overwhelming, had enabled her
  • to free herself temporarily from these surroundings and to become
  • reconciled to a life for which, he told himself, she had never been
  • intended. Fate had thrown her back into her natural sphere. And now she
  • revelled in the old environment as an exile revels in the life of the
  • homeland from which he has been so long absent.
  • That was the crux of the tragedy. Ruth was at home. He was not. Ruth
  • was among her own people. He was a stranger among strangers, a prisoner
  • in a land where men spoke with an alien tongue.
  • There was nothing to be done. The gods had played one of their
  • practical jokes, and he must join in the laugh against himself and try
  • to pretend that he was not hurt.
  • Chapter V
  • The Real Thing
  • Kirk sat in the nursery with his chin on his hands, staring gloomily
  • at William Bannister. On the floor William Bannister played some game
  • of his own invention with his box of bricks.
  • They were alone. It was the first time they had been alone together for
  • two weeks. As a rule, when Kirk paid his daily visit, Lora Delane
  • Porter was there, watchful and forbidding, prepared, on the slightest
  • excuse, to fall upon him with rules and prohibitions. To-day she was
  • out, and Kirk had the field to himself, for Mamie, whose duty it was to
  • mount guard, and who had been threatened with many terrible things by
  • Mrs. Porter if she did not stay on guard, had once more allowed her too
  • sympathetic nature to get the better of her and had vanished.
  • Kirk was too dispirited to take advantage of his good fortune. He had a
  • sense of being there on parole, of being on his honour not to touch. So
  • he sat in his chair, and looked at Bill; while Bill, crooning to
  • himself, played decorously with bricks.
  • The truth had been a long time in coming home to Kirk, but it had
  • reached him at last. Ever since his return he had clung to the belief
  • that it was a genuine conviction of its merits that had led Ruth to
  • support her aunt's scheme for Bill's welfare. He himself had always
  • looked on the exaggerated precautions for the maintenance of the
  • latter's health as ridiculous and unnecessary; but he had acquiesced in
  • them because he thought that Ruth sincerely believed them
  • indispensable.
  • After all, he had not been there when Bill so nearly died, and he could
  • understand that the shock of that episode might have distorted the
  • judgment even of a woman so well balanced as Ruth. He was quite ready
  • to be loyal to her in the matter, however distasteful it might be to
  • him.
  • But now he saw the truth. A succession of tiny incidents had brought
  • light to him. Ruth might or might not be to some extent genuine in her
  • belief in the new system, but her chief motive for giving it her
  • support was something quite different. He had tried not to admit to
  • himself, but he could do so no longer. Ruth allowed Mrs. Porter to have
  • her way because it suited her to do so; because, with Mrs. Porter on
  • the premises, she had more leisure in which to amuse herself; because,
  • to put it in a word, the child had begun to bore her.
  • Everything pointed to that. In the old days it had been her chief
  • pleasure to be with the boy. Their walks in the park had been a daily
  • ceremony with which nothing had been allowed to interfere. But now she
  • always had some excuse for keeping away from him.
  • Her visits to the nursery, when she did go there, were brief and
  • perfunctory. And the mischief of it was that she always presented such
  • admirable reasons for abstaining from Bill's society, when it was
  • suggested to her that she should go to him, that it was impossible to
  • bring her out into the open and settle the matter once and for all.
  • Patience was one of the virtues which set off the defects in Kirk's
  • character; but he did not feel very patient now as he sat and watched
  • Bill playing on the floor.
  • "Well, Bill, old man, what do you make of it all?" he said at last.
  • The child looked up and fixed him with unwinking eyes. Kirk winced.
  • They were so exactly Ruth's eyes. That wide-open expression when
  • somebody, speaking suddenly to her, interrupted a train of thought, was
  • one of her hundred minor charms.
  • Bill had reproduced it to the life. He stared for a moment; then, as if
  • there had been some telepathy between them, said: "I want mummy."
  • Kirk laughed bitterly.
  • "You aren't the only one. I want mummy, too."
  • "Where is mummy?"
  • "I couldn't tell you exactly. At a luncheon-party somewhere."
  • "What's luncheon-party?"
  • "A sort of entertainment where everybody eats too much and talks all
  • the time without ever saying a thing that's worth hearing."
  • Bill considered this gravely.
  • "Why?"
  • "Because they like it, I suppose."
  • "Why do they like it?"
  • "Goodness knows."
  • "Does mummy like it?"
  • "I suppose so."
  • "Does mummy eat too much?"
  • "She doesn't. The others do."
  • "Why?"
  • William Bannister's thirst for knowledge was at this time perhaps his
  • most marked characteristic. No encyclopaedia could have coped with it.
  • Kirk was accustomed to do his best, cheerfully yielding up what little
  • information on general subjects he happened to possess, but he was like
  • Mrs. Partington sweeping back the Atlantic Ocean with her broom.
  • "Because they've been raised that way," he replied to the last
  • question. "Bill, old man, when you grow up, don't you ever become one
  • of these fellows who can't walk two blocks without stopping three times
  • to catch up with their breath. If you get like that mutt Dana Ferris
  • you'll break my heart. And you're heading that way, poor kid."
  • "What's Ferris?"
  • "He's a man I met at dinner the other night. When he was your age he
  • was the richest child in America, and everybody fussed over him till he
  • grew up into a wretched little creature with a black moustache and two
  • chins. You ought to see him. He would make you laugh; and you don't get
  • much to laugh at nowadays. I guess it isn't hygienic for a kid to
  • laugh. Bill, honestly--what _do_ you think of things? Don't you
  • ever want to hurl one of those sterilized bricks of yours at a certain
  • lady? Or has she taken all the heart out of you by this time?"
  • This was beyond Bill, as Kirk's monologues frequently were. He changed
  • the subject.
  • "I wish I had a cat," he said, by way of starting a new topic.
  • "Well, why haven't you a cat? Why haven't you a dozen cats if you want
  • them?"
  • "I asked Aunty Lora could I have a cat, and she said: 'Certainly not,
  • cats are--cats are----"
  • "Unhygienic?"
  • "What's that?"
  • "It's what your Aunt Lora might think a cat was. Or did she say
  • pestilential?"
  • "I don't amember."
  • "But she wouldn't let you have one?"
  • "Mamie said a cat might scratch me."
  • "Well, you wouldn't mind that?" said Kirk anxiously.
  • He had come to be almost morbidly on the look-out for evidence which
  • might go to prove that this cotton-wool existence was stealing from the
  • child the birthright of courage which was his from both his parents.
  • Much often depends on little things, and, if Bill had replied in the
  • affirmative to the question, it would probably have had the result of
  • sending Kirk there and then raging through the house conducting a sort
  • of War of Independence.
  • The only thing that had kept him from doing so before was the
  • reflection that Mrs. Porter's system could not be definitely taxed with
  • any harmful results. But his mind was never easy. Every day found him
  • still nervously on the alert for symptoms.
  • Bill soothed him now by answering "No" in a very decided voice. All
  • well so far, but it had been an anxious moment.
  • It seemed incredible to Kirk that the life he was leading should not in
  • time turn the child into a whimpering bundle of nerves. His
  • conversations with Bill were, as a result, a sort of spiritual parallel
  • to the daily taking of his temperature with the thermometer. Sooner or
  • later he always led the talk round to some point where Bill must make a
  • definite pronouncement which would show whether or not the insidious
  • decay had begun to set in.
  • So far all appeared to be well. In earlier conversations Bill, subtly
  • questioned, had stoutly maintained that he was not afraid of Indians,
  • dogs, pirates, mice, cows, June-bugs, or noises in the dark. He had
  • even gone so far as to state that if an Indian chief found his way into
  • the nursery he, Bill, would chop his head off. The most exacting father
  • could not have asked more. And yet Kirk was not satisfied: he remained
  • uneasy.
  • It so happened that this afternoon Bill, who had had hitherto to
  • maintain his reputation for intrepidity entirely by verbal statements,
  • was afforded an opportunity of providing a practical demonstration that
  • his heart was in the right place. The game he was playing with the
  • bricks was one that involved a certain amount of running about with a
  • puffing accompaniment of a vaguely equine nature. And while performing
  • this part of the programme he chanced to trip. He hesitated for a
  • moment, as if uncertain whether to fall or remain standing; then did
  • the former with a most emphatic bump.
  • He scrambled up, stood looking at Kirk with a twitching lip, then gave
  • a great gulp, and resumed his trotting. The whole exhibition of
  • indomitable heroism was over in half a minute, and he did not even
  • bother to wait for applause.
  • The effect of the incident on Kirk was magical. He was in the position
  • of an earnest worshipper who, tortured with doubts, has prayed for a
  • sign. This was a revelation. A million anti-Indian statements, however
  • resolute, were nothing to this.
  • This was the real thing. Before his eyes this super-child of his had
  • fallen in a manner which might quite reasonably have led to tears;
  • which would, Kirk felt sure, have produced bellows of anguish from
  • every other child in America. And what had happened? Not a moan. No,
  • sir, not one solitary cry. Just a gulp which you had to strain your
  • ears to hear, and which, at that, might have been a mere taking-in of
  • breath such as every athlete must do, and all was over.
  • This child of his was the real thing. It had been proved beyond
  • possibility of criticism.
  • There are moments when a man on parole forgets his promise. All thought
  • of rules and prohibitions went from Kirk. He rose from his seat,
  • grabbed his son with both hands, and hugged him. We cannot even begin
  • to estimate the number of bacilli which must have rushed, whooping with
  • joy, on to the unfortunate child. Under a microscope it would probably
  • have looked like an Old Home Week. And Kirk did not care. He simply
  • kept on hugging. That was the sort of man he was--thoroughly heartless.
  • "Bill, you're great!" he cried.
  • Bill had been an amazed party to the incident. Nothing of this kind had
  • happened to him for so long that he had forgotten there were children
  • to whom this sort of thing did happen. Then he recollected a similar
  • encounter with a bearded man down in the hall when he came in one
  • morning from his ride in the automobile. A moment later he had
  • connected his facts.
  • This man who had no beard was the same man as the man who had a beard,
  • and this behaviour was a personal eccentricity of his. The thought
  • crossed his mind that Aunty Lora would not approve of this.
  • And then, surprisingly, there came the thought that he did not care
  • whether Aunty Lora approved or not. _He_ liked it, and that was
  • enough for him.
  • The seeds of revolt had been sown in the bosom of William Bannister.
  • It happened that Ruth, returning from her luncheon-party, looked in at
  • the nursery on her way upstairs. She was confronted with the spectacle
  • of Bill seated on Kirk's lap, his face against Kirk's shoulder. Kirk,
  • though he had stopped speaking as the door opened, appeared to be in
  • the middle of a story, for Bill, after a brief glance at the newcomer,
  • asked: "What happened then?"
  • "Kirk, really!" said Ruth.
  • Kirk did not appear in the least ashamed of himself.
  • "Ruth, this kid is the most amazing kid. Do you know what happened just
  • now? He was running along and he tripped and came down flat. And he
  • didn't even think of crying. He just picked himself up, and----"
  • "That was very brave of you, Billy. But, seriously, Kirk, you shouldn't
  • hug him like that. Think what Aunt Lora would say!"
  • "Aunt Lora be----Bother Aunt Lora!"
  • "Well, I won't give you away. If she heard, she would write a book
  • about it. And she was just starting to come up when I was downstairs.
  • We came in together. You had better fly while there's time."
  • It was sound advice, and Kirk took it.
  • It was not till some time later, going over the incident again in his
  • mind, he realized how very lightly Ruth had treated what, if she really
  • adhered to Mrs. Porter's views on hygiene, should have been to her a
  • dreadful discovery. The reflection was pleasant to him for a moment; it
  • seemed to draw Ruth and himself closer together; then he saw the
  • reverse side of it.
  • If Ruth did not really believe in this absurd hygienic nonsense, why
  • had she permitted it to be practised upon the boy? There was only one
  • answer, and it was the one which Kirk had already guessed at. She did
  • it because it gave her more freedom, because it bored her to look after
  • the child herself, because she was not the same Ruth he had left at the
  • studio when he started with Hank Jardine for Colombia.
  • Chapter VI
  • The Outcasts
  • Three months of his new life had gone by before Kirk awoke from the
  • stupor which had gripped him as the result of the general upheaval of
  • his world. Ever since his return from Colombia he had honestly been
  • intending to resume his painting, and, attacking it this time in a
  • business-like way, to try to mould himself into the semblance of an
  • efficient artist.
  • His mind had been full of fine resolutions. He would engage a good
  • teacher, some competent artist whom fortune had not treated well and
  • who would be glad of the job--Washington Square and its neighbourhood
  • were full of them--and settle down grimly, working regular hours, to
  • recover lost ground.
  • But the rush of life, as lived on the upper avenue, had swept him away.
  • He had been carried along on the rapids of dinners, parties, dances,
  • theatres, luncheons, and the rest, and his great resolve had gone
  • bobbing away from him on the current.
  • He had recovered it now and climbed painfully ashore, feeling bruised
  • and exhausted, but determined.
  • * * * * *
  • Among the motley crowd which had made the studio a home in the days of
  • Kirk's bachelorhood had been an artist--one might almost say an
  • ex-artist--named Robert Dwight Penway. An over-fondness for rye whisky
  • at the Brevoort cafe had handicapped Robert as an active force in the
  • world of New York art. As a practical worker he was not greatly
  • esteemed--least of all by the editors of magazines, who had paid
  • advance cheques to him for work which, when delivered at all, was
  • delivered too late for publication. These, once bitten, were now twice
  • shy of Mr. Penway. They did not deny his great talents, which were,
  • indeed, indisputable; but they were fixed in their determination not to
  • make use of them.
  • Fate could have provided no more suitable ally for Kirk. It was
  • universally admitted around Washington Square and--grudgingly--down-town
  • that in the matter of theory Mr. Penway excelled. He could teach to
  • perfection what he was too erratic to practise.
  • Robert Dwight Penway, run to earth one sultry evening in the Brevoort,
  • welcomed Kirk as a brother, as a rich brother. Even when his first
  • impression, that he was to have the run of the house on Fifth Avenue
  • and mix freely with touchable multi-millionaires, had been corrected,
  • his altitude was still brotherly. He parted from Kirk with many solemn
  • promises to present himself at the studio daily and teach him enough
  • art to put him clear at the top of the profession. "Way above all
  • these other dubs," asserted Mr. Penway.
  • Robert Dwight Penway's attitude toward his contemporaries in art bore a
  • striking resemblance to Steve's estimate of his successors in the
  • middle-weight department of the American prize-ring.
  • Surprisingly to those who knew him, Mr. Penway was as good as his word.
  • Certainly Kirk's terms had been extremely generous; but he had thrown
  • away many a contract of equal value in his palmy days. Possibly his
  • activity was due to his liking for Kirk; or it may have been that the
  • prospect of sitting by with a cigar while somebody else worked, with
  • nothing to do all day except offer criticism, and advice, appealed to
  • him.
  • At any rate, he appeared at the studio on the following afternoon,
  • completely sober and excessively critical. He examined the canvases
  • which Kirk had hauled from shelves and corners for his inspection. One
  • after another he gazed upon them in an increasingly significant
  • silence. When the last one was laid aside he delivered judgment.
  • "Golly!" he said.
  • Kirk flushed. It was not that he was not in complete agreement with the
  • verdict. Looking at these paintings, some of which he had in the old
  • days thought extremely good, he was forced to admit that "Golly" was
  • the only possible criticism.
  • He had not seen them for a long time, and absence had enabled him to
  • correct first impressions. Moreover, something had happened to him,
  • causing him to detect flaws where he had seen only merits. Life had
  • sharpened his powers of judgment. He was a grown man looking at the
  • follies of his youth.
  • "Burn them!" said Mr. Penway, lighting a cigar with the air of one
  • restoring his tissues after a strenuous ordeal. "Burn the lot. They're
  • awful. Darned amateur nightmares. They offend the eye. Cast them into a
  • burning fiery furnace."
  • Kirk nodded. The criticism was just. It erred, if at all, on the side
  • of mildness. Certainly something had happened to him since he
  • perpetrated those daubs. He had developed. He saw things with new eyes.
  • "I guess I had better start right in again at the beginning," he said.
  • "Earlier than that," amended Mr. Penway.
  • * * * * *
  • So Kirk settled down to a routine of hard work; and, so doing, drove
  • another blow at the wedge which was separating his life from Ruth's.
  • There were days now when they did not meet at all, and others when they
  • saw each other for a few short moments in which neither seemed to have
  • much to say.
  • Ruth had made a perfunctory protest against the new departure.
  • "Really," she said, "it does seem absurd for you to spend all your time
  • down at that old studio. It isn't as if you had to. But, of course, if
  • you want to----"
  • And she had gone on to speak of other subjects. It was plain to Kirk
  • that his absence scarcely affected her. She was still in the rapids,
  • and every day carried her farther away from him.
  • It did not hurt him now. A sort of apathy seemed to have fallen on him.
  • The old days became more and more remote. Sometimes he doubted whether
  • anything remained of her former love for him, and sometimes he wondered
  • if he still loved her. She was so different that it was almost as if
  • she were a stranger. Once they had had everything in common. Now it
  • seemed to him that they had nothing--not even Bill.
  • He did not brood upon it. He gave himself no time for that. He worked
  • doggedly on under the blasphemous but efficient guidance of Mr. Penway.
  • He was becoming a man with a fixed idea--the idea of making good.
  • He began to make headway. His beginnings were small, but practical. He
  • no longer sat down when the spirit moved him to dash off vague
  • masterpieces which might turn into something quite unexpected on the
  • road to completion; he snatched at anything definite that presented
  • itself.
  • Sometimes it was a couple of illustrations to a short story in one of
  • the minor magazines, sometimes a picture to go with an eulogy of a
  • patent medicine. Whatever it was, he seized upon it and put into it all
  • the talent he possessed. And thanks to the indefatigable coaching of
  • Robert Dwight Penway, a certain merit was beginning to creep into his
  • work. His drawing was growing firmer. He no longer shirked
  • difficulties.
  • Mr. Penway was good enough to approve of his progress. Being free from
  • any morbid distaste for himself, he attributed that progress to its
  • proper source. As he said once in a moment of expansive candour, he
  • could, given a free hand and something to drink and smoke while doing
  • it, make an artist out of two sticks and a lump of coal.
  • "Why, I've made _you_ turn out things that are like something on
  • earth, my boy," he said proudly. "And that," he added, as he reached
  • out for the bottle of Bourbon which Kirk had provided for him, "is
  • going some."
  • Kirk was far too grateful to resent the slightly unflattering note a
  • more spirited man might have detected in the remark.
  • * * * * *
  • Only once during those days did Kirk allow himself to weaken and admit
  • to himself how wretched he was. He was drawing a picture of Steve at
  • the time, and Steve had the sympathy which encourages weakness in
  • others.
  • It was a significant sign of his changed attitude towards his
  • profession that he was not drawing Steve as a figure in an allegorical
  • picture or as "Apollo" or "The Toiler," but simply as a well-developed
  • young man who had had the good sense to support his nether garments
  • with Middleton's Undeniable Suspenders. The picture, when completed,
  • would show Steve smirking down at the region of his waist-line and
  • announcing with pride and satisfaction: "They're Middleton's!" Kirk was
  • putting all he knew into the work, and his face, as he drew, was dark
  • and gloomy.
  • Steve noted this with concern. He had perceived for some time that Kirk
  • had changed. He had lost all his old boyish enjoyment of their
  • sparring-bouts, and he threw the medicine-ball with an absent gloom
  • almost equal to Bailey's.
  • It had not occurred to Steve to question Kirk about this. If Kirk had
  • anything on his mind which he wished to impart he would say it.
  • Meanwhile, the friendly thing for him to do was to be quiet and pretend
  • to notice nothing.
  • It seemed to Steve that nothing was going right these days. Here was
  • he, chafing at his inability to open his heart to Mamie. Here was Kirk,
  • obviously in trouble. And--a smaller thing, but of interest, as showing
  • how universal the present depression was--there was Bailey Bannister,
  • equally obviously much worried over something or other.
  • For Bailey had reinstated Steve in the place he had occupied before old
  • John Bannister had dismissed him, and for some time past Steve had
  • marked him down as a man with a secret trouble. He had never been of a
  • riotously cheerful disposition, but it had been possible once to draw
  • him into conversation at the close of the morning's exercises. Now he
  • hardly spoke. And often, when Steve arrived in the morning, he was
  • informed that Mr. Bannister had started for Wall Street early on
  • important business.
  • These things troubled Steve. His simple soul abhorred a mystery.
  • But it was the case of Kirk that worried him most, for he half guessed
  • that the latter's gloom had to do with Ruth; and he worshipped Ruth.
  • Kirk laid down his sketch and got up.
  • "I guess that'll do for the moment, Steve," he said.
  • Steve relaxed the attitude of proud satisfaction which he had assumed
  • in order to do justice to the Undeniable Suspenders. He stretched
  • himself and sat down.
  • "You certainly are working to beat the band just now, squire," he
  • remarked.
  • "It's a pretty good thing, work, Steve," said Kirk. "If it does nothing
  • else, it keeps you from thinking."
  • He knew it was feeble of him, but he was powerfully impelled to relieve
  • himself by confiding his wretchedness to Steve. He need not say much,
  • he told himself plausibly--only just enough to lighten the burden a
  • little.
  • He would not be disloyal to Ruth--he had not sunk to that--but, after
  • all Steve was Steve. It was not like blurting out his troubles to a
  • stranger. It would harm nobody, and do him a great deal of good, if he
  • talked to Steve.
