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+<title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Lion and the Unicorn, by Richard Harding Davis</title>
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+<style type="text/css" xml:space="preserve">
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+ .mynote {background-color: #DDE; color: #000; padding: .5em; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-family: sans-serif; font-size: 95%;}
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+<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Lion and the Unicorn and Other Stories, by Richard Harding Davis</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
+most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
+whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
+of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online
+at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
+are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
+country where you are located before using this eBook.
+</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: The Lion and the Unicorn and Other Stories</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Richard Harding Davis</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: January, 1999 [eBook #1620]<br />
+[Most recently updated: May 5, 2023]</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Produced by: Charles Keller and David Widger</div>
+<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LION AND THE UNICORN ***</div>
+
+ <h1>
+ THE LION AND THE UNICORN
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ By Richard Harding Davis
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ IN MEMORY OF MANY HOT DAYS AND SOME HOT CORNERS
+ THIS BOOK IS DEDICATED TO
+ LT.-COL. ARTHUR H. LEE, R.A.
+ British Military Attache with the United States Army
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ Contents
+ </h3>
+ <table summary="" style="margin-right: auto; margin-left: auto">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0001"> THE LION AND THE UNICORN </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0002"> ON THE FEVER SHIP </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0003"> THE MAN WITH ONE TALENT </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0004"> THE VAGRANT </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0005"> THE LAST RIDE TOGETHER </a>
+ </p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2H_4_0001" id="link2H_4_0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ THE LION AND THE UNICORN
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Prentiss had a long lease on the house, and because it stood in Jermyn
+ Street the upper floors were, as a matter of course, turned into lodgings
+ for single gentlemen; and because Prentiss was a Florist to the Queen, he
+ placed a lion and unicorn over his flowershop, just in front of the middle
+ window on the first floor. By stretching a little, each of them could see
+ into the window just beyond him, and could hear all that was said inside;
+ and such things as they saw and heard during the reign of Captain
+ Carrington, who moved in at the same time they did! By day the table in
+ the centre of the room was covered with maps, and the Captain sat with a
+ box of pins, with different-colored flags wrapped around them, and amused
+ himself by sticking them in the maps and measuring the spaces in between,
+ swearing meanwhile to himself. It was a selfish amusement, but it appeared
+ to be the Captain’s only intellectual pursuit, for at night, the maps were
+ rolled up, and a green cloth was spread across the table, and there was
+ much company and popping of soda-bottles, and little heaps of gold and
+ silver were moved this way and that across the cloth. The smoke drifted
+ out of the open windows, and the laughter of the Captain’s guests rang out
+ loudly in the empty street, so that the policeman halted and raised his
+ eyes reprovingly to the lighted windows, and cabmen drew up beneath them
+ and lay in wait, dozing on their folded arms, for the Captain’s guests to
+ depart. The Lion and the Unicorn were rather ashamed of the scandal of it,
+ and they were glad when, one day, the Captain went away with his tin boxes
+ and gun-cases piled high on a four-wheeler.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Prentiss stood on the sidewalk and said: “I wish you good luck, sir.” And
+ the Captain said: “I’m coming back a Major, Prentiss.” But he never came
+ back. And one day—the Lion remembered the day very well, for on that
+ same day the newsboys ran up and down Jermyn Street shouting out the news
+ of “a ’orrible disaster” to the British arms. It was then that a young
+ lady came to the door in a hansom, and Prentiss went out to meet her and
+ led her upstairs. They heard him unlock the Captain’s door and say, “This
+ is his room, miss,” and after he had gone they watched her standing quite
+ still by the centre table. She stood there for a very long time looking
+ slowly about her, and then she took a photograph of the Captain from the
+ frame on the mantel and slipped it into her pocket, and when she went out
+ again her veil was down, and she was crying. She must have given Prentiss
+ as much as a sovereign, for he called her “Your ladyship,” which he never
+ did under a sovereign.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And she drove off, and they never saw her again either, nor could they
+ hear the address she gave the cabman. But it was somewhere up St. John’s
+ Wood way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After that the rooms were empty for some months, and the Lion and the
+ Unicorn were forced to amuse themselves with the beautiful ladies and
+ smart-looking men who came to Prentiss to buy flowers and “buttonholes,”
+ and the little round baskets of strawberries, and even the peaches at
+ three shillings each, which looked so tempting as they lay in the window,
+ wrapped up in cotton-wool, like jewels of great price.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Philip Carroll, the American gentleman, came, and they heard Prentiss
+ telling him that those rooms had always let for five guineas a week, which
+ they knew was not true; but they also knew that in the economy of nations
+ there must always be a higher price for the rich American, or else why was
+ he given that strange accent, except to betray him into the hands of the
+ London shopkeeper, and the London cabby?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The American walked to the window toward the west, which was the window
+ nearest the Lion, and looked out into the graveyard of St. James’s Church,
+ that stretched between their street and Piccadilly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “You’re lucky in having a bit of green to look out on,” he said to
+ Prentiss. “I’ll take these rooms—at five guineas. That’s more than
+ they’re worth, you know, but as I know it, too, your conscience needn’t
+ trouble you.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then his eyes fell on the Lion, and he nodded to him gravely. “How do you
+ do?” he said. “I’m coming to live with you for a little time. I have read
+ about you and your friends over there. It is a hazard of new fortunes with
+ me, your Majesty, so be kind to me, and if I win, I will put a new coat of
+ paint on your shield and gild you all over again.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Prentiss smiled obsequiously at the American’s pleasantry, but the new
+ lodger only stared at him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “He seemed a social gentleman,” said the Unicorn, that night, when the
+ Lion and he were talking it over. “Now the Captain, the whole time he was
+ here, never gave us so much as a look. This one says he has read of us.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “And why not?” growled the Lion. “I hope Prentiss heard what he said of
+ our needing a new layer of gilt. It’s disgraceful. You can see that Lion
+ over Scarlett’s, the butcher, as far as Regent Street, and Scarlett is
+ only one of Salisbury’s creations. He received his Letters-Patent only two
+ years back. We date from Palmerston.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lodger came up the street just at that moment, and stopped and looked
+ up at the Lion and the Unicorn from the sidewalk, before he opened the
+ door with his night-key. They heard him enter the room and feel on the
+ mantel for his pipe, and a moment later he appeared at the Lion’s window
+ and leaned on the sill, looking down into the street below and blowing
+ whiffs of smoke up into the warm night-air.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a night in June, and the pavements were dry under foot and the
+ streets were filled with well-dressed people, going home from the play,
+ and with groups of men in black and white, making their way to supper at
+ the clubs. Hansoms of inky-black, with shining lamps inside and out,
+ dashed noiselessly past on mysterious errands, chasing close on each
+ other’s heels on a mad race, each to its separate goal. From the cross
+ streets rose the noises of early night, the rumble of the ’buses, the
+ creaking of their brakes, as they unlocked, the cries of the “extras,” and
+ the merging of thousands of human voices in a dull murmur. The great world
+ of London was closing its shutters for the night, and putting out the
+ lights; and the new lodger from across the sea listened to it with his
+ heart beating quickly, and laughed to stifle the touch of fear and
+ homesickness that rose in him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “I have seen a great play to-night,” he said to the Lion, “nobly played by
+ great players. What will they care for my poor wares? I see that I have
+ been over-bold. But we cannot go back now—not yet.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He knocked the ashes out of his pipe, and nodded “good-night” to the great
+ world beyond his window. “What fortunes lie with ye, ye lights of London
+ town?” he quoted, smiling. And they heard him close the door of his
+ bedroom, and lock it for the night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next morning he bought many geraniums from Prentiss and placed them
+ along the broad cornice that stretched across the front of the house over
+ the shop window. The flowers made a band of scarlet on either side of the
+ Lion as brilliant as a Tommy’s jacket.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “I am trying to propitiate the British Lion by placing flowers before his
+ altar,” the American said that morning to a visitor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “The British public you mean,” said the visitor; “they are each likely to
+ tear you to pieces.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Yes, I have heard that the pit on the first night of a bad play is
+ something awful,” hazarded the American.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Wait and see,” said the visitor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Thank you,” said the American, meekly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Every one who came to the first floor front talked about a play. It seemed
+ to be something of great moment to the American. It was only a bundle of
+ leaves printed in red and black inks and bound in brown paper covers.
+ There were two of them, and the American called them by different names:
+ one was his comedy and one was his tragedy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “They are both likely to be tragedies,” the Lion heard one of the visitors
+ say to another, as they drove away together. “Our young friend takes it
+ too seriously.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The American spent most of his time by his desk at the window writing on
+ little blue pads and tearing up what he wrote, or in reading over one of
+ the plays to himself in a loud voice. In time the number of his visitors
+ increased, and to some of these he would read his play; and after they had
+ left him he was either depressed and silent or excited and jubilant. The
+ Lion could always tell when he was happy because then he would go to the
+ side table and pour himself out a drink and say, “Here’s to me,” but when
+ he was depressed he would stand holding the glass in his hand, and finally
+ pour the liquor back into the bottle again and say, “What’s the use of
+ that?”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After he had been in London a month he wrote less and was more frequently
+ abroad, sallying forth in beautiful raiment, and coming home by daylight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And he gave suppers too, but they were less noisy than the Captain’s had
+ been, and the women who came to them were much more beautiful, and their
+ voices when they spoke were sweet and low. Sometimes one of the women
+ sang, and the men sat in silence while the people in the street below
+ stopped to listen, and would say, “Why, that is So-and-So singing,” and
+ the Lion and the Unicorn wondered how they could know who it was when they
+ could not see her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lodger’s visitors came to see him at all hours. They seemed to regard
+ his rooms as a club, where they could always come for a bite to eat or to
+ write notes; and others treated it like a lawyer’s office and asked advice
+ on all manner of strange subjects. Sometimes the visitor wanted to know
+ whether the American thought she ought to take £10 a week and go on tour,
+ or stay in town and try to live on £8; or whether she should paint
+ landscapes that would not sell, or racehorses that would; or whether
+ Reggie really loved her and whether she really loved Reggie; or whether
+ the new part in the piece at the Court was better than the old part at
+ Terry’s, and wasn’t she getting too old to play “ingenues” anyway.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lodger seemed to be a general adviser, and smoked and listened with
+ grave consideration, and the Unicorn thought his judgment was most
+ sympathetic and sensible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of all the beautiful ladies who came to call on the lodger the one the
+ Unicorn liked the best was the one who wanted to know whether she loved
+ Reggie and whether Reggie loved her. She discussed this so interestingly
+ while she consumed tea and thin slices of bread that the Unicorn almost
+ lost his balance in leaning forward to listen. Her name was Marion
+ Cavendish and it was written over many photographs which stood in silver
+ frames in the lodger’s rooms. She used to make the tea herself, while the
+ lodger sat and smoked; and she had a fascinating way of doubling the thin
+ slices of bread into long strips and nibbling at them like a mouse at a
+ piece of cheese. She had wonderful little teeth and Cupid’s-bow lips, and
+ she had a fashion of lifting her veil only high enough for one to see the
+ two Cupid-bow lips. When she did that the American used to laugh, at
+ nothing apparently, and say, “Oh, I guess Reggie loves you well enough.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “But do I love Reggie?” she would ask sadly, with her tea-cup held poised
+ in air.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “I am sure I hope not,” the lodger would reply, and she would put down the
+ veil quickly, as one would drop a curtain over a beautiful picture, and
+ rise with great dignity and say, “if you talk like that I shall not come
+ again.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She was sure that if she could only get some work to do her head would be
+ filled with more important matters than whether Reggie loved her or not.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “But the managers seem inclined to cut their cavendish very fine just at
+ present,” she said. “If I don’t get a part soon,” she announced, “I shall
+ ask Mitchell to put me down on the list for recitations at evening
+ parties.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “That seems a desperate revenge,” said the American; “and besides, I don’t
+ want you to get a part, because some one might be idiotic enough to take
+ my comedy, and if he should, you must play Nancy.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “I would not ask for any salary if I could play Nancy,” Miss Cavendish
+ answered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They spoke of a great many things, but their talk always ended by her
+ saying that there must be some one with sufficient sense to see that his
+ play was a great play, and by his saying that none but she must play
+ Nancy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Lion preferred the tall girl with masses and folds of brown hair, who
+ came from America to paint miniatures of the British aristocracy. Her name
+ was Helen Cabot, and he liked her because she was so brave and fearless,
+ and so determined to be independent of every one, even of the lodger—especially
+ of the lodger, who it appeared had known her very well at home. The
+ lodger, they gathered, did not wish her to be independent of him and the
+ two Americans had many arguments and disputes about it, but she always
+ said, “It does no good, Philip; it only hurts us both when you talk so. I
+ care for nothing, and for no one but my art, and, poor as it is, it means
+ everything to me, and you do not, and, of course, the man I am to marry,
+ must.” Then Carroll would talk, walking up and down, and looking very
+ fierce and determined, and telling her how he loved her in such a way that
+ it made her look even more proud and beautiful. And she would say more
+ gently, “It is very fine to think that any one can care for like that, and
+ very helpful. But unless I cared in the same way it would be wicked of me
+ to marry you, and besides—” She would add very quickly to prevent
+ his speaking again—“I don’t want to marry you or anybody, and I
+ never shall. I want to be free and to succeed in my work, just as you want
+ to succeed in your work. So please never speak of this again.” When she
+ went away the lodger used to sit smoking in the big arm-chair and beat the
+ arms with his hands, and he would pace up and down the room while his work
+ would lie untouched and his engagements pass forgotten.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Summer came and London was deserted, dull, and dusty, but the lodger
+ stayed on in Jermyn Street. Helen Cabot had departed on a round of visits
+ to country houses in Scotland, where, as she wrote him, she was painting
+ miniatures of her hosts and studying the game of golf. Miss Cavendish
+ divided her days between the river and one of the West End theatres. She
+ was playing a small part in a farce-comedy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One day she came up from Cookham earlier than usual, looking very
+ beautiful in a white boating frock and a straw hat with a Leander ribbon.
+ Her hands and arms were hard with dragging a punting pole and she was
+ sunburnt and happy, and hungry for tea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Why don’t you come down to Cookham and get out of this heat?” Miss
+ Cavendish asked. “You need it; you look ill.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “I’d like to, but I can’t,” said Carroll. “The fact is, I paid in advance
+ for these rooms, and if I lived anywhere else I’d be losing five guineas a
+ week on them.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Miss Cavendish regarded him severely. She had never quite mastered his
+ American humor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “But five guineas—why that’s nothing to you,” she said. Something in
+ the lodger’s face made her pause. “You don’t mean——”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Yes, I do,” said the lodger, smiling. “You see, I started in to lay siege
+ to London without sufficient ammunition. London is a large town, and it
+ didn’t fall as quickly as I thought it would. So I am economizing. Mr.
+ Lockhart’s Coffee Rooms and I are no longer strangers.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Miss Cavendish put down her cup of tea untasted and leaned toward him
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Are you in earnest?” she asked. “For how long?”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Oh, for the last month,” replied the lodger; “they are not at all bad—clean
+ and wholesome and all that.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “But the suppers you gave us, and this,” she cried, suddenly, waving her
+ hands over the pretty tea-things, “and the cake and muffins?”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “My friends, at least,” said Carroll, “need not go to Lockhart’s.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “And the Savoy?” asked Miss Cavendish, mournfully shaking her head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “A dream of the past,” said Carroll, waving his pipe through the smoke.
+ “Gatti’s? Yes, on special occasions; but for necessity, the Chancellor’s,
+ where one gets a piece of the prime roast beef of Old England, from
+ Chicago, and potatoes for ninepence—a pot of bitter
+ twopence-halfpenny, and a penny for the waiter. It’s most amusing on the
+ whole. I am learning a little about London, and some things about myself.
+ They are both most interesting subjects.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Well, I don’t like it,” Miss Cavendish declared helplessly. “When I think
+ of those suppers and the flowers, I feel—I feel like a robber.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Don’t,” begged Carroll. “I am really the most happy of men—that is,
+ as the chap says in the play, I would be if I wasn’t so damned miserable.
+ But I owe no man a penny and I have assets—I have £80 to last me
+ through the winter and two marvellous plays; and I love, next to yourself,
+ the most wonderful woman God ever made. That’s enough.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “But I thought you made such a lot of money by writing?” asked Miss
+ Cavendish.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “I do—that is, I could,” answered Carroll, “if I wrote the things
+ that sell; but I keep on writing plays that won’t.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “And such plays!” exclaimed Marion, warmly; “and to think that they are
+ going begging.” She continued indignantly, “I can’t imagine what the
+ managers do want.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “I know what they don’t want,” said the American. Miss Cavendish drummed
+ impatiently on the tea-tray.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “I wish you wouldn’t be so abject about it,” she said. “If I were a man
+ I’d make them take those plays.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “How?” asked the American; “with a gun?”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Well, I’d keep at it until they read them,” declared Marion. “I’d sit on
+ their front steps all night and I’d follow them in cabs, and I’d lie in
+ wait for them at the stage-door. I’d just make them take them.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Carroll sighed and stared at the ceiling. “I guess I’ll give up and go
+ home,” he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Oh, yes, do, run away before you are beaten,” said Miss Cavendish,
+ scornfully. “Why, you can’t go now. Everybody will be back in town soon,
+ and there are a lot of new plays coming on, and some of them are sure to
+ be failures, and that’s our chance. You rush in with your piece and
+ somebody may take it sooner than close the theatre.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “I’m thinking of closing the theatre myself,” said Carroll. “What’s the
+ use of my hanging on here?” he exclaimed. “It distresses Helen to know I
+ am in London, feeling about her as I do—and the Lord only knows how
+ it distresses me. And, maybe, if I went away,” he said, consciously, “she
+ might miss me. She might see the difference.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Miss Cavendish held herself erect and pressed her lips together with a
+ severe smile. “If Helen Cabot doesn’t see the difference between you and
+ the other men she knows now,” she said, “I doubt if she ever will. Besides—”
+ she continued, and then hesitated. “Well, go on,” urged Carroll.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Well, I was only going to say,” she explained, “that leaving the girl
+ alone never did the man any good unless he left her alone willingly. If
+ she’s sure he still cares, it’s just the same to her where he is. He might
+ as well stay on in London as go to South Africa. It won’t help him any.
+ The difference comes when she finds he has stopped caring. Why, look at
+ Reggie. He tried that. He went away for ever so long, but he kept writing
+ me from wherever he went, so that he was perfectly miserable—and I
+ went on enjoying myself. Then when he came back, he tried going about with
+ his old friends again. He used to come to the theatre with them—oh,
+ with such nice girls—but he always stood in the back of the box and
+ yawned and scowled—so I knew. And, anyway, he’d always spoil it all
+ by leaving them and waiting at the stage entrance for me. But one day he
+ got tired of the way I treated him and went off on a bicycle tour with
+ Lady Hacksher’s girls and some men from his regiment, and he was gone
+ three weeks and never sent me even a line; and I got so scared; I couldn’t
+ sleep, and I stood it for three days more, and then I wired him to come
+ back or I’d jump off London Bridge; and he came back that very night from
+ Edinburgh on the express, and I was so glad to see him that I got
+ confused, and in the general excitement I promised to marry him, so that’s
+ how it was with us.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Yes,” said the American, without enthusiasm; “but then I still care, and
+ Helen knows I care.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Doesn’t she ever fancy that you might care for some one else? You have a
+ lot of friends, you know.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Yes, but she knows they are just that—friends,” said the American.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Miss Cavendish stood up to go, and arranged her veil before the mirror
+ above the fireplace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “I come here very often to tea,” she said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “It’s very kind of you,” said Carroll. He was at the open window, looking
+ down into the street for a cab.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Well, no one knows I am engaged to Reggie,” continued Miss Cavendish,
+ “except you and Reggie, and he isn’t so sure. SHE doesn’t know it.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Well?” said Carroll.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Miss Cavendish smiled a mischievous kindly smile at him from the mirror.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Well?” she repeated, mockingly. Carroll stared at her and laughed. After
+ a pause he said: “It’s like a plot in a comedy. But I’m afraid I’m too
+ serious for play-acting.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Yes, it is serious,” said Miss Cavendish. She seated herself again and
+ regarded the American thoughtfully. “You are too good a man to be treated
+ the way that girl is treating you, and no one knows it better than she
+ does. She’ll change in time, but just now she thinks she wants to be
+ independent. She’s in love with this picture-painting idea, and with the
+ people she meets. It’s all new to her—the fuss they make over her
+ and the titles, and the way she is asked about. We know she can’t paint.
+ We know they only give her commissions because she’s so young and pretty,
+ and American. She amuses them, that’s all. Well, that cannot last; she’ll
+ find it out. She’s too clever a girl, and she is too fine a girl to be
+ content with that long. Then—then she’ll come back to you. She feels
+ now that she has both you and the others, and she’s making you wait: so
+ wait and be cheerful. She’s worth waiting for; she’s young, that’s all.
+ She’ll see the difference in time. But, in the meanwhile, it would hurry
+ matters a bit if she thought she had to choose between the new friends and
+ you.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “She could still keep her friends, and marry me,” said Carroll; “I have
+ told her that a hundred times. She could still paint miniatures and marry
+ me. But she won’t marry me.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “She won’t marry you because she knows she can whenever she wants to;”
+ cried Marion. “Can’t you see that? But if she thought you were going to
+ marry some one else now?”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “She would be the first to congratulate me,” said Carroll. He rose and
+ walked to the fireplace, where he leaned with his arm on the mantel. There
+ was a photograph of Helen Cabot near his hand, and he turned this toward
+ him and stood for some time staring at it. “My dear Marion,” he said at
+ last, “I’ve known Helen ever since she was as young as that. Every year
+ I’ve loved her more, and found new things in her to care for; now I love
+ her more than any other man ever loved any other woman.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Miss Cavendish shook her head sympathetically.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Yes, I know,” she said; “that’s the way Reggie loves me, too.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Carroll went on as though he had not heard her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “There’s a bench in St. James’s Park,” he said, “where we used to sit when
+ she first came here, when she didn’t know so many people. We used to go
+ there in the morning and throw penny buns to the ducks. That’s been my
+ amusement this summer since you’ve all been away—sitting on that
+ bench, feeding penny buns to the silly ducks—especially the black
+ one, the one she used to like best. And I make pilgrimages to all the
+ other places we ever visited together, and try to pretend she is with me.