  • He relit his pipe, which had gone out during a tense spell of work on
  • the suspenders.
  • "Well, Steve," he said, "what do you think of life? How is this best of
  • all possible worlds treating you?"
  • Steve deposed that life was pretty punk.
  • "You're a great describer, Steve. You've hit it first time. Punk is the
  • word. It's funny, if you look at it properly. Take my own case. The
  • superficial observer, who is apt to be a bonehead, would say that I
  • ought to be singing psalms of joy. I am married to the woman I wanted
  • to marry. I have a son who, not to be fulsome, is a perfectly good sort
  • of son. I have no financial troubles. I eat well. I have ceased to
  • tremble when I see a job of work. In fact, I have advanced in my art to
  • such an extent that shrewd business men like Middleton put the
  • pictorial side of their Undeniable Suspenders in my hands and go off to
  • play golf with their minds easy, having perfect confidence in my skill
  • and judgment. If I can't be merry and bright, who can? Do you find me
  • merry and bright, Steve?"
  • "I've seen you in better shape," said Steve cautiously.
  • "I've felt in better shape."
  • Steve coughed. The conversation was about to become delicate.
  • "What's eating you, colonel?" he asked presently.
  • Kirk frowned in silence at the Undeniable for a few moments. Then the
  • pent-up misery of months exploded in a cascade of words. He jumped up
  • and began to walk restlessly about the studio.
  • "Damn it! Steve, I ought not to say a word, I know. It's weak and
  • cowardly and bad taste and everything else you can think of to speak of
  • it--even to you. One's supposed to stand this sort of roasting at the
  • stake with a grin, as if one enjoyed it. But, after all, you _are_
  • different. It's not as if it was any one. You _are_ different,
  • aren't you?"
  • "Sure."
  • "Well, you know what's wrong as well as I do."
  • "Surest thing you know. It's hit me, too."
  • "How's that?"
  • "Well, things ain't the same. That's about what it comes to."
  • Kirk stopped and looked at him. His expression was wistful. "I ought
  • not to be talking about it."
  • "You go right ahead, squire," said Steve soothingly. "I know just how
  • you feel, and I guess talking's not going to do any harm. Act as if I
  • wasn't here. Look on it as a monologue. I don't amount to anything."
  • "When did you go to the house last, Steve?"
  • Steve reflected.
  • "About a couple of weeks ago, I reckon."
  • "See the kid?"
  • Steve shook his head.
  • "Seeing his nibs ain't my long suit these days. I may be wrong, but I
  • got the idea there was a dead-line for me about three blocks away from
  • the nursery. I asked Keggs was the coast clear, but he said the Porter
  • dame was in the ring, so I kind of thought I'd better away. I don't
  • seem to fit in with all them white tiles and thermometers."
  • "You used to see him every day when we were here. And you didn't seem
  • to contaminate him, as far as any one could notice."
  • There was a silence.
  • "Do you see him often, colonel?"
  • Kirk laughed.
  • "Oh, yes. I'm favoured. I pay a state visit every day. Think of that! I
  • sit in a chair at the other end of the room while Mrs. Porter stands
  • between to see that I don't start anything. Bill plays with his
  • sterilized bricks. Occasionally he and I exchange a few civil words.
  • It's as jolly and sociable as you could want. We have great times."
  • "Say, on the level, I wonder you stand for it."
  • "I've got to stand for it."
  • "He's your kid."
  • "Not exclusively. I have a partner, Steve."
  • Steve snorted dolefully.
  • "Ain't it hell the way things break loose in this world!" he sighed.
  • "Who'd have thought two years ago----"
  • "Do you make it only two? I should have put it at about two thousand."
  • "Honest, squire, if any one had told me then that Miss Ruth had it in
  • her to take up with all these fool stunts----"
  • "Well, I can't say I was prepared for it."
  • Steve coughed again. Kirk was in an expansive mood this afternoon, and
  • the occasion was ideal for the putting forward of certain views which
  • he had long wished to impart. But, on the other hand, the subject was a
  • peculiarly delicate one. It has been well said that it is better for a
  • third party to quarrel with a buzz-saw than to interfere between
  • husband and wife; and Steve was constitutionally averse to anything
  • that savoured of butting in.
  • Still, Kirk had turned the talk into this channel. He decided to risk
  • it.
  • "If I were you," he said, "I'd get busy and start something."
  • "Such as what?"
  • Steve decided to abandon caution and speak his mind. Him, almost as
  • much as Kirk, the existing state of things had driven to desperation.
  • Though in a sense he was only a spectator, the fact that the altered
  • conditions of Kirk's life involved his almost complete separation from
  • Mamie gave him what might be called a stake in the affair. The brief
  • and rare glimpses which he got of her nowadays made it absolutely
  • impossible for him to conduct his wooing on a business-like basis. A
  • diffident man cannot possibly achieve any success in odd moments.
  • Constant propinquity is his only hope.
  • That fact alone, he considered, almost gave him the right to interfere.
  • And, apart from that, his affection for Kirk and Ruth gave him a claim.
  • Finally, he held what was practically an official position in the
  • family councils on the strength of being William Bannister Winfield's
  • godfather.
  • He loved William Bannister as a son, and it had been one of his
  • favourite day dreams to conjure up a vision of the time when he should
  • be permitted to undertake the child's physical training. He had toyed
  • lovingly with the idea of imparting to this promising pupil all that he
  • knew of the greatest game on earth. He had watched him in the old days
  • staggering about the studio, and had pictured him grown to his full
  • strength, his muscles trained, his brain full of the wisdom of one who,
  • if his mother had not kicked, would have been middle-weight champion of
  • America.
  • He had resigned himself to the fact that the infant's social status
  • made it impossible that he should be the real White Hope whom he had
  • once pictured beating all comers in the roped ring; but, after all,
  • there was a certain mild fame to be acquired even by an amateur. And
  • now that dream was over--unless Kirk could be goaded into strong action
  • in time.
  • "Why don't you sneak the kid away somewhere?" he suggested. "Why don't
  • you go right in at them and say: 'It's my kid, and I'm going to take
  • him away into the country out of all this white-tile stuff and let him
  • roll in the mud same as he used to.' Why, say, there's that shack of
  • yours in Connecticut, just made for it. That kid would have the time of
  • his life there."
  • "You think that's the solution, do you, Steve?"
  • "I'm dead sure it is." Steve's voice became more and more enthusiastic
  • as the idea unfolded itself. "Why, it ain't only the kid I'm thinking
  • of. There's Miss Ruth. Say, you don't mind me pulling this line of
  • talk?"
  • "Go ahead. I began it. What about Miss Ruth?"
  • "Well, you know just what's the matter with her. She's let this society
  • game run away with her. I guess she started it because she felt
  • lonesome when you were away; and now it's got her and she can't drop
  • it. All she wants is a jolt. It would slow her up and show her just
  • where she was. She's asking for it. One good, snappy jolt would put the
  • whole thing right. And this thing of jerking the kid away to
  • Connecticut would be the right dope, believe _me_."
  • Kirk shook his head.
  • "It wouldn't do, Steve. It isn't that I don't want to do it; but one
  • must play to the rules. I can't explain what I mean. I can only say
  • it's impossible. Let's think of a parallel case. When you were in the
  • ring, there must have been times when you had a chance of hitting your
  • man low. Why didn't you do it? It would have jolted him, all right."
  • "Why, I'd have lost on a foul."
  • "Well, so should I lose on a foul if I started the sort of rough-house
  • you suggest."
  • "I don't get you."
  • "Well, if you want it in plain English, Ruth would never forgive me. Is
  • that clear enough?"
  • "You're dead wrong, boss," said Steve excitedly. "I know her."
  • "I thought I did. Well, anyway, Steve, thanks for the suggestion; but,
  • believe me, nothing doing. And now, if you feel like it, I wish you
  • would resume your celebrated imitation of a man exulting over the fact
  • that he is wearing Middleton's Undeniable. There isn't much more to do,
  • and I should like to get through with it to-day, if possible. There,
  • hold that pose. It's exactly right. The honest man gloating over his
  • suspenders. You ought to go on the stage, Steve."
  • Chapter VII
  • Cutting the Tangled Knot
  • There are some men whose mission in life it appears to be to go about
  • the world creating crises in the lives of other people. When there is
  • thunder in the air they precipitate the thunderbolt.
  • Bailey Bannister was one of these. He meant extraordinarily well, but
  • he was a dangerous man for that very reason, and in a properly
  • constituted world would have been segregated or kept under supervision.
  • He would not leave the tangled lives of those around him to adjust
  • themselves. He blundered in and tried to help. He nearly always
  • produced a definite result, but seldom the one at which he aimed.
  • That he should have interfered in the affairs of Ruth and Kirk at this
  • time was, it must be admitted, unselfish of him, for just now he was
  • having troubles of his own on a somewhat extensive scale. His wife's
  • extravagance was putting a strain on his finances, and he was faced
  • with the choice of checking her or increasing his income. Being very
  • much in love, he shrank from the former task and adopted the other way
  • out of the difficulty.
  • It was this that had led to the change in his manner noticed by Steve.
  • In order to make more money he had had to take risks, and only recently
  • had he begun to perceive how extremely risky these risks were. For the
  • first time in its history the firm of Bannister was making first-hand
  • acquaintance with frenzied finance.
  • It is, perhaps, a little unfair to lay the blame for this entirely at
  • the door of Bailey's Sybil. Her extravagance was largely responsible;
  • but Bailey's newly found freedom was also a factor in the developments
  • of the firm's operations. If you keep a dog, a dog with a high sense of
  • his abilities and importance, tied up and muzzled for a length of time
  • and then abruptly set it free the chances are that it will celebrate
  • its freedom. This had happened in the case of Bailey.
  • Just as her father's money had caused Ruth to plunge into a whirl of
  • pleasures which she did not really enjoy, merely for the novelty of it,
  • so the death of John Bannister and his own consequent accession to the
  • throne had upset Bailey's balance and embarked him on an orgy of
  • speculation quite foreign to his true nature. All their lives Ruth and
  • Bailey had been repressed by their father, and his removal had
  • unsteadied them.
  • Bailey, on whom the shadow of the dead man had pressed particularly
  • severely, had been quite intoxicated by sudden freedom. He had been a
  • cipher in the firm of Bannister & Son. In the firm of Bannister & Co.
  • he was an untrammelled despot. He did that which was right in his own
  • eyes, and there was no one to say him nay.
  • It was true that veteran members of the firm, looking in the glass,
  • found white hairs where no white hairs had been and wrinkles on
  • foreheads which, under the solid rule of old John Bannister, had been
  • smooth; but it would have taken more than these straws to convince
  • Bailey that the wind which was blowing was an ill-wind. He had
  • developed in a day the sublime self-confidence of a young Napoleon. He
  • was all dash and enterprise--the hurricane fighter of Wall Street.
  • With these private interests to occupy him, it is surprising that he
  • should have found time to take the affairs of Ruth and Kirk in hand.
  • But he did.
  • For some time he had watched the widening gulf between them with pained
  • solicitude. He disliked Kirk personally; but that did not influence
  • him. He conceived it to be his duty to suppress private prejudices.
  • Duty seemed to call him to go to Kirk's aid and smooth out his domestic
  • difficulties.
  • What urged him to this course more than anything else was Ruth's
  • growing intimacy with Basil Milbank; for, in the period which had
  • elapsed since the conversation recorded earlier in the story, when Kirk
  • had first made the other's acquaintance, the gifted Basil had become a
  • very important and menacing figure in Ruth's life.
  • To Ruth, as to most women, his gifts were his attraction. He danced
  • well; he talked well; he did everything well. He appealed to a side of
  • Ruth's nature which Kirk scarcely touched--a side which had only come
  • into prominence in the last year.
  • His manner was admirable. He suggested sympathy without expressing it.
  • He could convey to Ruth that he thought her a misunderstood and
  • neglected wife while talking to her about the weather. He could make
  • his own knight-errant attitude toward her perfectly plain without
  • saying a word, merely by playing soft music to her on the piano; for he
  • had the gift of saying more with his finger-tips than most men could
  • have said in a long speech carefully rehearsed.
  • Kirk's inability to accompany Ruth into her present life had given
  • Basil his chance. Into the gap which now lay between them he had
  • slipped with a smooth neatness born of experience.
  • Bailey hated Basil. Men, as a rule, did, without knowing why. Basil's
  • reputation was shady, without being actually bad. He was a suspect who
  • had never been convicted. New York contained several husbands who eyed
  • him askance, but could not verify their suspicions, and the apparent
  • hopelessness of ever doing so made them look on Basil as a man who had
  • carried smoothness into the realms of fine art. He was considered too
  • gifted to be wholesome. The men of his set, being for the most part
  • amiably stupid, resented his cleverness.
  • Bailey, just at present, was feeling strongly on the subject of Basil.
  • He was at that stage of his married life when he would have preferred
  • his Sybil to speak civilly to no other man than himself. And only
  • yesterday Sybil had come to him to inform him with obvious delight that
  • Basil Milbank had invited her to join his yacht party for a lengthy
  • voyage.
  • This had stung Bailey. He was not included in the invitation. The whole
  • affair struck him as sinister. It was true that Sybil had never shown
  • any sign of being fascinated by Basil; but, he told himself, there was
  • no knowing. He forbade Sybil to accept the invitation. To soothe her
  • disappointment, he sent her off then and there to Tiffany's with a
  • roving commission to get what she liked; for Bailey, the stern, strong
  • man, the man who knew when to put his foot down, was no tyrant. But he
  • would have been indignant at the suggestion that he had bribed Sybil to
  • refuse Basil's invitation.
  • One of the arguments which Sybil had advanced in the brief discussion
  • which had followed the putting down of Bailey's foot had been that Ruth
  • had been invited and accepted, so why should not she? Bailey had not
  • replied to this--it was at this point of the proceedings that the
  • Tiffany motive had been introduced, but he had not forgotten it. He
  • thought it over, and decided to call upon Ruth. He did so.
  • It was unfortunate that the nervous strain of being the Napoleon of
  • Wall Street had had the effect of increasing to a marked extent the
  • portentousness of Bailey's always portentous manner. Ruth rebelled
  • against it. There was an insufferable suggestion of ripe old age and
  • fatherliness in his attitude which she found irritating in the extreme.
  • All her life she had chafed at authority, and now, when Bailey set
  • himself up as one possessing it, she showed the worst side of herself
  • to him.
  • He struck this unfortunate note from the very beginning.
  • "Ruth," he said, "I wish to speak seriously to you."
  • Ruth looked at him with hostile eyes, but did not speak. He did not
  • know it, poor man, but he had selected an exceedingly bad moment for
  • his lecture. It so happened that, only half an hour before, she and
  • Kirk had come nearer to open warfare than they had ever come.
  • It had come about in this way. Kirk had slept badly the night before,
  • and, as he lay awake in the small hours, his conscience had troubled
  • him.
  • Had he done all that it was in him to do to bridge the gap between Ruth
  • and himself? That was what his conscience had wanted to know. The
  • answer was in the negative. On the following day, just before Bailey's
  • call, he accordingly sought Ruth out, and--rather nervously, for Ruth
  • made him feel nervous nowadays--suggested that he and she and William
  • Bannister should take the air in each other's company and go and feed
  • the squirrels in the park.
  • Ruth declined. It is possible that she declined somewhat curtly. The
  • day was close and oppressive, and she had a headache and a general
  • feeling of ill-will toward her species. Also, in her heart, she
  • considered that the scheme proposed smacked too much of Sunday
  • afternoon domesticity in Brooklyn. The idea of papa, mamma, and baby
  • sporting together in a public park offended her sense of the social
  • proprieties.
  • She did not reveal these thoughts to Kirk because she was more than a
  • little ashamed of them. A year ago, she knew, she would not have
  • objected to the idea. A year ago such an expedition would have been a
  • daily occurrence with her. Now she felt if William Bannister wished to
  • feed squirrels, Mamie was his proper companion.
  • She could not put all this baldly to Kirk, so she placed the burden of
  • her refusal on the adequate shoulders of Lora Delane Porter. Aunt Lora,
  • she said, would never hear of William Bannister wandering at large in
  • such an unhygienic fashion. Upon which Kirk, whose patience was not so
  • robust as it had been, and who, like Ruth, found the day oppressive and
  • making for irritability, had cursed Aunt Lora heartily, given it as his
  • opinion that between them she and Ruth were turning the child from a
  • human being into a sort of spineless, effeminate exhibit in a museum,
  • and had taken himself off to the studio muttering disjointed things.
  • Ruth was still quivering with the indignation of a woman who has been
  • cheated of the last word when Bailey appeared and announced that he
  • wished to speak seriously to her.
  • Bailey saw the hostility in her eyes and winced a little before it. He
  • was not feeling altogether at his ease. He had had experience of Ruth
  • in this mood, and she had taught him to respect it.
  • But he was not going to shirk his duty. He resumed:
  • "I am only speaking for your own good," he said. "I know that it
  • is nothing but thoughtlessness on your part, but I am naturally
  • anxious----"
  • "Bailey," interrupted Ruth, "get to the point."
  • Bailey drew a long breath.
  • "Well, then," he said, baulked of his preamble, and rushing on his
  • fate, "I think you see too much of Basil Milbank."
  • Ruth raised her eyebrows.
  • "Oh?"
  • The mildness of her tone deceived Bailey.
  • "I do not like to speak of these things," he went on more happily; "but
  • I feel that I must. It is my duty. Basil Milbank has not a good
  • reputation. He is not the sort of man who--ah--who--in fact, he has not
  • a good reputation."
  • "Oh?"
  • "I understand that he has invited you to form one of his yacht party."
  • "How did you know?"
  • "Sybil told me. He invited her. I refused to allow her to accept the
  • invitation."
  • "And what did Sybil say?"
  • "She was naturally a little disappointed, of course, but she did as I
  • requested."
  • "I wonder she didn't pack her things and go straight off."
  • "My dear Ruth!"
  • "That is what I should have done."
  • "You don't know what you are saying."
  • "Oh? Do you think I should let Kirk dictate to me like that?"
  • "He is certain to disapprove of your going when he hears of the
  • invitation. What will you do?"
  • Ruth's eyes opened. For a moment she looked almost ugly.
  • "What shall I do? Why, go, of course."
  • She clenched her teeth. A woman's mind can work curiously, and she was
  • associating Kirk with Bailey in what she considered an unwarrantable
  • intrusion into her private affairs. It was as if Kirk, and not Bailey,
  • were standing there, demanding that she should not associate with Basil
  • Milbank.
  • "I shall make it my business," said Bailey, "to warn Kirk that this man
  • is not a desirable companion for you."
  • The discussion of this miserable yacht affair had brought back to
  • Bailey all the jealousy which he had felt when Sybil had first told him
  • of it. All the vague stories he had ever heard about Basil were surging
  • in his mind like waves of some corrosive acid. He had become a leading
  • member of the extreme wing of the anti-Milbank party. He regarded Basil
  • with the aversion which a dignified pigeon might feel for a circling
  • hawk; and he was now looking on this yacht party as a deadly peril from
  • which Ruth must be saved at any cost.
  • "I shall speak to him very strongly," he added.
  • Ruth's suppressed anger blazed up in the sudden way which before now
  • had disconcerted her brother.
  • "Bailey, what do you mean by coming here and saying this sort of thing?
  • You're becoming a perfect old woman. You spend your whole time prying
  • into other people's affairs. I'm sorry for Sybil."
  • Bailey cast one reproachable look at her and left the room with pained
  • dignity. Something seemed to tell him that no good could come to him
  • from a prolongation of the interview. Ruth, in this mood, always had
  • been too much for him, and always would be. Well, he had done his duty
  • as far as he was concerned. It now remained to do the same by Kirk.
  • He hailed a taxi and drove to the studio.
  • Kirk was busy and not anxious for conversation, least of all with
  • Bailey. He had not forgotten their last _tete-a-tete_.
  • Bailey, however, was regarding him with a feeling almost of
  • friendliness. They were bound together by a common grievance against
  • Basil Milbank.
  • "I came here, Winfield," he said, after a few moments of awkward
  • conversation on neutral topics, "because I understand that this man
  • Milbank has invited Ruth to join his yacht party."
  • "What yacht party?"
  • "This man Milbank is taking a party for a cruise shortly in his yacht."
  • "Who is Milbank?"
  • "Surely you have met him? Yes, he was at my house one night when you
  • and Ruth dined there shortly after your return."
  • "I don't remember him. However, it doesn't matter. But why does the
  • fact that he has asked Ruth on his yacht excite you? Are you nervous
  • about the sea?"
  • "I dislike this man Milbank very much, Winfield. I think Ruth sees too
  • much of him."
  • Kirk stiffened. His eyebrows rose the fraction of an inch.
  • "Oh?" he said.
  • It seemed to Bailey for an instant that he had been talking all his
  • life to people who raised their eyebrows and said "Oh!" but he
  • continued manfully.
  • "I do not think that Ruth should know him, Winfield."
  • "Wouldn't Ruth be rather a good judge of that?"
  • His tone nettled Bailey, but the man conscious of doing his duty
  • acquires an artificial thickness of skin, and he controlled himself.
  • But he had lost that feeling of friendliness, of sympathy with a
  • brother in misfortune which he had brought in with him.
  • "I disagree with you entirely," he said.
  • "Another thing," went on Kirk. "If this man Milbank--I still can't
  • place him--is such a thug, or whatever it is that he happens to be, how
  • did he come to be at your house the night you say I met him?"
  • Bailey winced. He wished the world was not perpetually reminding him
  • that Basil and Sybil were on speaking terms.
  • "Sybil invited him. I may say he has asked Sybil to make one of the
  • yacht party. I absolutely forbade it."
  • "But, Heavens! What's wrong with the man?"
  • "He has a bad reputation."
  • "Has he, indeed!"
  • "And I wish my wife to associate with him as little as possible. And I
  • should advise you to forbid Ruth to see more of him than she can help."
  • Kirk laughed. The idea struck him as comic.
  • "My good man, I don't forbid Ruth to do things."
  • Bailey, objecting to being called any one's good man, especially
  • Kirk's, permitted his temper to get the better of him.
  • "Then you should," he snapped. "I have no wish to quarrel with you. I
  • came in here in a friendly spirit to warn you; but I must say that for
  • a man who married a girl, as you married Ruth, in direct opposition to
  • the wishes of her family, you take a curious view of your obligations.
  • Ruth has always been a headstrong, impulsive girl, and it is for you to
  • see that she is protected from herself. If you are indifferent to her
  • welfare, then all I can say is that you should not have married her.
  • You appear to think otherwise. Good afternoon."
  • He stalked out of the studio, leaving Kirk uncomfortably conscious that
  • he had had the worst of the argument. Bailey had been officious, no
  • doubt, and his pompous mode of expression was not soothing, but there
  • was no doubt that he had had right on his side.
  • Marrying Ruth did not involve obligations. He had never considered her
  • in that light, but perhaps she was a girl who had to be protected from
  • herself. She was certainly impulsive. Bailey had been right there, if
  • nowhere else.
  • Who was this fellow Milbank who had sprung suddenly from nowhere into
  • the position of a menace? What were Ruth's feelings toward him? Kirk
  • threw his mind back to the dinner-party at Bailey's and tried to place
  • him.
  • Was it the man--yes, he had it now. It was the man with the wave of
  • hair over his forehead, the fellow who looked like a poet. Memory came
  • to him with a rush. He recalled his instinctive dislike for the fellow.
  • So that was Milbank, was it? He got up and put away his brushes. There
  • would be no more work for him that afternoon.
  • He walked slowly home. The heat of the day had grown steadily more
  • oppressive. It was one of those airless, stifling afternoons which
  • afflict New York in the summer. He remembered seeing something about a
  • record in the evening paper which he had bought on his way to the
  • studio, a whole column about heat and humidity. It certainly felt
  • unusually warm even for New York.
  • It was one of those days when nerves are strained, when molehills
  • become mountains, and mountains are all Everests. He had felt it when
  • he talked with Ruth about Bill and the squirrels, and he felt it now.
  • He was conscious of being extraordinarily irritated, not so much with
  • any particular person as with the world in general. The very vagueness
  • of Bailey's insinuations against Basil Milbank increased his
  • resentment.
  • What a pompous ass Bailey was! What a fool he had been to give Bailey
  • such a chance of snubbing him! What an extraordinarily futile and
  • unpleasant world it was altogether!
  • He braced himself with an effort. It was this heat which was making him
  • magnify trifles. Bailey was a fool. Probably there was nothing whatever
  • wrong with this fellow Milbank. Probably he had some personal objection
  • to the man, and that was all.
  • And yet the image of Basil which had come back to his mind was not
  • reassuring. He had mistrusted him that night, and he mistrusted him
  • now.
  • What should he do? Ruth was not Sybil. She was not the sort of woman a
  • man could forbid to do things. It would require tact to induce her to
  • refuse Basil's invitation.
  • As he reached the door an idea came to him, so simple that he wondered
  • that it had not occurred to him before. It was, perhaps, an echo of his
  • conversation with Steve.
  • He would get Ruth to come away with him to the shack in the Connecticut
  • woods. As he dwelt on the idea the heat of the day seemed to become
  • less oppressive and his heart leaped. How cool and pleasant it would be
  • out there! They would take Bill with them and live the simple life
  • again, in the country this time instead of in town. Perhaps out there,
  • far away from the over-crowded city, he and Ruth would be able to come
  • to an understanding and bridge over that ghastly gulf.
  • As for his work, he could do that as well in the woods as in New York.
  • And, anyhow, he had earned a vacation. For days Mr. Penway had been
  • hinting that the time had arrived for a folding of the hands.
  • Mr. Penway's views on New York and its record humidity were strong and
  • crisply expressed. His idea, he told Kirk, was that some sport with a
  • heart should loan him a couple of hundred bucks and let him beat it to
  • the seashore before he melted.
  • In the drawing-room Ruth was playing the piano softly, as she had done
  • so often at the studio. Kirk went to her and kissed her. A marked
  • coolness in her reception of the kiss increased the feeling of
  • nervousness which he had felt at the sight of her. It came back to him
  • that they had parted that afternoon, for the first time, on definitely
  • hostile terms.
  • He decided to ignore the fact. Something told him that Ruth had not
  • forgotten, but it might be that cheerfulness now would blot out the
  • resentment of past irritability.
  • But in his embarrassment he was more than cheerful. As Steve had been
  • on the occasion of his visit to old John Bannister, he was breezy,
  • breezy with an effort that was as painful to Ruth as it was to himself,
  • breezy with a horrible musical comedy breeziness.
  • He could have adopted no more fatal tone with Ruth at that moment. All
  • the afternoon she had been a complicated tangle of fretted nerves. Her
  • quarrel with Kirk, Bailey's visit, a conscience that would not lie down
  • and go to sleep at her orders, but insisted on running riot--all these
  • things had unfitted her to bear up amiably under sudden, self-conscious
  • breeziness.
  • And the heat of the day, charged now with the oppressiveness of
  • long-overdue thunder, completed her mood. When Kirk came in and began
  • to speak, the softest notes of the human voice would have jarred upon
  • her. And Kirk, in his nervousness, was almost shouting.
  • His voice rang through the room, and Ruth winced away from it like a
  • stricken thing. From out of the hell of nerves and heat and interfering
  • brothers there materialized itself, as she sat there, a very vivid
  • hatred of Kirk.
  • Kirk, meanwhile, uneasy, but a little guessing at the fury behind
  • Ruth's calm face, was expounding his great scheme, his panacea for all
  • the ills of domestic misunderstandings and parted lives.
  • "Ruth, old girl."
  • Ruth shuddered.
  • "Ruth, old girl, I've had a bully good idea. It's getting too warm for
  • anything in New York. Did you ever feel anything like it is to-day? Why
  • shouldn't you and I pop down to the shack and camp out there for a week
  • or so? And we would take Bill with us. Just we three, with somebody to
  • do the cooking. It would be great. What do you say?"
  • What Ruth said languidly was: "It's quite impossible."
  • It was damping; but Kirk felt that at all costs he must refuse to be
  • damped. He clutched at his cheerfulness and held it.
  • "Nonsense," he retorted. "Why is it impossible? It's a great idea."
  • Ruth half hid a yawn. She knew she was behaving abominably, and she was
  • glad of it.
  • "It's impossible as far as I'm concerned. I have a hundred things to do
  • before I can leave New York."
  • "Well, I could do with a day or two to clear up a few bits of work I
  • have on hand. Why couldn't we start this day week?"
  • "It is out of the question for me. About then I shall be on Mr.
  • Milbank's yacht. He has invited me to join his party. The actual day is
  • not settled, but it will be in about a week's time."
  • "Oh!" said Kirk.
  • Ruth said nothing.
  • "Have you accepted the invitation?"
  • "I have not actually answered his letter. I was just going to when you
  • came in."
  • "But you mean to accept it?"
  • "Certainly. Several of my friends will be there. Sybil for one."
  • "Not Sybil."
  • "Oh, I know Bailey has made some ridiculous objection to her going, but
  • I mean to persuade her."
  • Kirk did not answer. She looked at him steadily.
  • "So Bailey did call on you this afternoon? He told me he was going to,
  • but I hoped he would think better of it. But apparently there are no
  • limits to Bailey's stupidity."
  • "Yes, Bailey came to the studio. He seemed troubled about this yacht
  • party."
  • "Did he advise you to forbid me to go?"
  • "Well, yes; he did."
  • "And now you have come to do it?"
  • "Not at all. I told Bailey that you were not the sort of woman one
  • forbade to do things."
  • "I'm not."
  • There was a pause.
  • "All the same, I wish you wouldn't go."
  • Ruth did not answer.
  • "It would be very jolly out at the shack."
  • Ruth shuddered elaborately and gave a little laugh.
  • "Would it? It's rather a question of taste. Personally, I can't imagine
  • anything more depressing and uncomfortable than being cooped up in a
  • draughty frame house miles away from anywhere. There's no reason why
  • you should not go, though, if you like that sort of thing. Of course,
  • you must not take Bill."
  • "Why not?"
  • Kirk spoke calmly enough, but he was very near the breaking point. All
  • his good resolutions had vanished under the acid of Ruth's manner.
  • "I couldn't let him rough it like that. Aunt Lora would have a fit."
  • Conditions being favourable, it only needs a spark to explode a powder
  • magazine; and there are moments when a word can turn an outwardly calm
  • and patient man into a raging maniac. This introduction of Mrs.
  • Porter's name into the discussion at this particular point broke down
  • the last remnants of Kirk's self-control.
  • For a few seconds his fury so mastered him that he could not speak.
  • Then, suddenly, the storm passed and he found himself cool and
  • venomous. He looked at Ruth curiously. It seemed incredible to him that
  • he had ever loved her.
  • "We had better get this settled," he said in a hard, quiet voice.
  • Ruth started. She had never heard him speak like this before. She had
  • not imagined him capable of speaking in that way. Even in the days
  • when she had loved him most she had never looked up to him. She had
  • considered his nature weak, and she had loved his weakness. Except
  • in the case of her father, she had always dominated the persons with
  • whom she mixed; and she had taken it for granted that her will was
  • stronger than Kirk's. Something in his voice now told her that she had
  • under-estimated him.
  • "Get what settled?" she asked, and was furious with herself because her
  • voice shook.
  • "Is Mrs. Porter the mother of the child, or are you? What has Mrs.
  • Porter to do with it? Why should I ask her permission? How does it
  • happen to be any business of Mrs. Porter's at all?"
  • Ruth felt baffled. He was giving her no chance to take the offensive.
  • There was nothing in his tone which she could openly resent. He was not
  • shouting at her, he was speaking quietly. There was nothing for her to
  • do but answer the question, and she knew that her answer would give him
  • another point in the contest. Even as she spoke she knew that her words
  • were ridiculous.
  • "Aunt Lora has been wonderful with him. No child could have been better
  • looked after."
  • "I know she has used him as a vehicle for her particular form of
  • insanity, but that's not the point. What I am asking is why she was
  • introduced at all."
  • "I told you. When you were away, Bill nearly----"
  • "Died. I know. I'm not forgetting that. And naturally for a time you
  • were frightened. It is just possible that for the moment you lost your
  • head and honestly thought that Mrs. Porter's methods were the only
  • chance for him. But that state of mind could not last all the time with
  • you. You are not a crank like your aunt. You are a perfectly sensible,
  • level-headed woman. And you must have seen the idiocy of it all long
  • before I came back. Why did you let it go on?"
  • Ruth did not answer.
  • "I will tell you why. Because it saved you trouble. Because it gave you
  • more leisure for the sort of futile waste of time which seems to be the
  • only thing you care for nowadays. Don't trouble to deny it. Do you
  • think I haven't seen in these last few months that Bill bores you to
  • death? Oh, I know you always have some perfect excuse for keeping away
  • from him. It's too much trouble for you to be a mother to him, so you
  • hedge with your conscience by letting Mrs. Porter pamper him and
  • sterilize his toys and all the rest of it, and try to make yourself
  • think that you have done your duty to him. You know that, as far as
  • everything goes that matters, any tenement child is better off than
  • Bill."
  • "I----"
  • "You had better let me finish what I have got to say. I will be as
  • brief as I can. That is my case as regards Bill. Now about myself. What
  • do you think I am made of? I've stood it just as long as I could; you
  • have tried me too hard. I'm through. Heaven knows why it should have
  • come to this. It is not so very long ago that Bill was half the world
  • to you and I was the other half. Now, apparently, there is not room in
  • your world for either of us."
  • Ruth had risen. She was trembling.
  • "I think we had better end this."
  • He broke in on her words.
  • "End it? Yes, you're right. One way or the other. Either go back to the
  • old life or start a new one. What we are living now is a horrible
  • burlesque."
  • "What do you mean? How start a new life?"
  • "I mean exactly what I say. In the life you are living now I am an
  • anachronism. I'm a survival. I'm out of date and in the way. You would
  • be freer without me."
  • "That's absurd."
  • "Is the idea so novel? Is our marriage the only failure in New York?"
  • "Do you mean that we ought to separate?"
  • "Only a little more, a very little more, than we are separated now.
  • Never see each other again instead of seeing each other for a few
  • minutes every day. It's not a very big step to take."
  • Ruth sat down and rested her chin on her hand, staring at nothing. Kirk
  • went to the window and looked out.
  • Over the park the sky was black. In the room behind him the light had
  • faded till it seemed as if night were come. The air was heavy and
  • stifling. A flicker of lightning came and went in the darkness over the
  • trees.
  • He turned abruptly.
  • "It is the only reasonable thing to do. Our present mode of life is a
  • farce. We are drifting farther apart every day. Perhaps I have changed.
  • I know you have. We are two strangers chained together. We have made a
  • muddle of it, and the best thing we can do is to admit it.
  • "I am no good to you. I have no part in your present life. You're the
  • queen and I'm just the prince consort, the fellow who happens to be
  • Mrs. Winfield's husband. It's not a pleasant part to have to play, and
  • I have had enough of it. We had better separate before we hate each
  • other. You have your amusements. I have my work. We can continue them
  • apart. We shall both be better off."
  • He stopped. Ruth did not speak. She was still sitting in the same
  • attitude. It was too dark to see her face. It formed a little splash of
  • white in the dusk. She did not move.
  • Kirk went to the door.
  • "I'm going up to say good-bye to Bill. Have you anything to say against
  • that? And I shall say good-bye to him in my own way."
  • She made no sign that she had heard him.
  • "Good-bye," he said again.
  • The door closed.
  • Up in the nursery Bill crooned to himself as he played on the floor.
  • Mamie sat in a chair, sewing. The opening of the door caused them to
  • look up simultaneously.
  • "Hello," said Bill.
  • His voice was cordial without being enthusiastic. He was glad to see
  • Kirk, but tin soldiers were tin soldiers and demanded concentrated
  • attention. When you are in the middle of intricate manoeuvres you
  • cannot allow yourself to be more than momentarily distracted by
  • anything.
  • "Mamie," said Kirk hoarsely, "go out for a minute, will you? I shan't
  • be long."
  • Mamie obediently departed. Later, when Keggs was spreading the news of
  • Kirk's departure in the servants' hall, she remembered that his manner
  • had struck her as strange.
  • Kirk sat down in the chair she had left and looked at Bill. He felt
  • choked. There was a mist before his eyes.
  • "Bill."
  • The child, absorbed in his game, did not look up.
  • "Bill, old man, come here a minute. I've something to say."
  • Bill looked up, nodded, moved a couple of soldiers, and got up. He came
  • to Kirk's side. His chosen mode of progression at this time was a kind
  • of lurch. He was accustomed to breathe heavily during the journey, and
  • on arrival at the terminus usually shouted triumphantly.
  • Kirk put an arm round him. Bill stared gravely up into his face. There
  • was a silence. From outside came a sudden rumbling crash. Bill jumped.
  • "Funder," he said in a voice that shook a little.
  • "Not afraid of thunder, are you?" said Kirk.
  • Bill shook his head stoutly.
  • "Bill."
  • "Yes, daddy?"
  • Kirk fought to keep his voice steady.
  • "Bill, old man, I'm afraid you won't see me again for some time. I'm
  • going away."
  • "In a ship?"
  • "No, not in a ship."
  • "In a train?"
  • "Perhaps."
  • "Take me with you, daddy."
  • "I'm afraid I can't, Bill."
  • "Shan't I ever see you again?"
  • Kirk winced. How direct children are! What was it they called it in the
  • papers? "The custody of the child." How little it said and how much it
  • meant!
  • The sight of Bill's wide eyes and quivering mouth reminded him that he
  • was not the only person involved in the tragedy of those five words. He
  • pulled himself together. Bill was waiting anxiously for an answer to
  • his question. There was no need to make Bill unhappy before his time.
  • "Of course you will," he said, trying to make his voice cheerful.
  • "Of course I will," echoed Bill dutifully.
  • Kirk could not trust himself to speak again. The old sensation of
  • choking had come back to him. The room was a blur.
  • He caught Bill to him in a grip that made the child cry out, held him
  • for a long minute, then put him gently down and made blindly for the
  • door.
  • The storm had burst by the time Kirk found himself in the street. The
  • thunder crashed and great spears of lightning flashed across the sky. A
  • few heavy drops heralded the approach of the rain, and before he had
  • reached the corner it was beating down in torrents.
  • He walked on, raising his face to the storm, finding in it a curious
  • relief. A magical coolness had crept into the air, and with it a
  • strange calm into his troubled mind. He looked back at the scene
  • through which he had passed as at something infinitely remote. He could
  • not realize distinctly what had happened. He was only aware that
  • everything was over, that with a few words he had broken his life into
  • small pieces. Too impatient to unravel the tangled knot, he had cut it,
  • and nothing could mend it now.
  • "Why?"
  • The rain had ceased as suddenly as it had begun. The sun was struggling
  • through a mass of thin cloud over the park. The world was full of the
  • drip and rush of water. All that had made the day oppressive and
  • strained nerves to breaking point had gone, leaving peace behind. Kirk
  • felt like one waking from an evil dream.
  • "Why did it happen?" he asked himself. "What made me do it?"
  • A distant rumble of thunder answered the question.
  • Chapter VIII
  • Steve to the Rescue
  • It is an unfortunate fact that, when a powder-magazine explodes, the
  • damage is not confined to the person who struck the match, but extends
  • to the innocent bystanders. In the present case it was Steve Dingle who
  • sustained the worst injuries.
  • Of the others who might have been affected, Mrs. Lora Delane Porter was
  • bomb-proof. No explosion in her neighbourhood could shake her. She
  • received the news of Kirk's outbreak with composure. Privately, in her
  • eugenic heart, she considered his presence superfluous now that William
  • Bannister was safely launched upon his career.
  • In the drama of which she was the self-appointed stage-director, Kirk
  • was a mere super supporting the infant star. Her great mind, occupied
  • almost entirely by the past and the future, took little account of the
  • present. So long as Kirk did not interfere with her management of Bill,
  • he was at liberty, so far as she was concerned, to come or go as he
  • pleased.
  • Steve could not imitate her admirable detachment. He was a poor
  • philosopher, and all that his mind could grasp was that Kirk was in
  • trouble and that Ruth had apparently gone mad.
  • The affair did not come to his ears immediately. He visited the studio
  • at frequent intervals and found Kirk there, working hard and showing no
  • signs of having passed through a crisis which had wrecked his life. He
  • was quiet, it is true, but then he was apt to be quiet nowadays.
  • Probably, if it had not been for Keggs, he would have been kept in
  • ignorance of what had happened for a time.
  • Walking one evening up Broadway, he met Keggs taking the air and
  • observing the night-life of New York like himself.
  • Keggs greeted Steve with enthusiasm. He liked Steve, and it was just
  • possible that Steve might not have heard about the great upheaval. He
  • suggested a drink at a neighbouring saloon.
  • "We have not seen you at our house lately, Mr. Dingle," he remarked,
  • having pecked at his glass of beer like an old, wise bird.
  • He looked at Steve with a bright eye, somewhat puffy at the lids, but
  • full of life.
  • "No," said Steve. "That's right. Guess I must have been busy."
  • Keggs uttered a senile chuckle and drank more beer.
  • "They're rum uns,"
  • he went on. "I've been in some queer places, but this beats 'em all."
  • "What do you mean?" inquired Steve, as a second chuckle escaped his
  • companion.
  • "Why, it's come to an 'ead, things has, Mr. Dingle. That's what I mean.
  • You won't have forgotten all about the pampering of that child what I
  • told you of quite recent. Well, it's been and come to an 'ead."
  • "Yes? Continue, colonel. This listens good."
  • "You ain't 'eard?"
  • "Not a word."
  • Keggs smiled a happy smile and sipped his beer. It did the old man
  • good, finding an entirely new audience like this.
  • "Why, Mr. Winfield 'as packed up and left."
  • Steve gasped.
  • "Left!" he cried. "Not _quit_? Not gone for good?"
  • "For his own good, I should say. Finds himself better off away from it
  • all, if you ask me. But 'adn't you reelly heard, Mr. Dingle? God bless
  • my soul! I thought it was public property by now, that little bit of
  • noos. Why, Mr. Winfield 'asn't been living with us for the matter of a
  • week or more."
  • "For the love of Mike!"
  • "I'm telling you the honest truth, Mr. Dingle. Two weeks ago come next
  • Saturday Mr. Winfield meets me in the 'all looking wild and 'arassed--it
  • was the same day there was that big thunder-storm--and he looks at me,
  • glassy like, and says to me: 'Keggs, 'ave my bag packed and my boxes,
  • too; I'm going away for a time. I'll send a messenger for 'em.' And
  • out he goes into the rain, which begins to come down cats and dogs the
  • moment he was in the street.