+ And I support the crossing sweeper at Lansdowne Passage because she once
+ said she felt sorry for him. I do all the other absurd things that a man
+ in love tortures himself by doing. But to what end? She knows how I care,
+ and yet she won’t see why we can’t go on being friends as we once were.
+ What’s the use of it all?”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “She is young, I tell you,” repeated Miss Cavendish, “and she’s too sure
+ of you. You’ve told her you care; now try making her think you don’t
+ care.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Carroll shook his head impatiently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “I will not stoop to such tricks and pretence, Marion,” he cried
+ impatiently. “All I have is my love for her; if I have to cheat and to
+ trap her into caring, the whole thing would be degraded.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Miss Cavendish shrugged her shoulders and walked to the door. “Such
+ amateurs!” she exclaimed, and banged the door after her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Carroll never quite knew how he had come to make a confidante of Miss
+ Cavendish. Helen and he had met her when they first arrived in London, and
+ as she had acted for a season in the United States, she adopted the two
+ Americans—and told Helen where to go for boots and hats, and advised
+ Carroll about placing his plays. Helen soon made other friends, and
+ deserted the artists, with whom her work had first thrown her. She seemed
+ to prefer the society of the people who bought her paintings, and who
+ admired and made much of the painter. As she was very beautiful and at an
+ age when she enjoyed everything in life keenly and eagerly, to give her
+ pleasure was in itself a distinct pleasure; and the worldly tired people
+ she met were considering their own entertainment quite as much as hers
+ when they asked her to their dinners and dances, or to spend a week with
+ them in the country. In her way, she was as independent as was Carroll in
+ his, and as she was not in love, as he was, her life was not narrowed down
+ to but one ideal. But she was not so young as to consider herself
+ infallible, and she had one excellent friend on whom she was dependent for
+ advice and to whose directions she submitted implicitly. This was Lady
+ Gower, the only person to whom Helen had spoken of Carroll and of his
+ great feeling for her. Lady Gower, immediately after her marriage, had
+ been a conspicuous and brilliant figure in that set in London which works
+ eighteen hours a day to keep itself amused, but after the death of her
+ husband she had disappeared into the country as completely as though she
+ had entered a convent, and after several years had then re-entered the
+ world as a professional philanthropist. Her name was now associated
+ entirely with Women’s Leagues, with committees that presented petitions to
+ Parliament, and with public meetings, at which she spoke with marvellous
+ ease and effect. Her old friends said she had taken up this new pose as an
+ outlet for her nervous energies, and as an effort to forget the man who
+ alone had made life serious to her. Others knew her as an earnest woman,
+ acting honestly for what she thought was right. Her success, all admitted,
+ was due to her knowledge of the world and to her sense of humor, which
+ taught her with whom to use her wealth and position, and when to demand
+ what she wanted solely on the ground that the cause was just.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She had taken more than a fancy for Helen, and the position of the
+ beautiful, motherless girl had appealed to her as one filled with dangers.
+ When she grew to know Helen better, she recognized that these fears were
+ quite unnecessary, and as she saw more of her she learned to care for her
+ deeply. Helen had told her much of Carroll and of his double purpose in
+ coming to London; of his brilliant work and his lack of success in having
+ it recognized; and of his great and loyal devotion to her, and of his lack
+ of success, not in having that recognized, but in her own inability to
+ return it. Helen was proud that she had been able to make Carroll care for
+ her as he did, and that there was anything about her which could inspire a
+ man whom she admired so much, to believe in her so absolutely and for so
+ long a time. But what convinced her that the outcome for which he hoped
+ was impossible, was the very fact that she could admire him, and see how
+ fine and unselfish his love for her was, and yet remain untouched by it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She had been telling Lady Gower one day of the care he had taken of her
+ ever since she was fourteen years of age, and had quoted some of the
+ friendly and loverlike acts he had performed in her service, until one day
+ they had both found out that his attitude of the elder brother was no
+ longer possible, and that he loved her in the old and only way. Lady Gower
+ looked at her rather doubtfully and smiled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “I wish you would bring him to see me, Helen” she said; “I think I should
+ like your friend very much. From what you tell me of him I doubt if you
+ will find many such men waiting for you in this country. Our men marry for
+ reasons of property, or they love blindly, and are exacting and selfish
+ before and after they are married. I know, because so many women came to
+ me when my husband was alive to ask how it was that I continued so happy
+ in my married life.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “But I don’t want to marry any one,” Helen remonstrated gently. “American
+ girls are not always thinking only of getting married.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “What I meant was this,” said Lady Gower, “that, in my experience, I have
+ heard of but few men who care in the way this young man seems to care for
+ you. You say you do not love him; but if he had wanted to gain my
+ interest, he could not have pleaded his cause better than you have done.
+ He seems to see your faults and yet love you still, in spite of them—or
+ on account of them. And I like the things he does for you. I like, for
+ instance, his sending you the book of the moment every week for two years.
+ That shows a most unswerving spirit of devotion. And the story of the
+ broken bridge in the woods is a wonderful story. If I were a young girl, I
+ could love a man for that alone. It was a beautiful thing to do.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Helen sat with her chin on her hands, deeply considering this new point of
+ view.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “I thought it very foolish of him,” she confessed questioningly, “to take
+ such a risk for such a little thing.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lady Gower smiled down at her from the height of her many years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Wait,” she said dryly, “you are very young now—and very rich; every
+ one is crowding to give you pleasure, to show his admiration. You are a
+ very fortunate girl. But later, these things which some man has done
+ because he loved you, and which you call foolish, will grow large in your
+ life, and shine out strongly, and when you are discouraged and alone, you
+ will take them out, and the memory of them will make you proud and happy.
+ They are the honors which women wear in secret.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Helen came back to town in September, and for the first few days was so
+ occupied in refurnishing her studio and in visiting the shops that she
+ neglected to send Carroll word of her return. When she found that a whole
+ week had passed without her having made any effort to see him, and
+ appreciated how the fact would hurt her friend, she was filled with
+ remorse, and drove at once in great haste to Jermyn Street, to announce
+ her return in person. On the way she decided that she would soften the
+ blow of her week of neglect by asking him to take her out to luncheon.
+ This privilege she had once or twice accorded him, and she felt that the
+ pleasure these excursions gave Carroll were worth the consternation they
+ caused to Lady Gower.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The servant was uncertain whether Mr. Carroll was at home or not, but
+ Helen was too intent upon making restitution to wait for the fact to be
+ determined, and, running up the stairs, knocked sharply at the door of his
+ study.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A voice bade her come in, and she entered, radiant and smiling her
+ welcome. But Carroll was not there to receive it, and instead, Marion
+ Cavendish looked up at her from his desk where she was busily writing.
+ Helen paused with a surprised laugh, but Marion sprang up and hailed her
+ gladly. They met half way across the room and kissed each other with the
+ most friendly feeling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Philip was out, Marion said, and she had just stepped in for a moment to
+ write him a note. If Helen would excuse her, she would finish it, as she
+ was late for rehearsal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But she asked over her shoulder, with great interest, if Helen had passed
+ a pleasant summer. She thought she had never seen her looking so well.
+ Helen thought Miss Cavendish herself was looking very well also, but
+ Marion said no; that she was too sunburnt, she would not be able to wear a
+ dinner-dress for a month. There was a pause while Marion’s quill scratched
+ violently across Carroll’s note-paper. Helen felt that in some way she was
+ being treated as an intruder; or worse, as a guest. She did not sit down,
+ it seemed impossible to do so, but she moved uncertainly about the room.
+ She noted that there were many changes, it seemed more bare and empty; her
+ picture was still on the writing-desk, but there were at least six new
+ photographs of Marion. Marion herself had brought them to the room that
+ morning, and had carefully arranged them in conspicuous places. But Helen
+ could not know that. She thought there was an unnecessary amount of
+ writing scribbled over the face of each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Marion addressed her letter and wrote “Immediate” across the envelope, and
+ placed it before the clock on the mantelshelf. “You will find Philip
+ looking very badly,” she said, as she pulled on her gloves. “He has been
+ in town all summer, working very hard—he has had no holiday at all.
+ I don’t think he’s well. I have been a great deal worried about him,” she
+ added. Her face was bent over the buttons of her glove, and when she
+ raised her blue eyes to Helen they were filled with serious concern.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Really,” Helen stammered, “I—I didn’t know—in his letters he
+ seemed very cheerful.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Marion shook her head and turned and stood looking thoughtfully out of the
+ window. “He’s in a very hard place,” she began abruptly, and then stopped
+ as though she had thought better of what she intended to say. Helen tried
+ to ask her to go on, but could not bring herself to do so. She wanted to
+ get away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “I tell him he ought to leave London,” Marion began again; “he needs a
+ change and a rest.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “I should think he might,” Helen agreed, “after three months of this heat.
+ He wrote me he intended going to Herne Bay or over to Ostend.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Yes, he had meant to go,” Marion answered. She spoke with the air of one
+ who possessed the most intimate knowledge of Carroll’s movements and
+ plans, and change of plans. “But he couldn’t,” she added. “He couldn’t
+ afford it. Helen,” she said, turning to the other girl, dramatically, “do
+ you know—I believe that Philip is very poor.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Miss Cabot exclaimed incredulously, “Poor!” She laughed. “Why, what do you
+ mean?”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “I mean that he has no money,” Marion answered, sharply. “These rooms
+ represent nothing. He only keeps them on because he paid for them in
+ advance. He’s been living on three shillings a day. That’s poor for him.