  • "I start to go out after him with his rain-coat, thinking he'd get wet
  • before he could find a cab, they being so scarce in this city, not like
  • London, where you simply 'ave to raise your 'and to 'ave a dozen
  • flocking round you, but he don't stop; he just goes walking off through
  • the rain and all, and I gets back into the house, not wishing to be
  • wetted myself on account of my rheumatism, which is always troublesome
  • in the damp weather. And I says to myself: ''Ullo, 'ullo, 'ullo, what's
  • all this?'
  • "See what I mean? I could tell as plain as if I'd been in the room with
  • them that they had been having words. And since that day 'e ain't been
  • near the 'ouse, and where he is now is more than I can tell you, Mr.
  • Dingle."
  • "Why, he's at the studio."
  • "At the studio, is he? Well, I shouldn't wonder if he wasn't better
  • off. 'E didn't strike me as a man what was used to the ways of society.
  • He's happier where he is, I expect."
  • And, having summed matters up in this philosophical manner, Keggs
  • drained his glass and cocked an expectant eye at Steve.
  • Steve obeyed the signal and ordered a further supply of the beer for
  • which Mr. Keggs had a plebian and unbutlerlike fondness. His companion
  • turned the conversation to the prospects of one of that group of
  • inefficient middleweights whom Steve so heartily despised, between whom
  • and another of the same degraded band a ten-round contest had been
  • arranged and would shortly take place.
  • Ordinarily this would have been a subject on which Steve would have
  • found plenty to say, but his mind was occupied with what he had just
  • heard, and he sat silent while the silver-haired patron of sport
  • opposite prattled on respecting current form.
  • Steve felt stunned. It was unthinkable that this thing had really
  • occurred.
  • Mr. Keggs, sipping beer, discussed the coming fight. He weighed the
  • alleged left hook of one principal against the much-advertised right
  • swing of the other. He spoke with apprehension of a yellow streak which
  • certain purists claimed to have discovered in the gladiator on whose
  • chances he proposed to invest his cash.
  • Steve was not listening to him. A sudden thought had come to him,
  • filling his mind to the exclusion of all else.
  • The recollection of his talk with Kirk at the studio had come back to
  • him. He had advised Kirk, as a solution of his difficulties, to kidnap
  • the child and take him to Connecticut. Well, Kirk was out of the
  • running now, but he, Steve, was still in it.
  • He would do it himself.
  • The idea thrilled him. It was so in keeping with his theory of the
  • virtue of the swift and immediate punch, administered with the minimum
  • of preliminary sparring. There was a risk attached to the scheme which
  • appealed to him. Above all, he honestly believed that it would achieve
  • its object, the straightening out of the tangle which Ruth and Kirk had
  • made of their lives.
  • When once an idea had entered Steve's head he was tenacious of it. He
  • had come to the decision that Ruth needed what he called a jolt to
  • bring her to herself, much as a sleep-walker is aroused by the touch of
  • a hand, and he clung to it.
  • He interrupted Mr. Keggs in the middle of a speech touching on his
  • man's alleged yellow streak.
  • "Will you be at home to-night, colonel?" he asked.
  • "I certainly will, Mr. Dingle."
  • "Mind if I look in?"
  • "I shall be delighted. I can offer you a cigar that I think you'll
  • appreciate, and we can continue this little chat at our leisure. Mrs.
  • Winfield's dining out, and that there Porter, thank Gawd, 'as gone to
  • Boston."
  • Chapter IX
  • At One in the Morning
  • William Bannister Winfield slept the peaceful sleep of childhood in his
  • sterilized cot. The light gleamed faintly on the white tiles. It lit up
  • the brass knobs on the walls, the spotless curtains, the large
  • thermometer.
  • An intruder, interested in these things, would have seen by a glance at
  • this last that the temperature of the room was exactly that recommended
  • by doctors as the correct temperature for the nursery of a sleeping
  • child; no higher, no lower. The transom over the door was closed, but
  • the window was open at the top to precisely the extent advocated by the
  • authorities, due consideration having been taken for the time of year
  • and the condition of the outer atmosphere.
  • The hour was one in the morning.
  • Childhood is a readily adaptable time of life, and William Bannister,
  • after a few days of blank astonishment, varied by open mutiny, had
  • accepted the change in his surroundings and daily existence with
  • admirable philosophy. His memory was not far-reaching, and, as time
  • went on and he began to accommodate himself to the new situation, he
  • had gradually forgotten the days at the studio, as, it is to be
  • supposed, he had forgotten the clouds of glory which he had trailed on
  • his entry into this world. If memories of past bear-hunts among the
  • canvases on the dusty floor ever came to him now, he never mentioned
  • it.
  • A child can weave romance into any condition of life in which fate
  • places him; and William Bannister had managed to interest himself in
  • his present existence with a considerable gusto. Scraps of conversation
  • between Mrs. Porter and Mamie, overheard and digested, had given him a
  • good working knowledge of the system of hygiene of which he was the
  • centre. He was vague as to details, but not vaguer than most people.
  • He knew that something called "sterilizing" was the beginning and end
  • of life, and that things known as germs were the Great Peril. He had
  • expended much thought on the subject of germs. Mamie, questioned, could
  • give him no more definite information than that they were "things which
  • got at you and hurt you," and his awe of Mrs. Porter had kept him from
  • going to the fountainhead of knowledge for further data.
  • Building on the information to hand, he had formed in his mind an odd
  • kind of anthropomorphic image of the germ. He pictured it as a squat,
  • thick-set man of repellent aspect and stealthy movements, who sneaked
  • up on you when you were not looking and did unpleasant things to you,
  • selecting as the time for his attacks those nights when you had allowed
  • your attention to wander while saying your prayers.
  • On such occasions it was Bill's practice to fool him by repeating his
  • prayers to himself in bed after the official ceremony. Some times, to
  • make certain, he would do this so often that he fell asleep in
  • mid-prayer.
  • He was always glad of the night-light. A germ hates light, preferring
  • to do his scoundrelly work when it is so black that you can't see your
  • hand in front of your face and the darkness presses down on you like a
  • blanket. Occasionally a fear would cross his mind that the night-light
  • might go out; but it never did, being one of Mr. Edison's best electric
  • efforts neatly draped with black veiling.
  • Apart from this he had few worries, certainly none serious enough to
  • keep him awake.
  • He was sleeping now, his head on his right arm, a sterilized Teddy-bear
  • clutched firmly in his other hand, with the concentration of one
  • engaged upon a feat at which he is an expert.
  • * * * * *
  • The door opened slowly. A head insinuated itself into the room,
  • furtively, as if uncertain of its welcome. The door continued to open
  • and Steve slipped in.
  • He closed the door as gently as he had opened it, and stood there
  • glancing about him. A slow grin appeared upon his face, to be succeeded
  • by an expression of serious resolve. For Steve was anxious.
  • It was still Steve's intention to remove, steal, purloin, and kidnap
  • William Bannister that night, but now that the moment had come for
  • doing it he was nervous.
  • He was not used to this sort of thing. He was an honest ex-middleweight,
  • not a burglar; and just now he felt particularly burglarious. The
  • stillness of the house oppressed him. He had not relished the long wait
  • between the moment of his apparent departure and that of his entry into
  • the nursery.
  • He had acted with simple cunning. He had remained talking pugilism with
  • Keggs in the pantry till a prodigious yawn from his host had told him
  • that the time was come for the breaking up of the party. Then, begging
  • Keggs not to move, as he could find his way out, he had hurried to the
  • back door, opened and shut it, and darted into hiding. Presently Keggs,
  • yawning loudly, had toddled along the passage, bolted the door, and
  • made his way upstairs to bed, leaving Steve to his vigil.
  • Steve's reflections during this period had not been of the pleasantest.
  • Exactly what his explanation was to be, if by any mischance he should
  • make a noise and be detected, he had been unable to decide. Finally he
  • had dismissed the problem as insoluble, and had concentrated his mind
  • on taking precautions to omit any such noise.
  • So far he had succeeded. He had found his way to the nursery easily
  • enough, having marked the location earnestly on his previous visits.
  • During the whole of his conversation with Keggs in the pantry he had
  • been repeating to himself the magic formula which began: "First
  • staircase to the left--turn to the right-----" and here he was now at
  • his goal and ready to begin.
  • But it was just this question of beginning which exercised him so
  • grievously. How was he to begin? Should he go straight to the cot and
  • wake the kid? Suppose the kid was scared and let out a howl?
  • A warm, prickly sensation about the forehead was Steve's silent comment
  • on this reflection. He took a step forward and stopped again. He was
  • conscious of tremors about the region of the spine. The thought crossed
  • his mind at that moment that burglars earned their money.
  • As he stood, hesitating, his problem was solved for him. There came a
  • heavy sigh from the direction of the cot which made him start as if a
  • pistol had exploded in his ear; and then he was aware of two large eyes
  • staring at him.
  • There was a tense pause. A drop of perspiration rolled down his
  • cheek-bone and anchored itself stickily on the angle of his jaw. It
  • tickled abominably, but he did not dare to move for fear of unleashing
  • the scream which brooded over the situation like a cloud.
  • At any moment now a howl of terror might rip the silence and bring the
  • household on the run. And then--the explanations! A second drop of
  • perspiration started out in the wake of the first.
  • The large eyes continued to inspect him. They were clouded with sleep.
  • Suddenly a frightened look came into them, and, as he saw it, Steve
  • braced his muscles for the shock.
  • "Here it comes!" he said miserably to himself. "Oh, Lord! We're off!"
  • He searched in his brain for speech, desperately, as the best man at a
  • wedding searches for that ring while the universe stands still, waiting
  • expectantly.
  • He found no speech.
  • The child's mouth opened. Steve eyed him, fascinated. No bird,
  • encountering a snake, was ever so incapable of movement as he.
  • "Are you a germ?" inquired William Bannister.
  • Steve tottered to the cot and sat down on it. The relief was too much
  • for him.
  • "Gee, kid!" he said, "you had my goat then. I've got to hand it to
  • you."
  • His sudden approach had confirmed William Bannister's worst suspicions.
  • This was precisely how he had expected the germ to behave. He shrank
  • back on the pillow, gulping.
  • "Why, for the love of Mike," said Steve, "don't you know me, kid? I'm
  • not a porch-climber. Don't you remember Steve who used to raise Hades
  • with you at the studio? Darn it, I'm your godfather! I'm Steve!"
  • William Bannister sat up, partially reassured.
  • "What's Steve?" he inquired.
  • "I'm Steve."
  • "Why?"
  • "How do you mean--why?"
  • The large eyes inspected him gravely.
  • "I remember," he said finally.
  • "Well, don't go forgetting, kid. I couldn't stand a second session like
  • that. I got a weak heart."
  • "You're Steve."
  • "That's right. Stick to that and we'll get along fine."
  • "I thought you were a germ."
  • "A what?"
  • "They get at you and hurt you."
  • "Who said so?"
  • "Mamie."
  • "Are you scared of germs?"
  • The White Hope nodded gravely.
  • "I have to be sterilized because of them. Are you sterilized?"
  • "Nobody ever told me so. But, say, kid, you don't want to be frightened
  • of germs or microbes or bacilli or any of the rest of the circus. You
  • don't want to be frightened of nothing. You're the White Hope, the
  • bear-cat that ain't scared of anything on earth. What's this germ thing
  • like, anyway?"
  • "It's a----I've never seen one, but Mamie says they get at you and hurt
  • you. I think it's a kind of big sort of ugly man that creeps in when
  • you're asleep."
  • "So that's why you thought I was one?"
  • The White Hope nodded.
  • "Forget it!" said Steve. "Mamie is a queen, all right, believe me, but
  • she's got the wrong dope on this microbe proposition. You don't need to
  • be scared of them any more. Why, some of me best pals are germs."
  • "What's pals?"
  • "Why, friends. You and me are pals. Me and your pop are pals."
  • "Where's pop?"
  • "He's gone away."
  • "I remember."
  • "He thought he needed a change of air. Don't you ever need a change of
  • air?"
  • "I don't know."
  • "Well, you do. Take it from me. This is about the punkest joint I ever
  • was in. You don't want to stay in a dairy-kitchen like this."
  • "What's dairy-kitchen?"
  • "This is. All these white tiles and fixings. It makes me feel like a
  • pint of milk to look at 'em."
  • "It's because of the germs."
  • "Ain't I telling you the germs don't want to hurt you?"
  • "Aunt Lora told Mamie they do."
  • "Say, cull, you tell your Aunt Lora to make a noise like an ice-cream
  • in the sun and melt away. She's a prune, and what she says don't go. Do
  • you want to know what a germ or a microbe--it's the same thing--really
  • is? It's a fellow that has the best time you can think of. They've been
  • fooling you, kid. They saw you were easy, so they handed it to you on a
  • plate. I'm the guy that can put you wise about microbes."
  • "Tell me."
  • "Sure. Well, a microbe is a kid that just runs wild out in the country.
  • He don't have to hang around in a white-tiled nursery and eat
  • sterilized junk and go to bed when they tell him to. He has a swell
  • time out in the woods, fishing and playing around in the dirt and going
  • after birds' eggs and picking berries, and--oh, shucks, anything else
  • you can think of. Wouldn't you like to do that?"
  • William Bannister nodded.
  • "Well, say, as it happens, there's a fine chance for you to be a germ
  • right away. I know a little place down in the Connecticut woods which
  • would just hit you right. You could put on overalls----"
  • "What's overalls?"
  • "Sort of clothes. Not like the fussed-up scenery you have to wear now,
  • but the real sort of clothes which you can muss up and nobody cares a
  • darn. You can put 'em on and go out and tear up Jack like a regular kid
  • all you want. Say, don't you remember the fool stunts you and me used
  • to pull off in the studio?"
  • "What studio?"
  • "Gee! you're a bit shy on your English, ain't you? It makes it sort of
  • hard for a guy to keep up what you might call a flow of talk. Still,
  • you should worry. Why, don't you remember where you used to live before
  • you came to this joint? Big, dusty sort of place, where you and me used
  • to play around on the floor?"
  • The White Hope nodded.
  • "Well, wouldn't you like to do that again?"
  • "Yes."
  • "And be a regular microbe?"
  • "Yes."
  • Steve looked at his watch.
  • "Well, that's lucky," he said. "It happens to be exactly the right time
  • for starting out to be one. That's curious, ain't it?"
  • "Yes."
  • "I've got a pal--friend, you know----"
  • "Is he a germ?"
  • "Sure. He's waiting for me now in an automobile in the park----"
  • "Why?"
  • "Because I asked him to. He owns a garage. Place where automobiles
  • live, you know. I asked him to bring out a car and wait around near by,
  • because I might be taking a pal of mine--that's you--for a ride into
  • the country to-night. Of course, you don't have to come if you don't
  • want to. Only it's mighty nice out there. You can spend all to-morrow
  • rolling about in the grass and listening to the birds. I shouldn't
  • wonder if we couldn't borrow a farmer's kid for you to play with.
  • There's lots of them around. He should show you the best time you've
  • had in months."
  • William Bannister's eyes gleamed. The finer points of the scheme were
  • beginning to stand out before him with a growing clarity.
  • "Would I have to take my bib?" he asked excitedly.
  • Steve uttered a scornful laugh.
  • "No, _sir_! We don't wear bibs out there."
  • As far as William Bannister was concerned, this appeared to settle it.
  • Of all the trials of his young life he hated most his bib.
  • "Let's go!"
  • Steve breathed a sigh of relief.
  • "Right, squire; we will," he said. "But I guess we had best leave a
  • letter for Mamie, so's she won't be wondering where you've got to."
  • "Will Mamie be cross?"
  • "Not on your life. She'll be tickled to death."
  • He scribbled a few lines on a piece of paper and left them on the cot,
  • from which William Bannister had now scrambled.
  • "Can you dress yourself?" asked Steve.
  • "Oh, yes." It was an accomplishment of which the White Hope was
  • extremely proud.
  • "Well, go to it, then."
  • "Steve."
  • "Hello?"
  • "Won't it be a surprise for Mamie?"
  • "You bet it will. And she won't be the only one, at that."
  • "Will mother be surprised?"
  • "She sure will."
  • "And pop?"
  • "You bet!"
  • William Bannister chuckled delightedly.
  • "Ready?" said Steve.
  • "Yes."
  • "Now listen. We've got to get out of this joint as quiet as mice. It
  • would spoil the surprise if they was to hear us and come out and ask
  • what we were doing. Get that?"
  • "Yes."
  • "Well, see how quiet you can make it. You don't want even to breathe
  • more than you can help."
  • * * * * *
  • They left the room and crept down the dark stairs. In the hall Steve
  • lit a match and switched on the electric light. He unbolted the door
  • and peered out into the avenue. Close by, under the trees, stood an
  • automobile, its headlights staring into the night.
  • "Quick!" cried Steve.
  • He picked up the White Hope, closed the door, and ran.
  • Chapter X
  • Accepting the Gifts of the Gods
  • It was fortunate, considering the magnitude of the shock which she was
  • to receive, that circumstances had given Steve's Mamie unusual powers
  • of resistance in the matter of shocks. For years before her
  • introduction into the home of the Winfield family her life had been one
  • long series of crises. She had never known what the morrow might bring
  • forth, though experience had convinced her that it was pretty certain
  • to bring forth something agitating which would call for all her
  • well-known ability to handle disaster.
  • The sole care of three small brothers and a weak-minded father gives a
  • girl exceptional opportunities of cultivating poise under difficult
  • conditions. It had become second nature with Mamie to keep her head
  • though the heavens fell.
  • Consequently, when she entered the nursery next morning and found it
  • empty, she did not go into hysterics. She did not even scream. She read
  • Steve's note twice very carefully, then sat down to think what was her
  • best plan of action.
  • Her ingrained habit of looking on the bright side of things, the result
  • of a life which, had pessimism been allowed to rule it, might have
  • ended prematurely with what the papers are fond of calling a "rash
  • act," led her to consider first those points in the situation which she
  • labelled in her meditations as "bits of luck."
  • It was a bit of luck that Mrs. Porter happened to be away for the
  • moment. It gave her time for reflection. It was another bit of luck
  • that, as she had learned from Keggs, whom she met on the stairs on her
  • way to the nursery, a mysterious telephone-call had caused Ruth to rise
  • from her bed some three hours before her usual time and depart
  • hurriedly in a cab. This also helped.
  • Keggs had no information to give as to Ruth's destination or the
  • probable hour of her return. She had vanished without a word, except
  • a request to Keggs to tell the driver of her taxi to go to the
  • Thirty-Third Street subway.
  • "Must 'a' 'ad bad noos," Keggs thought, "because she were look'n' white
  • as a sheet."
  • Mamie was sorry that Ruth had had bad news, but her departure certainly
  • helped to relieve the pressure of an appalling situation.
  • With the absence of Ruth and Mrs. Porter the bits of luck came to an
  • end. Try as she would, Mamie could discover no other silver linings in
  • the cloud-bank. And even these ameliorations of the disaster were only
  • temporary.
  • Ruth would return. Worse, Mrs. Porter would return. Like two Mother
  • Hubbards, they would go to the cupboard, and the cupboard would be
  • bare. And to her, Mamie, would fall the task of explanation.
  • The only explanation that occurred to her was that Steve had gone
  • suddenly mad. He had given no hint of his altruistic motives in the
  • hurried scrawl which she had found on the empty cot. He had merely said
  • that he had taken away William Bannister, but that "it was all right."
  • Why Steve should imagine that it was all right baffled Mamie. Anything
  • less all right she had never come across in a lifetime of disconcerting
  • experiences.
  • She was aware that things were not as they should be between Ruth and
  • Kirk, and the spectacle of the broken home had troubled her gentle
  • heart; but she failed to establish a connection between Kirk's
  • departure and Steve's midnight raid.
  • After devoting some ten minutes to steady brainwork she permitted
  • herself the indulgence of a few tears. She did not often behave in this
  • shockingly weak way, her role in life hitherto having been that of the
  • one calm person in a disrupted world. When her father had lost his job,
  • and the rent was due, and Brother Jim had fallen in the mud to the
  • detriment of his only suit of clothes, and Brothers Terence and Mike
  • had developed respectively a sore throat and a funny feeling in the
  • chest, she had remained dry-eyed and capable. Her father had cried, her
  • brother Jim had cried, her brother Terence had cried, and her brother
  • Mike had cried in a manner that made the weeping of the rest of the
  • family seem like the uncanny stillness of a summer night; but she had
  • not shed a tear.
  • Now, however, she gave way. She buried her little face on the pillow
  • which so brief a while before had been pressed by the round head of
  • William Bannister and mourned like a modern Niobe.
  • At the end of two minutes she rose, sniffing but courageous, herself
  • again. In her misery an idea had come to her. It was quite a simple and
  • obvious idea, but till now it had eluded her.
  • She would go round to the studio and see Kirk. After all, it was his
  • affair as much as anybody else's, and she had a feeling that it would
  • be easier to break the news to him than to Ruth and Mrs. Porter.
  • She washed her eyes, put on her hat, and set out.
  • Luck, however, was not running her way that morning. Arriving at the
  • studio, she rang the bell, and rang and rang again without result
  • except a marked increase in her already substantial depression. When it
  • became plain to her that the studio was empty she desisted.
  • It is an illustration of her remarkable force of character that at this
  • point, refusing to be crushed by the bludgeoning of fate, she walked to
  • Broadway and went into a moving-picture palace. There was nothing to be
  • effected by staying in the house and worrying, so she resolutely
  • declined to worry.