+ He takes his meals at cabmen’s shelters and at Lockhart’s, and he’s been
+ doing so for a month.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Helen recalled with a guilty thrill the receipt of certain boxes of La
+ France roses—cut long, in the American fashion—which had
+ arrived within the last month at various country houses. She felt
+ indignant at herself, and miserable. Her indignation was largely due to
+ the recollection that she had given these flowers to her hostess to
+ decorate the dinner-table.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She hated to ask this girl of things which she should have known better
+ than any one else. But she forced herself to do it. She felt she must know
+ certainly and at once.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “How do you know this?” she asked. “Are you sure there is no mistake?”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “He told me himself,” said Marion, “when he talked of letting the plays go
+ and returning to America. He said he must go back; that his money was
+ gone.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “He is gone to America!” Helen said, blankly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “No, he wanted to go, but I wouldn’t let him,” Marion went on. “I told him
+ that some one might take his play any day. And this third one he has
+ written, the one he finished this summer in town, is the best of all, I
+ think. It’s a love-story. It’s quite beautiful.” She turned and arranged
+ her veil at the glass, and as she did so, her eyes fell on the photographs
+ of herself scattered over the mantelpiece, and she smiled slightly. But
+ Helen did not see her—she was sitting down now, pulling at the books
+ on the table. She was confused and disturbed by emotions which were quite
+ strange to her, and when Marion bade her good-by she hardly noticed her
+ departure. What impressed her most of all in what Marion had told her,
+ was, she was surprised to find, that Philip was going away. That she
+ herself had frequently urged him to do so, for his own peace of mind,
+ seemed now of no consequence. Now that he seriously contemplated it, she
+ recognized that his absence meant to her a change in everything. She felt
+ for the first time the peculiar place he held in her life. Even if she had
+ seen him but seldom, the fact that he was within call had been more of a
+ comfort and a necessity to her than she understood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That he was poor, concerned her chiefly because she knew that, although
+ this condition could only be but temporary, it would distress him not to
+ have his friends around him, and to entertain them as he had been used to
+ do. She wondered eagerly if she might offer to help him, but a second
+ thought assured her that, for a man, that sort of help from a woman was
+ impossible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She resented the fact that Marion was deep in his confidence; that it was
+ Marion who had told her of his changed condition and of his plans. It
+ annoyed her so acutely that she could not remain in the room where she had
+ seen her so complacently in possession. And after leaving a brief note for
+ Philip, she went away. She stopped a hansom at the door, and told the man
+ to drive along the Embankment—she wanted to be quite alone, and she
+ felt she could see no one until she had thought it all out, and had
+ analyzed the new feelings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So for several hours she drove slowly up and down, sunk far back in the
+ cushions of the cab, and staring with unseeing eyes at the white enamelled
+ tariff and the black dash-board.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She assured herself that she was not jealous of Marion, because, in order
+ to be jealous, she first would have to care for Philip in the very way she
+ could not bring herself to do.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She decided that his interest in Marion hurt her, because it showed that
+ Philip was not capable of remaining true to the one ideal of his life. She
+ was sure that this explained her feelings—she was disappointed that
+ he had not kept up to his own standard; that he was weak enough to turn
+ aside from it for the first pretty pair of eyes. But she was too honest
+ and too just to accept that diagnosis of her feelings as final—she
+ knew there had been many pairs of eyes in America and in London, and that
+ though Philip had seen them, he had not answered them when they spoke. No,
+ she confessed frankly, she was hurt with herself for neglecting her old
+ friend so selfishly and for so long a time; his love gave him claims on
+ her consideration, at least, and she had forgotten that and him, and had
+ run after strange gods and allowed others to come in and take her place,
+ and to give him the sympathy and help which she should have been the first
+ to offer, and which would have counted more when coming from her than from
+ any one else. She determined to make amends at once for her
+ thoughtlessness and selfishness, and her brain was pleasantly occupied
+ with plans and acts of kindness. It was a new entertainment, and she found
+ she delighted in it. She directed the cabman to go to Solomons’s, and from
+ there sent Philip a bunch of flowers and a line saying that on the
+ following day she was coming to take tea with him. She had a guilty
+ feeling that he might consider her friendly advances more seriously than
+ she meant them, but it was her pleasure to be reckless: her feelings were
+ running riotously, and the sensation was so new that she refused to be
+ circumspect or to consider consequences. Who could tell, she asked herself
+ with a quick, frightened gasp, but that, after all, it might be that she
+ was learning to care? From Solomons’s she bade the man drive to the shop
+ in Cranbourne Street where she was accustomed to purchase the materials
+ she used in painting, and Fate, which uses strange agents to work out its
+ ends, so directed it that the cabman stopped a few doors below this shop,
+ and opposite one where jewelry and other personal effects were bought and
+ sold. At any other time, or had she been in any other mood, what followed
+ might not have occurred, but Fate, in the person of the cabman, arranged
+ it so that the hour and the opportunity came together.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were some old mezzotints in the window of the loan shop, a string of
+ coins and medals, a row of new French posters; and far down to the front a
+ tray filled with gold and silver cigarette-cases and watches and rings. It
+ occurred to Helen, who was still bent on making restitution for her
+ neglect, that a cigarette-case would be more appropriate for a man than
+ flowers, and more lasting. And she scanned the contents of the window with
+ the eye of one who now saw in everything only something which might give
+ Philip pleasure. The two objects of value in the tray upon which her eyes
+ first fell were the gold seal-ring with which Philip had sealed his
+ letters to her, and, lying next to it, his gold watch! There was something
+ almost human in the way the ring and watch spoke to her from the past—in
+ the way they appealed to her to rescue them from the surroundings to which
+ they had been abandoned. She did not know what she meant to do with them
+ nor how she could return them to Philip; but there was no question of
+ doubt in her manner as she swept with a rush into the shop. There was no
+ attempt, either, at bargaining in the way in which she pointed out to the
+ young woman behind the counter the particular ring and watch she wanted.
+ They had not been left as collateral, the young woman said; they had been
+ sold outright.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Then any one can buy them?” Helen asked eagerly. “They are for sale to
+ the public—to any one?”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young woman made note of the customer’s eagerness, but with an unmoved
+ countenance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Yes, miss, they are for sale. The ring is four pounds and the watch
+ twenty-five.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Twenty-nine pounds!” Helen gasped.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That was more money than she had in the world, but the fact did not
+ distress her, for she had a true artistic disregard for ready money, and
+ the absence of it had never disturbed her. But now it assumed a sudden and
+ alarming value. She had ten pounds in her purse and ten pounds at her
+ studio—these were just enough to pay for a quarter’s rent and the
+ rates, and there was a hat and cloak in Bond Street which she certainly
+ must have. Her only assets consisted of the possibility that some one
+ might soon order a miniature, and to her mind that was sufficient. Some
+ one always had ordered a miniature, and there was no reasonable doubt but
+ that some one would do it again. For a moment she questioned if it would
+ not be sufficient if she bought the ring and allowed the watch to remain.
+ But she recognized that the ring meant more to her than the watch, while
+ the latter, as an old heirloom which had been passed down to him from a
+ great-grandfather, meant more to Philip. It was for Philip she was doing
+ this, she reminded herself. She stood holding his possessions, one in each
+ hand, and looking at the young woman blankly. She had no doubt in her mind
+ that at least part of the money he had received for them had paid for the
+ flowers he had sent to her in Scotland. The certainty of this left her no
+ choice. She laid the ring and watch down and pulled the only ring she
+ possessed from her own finger. It was a gift from Lady Gower. She had no
+ doubt that it was of great value.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Can you lend me some money on that?” she asked. It was the first time she
+ had conducted a business transaction of this nature, and she felt as
+ though she were engaging in a burglary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “We don’t lend money, miss,” the girl said, “we buy outright. I can give
+ you twenty-eight shillings for this,” she added.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Twenty-eight shillings,” Helen gasped; “why, it is worth—oh, ever
+ so much more than that!”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “That is all it is worth to us,” the girl answered. She regarded the ring
+ indifferently and laid it away from her on the counter. The action was
+ final.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Helen’s hands rose slowly to her breast, where a pretty watch dangled from
+ a bowknot of crushed diamonds. It was her only possession, and she was
+ very fond of it. It also was the gift of one of the several great ladies
+ who had adopted her since her residence in London. Helen had painted a
+ miniature of this particular great lady which had looked so beautiful that
+ the pleasure which the original of the portrait derived from the thought
+ that she still really looked as she did in the miniature was worth more to
+ her than many diamonds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it was different with Helen, and no one could count what it cost her
+ to tear away her one proud possession.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “What will you give me for this?” she asked defiantly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The girl’s eyes showed greater interest. “I can give you twenty pounds for
+ that,” she said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Take it, please,” Helen begged, as though she feared if she kept it a
+ moment longer she might not be able to make the sacrifice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “That will be enough now,” she went on, taking out her ten-pound note. She
+ put Lady Gower’s ring back upon her finger and picked up Philip’s ring and
+ watch with the pleasure of one who has come into a great fortune. She
+ turned back at the door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Oh,” she stammered, “in case any one should inquire, you are not to say
+ who bought these.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “No, miss, certainly not,” said the woman. Helen gave the direction to the
+ cabman and, closing the doors of the hansom, sat looking down at the watch
+ and the ring, as they lay in her lap. The thought that they had been his
+ most valued possessions, which he had abandoned forever, and that they
+ were now entirely hers, to do with as she liked, filled her with most
+ intense delight and pleasure. She took up the heavy gold ring and placed
+ it on the little finger of her left hand; it was much too large, and she
+ removed it and balanced it for a moment doubtfully in the palm of her
+ right hand. She was smiling, and her face was lit with shy and tender
+ thoughts. She cast a quick glance to the left and right as though fearful
+ that people passing in the street would observe her, and then slipped the
+ ring over the fourth finger of her left hand. She gazed at it with a
+ guilty smile and then, covering it hastily with her other hand, leaned
+ back, clasping it closely, and sat frowning far out before her with
+ puzzled eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To Carroll all roads led past Helen’s studio, and during the summer, while
+ she had been absent in Scotland it was one of his sad pleasures to make a
+ pilgrimage to her street and to pause opposite the house and look up at
+ the empty windows of her rooms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was during this daily exercise that he learned, through the arrival of
+ her luggage, of her return to London, and when day followed day without
+ her having shown any desire to see him or to tell him of her return he
+ denounced himself most bitterly as a fatuous fool.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the end of the week he sat down and considered his case quite calmly.
+ For three years he had loved this girl, deeply and tenderly. He had been
+ lover, brother, friend, and guardian. During that time, even though she
+ had accepted him in every capacity except as that of the prospective
+ husband, she had never given him any real affection, nor sympathy, nor
+ help; all she had done for him had been done without her knowledge or
+ intent. To know her, to love her, and to scheme to give her pleasure had
+ been its own reward, and the only one. For the last few months he had been
+ living like a crossing-sweeper in order to be able to stay in London until
+ she came back to it, and that he might still send her the gifts he had
+ always laid on her altar. He had not seen her in three months. Three
+ months that had been to him a blank, except for his work—which like
+ all else that he did, was inspired and carried on for her. Now at last she
+ had returned and had shown that, even as a friend, he was of so little
+ account in her thoughts, of so little consequence in her life, that after
+ this long absence she had no desire to learn of his welfare or to see him—she
+ did not even give him the chance to see her. And so, placing these facts
+ before him for the first time since he had loved her, he considered what
+ was due to himself. “Was it good enough?” he asked. “Was it just that he
+ should continue to wear out his soul and body for this girl who did not
+ want what he had to give, who treated him less considerately than a man
+ whom she met for the first time at dinner?” He felt he had reached the
+ breaking-point; that the time had come when he must consider what he owed
+ to himself. There could never be any other woman save Helen, but as it was
+ not to be Helen, he could no longer, with self-respect, continue to
+ proffer his love only to see it slighted and neglected. He was humble
+ enough concerning himself, but of his love he was very proud. Other men
+ could give her more in wealth or position, but no one could ever love her
+ as he did. “He that hath more let him give,” he had often quoted to her
+ defiantly, as though he were challenging the world, and now he felt he
+ must evolve a make-shift world of his own—a world in which she was
+ not his only spring of acts; he must begin all over again and keep his
+ love secret and sacred until she understood it and wanted it. And if she
+ should never want it he would at least have saved it from many rebuffs and
+ insults.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With this determination strong in him, the note Helen had left for him
+ after her talk with Marion, and the flowers, and the note with them,
+ saying she was coming to take tea on the morrow, failed to move him except
+ to make him more bitter. He saw in them only a tardy recognition of her
+ neglect—an effort to make up to him for thoughtlessness which, from
+ her, hurt him worse than studied slight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A new regime had begun, and he was determined to establish it firmly and
+ to make it impossible for himself to retreat from it; and in the note in
+ which he thanked Helen for the flowers and welcomed her to tea, he
+ declared his ultimatum.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “You know how terribly I feel,” he wrote; “I don’t have to tell you that,
+ but I cannot always go on dragging out my love and holding it up to excite
+ your pity as beggars show their sores. I cannot always go on praying
+ before your altar, cutting myself with knives and calling upon you to
+ listen to me. You know that there is no one else but you, and that there
+ never can be any one but you, and that nothing is changed except that
+ after this I am not going to urge and torment you. I shall wait as I have
+ always waited—only now I shall wait in silence. You know just how
+ little, in one way, I have to offer you, and you know just how much I have
+ in love to offer you. It is now for you to speak—some day, or never.