  • From this point onward her day divided itself into a series of three
  • movements repeated at regular intervals. From the moving pictures she
  • went to the house on Fifth Avenue. Finding that neither Ruth nor Mrs.
  • Porter had returned, she went to the studio. Ringing the bell there and
  • getting no answer, she took in the movies once more.
  • Mamie was a philosopher.
  • The atmosphere of the great house was still untroubled on her second
  • visit. The care of the White Hope had always been left exclusively in
  • the hands of the women, and the rest of the household had not yet
  • detected his absence. It was not their business to watch his comings in
  • and his goings out. Besides, they had other things to occupy them.
  • The unique occasion of the double absence of Ruth and Mrs. Porter was
  • being celebrated by a sort of Saturnalia or slaves' holiday. It was
  • true that either or both might return at any moment, but there was a
  • disposition on the part of the domestic staff to take a chance on it.
  • Keggs, that sinful butler, had strolled round to an apparently
  • untenanted house on Forty-First Street, where those who knew their New
  • York could, by giving the signal, obtain admittance and the privilege
  • of losing their money at the pleasing game of roulette with a double
  • zero.
  • George, the footman, in company with Henriette, the lady's-maid, and
  • Rollins, the chauffeur, who had butted in absolutely uninvited to
  • George's acute disgust, were taking the air in the park. The rest of
  • the staff, with the exception of a house-maid, who had been bribed,
  • with two dollars and an old dress which had once been Ruth's and was
  • now the property of Henriette, to stand by the ship, were somewhere on
  • the island, amusing themselves in the way that seemed best to them. For
  • all practical purposes, it was a safe and sane Fourth provided out of a
  • blue sky by the god of chance.
  • It was about five o'clock when Mamie, having, at a modest estimate,
  • seen five hundred persecuted heroes, a thousand ill-used heroines,
  • several regiments of cowboys, and perhaps two thousand comic men
  • pursued by angry mobs, returned from her usual visit to the studio.
  • This time there were signs of hope in the shape of a large automobile
  • opposite the door. She rang the bell, and there came from within the
  • welcome sound of footsteps. An elderly man of a somewhat dissipated
  • countenance opened the door.
  • "I want to see Mr. Winfield," said Mamie.
  • Mr. Penway, for it was he, gave her the approving glance which your man
  • of taste and discrimination does not fail to bestow upon youth and
  • beauty and bawled over his shoulder--
  • "Kirk!"
  • Kirk came down the passage. He was looking brown and healthy. He was in
  • his shirt-sleeves.
  • "Oh, Mr. Winfield. I'm in such trouble."
  • "Why, Mamie! What's the matter? Come in."
  • Mamie followed him into the studio, eluding Mr. Penway, whose arm was
  • hovering in the neighbourhood of her waist.
  • "Sit down," said Kirk. "What's the trouble? Have you been trying to get
  • at me before? We've been down to Long Beach."
  • "A delightful spot," observed Mr. Penway, who had followed. "Sandy, but
  • replete with squabs. Why didn't you come earlier? We could have taken
  • you."
  • "May I talk privately with you, Mr. Winfield?"
  • "Sure."
  • Kirk looked at Mr. Penway, who nodded agreeably.
  • "Outside for Robert?" he inquired amiably. "Very well. There is
  • no Buttinsky blood in the Penway family. Let me just fix myself a
  • high-ball and borrow one of your cigars and I'll go and sit in the
  • car and commune with nature. Take your time."
  • "Just a moment, Mamie," said Kirk, when he had gone. He picked up a
  • telegram which lay on the table. "I'll read this and see if it's
  • important, and then we'll get right down to business. We only got back
  • a moment before you arrived, so I'm a bit behind with my
  • correspondence."
  • As he read the telegram a look of astonishment came into his face. He
  • sat down and read the message a second time. Mamie waited patiently.
  • "Good Lord!" he muttered.
  • A sudden thought struck Mamie.
  • "Mr. Winfield, is it from Steve?" she said.
  • Kirk started, and looked at her incredulously.
  • "How on earth did you know? Good Heavens! Are you in this, Mamie, too?"
  • Mamie handed him her note. He read it without a word. When he had
  • finished he sat back in his chair, thinking.
  • "I thought Steve might have telegraphed to you," said Mamie.
  • Kirk roused himself from his thoughts.
  • "Was this what you came to see me about?"
  • "Yes."
  • "What does Ruth--what do they think of it--up there?"
  • "They don't know anything about it. Mrs. Winfield went away early this
  • morning. Mr. Keggs said she had had a telephone call, Mrs. Porter is in
  • Boston. She will be back to-day some time. What are we to do?"
  • "Do!" Kirk jumped up and began to pace the floor. "I'll tell you what
  • I'm going to do. Steve has taken the boy up to my shack in Connecticut.
  • I'm going there as fast as the auto can take me."
  • "Steve's mad!"
  • "Is he? Steve's the best pal I've got. For two years I've been aching
  • to get at this boy, and Steve has had the sense to show me the way."
  • He went on as if talking to himself.
  • "Steve's a man. I'm just a fool who hangs round without the nerve to
  • act. If I had had the pluck of a rabbit I'd have done this myself six
  • months ago. But I've hung round doing nothing while that damned Porter
  • woman played the fool with the boy. I'll be lucky now if he remembers
  • who I am."
  • He turned abruptly to Mamie.
  • "Mamie, you can tell them whatever you please when you get home. They
  • can't blame you. It's not your fault. Tell them that Steve was acting
  • for me with my complete approval. Tell them that the kid's going to be
  • brought up right from now on. I've got him, and I'm going to keep him."
  • Mamie had risen and was facing him, a very determined midget, pink and
  • resolute.
  • "I'm not going home, Mr. Winfield."
  • "What?"
  • "If you are going to Bill, I am coming with you."
  • "Nonsense."
  • "That's my place--with him."
  • "But you can't. It's impossible."
  • "Not more impossible than what has happened already."
  • "I won't take you."
  • "Then I'll go by train. I know where your house is. Steve told me."
  • "It's out of the question."
  • Mamie's Irish temper got the better of her professional desire to
  • maintain the discreetly respectful attitude of employee toward
  • employer.
  • "Is it then? We'll see. Do you think I'm going to leave you and Steve
  • to look after my Bill? What do men know about taking care of children?
  • You would choke the poor mite or let him kill himself a hundred ways."
  • She glared at him defiantly. He glared back at her. Then his sense of
  • humour came to his rescue. She looked so absurdly small standing there
  • with her chin up and her fists clenched. He laughed delightedly. He
  • went up to her and placed a hand on each of her shoulders, looking down
  • at her. He felt that he loved her for her championship of Bill.
  • "You're a brick, Mamie. Of course you shall come. We'll call at the house
  • and you can pack your grip. But, by George, if you put that infernal
  • thermometer in I'll run the automobile up against a telegraph-pole, and
  • then Bill will lose us both."
  • "Finished?" said a voice. "Oh, I beg your pardon. Sorry."
  • Mr. Penway was gazing at them with affectionate interest from the
  • doorway. Kirk released Mamie and stepped back.
  • "I only looked in," explained Mr. Penway. "Didn't mean to intrude.
  • Thought you might have finished your chat, and it was a trifle lonely
  • communing with nature."
  • "Bob," said Kirk, "you'll have to get on without me for a day or two.
  • Make yourself at home. You know where everything is."
  • "I can satisfy my simple needs. Thinking of going away?"
  • "I've got to go up to Connecticut. I don't know how long I shall be
  • away."
  • "Take your time," said Mr. Penway affably. "Going in the auto?"
  • "Yes."
  • "The weather is very pleasant for automobiling just now," remarked Mr.
  • Penway.
  • * * * * *
  • Ten minutes later, having thrown a few things together into a bag, Kirk
  • took his place at the wheel. Mamie sat beside him. The bag had the rear
  • seat to itself.
  • "There seems to be plenty of room still," said Mr. Penway. "I have half
  • a mind to come with you."
  • He looked at Mamie.
  • "But on reflection I fancy you can get along without me."
  • He stood at the door, gazing after the motor as it moved down the
  • street. When it had turned the corner he went back into the studio and
  • mixed himself a high-ball.
  • "Kirk does manage to find them," he said enviously.
  • Chapter XI
  • Mr. Penway on the Grill
  • Fate moves in a mysterious way. Luck comes hand in hand with
  • misfortune. What we lose on the swings we make up on the roundabouts.
  • If Keggs had not seen twenty-five of his hard-earned dollars pass at
  • one swoop into the clutches of the _croupier_ at the apparently
  • untenanted house on Forty-First Street, and become disgusted with the
  • pleasing game of roulette, he might have delayed his return to the
  • house on Fifth Avenue till a later hour; in which case he would have
  • missed the remarkable and stimulating spectacle of Kirk driving to the
  • door in an automobile with Mamie at his side; of Mamie, jumping out and
  • entering the house; of Mamie leaving the house with a suit-case; of
  • Kirk helping her into the automobile, and of the automobile
  • disappearing with its interesting occupants up the avenue at a high
  • rate of speed.
  • Having lost his money, as stated, and having returned home, he was
  • enabled to be a witness, the only witness, of these notable events, and
  • his breast was filled with a calm joy in consequence. This was
  • something special. This was exclusive, a scoop. He looked forward to
  • the return of Mrs. Porter with an eagerness which, earlier in the day,
  • he would have considered impossible. Somehow Ruth did not figure in his
  • picture of the delivery of the sensational news that Mr. Winfield had
  • eloped with the young person engaged to look after her son. Mrs.
  • Porter's was one of those characters which monopolize any stage on
  • which they appear. Besides, Keggs disliked Mrs. Porter, and the
  • pleasure of the prospect of giving her a shock left no room for other
  • thoughts.
  • It was nearly seven o'clock when Mrs. Porter reached the house. She was
  • a little tired from the journey, but in high good humour. She had had a
  • thoroughly satisfactory interview with her publishers--satisfactory,
  • that is to say, to herself; the publishers had other views.
  • "Is Mrs. Winfield in?" she asked Keggs as he admitted her.
  • Ruth was always sympathetic about her guerrilla warfare with the
  • publishers. She looked forward to a cosy chat, in the course of which
  • she would trace, step by step, the progress of the late campaign which
  • had begun overnight and had culminated that morning in a sort of
  • Gettysburg, from which she had emerged with her arms full of captured
  • flags and all the other trophies of conquest.
  • "No, madam," said Keggs. "Mrs. Winfield has not yet returned."
  • Keggs was an artist in tragic narration. He did not give away his
  • climax; he led up to it by degrees as slow as his audience would
  • permit.
  • "Returned? I did not know she intended to go away. Her yacht party is
  • next week, I understand."
  • "Yes, madam."
  • "Where has she gone?"
  • "To Tuxedo, madam."
  • "Tuxedo?"
  • "Mrs. Winfield has just rung us up from there upon the telephone to
  • request that necessaries for an indefinite stay be despatched to her.
  • She is visiting Mrs. Bailey Bannister."
  • If Mrs. Porter had been Steve, she would probably have said "For the
  • love of Mike!" at this point. Being herself, she merely repeated the
  • butler's last words.
  • "If I may be allowed to say so, madam, I think that there must have
  • been trouble at Mrs. Bannister's. A telephone-call came from her very
  • early this morning for Mrs. Winfield which caused Mrs. Winfield to rise
  • and leave in a taximeter-cab in an extreme hurry. If I might be allowed
  • to suggest it, it is probably a case of serious illness. Mrs. Winfield
  • was looking very disturbed."
  • "H'm!" said Mrs. Porter. The exclamation was one of disappointment
  • rather than of apprehension. Sudden illnesses at the Bailey home did
  • not stir her, but she was annoyed that her recital of the squelching of
  • the publishers would have to wait.
  • She went upstairs. Her intention was to look in at the nursery and
  • satisfy herself that all was well with William Bannister. She had given
  • Mamie specific instructions as to his care on her departure; but you
  • never knew. Perhaps her keen eye might be able to detect some deviation
  • from the rules she had laid down.
  • It detected one at once. The nursery was empty. According to schedule,
  • the child should have been taking his bath.
  • She went downstairs again. Keggs was waiting in the hall. He had
  • foreseen this return. He had allowed her to go upstairs with his story
  • but half heard because that appealed to his artistic sense. This story,
  • to his mind, was too good to be bolted at a sitting; it was the ideal
  • serial.
  • "Keggs."
  • "Madam?"
  • "Where is Master William?"
  • "I fear I do not know, madam."
  • "When did he go out? It is seven o'clock; he should have been in an
  • hour ago."
  • "I have been making inquiries, madam, and I regret to inform you that
  • nobody appears to have seen Master William all day."
  • "What?"
  • "It not being my place to follow his movements, I was unaware of this
  • until quite recently, but from conversation with the other domestics, I
  • find that he seems to have disappeared!"
  • "Disappeared?"
  • A glow of enjoyment such as he had sometimes experienced when the
  • ticker at the Cadillac Hotel informed him that the man he had backed in
  • some San Francisco fight had upset his opponent for the count began to
  • permeate Keggs.
  • "Disappeared, madam," he repeated.
  • "Perhaps Mrs. Winfield took him with her to Tuxedo."
  • "No, madam. Mrs. Winfield was alone. I was present when she drove
  • away."
  • "Send Mamie to me at once," said Mrs. Porter.
  • Keggs could have whooped with delight had not such an action seemed to
  • him likely to prejudice his chances of retaining a good situation. He
  • contented himself with wriggling ecstatically. "The young person is not
  • in the house, madam."
  • "Not in the house? What business has she to be out? Where is she?"
  • "I could not tell you, madam." Keggs paused, reluctant to deal the
  • final blow, as a child lingers lovingly over the last lick of ice-cream
  • in a cone. "I last saw her at about five o'clock, driving off with Mr.
  • Winfield in an automobile."
  • "What!"
  • Keggs was content. His climax had not missed fire. Its staggering
  • effect was plain on the face of his hearer. For once Mrs. Porter's
  • poise had deserted her. Her one word had been a scream.
  • "She did not tell me her destination, madam," went on Keggs, making all
  • that could be made of what was left of the situation after its artistic
  • finish. "She came in and packed a suit-case and went out again and
  • joined Mr. Winfield in the automobile, and they drove off together."
  • Mrs. Porter recovered herself. This was a matter which called for
  • silent meditation, not for chit-chat with a garrulous butler.
  • "That will do, Keggs."
  • "Very good, madam."
  • Keggs withdrew to his pantry, well pleased. He considered that he had
  • done himself justice as a raconteur. He had not spoiled a good story in
  • the telling.
  • Mrs. Porter went to her room and sat down to think. She was a woman of
  • action, and she soon reached a decision.
  • The errant pair must be followed, and at once. Her great mind, playing
  • over the situation like a searchlight, detected a connection between
  • this elopement and the disappearance of William Bannister. She had long
  • since marked Kirk down as a malcontent, and she now labelled the absent
  • Mamie as a snake in the grass who had feigned submission to her rule,
  • while meditating all the time the theft of the child and the elopement
  • with Kirk. She had placed the same construction on Mamie's departure
  • with Kirk as had Mr. Penway, showing that it is not only great minds
  • that think alike.
  • A latent conviction as to the immorality of all artists, which had been
  • one of the maxims of her late mother, sprang into life. She blamed
  • herself for having allowed a nurse of such undeniable physical
  • attractions to become a member of the household. Mamie's very quietness
  • and apparent absence of bad qualities became additional evidence
  • against her now, Mrs. Porter arguing that these things indicated deep
  • deceitfulness. She told herself, what was not the case, that she had
  • never trusted that girl.
  • But Lora Delane Porter was not a woman to waste time in retrospection.
  • She had not been in her room five minutes before her mind was made up.
  • It was improbable that Kirk and his guilty accomplice had sought so
  • near and obvious a haven as the studio, but it was undoubtedly there
  • that pursuit must begin. She knew nothing of his way of living at that
  • retreat, but she imagined that he must have appointed some successor to
  • George Pennicut as general factotum, and it might be that this person
  • would have information to impart.
  • The task of inducing him to impart it did not daunt Mrs. Porter. She
  • had a just confidence in her powers of cross-examination.
  • She went to the telephone and called up the garage where Ruth's
  • automobiles were housed. Her plan of action was now complete. If no
  • information were forthcoming at the studio, she would endeavour to find
  • out where Kirk had hired the car in which he had taken Mamie away. He
  • would probably have secured it from some garage near by. But this
  • detective work would be a last resource. Like a good general, she did
  • not admit of the possibility of failing in her first attack.
  • And, luck being with her, it happened that at the moment when she set
  • out, Mr. Penway, feeling pretty comfortable where he was, abandoned his
  • idea of going out for a stroll along Broadway and settled himself to
  • pass the next few hours in Kirk's armchair.
  • Mr. Penway's first feeling when the bell rang, rousing him from his
  • peaceful musings, was one of mild vexation. A few minutes later, when
  • Mrs. Porter had really got to work upon him, he would not have
  • recognized that tepid emotion as vexation at all.
  • Mrs. Porter wasted no time. She perforated Mr. Penway's spine with her
  • eyes, reduced it to the consistency of summer squash, and drove him
  • before her into the studio, where she took a seat and motioned him to
  • do the same. For a moment she sat looking at him, by way of completing
  • the work of subjection, while Mr. Penway writhed uneasily on his chair
  • and thought of past sins.
  • "My name is Mrs. Porter," she began abruptly.
  • "Mine's Penway," said the miserable being before her. It struck him as
  • the only thing to say.
  • "I have come to inquire about Mr. Winfield."
  • As she paused Mr. Penway felt it incumbent upon him to speak again.
  • "Dear old Kirk," he mumbled.
  • "Nothing of the kind," said Mrs. Porter sharply. "Mr. Winfield is a
  • scoundrel of the worst type, and if you are as intimate a friend of his
  • as your words imply, it does not argue well for your respectability."
  • Mr. Penway opened his mouth feebly and closed it again. Having closed
  • it, he reopened it and allowed it to remain ajar, as it were. It was
  • his idea of being conciliatory.
  • "Tell me." Mr. Penway started violently. "Tell me, when did you last
  • see Mr. Winfield?"
  • "We went to Long Beach together this afternoon."
  • "In an automobile?"
  • "Yes."
  • "Ah! Were you here when Mr. Winfield left again?"
  • For the life of him Mr. Penway had not the courage to say no. There was
  • something about this woman's stare which acted hypnotically upon his
  • mind, never at its best as early in the evening.
  • He nodded.
  • "There was a young woman with him?" pursued Mrs. Porter.
  • At this moment Mr. Penway's eyes, roving desperately about the room,
  • fell upon the bottle of Bourbon which Kirk's kindly hospitality had
  • provided. His emotions at the sight of it were those of the shipwrecked
  • mariner who see a sail. He sprang at it and poured himself out a stiff
  • dose. Before Mrs. Porter's disgusted gaze he drained the glass and then
  • turned to her, a new man.
  • The noble spirit restored his own. For the first time since the
  • interview had begun he felt capable of sustaining his end of the
  • conversation with ease and dignity.
  • "How's that?" he said.
  • "There was a young woman with him?" repeated
  • Mrs. Porter.
  • Mr. Penway imagined that he had placed her by this time. Here, he told
  • himself in his own crude language, was the squab's mother camping on
  • Kirk's trail with an axe. Mr. Penway's moral code was of the easiest
  • description. His sympathies were entirely with Kirk. Fortified by the
  • Bourbon, he set himself resolutely to the task of lying whole-heartedly
  • on behalf of his absent friend.
  • "No," he said firmly.
  • "No!" exclaimed Mrs. Porter.
  • "No," repeated Mr. Penway with iron resolution. "No young woman. No
  • young woman whatsoever. I noticed it particularly, because I thought it
  • strange, don't you know--what I mean is, don't you know, strange there
  • shouldn't be!"
  • How tragic is a man's fruitless fight on behalf of a friend! For one
  • short instant Mrs. Porter allowed Mr. Penway to imagine that the
  • victory was his, then she administered the _coup-de-grace_.
  • "Don't lie, you worthless creature," she said. "They stopped at my
  • house on their way while the girl packed a suitcase."
  • Mr. Penway threw up his brief. There are moments when the
  • stoutest-hearted, even under the influence of old Bourbon, realize
  • that to fight on is merely to fight in vain.
  • He condensed his emotions into four words.
  • "Of all the chumps!" he remarked, and, pouring himself out a further
  • instalment of the raw spirit, he sat down, a beaten man.
  • Mrs. Porter continued to harry him.
  • "Exactly," she said. "So you see that there is no need for any more
  • subterfuge and concealment. I do not intend to leave this room until
  • you have told me all you have to tell, so you had better be quick about
  • it. Kindly tell me the truth in as few words as possible--if you know
  • what is meant by telling the truth."
  • A belated tenderness for his dignity came to Mr. Penway.
  • "You are insulting," he remarked. "You are--you are--most insulting."
  • "I meant to be," said Mrs. Porter crisply. "Now. Tell me. Where has Mr.
  • Winfield gone?"
  • Mr. Penway preserved an offended silence. Mrs. Porter struck the table
  • a blow with a book which caused him to leap in his seat.
  • "Where has Mr. Winfield gone?"
  • "How should I know?"
  • "How should you know? Because he told you, I should imagine.
  • Where--has--Mr.--Winfield--gone?"
  • "C'nnecticut," said Mr. Penway, finally capitulating.
  • "What part of Connecticut?"
  • "I don't know."
  • "What part of Connecticut?"
  • "I tell you I don't know. He said: 'I'm off to Connecticut,' and left."
  • It suddenly struck Mr. Penway that his defeat was not so overwhelming
  • as he had imagined. "So you haven't got much out of me, you see, after
  • all," he added.
  • Mrs. Porter rose.
  • "On the contrary," she said; "I have got out of you precisely the
  • information which I required, and in considerably less time than I had
  • supposed likely. If it interests you, I may tell you that Mr. Winfield
  • has gone to a small house which he owns in the Connecticut woods."
  • "Then what," demanded Mr. Penway indignantly, "did you mean by keeping
  • on saying 'What part of C'nnecticut? What part of C'nnecticut? What
  • part----'"
  • "Because Mr. Winfield's destination has only just occurred to me." She
  • looked at him closely. "You are a curious and not uninteresting object,
  • Mr. Penway."
  • Mr. Penway started. "Eh?"
  • "Object lesson, I should have said. I should like to exhibit you as a
  • warning to the youth of this country."
  • "What!"
  • "From the look of your frame I should imagine that you were once a man
  • of some physique. Your shoulders are good. Even now a rigorous course
  • of physical training might save you. I have known more helpless cases
  • saved by firm treatment. You have allowed yourself to deteriorate much
  • as did a man named Pennicut who used to be employed here by Mr.
  • Winfield. I saved him. I dare say I could make something of you. I can
  • see at a glance that you eat, drink, and smoke too much. You could not
  • hold out your hand now, at this minute, without it trembling."
  • "I could," said Mr. Penway indignantly.
  • He held it out, and it quivered like a tuning-fork.
  • "There!" said Mrs. Porter calmly. "What do you expect? You know your
  • own business best, I suppose, but I should like to tell you that if you
  • do not become a teetotaller instantly, and begin taking exercise, you
  • will probably die suddenly within a very few years. Personally I shall
  • bear the calamity with fortitude. Good evening, Mr. Penway."
  • For some moments after she had gone Mr. Penway sat staring before him.
  • His eyes wore a glassy look. His mouth was still ajar.
  • "Damn woman!" he said at length.
  • He turned to his meditations.
  • "Damn impertinent woman!"
  • Another interval for reflection, and he spoke again.
  • "Damn impertinent, interfering woman that!"
  • He reached out for the bottle of Bourbon and filled his glass. He put
  • it to his lips, then slowly withdrew it.
  • "Damn impertinent, inter--I wonder!"
  • There was a small mirror on the opposite wall. He walked unsteadily
  • toward it and put out his tongue. He continued in this attitude for a
  • time, then, with increased dejection, turned away.
  • He placed a hand over his heart. This seemed to depress him still
  • further. Finally he went to the table, took up the glass, poured its
  • contents carefully back into the bottle, which he corked and replaced
  • on the shelf.
  • On the floor against the wall was a pair of Indian clubs. He picked
  • these up and examined them owlishly. He gave them little tentative
  • jerks. Finally, with the air of a man carrying out a great resolution,
  • he began to swing them. He swung them in slow, irregular sweeps, his
  • eyes the while, still glassy, staring fixedly at the ceiling.
  • Chapter XII
  • Dolls with Souls
  • Ruth had not seen Bailey since the afternoon when he had called to
  • warn her against Basil Milbank. Whether it was offended dignity that
  • kept him away, or merely pressure of business, she did not know.
  • That pressure of business existed, she was aware. The papers were full,
  • and had been full for several days, of wars and rumours of wars down in
  • Wall Street; and, though she understood nothing of finance, she knew
  • that Bailey was in the forefront of the battle. Her knowledge was based
  • partly on occasional references in the papers to the firm of Bannister
  • & Co. and partly on what she heard in society.
  • She did not hear all that was said in society about Bailey's financial
  • operations--which, as Bailey had the control of her money, was
  • unfortunate for her. The manipulation of money bored her, and she had
  • left the investing of her legacy entirely to Bailey. Her father, she
  • knew, had always had a high opinion of Bailey's business instincts, and
  • that was good enough for her.
  • She could not know how completely revolutionized the latter's mind had
  • become since the old man's death, and how freedom had turned him from a
  • steady young man of business to a frenzied financier.
  • It was common report now that Bailey was taking big chances. Some went
  • so far as to say that he was "asking for it," "it" in his case being
  • presumably the Nemesis which waits on those who take big chances in an
  • uncertain market. It was in the air that he was "going up against" the
  • Pinkey-Dowd group and the Norman-Graham combination, and everybody knew
  • that the cemeteries of Wall Street were full of the unhonoured graves
  • of others who in years past had attempted to do the same.
  • Pinkey, that sinister buccaneer, could have eaten a dozen Baileys.
  • Devouring aspiring young men of the Bailey type was Norman's chief
  • diversion.
  • Ruth knew nothing of these things. She told herself that it was her
  • abruptness that had driven Bailey away.
  • Weariness and depression had settled on Ruth since that afternoon of
  • the storm. It was as if the storm had wrought an awakening in her. It
  • had marked a definite point of change in her outlook. She felt as if
  • she had been roused from a trance by a sharp blow.
  • If Steve had but known, she had had the "jolt" by which he set such
  • store. She knew now that she had thrown away the substance for the
  • shadow.
  • Kirk's anger, so unlike him, so foreign to the weak, easy-going person
  • she had always thought him, had brought her to herself. But it was too
  • late. There could be no going back and picking up the threads. She had
  • lost him, and must bear the consequences.
  • The withdrawal of Bailey was a small thing by comparison, a submotive
  • in the greater tragedy. But she had always been fond of Bailey, and it
  • hurt her to think that she should have driven him out of her life.
  • It seemed to her that she was very much alone now. She was marooned on
  • a desert island of froth and laughter. Everything that mattered she had
  • lost.
  • Even Bill had gone from her. The bitter justice of Kirk's words came
  • home to her now in her time of clear thinking. It was all true. In the
  • first excitement of the new life he had bored her. She had looked upon
  • Mrs. Porter as a saviour who brought her freedom together with an easy
  • conscience. It had been so simple to deceive herself, to cheat herself
  • into the comfortable belief that all that could be done for him was
  • being done, when, as concerned the essential thing, as Kirk had said,
  • there was no child of the streets who was not better off.
  • She tramped her round of social duties mechanically. Everything bored
  • her now. The joy of life had gone out of her. She ate the bread of
  • sorrow in captivity.
  • And then, this morning, had come a voice from the world she had
  • lost--little Mrs. Bailey's voice, small and tearful.
  • Could she possibly come out by the next train? Bailey was very ill.
  • Bailey was dying. Bailey had come home last night looking ghastly. He
  • had not slept. In the early morning he had begun to babble--Mrs.
  • Bailey's voice had risen and broken on the word, and Ruth at the other
  • end of the wire had heard her frightened sobs. The doctor had come. The
  • doctor had looked awfully grave. The doctor had telephoned to New York
  • for another doctor. They were both upstairs now. It was awful, and Ruth
  • must come at once.
  • This was the bad news which had brought about the pallor which had
  • impressed Mr. Keggs as he helped Ruth into her cab.
  • Little Mrs. Bailey was waiting for her on the platform when she got out
  • of the train. Her face was drawn and miserable. She looked like a
  • beaten kitten. She hugged Ruth hysterically.
  • "Oh, my dear, I'm so glad you've come. He's better, but it has been
  • awful. The doctors have had to _fight_ him to keep him in bed. He
  • was crazy to get to town. He kept saying over and over again that he
  • must be at the office. They gave him something, and he was asleep when
  • I left the house."
  • She began to cry helplessly. The fates had not bestowed upon Sybil
  • Bannister the same care in the matter of education for times of crisis
  • which they had accorded to Steve's Mamie. Her life till now had been
  • sheltered and unruffled, and disaster, swooping upon her, had found her
  • an easy victim.
  • She was trying to be brave, but her powers of resistance were small
  • like her body. She clung to Ruth as a child clings to its mother. Ruth,
  • as she tried to comfort her, felt curiously old. It occurred to her
  • with a suggestion almost of grotesqueness that she and Sybil had been
  • debutantes in the same season.
  • They walked up to the house. The summer cottage which Bailey had taken
  • was not far from the station. On the way, in the intervals of her sobs,
  • Sybil told Ruth the disjointed story of what had happened.
  • Bailey had not been looking well for some days. She had thought it must
  • be the heat or business worries or something. He had not eaten very
  • much, and he had seemed too tired to talk when he got home each
  • evening. She had begged him to take a few days' rest. That had been the
  • only occasion in the whole of the last week when she had heard him
  • laugh; and it had been such a horrid, ugly sort of laugh that she
  • wished she hadn't.
  • He had said that if he stayed away from the office for some time to
  • come it would mean love in a cottage for them for the rest of their
  • lives--and not a summer cottage at Tuxedo at that. "'My dear child,'"
  • he had gone on, "and you know when Bailey calls me that," said Sybil,
  • "it means that there is something the matter; for, as a rule, he never
  • calls me anything but my name, or baby, or something like that."
  • Which gave Ruth a little shock of surprise. Somehow the idea of the
  • dignified Bailey addressing his wife as baby startled her. She was
  • certainly learning these days that she did not know people as
  • completely as she had supposed. There seemed to be endless sides to
  • people's characters which had never come under her notice. A sudden
  • memory of Kirk on that fateful afternoon came to her and made her
  • wince.
  • Mrs. Bailey continued: "'My dear child,' he went on, 'this week is
  • about the most important week you and I are ever likely to live
  • through. It's the show-down. We either come out on top or we blow up.
  • It's one thing or the other. And if I take a few days' holiday just now
  • you had better start looking about for the best place to sell your
  • jewellery.'
  • "Those were his very words," she said tearfully. "I remember them all.
  • It was so unlike his usual way of talking."
  • Ruth acknowledged that it was. More than ever she felt that she did not
  • know the complete Bailey.
  • "He was probably exaggerating," she said for the sake of saying
  • something.
  • Sybil was silent for a moment.
  • "It isn't that that's worrying me," she went on then. "Somehow I don't
  • seem to care at all whether we come out right or not, so long as he
  • gets well. Last night, when I thought he was going to die, I made up my
  • mind that I couldn't go on living without him. I wouldn't have,
  • either."
  • This time the shock of surprise which came to Ruth was greater by a
  • hundred-fold than the first had been. She gave a quick glance at Sybil.
  • Her small face was hard, and the little white teeth gleamed between her
  • drawn lips. It was the face, for one brief instant, of a fanatic. The
  • sight of it affected Ruth extraordinarily. It was as if she had seen a
  • naked soul where she had never imagined a soul to be.
  • She had weighed Sybil in the same calm, complacent almost patronizing
  • fashion in which she had weighed Bailey, Kirk, everybody. She had set
  • her down as a delightful child, an undeveloped, feather-brained little
  • thing, pleasant to spend an afternoon with, but not to be taken
  • seriously by any one as magnificent and superior as Ruth Winfield. And
  • what manner of a man must Bailey be, Bailey whom she had always looked
  • on as a dear, but as quite a joke, something to be chaffed and made to
  • look foolish, if he was capable of inspiring love like this?
  • A wave of humility swept over her. The pygmies of her world were
  • springing up as giants, dwarfing her. The pinnacle of superiority on
  • which she had stood so long was crumbling into dust.
  • She was finding herself. She winced again as the thought stabbed her
  • that she was finding herself too late.
  • They reached the house in silence, each occupied with her own thoughts.
  • The defiant look had died out of Sybil's face and she was once more a
  • child, crying because unknown forces had hurt it. But Ruth was not
  • looking at her now.
  • She was too busy examining this new world into which she had been
  • abruptly cast, this world where dolls had souls and jokes lost their
  • point.
  • At the cottage good news awaited them. The crisis was past. Bailey was
  • definitely out of danger. He was still asleep, and sleeping easily. It
  • had just been an ordinary breakdown, due to worrying and overwork, said
  • the doctor, the bigger of the doctors, the one who had been summoned
  • from New York.
  • "All your husband needs now, Mrs. Bannister, is rest. See that he is
  • kept quiet. That's all there is to it."
  • As if by way of a commentary on his words, a small boy on a bicycle
  • rode up with a telegram.
  • Sybil opened it. She read it, and looked at Ruth with large eyes.
  • "From the office," she said, handing it to her.
  • Ruth read it. It was a C. D. Q., an S.O.S. from the front; an appeal
  • for help from the forefront of the battle. She did not understand the
  • details of it, but the purport was clear. The battle had begun, and
  • Bailey was needed. But Bailey lay sleeping in his tent.
  • She handed it back in silence. There was nothing to be done.
  • The second telegram arrived half an hour after the first. It differed
  • from the first only in its greater emphasis. Panic seemed to be growing
  • in the army of the lost leader.
  • The ringing of the telephone began almost simultaneously with the
  • arrival of the second telegram. Ruth went to the receiver. A frantic
  • voice was inquiring for Mr. Bannister even as she put it to her ear.
  • "This is Mrs. Winfield speaking," she said steadily, "Mr. Bannister's
  • sister. Mr. Bannister is very ill and cannot possibly attend to any
  • business."
  • There was a silence at the other end of the wire. Then a voice, with
  • the calm of desperation, said: "Thank you." There was a pause. "Thank
  • you," said the voice again in a crushed sort of way, and the receiver
  • was hung up. Ruth went back to Sybil.
  • The hours passed. How she got through them Ruth hardly knew. Time
  • seemed to have stopped. For the most part they sat in silence. In the
  • afternoon Sybil was allowed to see Bailey for a few minutes. She
  • returned thoughtful. She kissed Ruth before she sat down, and once or
  • twice after that Ruth, looking up, found her eyes fixed upon her. It
  • seemed to Ruth that there was something which she was trying to say,
  • but she asked no questions.
  • After dinner they sat out on the porch. It was a perfect night. The
  • cool dusk was soothing.
  • Ruth broke a long silence.
  • "Sybil!"
  • "Yes, dear?"
  • "May I tell you something?"
  • "Well?"
  • "I'm afraid it's bad news."
  • Sybil turned quickly.
  • "You called up the office while I was with Bailey?"
  • Ruth started.
  • "How did you know?"
  • "I guessed. I have been trying to do it all day, but I hadn't the
  • pluck. Well?"
  • "I'm afraid things are about as bad as they can be. A Mr. Meadows spoke
  • to me. He was very gloomy. He told me a lot of things which I couldn't
  • follow, details of what had happened, but I understood all that was
  • necessary, I'm afraid----"
  • "Bailey's ruined?" said Sybil quietly.
  • "Mr. Meadows seemed to think so. He may have exaggerated."
  • Sybil shook her head.
  • "No. Bailey was talking to me upstairs. I expected it."
  • There was a long silence.
  • "Ruth."
  • "Yes?"
  • "I'm afraid--"
  • Sybil stopped.
  • "Yes?"
  • A sudden light of understanding came to Ruth. She knew what it was that
  • Sybil was trying to say, had been trying to say ever since she spoke
  • with Bailey.
  • "My money has gone, too? Is that it?"
  • Sybil did not answer. Ruth went quickly to her and took her in her
  • arms.
  • "You poor baby," she cried. "Was that what was on your mind, wondering
  • how you should tell me? I knew there was something troubling you."
  • Sybil began to sob.
  • "I didn't know how to tell you," she whispered.
  • Ruth laughed excitedly. She felt as if a great weight had been lifted
  • from her shoulders--a weight which had been crushing the life out of
  • her. In the last few days the scales had fallen from her eyes and she
  • had seen clearly.
  • She realized now what Kirk had realized from the first, that what had
  • forced his life apart from hers had been the golden wedge of her
  • father's money. It was the burden of wealth that had weighed her down
  • without her knowing it. She felt as if she had been suddenly set free.
  • "I'm dreadfully sorry," said Sybil feebly.
  • Ruth laughed again.
  • "I'm not," she said. "If you knew how glad I was you would be
  • congratulating me instead of looking as if you thought I was going to
  • bite you."
  • "Glad!"
  • "Of course I'm glad. Everything's going to be all right again now.
  • Sybil dear, Kirk and I had the most awful quarrel the other day. We--we
  • actually decided it would be better for us to separate. It was all my
  • fault. I had neglected Kirk, and I had neglected Bill, and Kirk
  • couldn't stand it any longer. But now that this has happened, don't you
  • see that it will be all right again? You can't stand on your dignity
  • when you're up against real trouble. If this had not happened, neither
  • of us would have had the pluck to make the first move; but now, you
  • see, we shall just naturally fall into each other's arms and be happy
  • again, he and I and Bill, just as we were before."
  • "It must be lovely for you having Bill," said little Mrs. Bailey
  • wistfully. "I wish--"
  • She stopped. There was a corner of her mind into which she could not
  • admit any one, even Ruth.
  • "Having him ought to have been enough for any woman." Ruth's voice was
  • serious. "It was enough for me in the old days when we were at the
  • studio. What fools women are sometimes! I suppose I lost my head,
  • coming suddenly into all that money--I don't know why; for it was not
  • as if I had not had plenty of time, when father was alive, to get used
  • to the idea of being rich. I think it must have been the unexpectedness
  • of it. I certainly did behave as if I had gone mad. Goodness! I'm glad
  • it's over and that we can make a fresh start."
  • "What is it like being poor, Ruth? Of course, we were never very well
  • off at home, but we weren't really poor."
  • "It's heaven if you're with the right man."
  • Mrs. Bailey sighed.
  • "Bailey's the right man, as far as I'm concerned. But I'm wondering how
  • he will bear it, poor dear."
  • Ruth was feeling too happy herself to allow any one else to be unhappy
  • if she could help it.
  • "Why, of course he will be splendid about it," she said. "You're
  • letting your imagination run away with you. You have got the idea of
  • Bailey and yourself as two broken creatures begging in the streets. I
  • don't know how badly Bailey will be off after this smash, but I do know
  • that he will have all his brains and his energy left."
  • Ruth was conscious of a momentary feeling of surprise that she should
  • be eulogizing Bailey in this fashion, and--stranger still--that she
  • should be really sincere in what she said. But to-day seemed to have
  • changed everything, and she was regarding her brother with a new-born
  • respect. She could still see Sybil's face as it had appeared in that
  • memorable moment of self-revelation. It had made a deep impression upon
  • her.
  • "A man like Bailey is worth a large salary to any one, even if he may
  • not be able to start out for himself again immediately. I'm not
  • worrying about you and Bailey. You will have forgotten all about this
  • crash this time next year." Sybil brightened up. She was by nature
  • easily moved, and Ruth's words had stimulated her imagination.
  • "He _is_ awfully clever," she said, her eyes shining.
  • "Why, this sort of thing happens every six months to anybody who has
  • anything to do with Wall Street," proceeded Ruth, fired by her own
  • optimism. "You read about it in the papers every day. Nobody thinks
  • anything of it."
  • Sybil, though anxious to look on the bright side, could not quite rise
  • to these heights of scorn for the earthquake which had shaken her
  • world.
  • "I hope not. It would be awful to go through a time like this again."
  • Ruth reassured her, though it entailed a certain inconsistency on her
  • part. She had a true woman's contempt for consistency.
  • "Of course you won't have to go through it again. Bailey will be
  • careful in future not to--not to do whatever it is that he has done."
  • She felt that the end of her inspiring speech was a little weak, but
  • she did not see how she could mend it. Her talk with Mr. Meadows on the
  • telephone had left her as vague as before as to the actual details of
  • what had been happening that day in Wall Street. She remembered stray
  • remarks of his about bulls, and she had gathered that something had
  • happened to something which Mr. Meadows called G.R.D.'s, which had
  • evidently been at the root of the trouble; but there her grasp of high
  • finance ended.
  • Sybil, however, was not exigent. She brightened at Ruth's words as if
  • they had been an authoritative pronouncement from an expert.
  • "Bailey is sure to do right," she said. "I think I'll creep in and see
  • if he's still asleep."
  • Ruth, left alone on the porch, fell into a pleasant train of thought.
  • There was something in her mental attitude which amused her. She
  • wondered if anybody had ever received the announcement of financial
  • ruin in quite the same way before. Yet to her this attitude seemed the
  • only one possible.
  • How simple everything was now! She could go to Kirk and, as she had
  • said to Sybil, start again. The golden barrier between them had
  • vanished. One day had wiped out all the wretchedness of the last year.
  • They were back where they had started, with all the accumulated
  • experience of those twelve months to help them steer their little ship
  • clear of the rocks on its new voyage.
  • * * * * *
  • She was roused from her dream by the sound of an automobile drawing up
  • at the door. A voice that she recognised called her name. She went
  • quickly down the steps.
  • "Is that you, Aunt Lora?"
  • Mrs. Porter, masterly woman, never wasted time in useless chatter.
  • "Jump in, my dear," she said crisply. "Your husband has stolen William
  • and eloped with that girl Mamie (whom I never trusted) to Connecticut."
  • Chapter XIII
  • Pastures New
  • Steve had arrived at the Connecticut shack in the early dawn of the
  • day which had been so eventful to most of his friends and
  • acquaintances. William Bannister's interest in the drive, at first
  • acute, had ceased after the first five miles, and he had passed the
  • remainder of the journey in a sound sleep from which the stopping of
  • the car did not awaken him.
  • Steve jumped down and stretched himself. There was a wonderful
  • freshness in the air which made him forget for a moment his desire for
  • repose. He looked about him, breathing deep draughts of its coolness.