+ But you will have to speak first. You will never hear a word of love from
+ me again. Why should you? You know it is always waiting for you. But if
+ you should ever want it, you must come to me, and take off your hat and
+ put it on my table and say, ‘Philip, I have come to stay.’ Whether you can
+ ever do that or not can make no difference in my love for you. I shall
+ love you always, as no man has ever loved a woman in this world, but it is
+ you who must speak first; for me, the rest is silence.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The following morning as Helen was leaving the house she found this letter
+ lying on the hall-table, and ran back with it to her rooms. A week before
+ she would have let it lie on the table and read it on her return. She was
+ conscious that this was what she would have done, and it pleased her to
+ find that what concerned Philip was now to her the thing of greatest
+ interest. She was pleased with her own eagerness—her own happiness
+ was a welcome sign, and she was proud and glad that she was learning to
+ care.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She read the letter with an anxious pride and pleasure in each word that
+ was entirely new. Philip’s recriminations did not hurt her, they were the
+ sign that he cared; nor did his determination not to speak of his love to
+ her hurt her, for she believed him when he said that he would always care.
+ She read the letter twice, and then sat for some time considering the kind
+ of letter Philip would have written had he known her secret—had he
+ known that the ring he had abandoned was now upon her finger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She rose and, crossing to a desk, placed the letter in a drawer, and then
+ took it out again and re-read the last page. When she had finished it she
+ was smiling. For a moment she stood irresolute, and then, moving slowly
+ toward the centre-table, cast a guilty look about her and, raising her
+ hands, lifted her veil and half withdrew the pins that fastened her hat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Philip,” she began in a frightened whisper, “I have—I have come to—”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sentence ended in a cry of protest, and she rushed across the room as
+ though she were running from herself. She was blushing violently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Never!” she cried, as she pulled open the door; “I could never do it—never!”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The following afternoon, when Helen was to come to tea, Carroll decided
+ that he would receive her with all the old friendliness, but that he must
+ be careful to subdue all emotion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was really deeply hurt at her treatment, and had it not been that she
+ came on her own invitation he would not of his own accord have sought to
+ see her. In consequence, he rather welcomed than otherwise the arrival of
+ Marion Cavendish, who came a half-hour before Helen was expected, and who
+ followed a hasty knock with a precipitate entrance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Sit down,” she commanded breathlessly; “and listen. I’ve been at
+ rehearsal all day, or I’d have been here before you were awake.” She
+ seated herself nervously and nodded her head at Carroll in an excited and
+ mysterious manner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “What is it?” he asked. “Have you and Reggie—”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Listen,” Marion repeated, “our fortunes are made; that is what’s the
+ matter—and I’ve made them. If you took half the interest in your
+ work I do, you’d have made yours long ago. Last night,” she began
+ impressively, “I went to a large supper at the Savoy, and I sat next to
+ Charley Wimpole. He came in late, after everybody had finished, and I
+ attacked him while he was eating his supper. He said he had been
+ rehearsing ‘Caste’ after the performance; that they’ve put it on as a
+ stop-gap on account of the failure of the ‘Triflers,’ and that he knew
+ revivals were of no use; that he would give any sum for a good modern
+ comedy. That was my cue, and I told him I knew of a better comedy than any
+ he had produced at his theatre in five years, and that it was going
+ begging. He laughed, and asked where was he to find this wonderful comedy,
+ and I said, ‘It’s been in your safe for the last two months and you
+ haven’t read it.’ He said, ‘Indeed, how do you know that?’ and I said,
+ ‘Because if you’d read it, it wouldn’t be in your safe, but on your
+ stage.’ So he asked me what the play was about, and I told him the plot
+ and what sort of a part his was, and some of his scenes, and he began to
+ take notice. He forgot his supper, and very soon he grew so interested
+ that he turned his chair round and kept eying my supper-card to find out
+ who I was, and at last remembered seeing me in ‘The New Boy’—and a
+ rotten part it was, too—but he remembered it, and he told me to go
+ on and tell him more about your play. So I recited it, bit by bit, and he
+ laughed in all the right places and got very much excited, and said
+ finally that he would read it the first thing this morning.” Marion
+ paused, breathlessly. “Oh, yes, and he wrote your address on his cuff,”
+ she added, with the air of delivering a complete and convincing climax.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Carroll stared at her and pulled excitedly on his pipe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Oh, Marion!” he gasped, “suppose he should? He won’t though,” he added,
+ but eying her eagerly and inviting contradiction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “He will,” she answered, stoutly, “if he reads it.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “The other managers read it,” Carroll suggested, doubtfully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Yes, but what do they know?” Marion returned, loftily. “He knows. Charles
+ Wimpole is the only intelligent actor-manager in London.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a sharp knock at the door, which Marion in her excitement had
+ left ajar, and Prentiss threw it wide open with an impressive sweep, as
+ though he were announcing royalty: “Mr. Charles Wimpole,” he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The actor-manager stopped in the doorway bowing gracefully, his hat held
+ before him and his hand on his stick as though it were resting on a foil.
+ He had the face and carriage of a gallant of the days of Congreve, and he
+ wore his modern frock-coat with as much distinction as if it were of silk
+ and lace. He was evidently amused. “I couldn’t help overhearing the last
+ line,” he said, smiling. “It gives me a good entrance.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Marion gazed at him blankly: “Oh,” she gasped, “we—we—were
+ just talking about you.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “If you hadn’t mentioned my name,” the actor said, “I should never have
+ guessed it. And this is Mr. Carroll, I hope.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The great man was rather pleased with the situation. As he read it, it
+ struck him as possessing strong dramatic possibilities: Carroll was the
+ struggling author on the verge of starvation: Marion, his sweetheart,
+ flying to him gave him hope; and he was the good fairy arriving in the
+ nick of time to set everything right and to make the young people happy
+ and prosperous. He rather fancied himself in the part of the good fairy,
+ and as he seated himself he bowed to them both in a manner which was
+ charmingly inclusive and confidential.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Miss Cavendish, I imagine, has already warned you that you might expect a
+ visit from me,” he said tentatively. Carroll nodded. He was too much
+ concerned to interrupt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Then I need only tell you,” Wimpole continued, “that I got up at an
+ absurd hour this morning to read your play; that I did read it; that I
+ like it immensely—and that if we can come to terms I shall produce
+ it I shall produce it at once, within a fortnight or three weeks.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Carroll was staring at him intently and continued doing so after Wimpole
+ had finished speaking. The actor felt he had somehow missed his point, or
+ that Carroll could not have understood him, and repeated, “I say I shall
+ put it in rehearsal at once.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Carroll rose abruptly, and pushed back his chair. “I should be very glad,”
+ he murmured, and strode over to the window, where he stood with his back
+ turned to his guests. Wimpole looked after him with a kindly smile and
+ nodded his head appreciatively. He had produced even a greater effect than
+ his lines seemed to warrant. When he spoke again, it was quite simply, and
+ sincerely, and though he spoke for Carroll’s benefit, he addressed himself
+ to Marion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “You were quite right last night,” he said, “it is a most charming piece
+ of work. I am really extremely grateful to you for bringing it to my
+ notice.” He rose, and going to Carroll, put his hand on his shoulder. “My
+ boy,” he said, “I congratulate you. I should like to be your age, and to
+ have written that play. Come to my theatre to-morrow and we will talk
+ terms. Talk it over first with your friends, so that I sha’n’t rob you. Do
+ you think you would prefer a lump sum now, and so be done with it
+ altogether, or trust that the royalties may—”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Royalties,” prompted Marion, in an eager aside.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The men laughed. “Quite right,” Wimpole assented, good-humoredly; “it’s a
+ poor sportsman who doesn’t back his own horse. Well, then, until
+ to-morrow.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “But,” Carroll began, “one moment please. I haven’t thanked you.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “My dear boy,” cried Wimpole, waving him away with his stick, “it is I who
+ have to thank you.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “And—and there is a condition,” Carroll said, “which goes with the
+ play. It is that Miss Cavendish is to have the part of Nancy.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wimpole looked serious and considered for a moment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Nancy,” he said, “the girl who interferes—a very good part. I have
+ cast Miss Maddox for it in my mind, but, of course, if the author insists—”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Marion, with her elbows on the table, clasped her hands appealingly before
+ her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Oh, Mr. Wimpole!” she cried, “you owe me that, at least.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Carroll leaned over and took both of Marion’s hands in one of his.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “It’s all right,” he said; “the author insists.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wimpole waved his stick again as though it were the magic wand of the good
+ fairy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “You shall have it,” he said. “I recall your performance in ‘The New Boy’
+ with pleasure. I take the play, and Miss Cavendish shall be cast for
+ Nancy. We shall begin rehearsals at once. I hope you are a quick study.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “I’m letter-perfect now{,}” laughed Marion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wimpole turned at the door and nodded to them. They were both so young, so
+ eager, and so jubilant that he felt strangely old and out of it. “Good-by,
+ then,” he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Good-by, sir,” they both chorussed. And Marion cried after him, “And
+ thank you a thousand times.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He turned again and looked back at them, but in their rejoicing they had
+ already forgotten him. “Bless you, my children,” he said, smiling. As he
+ was about to close the door a young girl came down the passage toward it,
+ and as she was apparently going to Carroll’s rooms, the actor left the
+ door open behind him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Neither Marion nor Carroll had noticed his final exit. They were both
+ gazing at each other as though, could they find speech, they would ask if
+ it were true.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “It’s come at last, Marion,” Philip said, with an uncertain voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “I could weep,” cried Marion. “Philip,” she exclaimed, “I would rather see
+ that play succeed than any play ever written, and I would rather play that
+ part in it than—Oh, Philip,” she ended. “I’m so proud of you!” and
+ rising, she threw her arms about his neck and sobbed on his shoulder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Carroll raised one of her hands and kissed the tips of her fingers gently.
+ “I owe it to you, Marion,” he said—“all to you.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was the tableau that was presented through the open door to Miss
+ Helen Cabot, hurrying on her errand of restitution and good-will, and with
+ Philip’s ring and watch clasped in her hand. They had not heard her, nor
+ did they see her at the door, so she drew back quickly and ran along the
+ passage and down the stairs into the street.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She did not need now to analyze her feelings. They were only too evident.
+ For she could translate what she had just seen as meaning only one thing—that
+ she had considered Philip’s love so lightly that she had not felt it
+ passing away from her until her neglect had killed it—until it was
+ too late. And now that it was too late she felt that without it her life
+ could not go on. She tried to assure herself that only the fact that she
+ had lost it made it seem invaluable, but this thought did not comfort her—she
+ was not deceived by it, she knew that at last she cared for him deeply and
+ entirely. In her distress she blamed herself bitterly, but she also blamed
+ Philip no less bitterly for having failed to wait for her. “He might have
+ known that I must love him in time,” she repeated to herself again and
+ again. She was so unhappy that her letter congratulating Philip on his
+ good fortune in having his comedy accepted seemed to him cold and
+ unfeeling, and as his success meant for him only what it meant to her, he
+ was hurt and grievously disappointed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He accordingly turned the more readily to Marion, whose interests and
+ enthusiasm at the rehearsals of the piece seemed in contrast most friendly
+ and unselfish. He could not help but compare the attitude of the two girls
+ at this time, when the failure or success of his best work was still
+ undecided. He felt that as Helen took so little interest in his success he
+ could not dare to trouble her with his anxieties concerning it, and she
+ attributed his silence to his preoccupation and interest in Marion. So the
+ two grew apart, each misunderstanding the other and each troubled in
+ spirit at the other’s indifference.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first night of the play justified all that Marion and Wimpole had
+ claimed for it, and was a great personal triumph for the new playwright.
+ The audience was the typical first-night audience of the class which
+ Charles Wimpole always commanded. It was brilliant, intelligent, and
+ smart, and it came prepared to be pleased.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From one of the upper stage-boxes Helen and Lady Gower watched the
+ successful progress of the play with an anxiety almost as keen as that of
+ the author. To Helen it seemed as though the giving of these lines to the
+ public—these lines which he had so often read to her, and altered to
+ her liking—was a desecration. It seemed as though she were losing
+ him indeed—as though he now belonged to these strange people, all of
+ whom were laughing and applauding his words, from the German Princess in
+ the Royal box to the straight-backed Tommy in the pit. Instead of the
+ painted scene before her, she saw the birch-trees by the river at home,
+ where he had first read her the speech to which they were now listening so
+ intensely—the speech in which the hero tells the girl he loves her.
+ She remembered that at the time she had thought how wonderful it would be
+ if some day some one made such a speech to her—not Philip—but
+ a man she loved. And now? If Philip would only make that speech to her
+ now!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He came out at last, with Wimpole leading him, and bowed across a glaring
+ barrier of lights at a misty but vociferous audience that was shouting the
+ generous English bravo! and standing up to applaud. He raised his eyes to
+ the box where Helen sat, and saw her staring down at the tumult, with her
+ hands clasped under her chin. Her face was colorless, but lit with the
+ excitement of the moment; and he saw that she was crying.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lady Gower, from behind her, was clapping her hands delightedly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “But, my dear Helen,” she remonstrated breathlessly, “you never told me he
+ was so good-looking.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Yes,” said Helen, rising abruptly, “he is—very good-looking.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She crossed the box to where her cloak was hanging, but instead of taking
+ it down buried her face in its folds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “My dear child!” cried Lady Gower, in dismay. “What is it? The excitement
+ has been too much for you.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “No, I am just happy,” sobbed Helen. “I am just happy for him.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “We will go and tell him so then,” said Lady Gower. “I am sure he would
+ like to hear it from you to-night.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Philip was standing in the centre of the stage, surrounded by many pretty
+ ladies and elderly men. Wimpole was hovering over him as though he had
+ claims upon him by the right of discovery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But when Philip saw Helen, he pushed his way toward her eagerly and took
+ her hand in both of his.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “I am so glad, Phil,” she said. She felt it all so deeply that she was
+ afraid to say more, but that meant so much to her that she was sure he
+ would understand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had planned it very differently. For a year he had dreamed that, on the
+ first night of his play, there would be a supper, and that he would rise
+ and drink her health, and tell his friends and the world that she was the
+ woman he loved, and that she had agreed to marry him, and that at last he
+ was able, through the success of his play, to make her his wife.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now they met in a crowd to shake hands, and she went her way with one
+ of her grand ladies, and he was left among a group of chattering
+ strangers. The great English playwright took him by the hand and in the
+ hearing of all, praised him gracefully and kindly. It did not matter to
+ Philip whether the older playwright believed what he said or not; he knew
+ it was generously meant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “I envy you this,” the great man was saying. “Don’t lose any of it, stay
+ and listen to all they have to say. You will never live through the first
+ night of your first play but once.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Yes, I hear them,” said Philip, nervously; “they are all too kind. But I
+ don’t hear the voice I have been listening for,” he added in a whisper.
+ The older man pressed his hand again quickly. “My dear boy,” he said, “I
+ am sorry.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Thank you,” Philip answered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Within a week he had forgotten the great man’s fine words of praise, but
+ the clasp of his hand he cherished always.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Helen met Marion as she was leaving the stage door and stopped to
+ congratulate her on her success in the new part. Marion was radiant. To
+ Helen she seemed obstreperously happy and jubilant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “And, Marion,” Helen began bravely, “I also want to congratulate you on
+ something else. You—you—neither of you have told me yet,” she
+ stammered, “but I am such an old friend of both that I will not be kept
+ out of the secret.” At these words Marion’s air of triumphant gayety
+ vanished; she regarded Helen’s troubled eyes closely and kindly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “What secret, Helen?” she asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “I came to the door of Philip’s room the other day when you did not know I
+ was there,” Helen answered; “and I could not help seeing how matters were.
+ And I do congratulate you both—and wish you—oh, such
+ happiness!” Without a word Marion dragged her back down the passage to her
+ dressing-room, and closed the door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Now tell me what you mean,” she said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “I am sorry if I discovered anything you didn’t want known yet,” said
+ Helen, “but the door was open. Mr. Wimpole had just left you and had not
+ shut it, and I could not help seeing.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Marion interrupted her with an eager exclamation of enlightenment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Oh, you were there, then,” she cried. “And you?” she asked eagerly—“you
+ thought Phil cared for me—that we are engaged, and it hurt you; you
+ are sorry? Tell me,” she demanded, “are you sorry?”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Helen drew back and stretched out her hand toward the door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “How can you!” she exclaimed, indignantly. “You have no right.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Marion stood between her and the door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “I have every right,” she said, “to help my friends, and I want to help
+ you and Philip. And indeed I do hope you ARE sorry. I hope you are
+ miserable. And I’m glad you saw me kiss him. That was the first and the
+ last time, and I did it because I was happy and glad for him; and because
+ I love him too, but not in the least in the way he loves you. No one ever
+ loved any one as he loves you. And it’s time you found it out. And if I
+ have helped to make you find it out I’m glad, and I don’t care how much I
+ hurt you.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Marion!” exclaimed Helen, “what does it mean? Do you mean that you are
+ not engaged; that—”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Certainly not,” Marion answered. “I am going to marry Reggie. It is you
+ that Philip loves, and I am very sorry for you that you don’t love him.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Helen clasped Marion’s hands in both of hers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “But, Marion!” she cried, “I do, oh, I do!”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a thick yellow fog the next morning, and with it rain and a
+ sticky, depressing dampness which crept through the window-panes, and
+ which neither a fire nor blazing gas-jets could overcome.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Philip stood in front of the fireplace with the morning papers piled high
+ on the centre-table and scattered over the room about him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had read them all, and he knew now what it was to wake up famous, but
+ he could not taste it. Now that it had come it meant nothing, and that it
+ was so complete a triumph only made it the harder. In his most optimistic
+ dreams he had never imagined success so satisfying as the reality had
+ proved to be; but in his dreams Helen had always held the chief part, and
+ without her, success seemed only to mock him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He wanted to lay it all before her, to say, “If you are pleased, I am
+ happy. If you are satisfied, then I am content. It was done for you, and I
+ am wholly yours, and all that I do is yours.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And, as though in answer to his thoughts, there was an instant knock at
+ the door, and Helen entered the room and stood smiling at him across the
+ table.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her eyes were lit with excitement, and spoke with many emotions, and her
+ cheeks were brilliant with color. He had never seen her look more
+ beautiful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Why, Helen!” he exclaimed, “how good of you to come. Is there anything
+ wrong? Is anything the matter?”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She tried to speak, but faltered, and smiled at him appealingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “What is it?” he asked in great concern.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Helen drew in her breath quickly, and at the same moment motioned him away—and
+ he stepped back and stood watching her in much perplexity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With her eyes fixed on his she raised her hands to her head, and her
+ fingers fumbled with the knot of her veil. She pulled it loose, and then,
+ with a sudden courage, lifted her hat proudly, as though it were a
+ coronet, and placed it between them on his table.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Philip,” she stammered, with the tears in her voice and eyes, “if you
+ will let me—I have come to stay.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The table was no longer between them. He caught her in his arms and kissed
+ her face and her uncovered head again and again. From outside the rain
+ beat drearily and the fog rolled through the street, but inside before the
+ fire the two young people sat close together, asking eager questions or
+ sitting in silence, staring at the flames with wondering, happy eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Lion and the Unicorn saw them only once again. It was a month later
+ when they stopped in front of the shop in a four-wheeler, with their
+ baggage mixed on top of it, and steamer-labels pasted over every trunk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “And, oh, Prentiss!” Carroll called from the cab-window. “I came near
+ forgetting. I promised to gild the Lion and the Unicorn if I won out in
+ London. So have it done, please, and send the bill to me. For I’ve won out
+ all right.” And then he shut the door of the cab, and they drove away
+ forever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Nice gal, that,” growled the Lion. “I always liked her. I am glad they’ve
+ settled it at last.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Unicorn sighed, sentimentally. “The other one’s worth two of her,” he
+ said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0002" id="link2H_4_0002">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ ON THE FEVER SHIP
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ There were four rails around the ship’s sides, the three lower ones of
+ iron and the one on top of wood, and as he looked between them from the
+ canvas cot he recognized them as the prison-bars which held him in.
+ Outside his prison lay a stretch of blinding blue water which ended in a
+ line of breakers and a yellow coast with ragged palms. Beyond that again
+ rose a range of mountain-peaks, and, stuck upon the loftiest peak of all,
+ a tiny block-house. It rested on the brow of the mountain against the
+ naked sky as impudently as a cracker-box set upon the dome of a great
+ cathedral.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the transport rode on her anchor-chains, the iron bars around her sides
+ rose and sank and divided the landscape with parallel lines. From his cot
+ the officer followed this phenomenon with severe, painstaking interest.