  • The robins which, though not so well advertised, rise just as
  • punctually as the lark, were beginning to sing as they made their
  • simple toilets before setting out to attend to the early worm. The sky
  • to the east was a delicate blend of pinks and greens and yellows, with
  • a hint of blue behind the grey which was still the prevailing note.
  • A vaguely sentimental mood came upon Steve. In his heart he knew
  • perfectly well that he could never be happy for any length of time out
  • of sight and hearing of Broadway cars; but at that moment, such was the
  • magic of the dawn, he felt a longing to settle down in the country and
  • pass the rest of his days a simple farmer with beard unchecked by
  • razor. He saw himself feeding the chickens and addressing the pigs by
  • their pet names, while Mamie, in a cotton frock, called cheerfully to
  • him to come in because breakfast was ready and getting cold.
  • Mamie! Ah!
  • His sigh turned into a yawn. He realized with the abruptness which
  • comes to a man who stands alone with nature in the small hours that he
  • was very sleepy. The excitement which had sustained him till now had
  • begun to ebb. The free life of the bearded farmer seemed suddenly less
  • attractive. Bed was what he wanted now, not nature.
  • He opened the door of the car and lifted William Bannister out, swathed
  • in rugs. The White Hope gurgled drowsily, but did not wake. Steve
  • carried him on to the porch and laid him down. Then he turned his
  • attention to the problem of effecting an entry.
  • Once an honest man has taken to amateur burgling he soon picks up the
  • tricks of it. To open his knife and shoot back the catch of the nearest
  • window was with Steve the work, if not of a moment, of a very few
  • minutes. He climbed in and unlocked the front door. Then he carried his
  • young charge into the sitting-room and laid him down on a chair, a step
  • nearer his ultimate destination--bed.
  • Steve's faculties were rapidly becoming numb with approaching sleep,
  • but he roused himself to face certain details of the country life which
  • till now had escaped him. His earnest concentration on the main plank
  • of his platform, the spiriting away of William Bannister, had caused
  • him to overlook the fact that no preparations had been made to welcome
  • him on his arrival at his destination. He had treated the shack as if
  • it had been a summer hotel, where he could walk in and engage a room.
  • It now struck him that there was much to be attended to before he
  • could, as he put it to himself, hit the hay. There was the White Hope's
  • bed to be made, and, by the way of a preliminary to that, sheets must
  • be found and blankets, not to mention pillows.
  • Yawning wearily he set out on his search.
  • He found sheets, but mistrusted them. They might or might not be
  • perfectly dry. He did not care to risk his godson's valuable health in
  • the experiment. A hazy notion that blankets were always safe restored
  • his spirits, and he became cheerful on reflecting that a child with
  • William Bannister's gift for sleep would not be likely to notice the
  • absence of linen in his bed.
  • The couch which he finally passed adequate would have caused Lora
  • Delane Porter's hair to stand erect, but it satisfied Steve. He went
  • downstairs, and, returning with William Bannister, placed him carefully
  • on it and tucked him in. The White Hope slept on.
  • Having assured himself that all was well, Steve made up a similar nest
  • for himself, and, removing his coat and shoes, crawled under the
  • blankets. Five minutes later rhythmical snores proclaimed the fact that
  • nature had triumphed over all the discomforts of one of the worst-made
  • beds in Connecticut.
  • * * * * *
  • The sun was high when Steve woke. He rose stiffly and went into the
  • other room. William Bannister still slept.
  • Steve regarded him admiringly.
  • "For the dormouse act," he mused, "that kid certainly stands alone. You
  • got to hand it to him."
  • An aching void within him called his mind to the question of breakfast.
  • It began to come home to him that he had not planned out this
  • expedition with that thoroughness which marks the great general.
  • "I guess I'll have to get out to the nearest village in the bubble," he
  • said. "And while I'm there maybe I'd better send Kirk a wire. And I
  • reckon I'll have to take the kid. If he wakes up and finds me gone
  • he'll throw fits. Up you get, squire."
  • He kneaded the recumbent form of his godson with a large hand until he
  • had massaged out of him the last remains of his great sleep. It took
  • some time, but it was effective. The White Hope sat up, full of life
  • and energy. He inspected Steve gravely for a moment, endeavouring to
  • place him.
  • "Hello, Steve," he said at length.
  • "Hello, kid."
  • "Where am I?"
  • "In the country. In Connecticut."
  • "What's 'Necticut?"
  • "This is. Where we are."
  • "Where are we?"
  • "Here. In Connecticut."
  • "Why?"
  • Steve raised a protesting hand.
  • "Not so early in the day, kid; not before breakfast," he pleaded.
  • "Honest, I'm not strong enough. It ain't as if we was a vaudeville team
  • that had got to rehearse."
  • "What's rehearse?"
  • Steve changed the subject.
  • "Say, kid, ain't you feeling like you could bite into something? I got
  • an emptiness inside me as big as all outdoors. How about a mouthful of
  • cereal and a shirred egg? Now, for the love of Mike," he went on
  • quickly, as his godson opened his mouth to speak, "don't say 'What's
  • shirred?' It's something you do to eggs. It's one way of fixing 'em."
  • "What's fixing?" inquired William Bannister brightly.
  • Steve sighed. When he spoke he was calm, but determined.
  • "That'll be all the dialogue for the present," he said. "We'll play the
  • rest of our act in dumb show. Get a move on you, and I'll take you out
  • in the bubble--the automobile, the car, the chug-chug wagon, the thing
  • we came here in, if you want to know what bubble is--and we'll scare up
  • some breakfast."
  • Steve's ignorance of the locality in which he found himself was
  • complete; but he had a general impression that farmers as a class were
  • people who delighted in providing breakfasts for the needy, if the
  • needy possessed the necessary price. Acting on this assumption, he
  • postponed his trip to the nearest town and drove slowly along the roads
  • with his eyes open for signs of life.
  • He found a suitable farm and, applying the brakes, gathered up William
  • Bannister and knocked at the door.
  • His surmise as to the hospitality of farmers proved correct, and
  • presently they were sitting down to a breakfast which it did his
  • famished soul good to contemplate.
  • William Bannister seemed less enthusiastic. Steve, having disposed
  • of two eggs in quick succession, turned to see how his young charge
  • was progressing with his repast, and found him eyeing a bowl of
  • bread-and-milk in a sort of frozen horror.
  • "What's the matter, kid?" he asked. "Get busy."
  • "No paper," said William Bannister.
  • "For the love of Pete! Do you expect your morning paper out in the
  • woods?"
  • "No paper," repeated the White Hope firmly.
  • Steve regarded him thoughtfully.
  • "I didn't have this trip planned out right," he said regretfully. "I
  • ought to have got Mamie to come along. I bet a hundred dollars she
  • would have got next to your meanings in a second. I pass. What's your
  • kick, anyway? What's all this about paper?"
  • "Aunty Lora says not to eat bread that doesn't come wrapped up in
  • paper," said the White Hope, becoming surprisingly lucid. "Mamie undoes
  • it out of crinkly paper."
  • "I get you. They feed you rolls at home wrapped up in tissue-paper, is
  • that it?"
  • "What's tissue?"
  • "Same as crinkly. Well, see here. You remember what we was talking
  • about last night about germs?"
  • "Yes."
  • "Well, that's one thing germs never do, eat bread out of crinkly paper.
  • You want to forget all the dope they shot into you back in New York and
  • start fresh. You do what I tell you and you can't go wrong. If you're
  • going to be a regular germ, what you've got to do is to wrap yourself
  • round that bread-and-milk the quickest you can. Get me? Till you do
  • that we can't begin to start out to have a good time."
  • William Bannister made no more objections. He attacked his meal with an
  • easy conscience, and about a quarter of an hour later leaned back with
  • a deep sigh of repletion.
  • Steve, meanwhile had entered into conversation with the lady of the
  • house.
  • "Say, I guess you ain't got a kid of your own anywheres, have you?"
  • "Sure I have," said the hostess proudly. "He's out in the field with
  • his pop this minute. His name's Jim."
  • "Fine. I want to get hold of a kid to play with this kid here. Jim
  • sounds pretty good to me. About the same age as this one?"
  • "For the Lord's sake! Jim's eighteen and weighs two hundred pounds."
  • "Cut out Jim. I thought from the way you spoke he was a regular kid.
  • Know any one in these parts who's got something about the same weight
  • as this one?"
  • The farmer's wife reflected.
  • "Kids is pretty scarce round here," she said. "I reckon you won't get
  • one that I knows of. There's that Tom Whiting, but he's a bad boy. He
  • ain't been raised right."
  • "What's the matter with him?"
  • "I don't want to speak harm of no one, but his father used to be a low
  • prize-fighter, and you know what they are."
  • Steve nodded sympathetically.
  • "Regular plug-uglies," he said. "A friend of mine used to have to mix
  • with them quite a lot, poor fellah! He used to say they was none of
  • them truly refined. And this kid takes after his pop, eh? Kind of
  • scrappy kid, is that it?"
  • "He's a bad boy."
  • "Well, maybe I'd better look him over, just in case. Where's he to be
  • found?"
  • "They live in the cottage by the big house you can see through them
  • trees. His pop looks after Mr. Wilson's prize dawgs. That's his job."
  • "What's Wilson?" asked the White Hope, coming out of his stupor.
  • "You beat me to it by a second, kid. I was just going to ask it
  • myself."
  • "He's one of them rich New Yawkers. He has his summer place here, and
  • this Whiting looks after his prize dawgs."
  • "Well, I guess I'll give him a call. It's going to be lonesome for my
  • kid if he ain't got some one to show him how to hit it up. He's not
  • used to country life. Come along. We'll get into the bubble and go and
  • send your pop a telegram."
  • "What's telegram?" asked William Bannister.
  • "I got you placed now," said Steve, regarding him with interest.
  • "You're not going to turn into an ambassador or an artist or any of
  • them things. You're going to be the greatest district attorney that
  • ever came down the pike."
  • Chapter XIV
  • The Sixty-First Street Cyclone
  • It was past seven o'clock when Kirk, bending over the wheel, with
  • Mamie at his side came in sight of the shack. The journey had been
  • checked just outside the city by a blow-out in one of the back tyres.
  • Kirk had spent the time, while the shirt-sleeved rescuer from the
  • garage toiled over the injured wheel, walking up and down with a cigar.
  • Neither he nor Mamie had shown much tendency towards conversation.
  • Mamie was habitually of a silent disposition, and Kirk's mind was too
  • full of his thoughts to admit of speech.
  • Ever since he had read Steve's telegram he had been in the grip of a
  • wild exhilaration. He had not stopped to ask himself what this mad
  • freak of Steve's could possibly lead to in the end--he was satisfied to
  • feel that its immediate result would be that for a brief while, at any
  • rate, he would have his son to himself, away from all the chilling
  • surroundings which had curbed him and frozen his natural feelings in
  • the past.
  • He tried to keep his mind from dwelling upon Ruth. He had thought too
  • much of her of late for his comfort. Since they had parted that day of
  • the thunder-storm the thought that he had lost her had stabbed him
  • incessantly. He had tried to tell himself that it was the best thing
  • they could do, to separate, since it was so plain that their love had
  • died; but he could not cheat himself into believing it.
  • It might be true in her case--it must be, or why had she let him go
  • that afternoon?--but, for himself, the separation had taught him that
  • he loved her as much as ever, more than ever. Absence had purified him
  • of that dull anger which had been his so short a while before. He
  • looked back and marvelled that he could ever have imagined for a moment
  • that he had ceased to love her.
  • Now, as he drove along the empty country roads, he forced his mind to
  • dwell, as far as he could, only upon his son. There was a mist before
  • his eyes as he thought of him. What a bully lad he had been! What fun
  • they had had in the old days! But that brought his mind back to Ruth,
  • and he turned his mind resolutely to the future again.
  • He chuckled silently as he thought of Steve. Of all the mad things to
  • do! What had made him think of it? How had such a wild scheme ever
  • entered his head? This, he supposed, was what Steve called punching
  • instead of sparring. But he had never given him credit for the
  • imagination that could conceive a punch of this magnitude.
  • And how had he carried it out? He could hardly have broken into the
  • house. Yet that seemed the only way in which it could have been done.
  • From Steve his thoughts returned to William Bannister. He smiled again.
  • What a time they would have--while it lasted! The worst of it was, it
  • could not last long. To-morrow, he supposed, he would have to take the
  • child back to his home. He could not be a party to this kidnapping raid
  • for any length of time. This must be looked on as a brief holiday, not
  • as a permanent relief.
  • That was the only flaw in his happiness as he stopped the car at the
  • door of the shack, for by now he had succeeded at last in thrusting the
  • image of Ruth from his mind.
  • There was a light in the ground-floor window. He raised his head and
  • shouted:
  • "Steve!"
  • The door opened.
  • "Hello, Kirk. That you? Come along in. You're just in time for the main
  • performance."
  • He caught sight of Mamie standing beside Kirk.
  • "Who's that?" he cried. For a moment he thought it was Ruth, and his
  • honest heart leaped at the thought that his scheme had worked already
  • and brought Kirk and her together again.
  • "It's me, Steve," said Mamie in her small voice. And Steve, as he heard
  • it, was seized with the first real qualm he had had since he had
  • embarked upon his great adventure.
  • As Kirk had endeavoured temporarily to forget Ruth, so had he tried not
  • to think of Mamie. It was the only thing he was ashamed of in the whole
  • affair, the shock he must have given her.
  • "Hello, Mamie," he said sheepishly, and paused. Words did not come
  • readily to him.
  • Mamie entered the house without speaking. It seemed to Steve that
  • invective would have been better than this ominous silence. He looked
  • ruefully at her retreating back and turned to greet Kirk.
  • "You're mighty late," he said.
  • "I only got your telegram toward the end of the afternoon. I had been
  • away all day. I came here as fast as I could hit it up directly I read
  • it. We had a blow-out, and that delayed us."
  • Steve ventured a question.
  • "Say, Kirk, why 'us,' while we're talking of it? How does Mamie come to
  • be here?"
  • "She insisted on coming. It seems that everybody in the house was away
  • to-day, so she tells me, so she came round to me with your note."
  • "I guess this has put me in pretty bad with Mamie," observed Steve
  • regretfully. "Has she been knocking me on the trip?"
  • "Not a word."
  • Steve brightened, but became subdued again next moment.
  • "I guess she's just saving it," he said resignedly.
  • "Steve, what made you do it?"
  • "Oh, I reckoned you could do with having the kid to yourself for a
  • spell," said Steve awkwardly.
  • "You're all right, Steve. But how did you manage it? I shouldn't have
  • thought it possible."
  • "Oh, it wasn't so hard, that part. I just hid in the house, and--but
  • say, let's forget it; it makes me feel kind of mean, somehow. It seems
  • to me I may have lost Mamie her job. It's mighty hard to do the right
  • thing by every one in this world, ain't it? Come along in and see the
  • kid. He's great. Are you feeling ready for supper? Him and me was just
  • going to start."
  • It occurred to Kirk for the first time that he was hungry.
  • "Have you got anything to eat, Steve?"
  • Steve brightened again.
  • "Have we?" he said. "We've got everything there is in Connecticut! Why,
  • say, we're celebrating. This is our big day. Know what's happened?
  • Why--"
  • He stopped short, as if somebody had choked him. They had gone into the
  • sitting-room while he was speaking. The table was laid for supper. A
  • chafing-dish stood at one end, and the remainder of the available space
  • was filled with a collection of foods, from cold chicken to candy,
  • which did credit to Steve's imagination.
  • But it was not the sight of these that checked his flow of speech. It
  • was the look on Mamie's face as he caught sight of it in the lamplight.
  • The White Hope was sitting at the table in the attitude of one who has
  • heard the gong and is anxious to begin; while Mamie, bending over him,
  • raised her head as the two men entered and fixed Steve with a baleful
  • stare.
  • "What have you been doing to the poor mite?" she demanded fiercely, "to
  • get his face scratched this way?"
  • There was no doubt about the scratch. It was a long, angry red line
  • running from temple to chin. The White Hope, becoming conscious of the
  • fact that the attention of the public was upon him, and diagnosing the
  • cause, volunteered an explanation.
  • "Bad boy," he said, and looked meaningly again at the candy.
  • "What does he mean by 'bad boy'?"
  • "Just what he says, Mamie, honest. Gee! you don't think _I_ done
  • it, do you?"
  • "Have you been letting the precious lamb _fight_?" cried Mamie,
  • her eyes two circles of blue indignation.
  • Steve's enthusiasm overcame his sense of guilt. He uttered a whoop.
  • "_Letting_ him! Gee! Listen to her! Why, say, that kid don't have
  • to be let! He's a scrapper from Swatville-on-the-Bingle. Honest! That's
  • what all this food is about. We're celebrating. This is a little supper
  • given in his honour by a few of his admirers and backers, meaning me.
  • Why, say, Kirk, that kid of yours is just the greatest thing that ever
  • happened. Get that chafing-dish going and I'll tell you all about it."
  • "How did he come by that scratch?" said Mamie, coldly sticking to her
  • point.
  • "I'll tell you quick enough. But let's start in on the eats first. You
  • wouldn't keep a coming champ waiting for his grub, would you? Look how
  • he's lamping that candy."
  • "Were you going to let the poor mite stuff himself with candy, Steve
  • Dingle?"
  • "Sure. Whatever he says goes. He owns the joint after this afternoon."
  • Mamie swiftly removed the unwholesome delicacy.
  • "The idea!"
  • Kirk was busying himself with the chafing-dish.
  • "What have you got in here, Steve?"
  • "Lobster, colonel. I had to do thirty miles to get it, too."
  • Mamie looked at him fixedly.
  • "Were you going to feed lobster to this child?" she asked with ominous
  • calm. "Were you intending to put him to bed full of broiled lobster and
  • marshmallows?"
  • "Nix on the rough stuff, Mamie," pleaded the embarrassed pugilist. "How
  • was I to know what kids feed on? And maybe he would have passed up the
  • lobster at that and stuck to the sardines."
  • "Sardines!"
  • "Ain't kids allowed sardines?" said Steve anxiously. "The guy at the
  • store told me they were wholesome and nourishing. It looked to me as if
  • that ought to hit young Fitzsimmons about right. What's the matter with
  • them?"
  • "A little bread-and-milk is all that he ever has before he goes to
  • bed."
  • Steve detected a flaw in this and hastened to make his point.
  • "Sure," he said, "but he don't win the bantam-weight champeenship of
  • Connecticut every night."
  • "Is that what he's done to-day, Steve?" asked Kirk.
  • "It certainly is. Ain't I telling you?"
  • "That's the trouble. You're not. You and Mamie seem to be having a
  • discussion about the nourishing properties of sardines and lobster.
  • What has been happening this afternoon?"
  • "Bad boy," remarked William Bannister with his mouth full.
  • "That's right," said Steve. "That's it in a nutshell. Say, it was this
  • way. It seemed to me that, having no kid of his own age to play around
  • with, his nibs was apt to get lonesome, so I asked about and found that
  • there was a guy of the name of Whiting living near here who had a kid
  • of the same age or thereabouts. Maybe you remember him? He used to
  • fight at the feather-weight limit some time back. Called himself Young
  • O'Brien. He was a pretty good scrapper in his time, and now he's up
  • here looking after some gent's prize dogs.
  • "Well, I goes to him and borrows his kid. He's a scrappy sort of kid at
  • that and weighs ten pounds more than his nibs; but I reckoned he'd have
  • to do, and I thought I could stay around and part 'em if they got to
  • mixing it."
  • Mamie uttered an indignant exclamation, but Kirk's eyes were gleaming
  • proudly.
  • "Well?" he said.
  • Steve swallowed lobster and resumed.
  • "Well, you know how it is. You meet a guy who's been in the same line
  • of business as yourself and you find you've got a heap to talk about.
  • I'd never happened across the gink Whiting, but I knew of him, and, of
  • course, he'd heard of me, and we got to discussing things. I seen him
  • lose on a foul to Tommy King in the eighteenth round out in Los
  • Angeles, and that kept us busy talking, him having it that he hadn't
  • gone within a mile of fouling Tommy and me saying I'd been in a
  • ring-seat and had the goods on him same as if I'd taken a snap-shot.
  • Well, we was both getting pretty hot under the collar about it when
  • suddenly there's the blazes of a noise behind us, and there's the two
  • kids scrapping all over the lot. The Whiting kid had started it, mind
  • you, and him ten pounds heavier than Bill, and tough, too."
  • The White Hope confirmed this.
  • "Bad boy," he remarked, and with a deep breath resumed excavating work
  • on a grapefruit.
  • "Well, I was just making a jump to separate them when this Whiting gook
  • says, 'Betcha a dollar my kid wins!' and before I knew what I was doing
  • I'd taken him. It wasn't that that stopped me, though. It was his
  • saying that his kid took after his dad and could eat up anything of his
  • own age in America. Well, darn it, could I take that from a slob of a
  • mixed-ale scrapper when it was handed out at the finest kid that ever
  • came from New York?"
  • "Of course not," said Kirk indignantly, and even Mamie forbore to
  • criticize. She bent over the White Hope and gave his grapefruit-stained
  • cheek a kiss.
  • "Well, I _should_ say not!" cried Steve. "I just hollered to his
  • nibs, 'Soak it to him, kid! for the honour of No. 99'; and, believe me,
  • the young bear-cat sort of gathered himself together, winked at me, and
  • began to hammer the stuffing out of the scrappy kid. Say, there wasn't
  • no sterilized stuff about his work. You were a regular germ, all right,
  • weren't you squire?"