+ Sometimes the wooden rail swept up to the very block-house itself, and for
+ a second of time blotted it from sight. And again it sank to the level of
+ the line of breakers, and wiped them out of the picture as though they
+ were a line of chalk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The soldier on the cot promised himself that the next swell of the sea
+ would send the lowest rail climbing to the very top of the palm-trees or,
+ even higher, to the base of the mountains; and when it failed to reach
+ even the palm-trees he felt a distinct sense of ill use, of having been
+ wronged by some one. There was no other reason for submitting to this
+ existence, save these tricks upon the wearisome, glaring landscape; and,
+ now, whoever it was who was working them did not seem to be making this
+ effort to entertain him with any heartiness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was most cruel. Indeed, he decided hotly, it was not to be endured; he
+ would bear it no longer, he would make his escape. But he knew that this
+ move, which could be conceived in a moment’s desperation, could only be
+ carried to success with great strategy, secrecy, and careful cunning. So
+ he fell back upon his pillow and closed his eyes, as though he were
+ asleep, and then opening them again, turned cautiously, and spied upon his
+ keeper. As usual, his keeper sat at the foot of the cot turning the pages
+ of a huge paper filled with pictures of the war printed in daubs of tawdry
+ colors. His keeper was a hard-faced boy without human pity or
+ consideration, a very devil of obstinacy and fiendish cruelty. To make it
+ worse, the fiend was a person without a collar, in a suit of soiled khaki,
+ with a curious red cross bound by a safety-pin to his left arm. He was
+ intent upon the paper in his hands; he was holding it between his eyes and
+ his prisoner. His vigilance had relaxed, and the moment seemed propitious.
+ With a sudden plunge of arms and legs, the prisoner swept the bed sheet
+ from him, and sprang at the wooden rail and grasped the iron stanchion
+ beside it. He had his knee pressed against the top bar and his bare toes
+ on the iron rail beneath it. Below him the blue water waited for him. It
+ was cool and dark and gentle and deep. It would certainly put out the fire
+ in his bones, he thought; it might even shut out the glare of the sun
+ which scorched his eyeballs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But as he balanced for the leap, a swift weakness and nausea swept over
+ him, a weight seized upon his body and limbs. He could not lift the lower
+ foot from the iron rail, and he swayed dizzily and trembled. He trembled.
+ He who had raced his men and beaten them up the hot hill to the trenches
+ of San Juan. But now he was a baby in the hands of a giant, who caught him
+ by the wrist and with an iron arm clasped him around his waist and pulled
+ him down, and shouted, brutally, “Help, some of you’se, quick; he’s at it
+ again. I can’t hold him.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ More giants grasped him by the arms and by the legs. One of them took the
+ hand that clung to the stanchion in both of his, and pulled back the
+ fingers one by one, saying, “Easy now, Lieutenant—easy.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ragged palms and the sea and block-house were swallowed up in a black
+ fog, and his body touched the canvas cot again with a sense of home-coming
+ and relief and rest. He wondered how he could have cared to escape from
+ it. He found it so good to be back again that for a long time he wept
+ quite happily, until the fiery pillow was moist and cool.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The world outside of the iron bars was like a scene in a theatre set for
+ some great event, but the actors were never ready. He remembered
+ confusedly a play he had once witnessed before that same scene. Indeed, he
+ believed he had played some small part in it; but he remembered it dimly,
+ and all trace of the men who had appeared with him in it was gone. He had
+ reasoned it out that they were up there behind the range of mountains,
+ because great heavy wagons and ambulances and cannon were emptied from the
+ ships at the wharf above and were drawn away in long lines behind the
+ ragged palms, moving always toward the passes between the peaks. At times
+ he was disturbed by the thought that he should be up and after them, that
+ some tradition of duty made his presence with them imperative. There was
+ much to be done back of the mountains. Some event of momentous import was
+ being carried forward there, in which he held a part; but the doubt soon
+ passed from him, and he was content to lie and watch the iron bars rising
+ and falling between the block-house and the white surf.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If they had been only humanely kind, his lot would have been bearable, but
+ they starved him and held him down when he wished to rise; and they would
+ not put out the fire in the pillow, which they might easily have done by
+ the simple expedient of throwing it over the ship’s side into the sea. He
+ himself had done this twice, but the keeper had immediately brought a
+ fresh pillow already heated for the torture and forced it under his head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His pleasures were very simple, and so few that he could not understand
+ why they robbed him of them so jealously. One was to watch a green cluster
+ of bananas that hung above him from the awning twirling on a string. He
+ could count as many of them as five before the bunch turned and swung
+ lazily back again, when he could count as high as twelve; sometimes when
+ the ship rolled heavily he could count to twenty. It was a most
+ fascinating game, and contented him for many hours. But when they found
+ this out they sent for the cook to come and cut them down, and the cook
+ carried them away to his galley.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, one day, a man came out from the shore, swimming through the blue
+ water with great splashes. He was a most charming man, who spluttered and
+ dove and twisted and lay on his back and kicked his legs in an excess of
+ content and delight. It was a real pleasure to watch him; not for days had
+ anything so amusing appeared on the other side of the prison-bars. But as
+ soon as the keeper saw that the man in the water was amusing his prisoner,
+ he leaned over the ship’s side and shouted, “Sa-ay, you, don’t you know
+ there’s sharks in there?”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the swimming man said, “The h—ll there is!” and raced back to
+ the shore like a porpoise with great lashing of the water, and ran up the
+ beach half-way to the palms before he was satisfied to stop. Then the
+ prisoner wept again. It was so disappointing. Life was robbed of
+ everything now. He remembered that in a previous existence soldiers who
+ cried were laughed at and mocked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But that was so far away and it was such an absurd superstition that he
+ had no patience with it. For what could be more comforting to a man when
+ he is treated cruelly than to cry. It was so obvious an exercise, and when
+ one is so feeble that one cannot vault a four-railed barrier it is
+ something to feel that at least one is strong enough to cry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He escaped occasionally, traversing space with marvellous rapidity and to
+ great distances, but never to any successful purpose; and his flight
+ inevitably ended in ignominious recapture and a sudden awakening in bed.
+ At these moments the familiar and hated palms, the peaks and the
+ block-house were more hideous in their reality than the most terrifying of
+ his nightmares.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These excursions afield were always predatory; he went forth always to
+ seek food. With all the beautiful world from which to elect and choose, he
+ sought out only those places where eating was studied and elevated to an
+ art. These visits were much more vivid in their detail than any he had
+ ever before made to these same resorts. They invariably began in a
+ carriage, which carried him swiftly over smooth asphalt. One route brought
+ him across a great and beautiful square, radiating with rows and rows of
+ flickering lights; two fountains splashed in the centre of the square, and
+ six women of stone guarded its approaches. One of the women was hung with
+ wreaths of mourning. Ahead of him the late twilight darkened behind a
+ great arch, which seemed to rise on the horizon of the world, a great
+ window into the heavens beyond. At either side strings of white and
+ colored globes hung among the trees, and the sound of music came joyfully
+ from theatres in the open air. He knew the restaurant under the trees to
+ which he was now hastening, and the fountain beside it, and the very
+ sparrows balancing on the fountain’s edge; he knew every waiter at each of
+ the tables, he felt again the gravel crunching under his feet, he saw the
+ maitre d’hotel coming forward smiling to receive his command, and the
+ waiter in the green apron bowing at his elbow, deferential and important,
+ presenting the list of wines. But his adventure never passed that point,
+ for he was captured again and once more bound to his cot with a close
+ burning sheet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Or else, he drove more sedately through the London streets in the late
+ evening twilight, leaning expectantly across the doors of the hansom and
+ pulling carefully at his white gloves. Other hansoms flashed past him, the
+ occupant of each with his mind fixed on one idea—dinner. He was one
+ of a million of people who were about to dine, or who had dined, or who
+ were deep in dining.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was so famished, so weak for food of any quality, that the galloping
+ horse in the hansom seemed to crawl. The lights of the Embankment passed
+ like the lamps of a railroad station as seen from the window of an
+ express; and while his mind was still torn between the choice of a thin or
+ thick soup or an immediate attack upon cold beef, he was at the door, and
+ the chasseur touched his cap, and the little chasseur put the wicker guard
+ over the hansom’s wheel. As he jumped out he said, “Give him
+ half-a-crown,” and the driver called after him, “Thank you, sir.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a beautiful world, this world outside of the iron bars. Every one
+ in it contributed to his pleasure and to his comfort. In this world he was
+ not starved nor manhandled. He thought of this joyfully as he leaped up
+ the stairs, where young men with grave faces and with their hands held
+ negligently behind their backs bowed to him in polite surprise at his
+ speed. But they had not been starved on condensed milk. He threw his coat
+ and hat at one of them, and came down the hall fearfully and quite weak
+ with dread lest it should not be real. His voice was shaking when he asked
+ Ellis if he had reserved a table. The place was all so real, it must be
+ true this time. The way Ellis turned and ran his finger down the list
+ showed it was real, because Ellis always did that, even when he knew there
+ would not be an empty table for an hour. The room was crowded with
+ beautiful women; under the light of the red shades they looked kind and
+ approachable, and there was food on every table, and iced drinks in silver
+ buckets.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was with the joy of great relief that he heard Ellis say to his
+ underling, “Numero cinq, sur la terrace, un couvert.” It was real at last.
+ Outside, the Thames lay a great gray shadow. The lights of the Embankment
+ flashed and twinkled across it, the tower of the House of Commons rose
+ against the sky, and here, inside, the waiter was hurrying toward him
+ carrying a smoking plate of rich soup with a pungent intoxicating odor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And then the ragged palms, the glaring sun, the immovable peaks, and the
+ white surf stood again before him. The iron rails swept up and sank again,
+ the fever sucked at his bones, and the pillow scorched his cheek.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One morning for a brief moment he came back to real life again and lay
+ quite still, seeing everything about him with clear eyes and for the first
+ time, as though he had but just that instant been lifted over the ship’s
+ side. His keeper, glancing up, found the prisoner’s eyes considering him
+ curiously, and recognized the change. The instinct of discipline brought
+ him to his feet with his fingers at his sides.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Is the Lieutenant feeling better?”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Lieutenant surveyed him gravely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “You are one of our hospital stewards.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Yes, Lieutenant.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Why ar’n’t you with the regiment?”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “I was wounded, too, sir. I got it same time you did, Lieutenant.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Am I wounded? Of course, I remember. Is this a hospital ship?”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The steward shrugged his shoulders. “She’s one of the transports. They
+ have turned her over to the fever cases.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Lieutenant opened his lips to ask another question; but his own body
+ answered that one, and for a moment he lay silent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Do they know up North that I—that I’m all right?”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Oh, yes, the papers had it in—there was pictures of the Lieutenant
+ in some of them.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Then I’ve been ill some time?”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Oh, about eight days.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The soldier moved uneasily, and the nurse in him became uppermost.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “I guess the Lieutenant hadn’t better talk any more,” he said. It was his
+ voice now which held authority.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Lieutenant looked out at the palms and the silent gloomy mountains and
+ the empty coast-line, where the same wave was rising and falling with
+ weary persistence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Eight days,” he said. His eyes shut quickly, as though with a sudden
+ touch of pain. He turned his head and sought for the figure at the foot of
+ the cot. Already the figure had grown faint and was receding and swaying.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Has any one written or cabled?” the Lieutenant spoke, hurriedly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was fearful lest the figure should disappear altogether before he could
+ obtain his answer. “Has any one come?”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Why, they couldn’t get here, Lieutenant, not yet.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The voice came very faintly. “You go to sleep now, and I’ll run and fetch
+ some letters and telegrams. When you wake up, may be I’ll have a lot for
+ you.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the Lieutenant caught the nurse by the wrist, and crushed his hand in
+ his own thin fingers. They were hot, and left the steward’s skin wet with
+ perspiration. The Lieutenant laughed gayly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “You see, Doctor,” he said, briskly, “that you can’t kill me. I can’t die.