  • "Germ," agreed the White Hope. He spoke drowsily.
  • "Gee!" Steve resumed his saga in a whirl of enthusiasm. "Gee! if
  • they're right to start with, if they're born right, if they've got the
  • grit in them, you can't sterilize it out of 'em if you use up half the
  • germ-killer in the country. From the way that kid acted you'd have
  • thought he'd been spending the last year in a training-camp. The other
  • kid rolled him over, but he come up again as if that was just the sort
  • of stuff he liked, and pretty soon I see that he's uncovered a yellow
  • streak in the Whiting kid as big as a barn door. You were on it,
  • weren't you, colonel?"
  • But the White Hope had no remarks to offer this time. His head had
  • fallen forward and was resting peacefully in his grapefruit.
  • "He's asleep," said Mamie.
  • She picked him up gently and carried him out.
  • "He's a champeen at that too," said Steve. "I had to pull him out of
  • the hay this morning. Well, I guess he's earned it. He's had a busy
  • day."
  • "What happened then, Steve?"
  • "Why, after that there wasn't a thing to it. Whiting, poor simp,
  • couldn't see it. 'Betcha ten dollars my kid wins,' he hollers. 'He's
  • got him going.' 'Take you,' I shouts; and at that moment the scrappy
  • kid sees it's all over, so he does the old business of fouling, same as
  • his pop done when he fought Tommy King. It's in the blood, I guess. He
  • takes and scratches poor Bill on the cheek."
  • "That was enough for me. I jumps in. 'All over,' I says. 'My kid wins
  • on a foul.' 'Foul nothing,' says Whiting. 'It was an accident, and you
  • lose because you jumped into the fight, same as Connie McVey did when
  • Corbett fought Sharkey. Think you can get away with it, pulling that
  • old-time stuff?' I didn't trouble to argue with him. 'Oh,' I says, 'is
  • that it? Say, just take a slant at your man. If you don't stop him
  • quick he'll be in Texas.'
  • "For the scrappy kid was beating it while the going was good and was
  • half a mile away, running hard. Well, that was enough even for the
  • Whiting guy. 'I guess we'll call it a draw,' he says, 'and all bets
  • off.' I just looks at him and says, quite civil and polite: 'You darned
  • half-baked slob of a rough-house scrapper,' I says, 'it ain't a draw or
  • anything like it. My kid wins, and I'll trouble you now to proceed to
  • cash in with the dough, or else I'm liable to start something.' So he
  • paid up, and I took the White Hope indoors and give him a wash and
  • brush-up, and we cranks up the bubble and hikes off to the town and
  • spends the money on getting food for the celebration supper. And what's
  • over I slips into the kid's pocket and says: 'That's your first
  • winner's end, kid, and you've earned it.'"
  • Steve paused and filled his glass.
  • "I'm on the waggon as a general thing nowadays," he said; "but I reckon
  • this an occasion. Right here is where we drink his health."
  • And, overcome by his emotion, he burst into discordant song.
  • "Fo-or he's a jolly good fellow," bellowed Steve. "For he's a jolly
  • good fellow. For he's--"
  • There was a sound of quick footsteps outside, and Mamie entered the
  • room like a small whirlwind.
  • "Be quiet!" she cried. "Do you want to wake him?"
  • "Wake him?" said Steve. "You can't wake that kid with dynamite."
  • He raised his glass.
  • "Ladeez'n gentlemen, the boy wonder! Here's to him! The bantam-weight
  • champeen of Connecticut. The Sixty-First Street Cyclone! The kid they
  • couldn't sterilize! The White Hope!"
  • "The White Hope!" echoed Kirk.
  • "Fo-or he's a jolly good fellow--" sang Steve.
  • "Be quiet!" said Mrs. Porter from the doorway, and Steve, wheeling
  • round, caught her eye and collapsed like a pricked balloon.
  • Chapter XV
  • Mrs. Porter's Waterloo
  • Of the little band of revellers it would be hard to say which was the
  • most taken aback at this invasion. The excitement of the moment had
  • kept them from hearing the sound of the automobile which Mrs. Porter,
  • mistrusting the rough road that led to the shack, had stopped some
  • distance away.
  • Perhaps, on the whole, Kirk was more surprised than either of his
  • companions. Their guilty consciences had never been quite free from the
  • idea of the possibility of pursuit; but Kirk, having gathered from
  • Mamie that neither Ruth nor her aunt was aware of what had happened,
  • had counted upon remaining undisturbed till the time for return came on
  • the morrow.
  • He stood staring at Ruth, who had followed Mrs. Porter into the room.
  • Mrs. Porter took charge of the situation. She was in her element. She
  • stood with one hand resting on the table as if she were about to make
  • an after-dinner speech--as indeed she was.
  • Lora Delane Porter was not dissatisfied with the turn events had taken.
  • On the whole, perhaps, it might be said that she was pleased. She
  • intended, when she began to speak, to pulverize Kirk and the abandoned
  • young woman whom he had selected as his partner in his shameful
  • escapade, but in this she was swayed almost entirely by a regard for
  • abstract morality.
  • As concerned Ruth, she felt that the situation was, on the whole, the
  • best thing that could have happened. To her Napoleonic mind, which took
  • little account of the softer emotions, concerning itself entirely with
  • the future of the race, Kirk had played his part and was now lagging
  • superfluous on the stage. His tendency, she felt, was to retard rather
  • than to assist William Bannister's development. His influence, such as
  • it was, clashed with hers. She did not forget that there had been a
  • time when Ruth, having practically to choose between them, had chosen
  • to go Kirk's way and had abandoned herself to a life which could only
  • be considered unhygienic and retrograde. Her defeat in the matter of
  • Whiskers, the microbe-harbouring dog from Ireland, still rankled.
  • It was true that in what might be called the return match she had
  • utterly routed Kirk; but until this moment she had always been aware of
  • him as an opponent who might have to be reckoned with. She was quite
  • convinced that it would be in the best interests of everybody,
  • especially of William Bannister, if he could be eliminated. There were
  • signs of human weakness in Ruth which sometimes made her uneasy. Ruth,
  • she told herself, might "bear the torch," but when it came to "not
  • faltering" she was less certain of her.
  • Ruth, it was true, had behaved admirably in the matter of the
  • upbringing of William from the moment of her conversion till now,
  • but might she not at any moment become a backslider and fill the
  • white-tiled nursery with abominable long-haired dogs? Most certainly
  • she might. In a woman who had once been a long-haired dogist there are
  • always possibilities of a relapse into long-haired dogism, just as in a
  • converted cannibal there are always possibilities of a return to the
  • gods of wood and stone and the disposition to look on his fellow-man
  • purely in the light of breakfast-food.
  • For these reasons Mrs. Porter was determined to push home her present
  • advantage, to wipe Kirk off the map as an influence in Ruth's life. It
  • was her intention, having recovered William Bannister and bathed him
  • from head to foot in a weak solution of boric acid, to stand over Ruth
  • while she obtained a divorce. That done, she would be in a position to
  • defy Kirk and all his antagonistic views on the subject of the hygienic
  • upbringing of children.
  • She rapped the table and prepared to speak.
  • Even a Napoleon, however, may err from lack of sufficient information;
  • and there was a flaw in her position of which she was unaware. From the
  • beginning of the drive to the end of it Ruth had hardly spoken a word,
  • and Mrs. Porter, in consequence, was still in ignorance of what had
  • been happening that day in Wall Street and the effect of these
  • happenings on her niece's outlook on life. Could she have known it, the
  • silent girl beside her had already suffered the relapse which she had
  • feared as a remote possibility.
  • Ruth's mind during that drive had been in a confusion of regrets and
  • doubts and hopes. There were times when she refused absolutely to
  • believe the story of Kirk's baseness which her aunt poured into her ear
  • during the first miles of the journey. It was absurd and incredible.
  • Yet, as they raced along the dark roads, doubt came to her and would
  • not be driven out.
  • A single unfortunate phrase of Kirk's, spoken in haste, but remembered
  • at leisure, formed the basis of this uncertainty. That afternoon when
  • he had left her he had said that Mamie was the real mother of the
  • child. Could it be that Mamie's undeviating devotion to the boy had won
  • the love which she had lost? It was possible. Considered in the light
  • of what Mrs. Porter had told her, it seemed, in her blackest moments,
  • certain.
  • She knew how wrapped up in the boy Kirk had been. Was it not a logical
  • outcome of his estrangement from herself that he should have turned for
  • consolation to the one person in sympathy with him in his great love
  • for his child?
  • She tried to read his face as he stood looking at her now, but she
  • could find no hope in it. The eyes that met hers were cold and
  • expressionless.
  • Mrs. Porter rapped the table a second time.
  • "Mr. Winfield," she said in the metallic voice with which she was wont
  • to cow publishers insufficiently equipped with dash and enterprise in
  • the matter of advertising treatises on the future of the race, "I have
  • no doubt you are surprised to see us. You appear to be looking your
  • wife in the face. It speaks well for your courage but badly for your
  • sense of shame. If you had the remnants of decent feeling in you, you
  • would be physically incapable of the feat. If you would care to know
  • how your conduct strikes an unprejudiced spectator, I may tell you that
  • I consider you a scoundrel of the worst type and unfit to associate
  • with any but the low company in which I find you."
  • Steve, who had been listening with interest, and indeed, a certain
  • relish while Kirk was, as he put it to himself, "getting his" in this
  • spirited fashion, started at the concluding words of the address,
  • which, in his opinion, seemed slightly personal. He had long ago made
  • up his mind that Lora Delane Porter, though an entertaining woman and,
  • on the whole, more worth while than a moving-picture show, was quite
  • mad; but, he felt, even lunatics ought to realize that there is a limit
  • to what they may say.
  • He moaned protestingly, and rashly, for he drew the speaker's attention
  • upon himself.
  • "This person," went on Mrs. Porter, indicating Steve with a wave of her
  • hand which caused him to sidestep swiftly and throw up an arm, as had
  • been his habit in the ring when Battling Dick or Fighting Jack
  • endeavoured to blot him out with a right swing, "who, I observe,
  • retains the tattered relics of a conscience, seeing that he winces, you
  • employed to do the only dangerous part of your dirty work. I hope he
  • will see that he gets his money. In his place I should be feeling
  • uneasy."
  • "Ma'am!" protested Steve.
  • Mrs. Porter silenced him with a gesture.
  • "Be quiet!" she said.
  • Steve was quiet.
  • Mrs. Porter returned to Kirk.
  • Of all her burning words, Kirk had not heard one. His eyes had never
  • left Ruth's. Like her, he was trying to read a message from a face that
  • seemed only cold. In this crisis of their two lives he had no thought
  • for anybody but her. He had a sense of great issues, of being on the
  • verge of the tremendous; but his brain felt numbed and heavy. He could
  • not think. He could see nothing except her eyes.
  • His inattention seemed to communicate itself to Mrs. Porter. She rapped
  • imperatively upon the table for the third time. The report galvanized
  • Steve, as, earlier in the day, a similar report had galvanized Mr.
  • Penway; but Kirk did not move.
  • "Mr. Winfield!"
  • Still Kirk made no sign that he had heard her. It was discouraging, but
  • Lora Delane Porter was not made of the stuff that yields readily to
  • discouragement. She resumed:
  • "As for this wretched girl"--she indicated the silent Mamie with a wave
  • of her hand--"this abandoned creature whom you have led astray, this
  • shameless partner of your----"
  • "Say!"
  • The exclamation came from Steve, and it stopped Mrs. Porter like a
  • bullet. To her this interruption from one whom she had fallen upon and
  • wiped out resembled a voice from the tomb. She was not accustomed to
  • having her victims rise up and cut sharply, even peremptorily, into the
  • flow of her speech. Macbeth, confronted by the ghost of Banquo, may
  • have been a little more taken aback, but not much.
  • She endeavoured to quell Steve with a glance, but it was instantly
  • apparent that he was immune for the time being to quelling glances. His
  • brown eyes were fixed upon her in a cold stare which she found
  • arresting and charged with menace. His chin protruded and his upper lip
  • was entirely concealed behind its fellow in a most uncomfortable
  • manner.
  • She had never had the privilege of seeing Steve in the active exercise
  • of his late profession, or she would have recognized the look. It was
  • the one which proclaims the state of mind commonly known as "being
  • fighting mad," and in other days had usually heralded a knock-out for
  • some too persistent opponent.
  • "Say, ma'am, you want to cut that out. That line of talk don't go."
  • Great is the magic of love that can restore a man in an instant of time
  • from being an obsequious wreck to a thing of fire and resolution. A
  • moment before Steve's only immediate object in life had been to stay
  • quiet and keep out of the way as much as possible. He had never been a
  • man of ready speech in the presence of an angry woman; words
  • intimidated him as blows never did, especially the whirl of words which
  • were at Lora Delane Porter's command in moments of emotion.
  • But this sudden onslaught upon Mamie, innocent Mamie who had done
  • nothing to anybody, scattered his embarrassment and filled him with
  • much the same spirit which sent bantam-weight knights up against
  • heavy-weight dragons in the Middle Ages. He felt inspired.
  • "Nix on the 'abandoned creature,'" he said with dignity. "You're on the
  • wrong wire! This here lady is my affianced wife!"
  • He went to Mamie and, putting his arm round her waist, pressed her to
  • him. He was conscious, as he did so, of a sensation of wonderment at
  • himself. This was the attitude he had dreamed of a thousand times and
  • had been afraid to assume. For the last three years he had been
  • picturing himself in precisely this position, and daily had cursed the
  • lack of nerve which had held him back. Yet here he was, and it had all
  • happened in a moment. A funny thing, life.
  • "What!" exclaimed Mrs. Porter.
  • "Sure thing," said Steve. His coolness, the ease with which he found
  • words astonished him as much as his rapidity of action.
  • "I stole the kid," he said, "and it was my idea at that. Kirk didn't
  • know anything about it. I wired to him to-day what I had done and that
  • he was to come right along. And," added Steve in a burst of
  • inspiration, "I said bring along Mamie, too, as the kid's used to her
  • and there ought to be a woman around. And she could be here, all right,
  • and no harm, she being my affianced wife." He liked that phrase. He had
  • read it in a book somewhere, and it was the goods.
  • He eyed Mrs. Porter jauntily. Mrs. Porter's gaze wavered. She was not
  • feeling comfortable. Hers was a nature that did not lend itself easily
  • to apologies, yet apologies were obviously what the situation demanded.
  • The thought of all the eloquence which she had expended to no end added
  • to her discomfort. For the first time she was pleased that Kirk had so
  • manifestly not been listening to a word of it.
  • "Oh!" she said.
  • She paused.
  • "That puts a different complexion on this affair."
  • "Betcha life!"
  • She paused once more. It was some moments before she could bring
  • herself to speak. She managed it at last.
  • "I beg your pardon," she said.
  • "Mine, ma'am?" said Steve grandly. Five minutes before, the idea that
  • he could ever speak grandly to Lora Delane Porter would have seemed
  • ridiculous to him; but he was surprised at nothing now.
  • "And the young wom---- And the future Mrs. Dingle's," said Mrs. Porter
  • with an effort.
  • "Thank you, ma'am," said Steve, and released Mamie, who forthwith
  • bolted from the room like a scared rabbit.
  • Steve had started to follow her when Mrs. Porter, magnificent woman,
  • snatching what was left from defeat, stopped him.
  • "Wait!" she said. "What you have said alters the matter in one respect;
  • but there is another point. On your own confession you have been guilty
  • of the extremely serious offence, the penal offence of kidnapping a
  • child who--"
  • "Drop me a line about it, ma'am," said Steve. "Me time's rather full
  • just now."
  • He disappeared into the outer darkness after Mamie.
  • * * * * *
  • In the room they had left, Kirk and Ruth faced each other in silence.
  • Lora Delane Porter eyed them grimly. It was the hour of her defeat, and
  • she knew it. Forces too strong for her were at work. Her grand attack,
  • the bringing of these two together that Ruth might confront Kirk in his
  • guilt, had recoiled upon her. The Old Guard had made their charge up
  • the hill, and it had failed. Victory had become a rout. With one speech
  • Steve had destroyed her whole plan of campaign.
  • She knew it was all over, that in another moment if she remained, she
  • would be compelled to witness the humiliating spectacle of Ruth in
  • Kirk's arms, stammering the words which intuition told her were even
  • now trembling on her lips. She knew Ruth. She could read her like a
  • primer. And her knowledge told her that she was about to capitulate,
  • that all her pride and resentment had been swept away, that she had
  • gone over to the enemy.
  • Elemental passions were warring against Lora Delane Porter, and she
  • bowed before them.
  • "Mr. Winfield," she said sharply, her voice cutting the silence like a
  • knife, "I beg your pardon. I seem to have made a mistake. Good night."
  • Kirk did not answer.
  • "Good night, Ruth."
  • Ruth made no sign that she had heard.
  • Mrs. Porter, grand in defeat, moved slowly to the door.
  • But even in the greatest women there is that germ of feminine curiosity
  • which cannot be wholly eliminated, that little grain of dust that
  • asserts itself and clogs the machinery. It had been Mrs. Porter's
  • intention to leave the room without a glance, her back defiantly toward
  • the foe. But, as she reached the door, there came from behind her a
  • sound of movement, a stifled cry, a little sound whose meaning she knew
  • too well.
  • She hesitated. She stood still, fighting herself. But the grain of dust
  • had done its work. For an instant she ceased to be a smoothly working
  • machine and became a woman subject to the dictates of impulse.
  • She turned.
  • Intuition had not deceived her. Ruth had gone over to the enemy. She
  • was in Kirk's arms, holding him to her, her face hidden against his
  • shoulder, for all the world as if Lora Delane Porter, her guiding
  • force, had ceased to exist.
  • Mrs. Porter closed the door and walked stiffly through the scented
  • night to where the headlights of her automobile cleft the darkness.
  • Birds, asleep in the trees, fluttered uneasily at the sudden throbbing
  • of the engine.
  • Chapter XVI
  • The White-Hope Link
  • The White Hope slept. The noise of the departing car, which had roused
  • the birds, had made no impression on him. As Steve had said, dynamite
  • could not do it. He slumbered on, calmly detached, unaware of the
  • remarkable changes which, in the past twenty-four hours, had taken
  • place in his life. An epoch had ended and a new one begun, but he knew
  • it not.
  • And probably, if Kirk and Ruth, who were standing at his bedside,
  • watching him, had roused him and informed him of these facts, he would
  • have displayed little excitement. He had the philosophical temperament.
  • He took things as they came. Great natural phenomena, like Lora Delane
  • Porter, he accepted as part of life. When they were in his life, he
  • endured them stoically. When they went out of it, he got on without
  • them. Marcus Aurelius would have liked William Bannister Winfield. They
  • belonged to the same school of thought.
  • The years have a tendency to
  • destroy this placidity towards life and to develop in man a sense of
  • gratitude to fate for its occasional kindnesses; and Kirk, having been
  • in the world longer than William Bannister, did not take the gifts of
  • the gods so much for granted. He was profoundly grateful for what had
  • happened. That Lora Delane Porter should have retired from active
  • interference with his concerns was much; but that he should have had
  • the incredible good fortune to be freed from the burden of John
  • Bannister's money was more.
  • If ever money was the root of all evil, this had been. It had come into
  • his life like a poisonous blight, withering and destroying wherever it
  • touched. It had changed Ruth; it had changed William Bannister; it had
  • changed himself; it was as if the spirit of the old man had lived on,
  • hating him and working him mischief. He always had superstitious fear
  • of it; and events had proved him right.
  • And now the cloud had rolled away. A few crowded hours of Bailey's
  • dashing imbecility had removed the curse forever.
  • He was alone with Ruth and his son in a world that contained only them,
  • just as in the old days of their happiness. There was something
  • symbolic, something suggestive of the beginning of a new order of
  • things, in their isolation at this very moment. Steve had gone. Only he
  • and Ruth and the child were left.
  • The child--the White Hope--he was the real hero of the story, the real
  • principal of the drama of their three lives. He was the link that bound
  • them together, the force that worked for coherence and against chaos.
  • He stood between them, his hands in theirs; and while he did so there
  • could be no parting of the ways. His grip was light, but as strong as
  • steel. Time would bring troubles, moods, misunderstandings, for they
  • were both human; but, while that grip held, there could be no gulf
  • dividing Ruth and himself, as it had divided them in the past.
  • He faced the future calmly, with open eyes. It would be rough going at
  • first, very rough going. It meant hard work, incessant work. No more
  • vague masterpieces which might or might not turn into "Carmen" or "The
  • Spanish Maiden." No more delightful idle days to be loafed through in
  • the studio or the shops. No more dreams, seen hazily through the smoke
  • of a cigar, as he lay on the couch and stared at the ceiling, of what
  • he would do to-morrow. To-morrow must look after itself. His business
  • was with the present and the work of the present.
  • He braced himself to the fight, confident of his power to win. He had
  • found himself.
  • Bill stirred in his sleep and muttered. Ruth bent over him and kissed
  • the honourable scratch on his cheek.
  • "Poor little chap! You'll wake up and find that you aren't a
  • millionaire baby after all! I wonder if you'll mind. Kirk, do
  • _you_ mind?"
  • "Mind!"
  • "I don't," said Ruth. "I think it will be rather fun being poor again."
  • "Who's poor?" said Kirk stoutly. "I'm not. I've got you and I've got
  • Bill. Do you remember--ages ago--what that Vince girl, the model, you
  • know, said that her friend had called me? A plute. That's me. I'm the
  • richest man in the world."
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