+ I’ve got to live, you understand. Because, sir, she said she would come.
+ She said if I was wounded, or if I was ill, she would come to me. She
+ didn’t care what people thought. She would come any way and nurse me—well,
+ she will come.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “So, Doctor—old man—” He plucked at the steward’s sleeve, and
+ stroked his hand eagerly, “old man—” he began again, beseechingly,
+ “you’ll not let me die until she comes, will you? What? No, I know I won’t
+ die. Nothing made by man can kill me. No, not until she comes. Then, after
+ that—eight days, she’ll be here soon, any moment? What? You think
+ so, too? Don’t you? Surely, yes, any moment. Yes, I’ll go to sleep now,
+ and when you see her rowing out from shore you wake me. You’ll know her;
+ you can’t make a mistake. She is like—no, there is no one like her—but
+ you can’t make a mistake.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That day strange figures began to mount the sides of the ship, and to
+ occupy its every turn and angle of space. Some of them fell on their knees
+ and slapped the bare deck with their hands, and laughed and cried out,
+ “Thank God, I’ll see God’s country again!” Some of them were regulars,
+ bound in bandages; some were volunteers, dirty and hollow-eyed, with long
+ beards on boys’ faces. Some came on crutches; others with their arms
+ around the shoulders of their comrades, staring ahead of them with a fixed
+ smile, their lips drawn back and their teeth protruding. At every second
+ step they stumbled, and the face of each was swept by swift ripples of
+ pain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They lay on cots so close together that the nurses could not walk between
+ them. They lay on the wet decks, in the scuppers, and along the transoms
+ and hatches. They were like shipwrecked mariners clinging to a raft, and
+ they asked nothing more than that the ship’s bow be turned toward home.
+ Once satisfied as to that, they relaxed into a state of self-pity and
+ miserable oblivion to their environment, from which hunger nor nausea nor
+ aching bones could shake them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The hospital steward touched the Lieutenant lightly on the shoulder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “We are going North, sir,” he said. “The transport’s ordered North to New
+ York, with these volunteers and the sick and wounded. Do you hear me,
+ sir?”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Lieutenant opened his eyes. “Has she come?” he asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Gee!” exclaimed the hospital steward. He glanced impatiently at the blue
+ mountains and the yellow coast, from which the transport was drawing
+ rapidly away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Well, I can’t see her coming just now,” he said. “But she will,” he
+ added.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “You let me know at once when she comes.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Why, cert’nly, of course,” said the steward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Three trained nurses came over the side just before the transport started
+ North. One was a large, motherly-looking woman, with a German accent. She
+ had been a trained nurse, first in Berlin, and later in the London
+ Hospital in Whitechapel, and at Bellevue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The nurse was dressed in white, and wore a little silver medal at her
+ throat; and she was strong enough to lift a volunteer out of his cot and
+ hold him easily in her arms, while one of the convalescents pulled his cot
+ out of the rain. Some of the men called her “nurse;” others, who wore
+ scapulars around their necks, called her “Sister;” and the officers of the
+ medical staff addressed her as Miss Bergen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Miss Bergen halted beside the cot of the Lieutenant and asked, “Is this
+ the fever case you spoke about, Doctor—the one you want moved to the
+ officers’ ward?” She slipped her hand up under his sleeve and felt his
+ wrist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “His pulse is very high,” she said to the steward. “When did you take his
+ temperature?” She drew a little morocco case from her pocket and from that
+ took a clinical thermometer, which she shook up and down, eying the
+ patient meanwhile with a calm, impersonal scrutiny. The Lieutenant raised
+ his head and stared up at the white figure beside his cot. His eyes opened
+ and then shut quickly, with a startled look, in which doubt struggled with
+ wonderful happiness. His hand stole out fearfully and warily until it
+ touched her apron, and then, finding it was real, he clutched it
+ desperately, and twisting his face and body toward her, pulled her down,
+ clasping her hands in both of his, and pressing them close to his face and
+ eyes and lips. He put them from him for an instant, and looked at her
+ through his tears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Sweetheart,” he whispered, “sweetheart, I knew you’d come.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the nurse knelt on the deck beside him, her thermometer slipped from
+ her fingers and broke, and she gave an exclamation of annoyance. The young
+ Doctor picked up the pieces and tossed them overboard. Neither of them
+ spoke, but they smiled appreciatively. The Lieutenant was looking at the
+ nurse with the wonder and hope and hunger of soul in his eyes with which a
+ dying man looks at the cross the priest holds up before him. What he saw
+ where the German nurse was kneeling was a tall, fair girl with great bands
+ and masses of hair, with a head rising like a lily from a firm, white
+ throat, set on broad shoulders above a straight back and sloping breast—a
+ tall, beautiful creature, half-girl, half-woman, who looked back at him
+ shyly, but steadily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Listen,” he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The voice of the sick man was so sure and so sane that the young Doctor
+ started, and moved nearer to the head of the cot. “Listen, dearest,” the
+ Lieutenant whispered. “I wanted to tell you before I came South. But I did
+ not dare; and then I was afraid something might happen to me, and I could
+ never tell you, and you would never know. So I wrote it to you in the will
+ I made at Baiquiri, the night before the landing. If you hadn’t come now,
+ you would have learned it in that way. You would have read there that
+ there never was any one but you; the rest were all dream people, foolish,
+ silly—mad. There is no one else in the world but you; you have been
+ the only thing in life that has counted. I thought I might do something
+ down here that would make you care. But I got shot going up a hill, and
+ after that I wasn’t able to do anything. It was very hot, and the hills
+ were on fire; and they took me prisoner, and kept me tied down here,
+ burning on these coals. I can’t live much longer, but now that I have told
+ you I can have peace. They tried to kill me before you came; but they
+ didn’t know I loved you, they didn’t know that men who love you can’t die.
+ They tried to starve my love for you, to burn it out of me; they tried to
+ reach it with their knives. But my love for you is my soul, and they can’t
+ kill a man’s soul. Dear heart, I have lived because you lived. Now that
+ you know—now that you understand—what does it matter?”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Miss Bergen shook her head with great vigor. “Nonsense,” she said,
+ cheerfully. “You are not going to die. As soon as we move you out of this
+ rain, and some food cook—”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Good God!” cried the young Doctor, savagely. “Do you want to kill him?”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When she spoke the patient had thrown his arms heavily across his face,
+ and had fallen back, lying rigid on the pillow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Doctor led the way across the prostrate bodies, apologizing as he
+ went. “I am sorry I spoke so quickly,” he said, “but he thought you were
+ real. I mean he thought you were some one he really knew—”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “He was just delirious,” said the German nurse, calmly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Doctor mixed himself a Scotch and soda and drank it with a single
+ gesture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Ugh!” he said to the ward-room. “I feel as though I’d been opening
+ another man’s letters.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The transport drove through the empty seas with heavy, clumsy upheavals,
+ rolling like a buoy. Having been originally intended for the
+ freight-carrying trade, she had no sympathy with hearts that beat for a
+ sight of their native land, or for lives that counted their remaining
+ minutes by the throbbing of her engines. Occasionally, without apparent
+ reason, she was thrown violently from her course: but it was invariably
+ the case that when her stern went to starboard, something splashed in the
+ water on her port side and drifted past her, until, when it had cleared
+ the blades of her propeller, a voice cried out, and she was swung back on
+ her home-bound track again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Lieutenant missed the familiar palms and the tiny block-house; and
+ seeing nothing beyond the iron rails but great wastes of gray water, he
+ decided he was on board a prison-ship, or that he had been strapped to a
+ raft and cast adrift. People came for hours at a time and stood at the
+ foot of his cot, and talked with him and he to them—people he had
+ loved and people he had long forgotten, some of whom he had thought were
+ dead. One of them he could have sworn he had seen buried in a deep trench,
+ and covered with branches of palmetto. He had heard the bugler, with tears
+ choking him, sound “taps;” and with his own hand he had placed the dead
+ man’s campaign hat on the mound of fresh earth above the grave. Yet here
+ he was still alive, and he came with other men of his troop to speak to
+ him; but when he reached out to them they were gone—the real and the
+ unreal, the dead and the living—and even She disappeared whenever he
+ tried to take her hand, and sometimes the hospital steward drove her away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Did that young lady say when she was coming back again?” he asked the
+ steward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “The young lady! What young lady?” asked the steward, wearily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “The one who has been sitting there,” he answered. He pointed with his
+ gaunt hand at the man in the next cot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Oh, that young lady. Yes, she’s coming back. She’s just gone below to
+ fetch you some hard-tack.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young volunteer in the next cot whined grievously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “That crazy man gives me the creeps,” he groaned. “He’s always waking me
+ up, and looking at me as though he was going to eat me.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Shut your head,” said the steward. “He’s a better man crazy than you’ll
+ ever be with the little sense you’ve got. And he has two Mauser holes in
+ him. Crazy, eh? It’s a damned good thing for you that there was about four
+ thousand of us regulars just as crazy as him, or you’d never seen the top
+ of the hill.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One morning there was a great commotion on deck, and all the convalescents
+ balanced themselves on the rail, shivering in their pajamas, and pointed
+ one way. The transport was moving swiftly and smoothly through water as
+ flat as a lake, and making a great noise with her steam-whistle. The noise
+ was echoed by many more steam-whistles; and the ghosts of out-bound ships
+ and tugs and excursion steamers ran past her out of the mist and
+ disappeared, saluting joyously. All of the excursion steamers had a heavy
+ list to the side nearest the transport, and the ghosts on them crowded to
+ that rail and waved handkerchiefs and cheered. The fog lifted suddenly,
+ and between the iron rails the Lieutenant saw high green hills on either
+ side of a great harbor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Houses and trees and thousands of masts swept past like a panorama; and
+ beyond was a mirage of three cities, with curling smoke-wreaths and
+ sky-reaching buildings, and a great swinging bridge, and a giant statue of
+ a woman waving a welcome home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Lieutenant surveyed the spectacle with cynical disbelief. He was far
+ too wise and far too cunning to be bewitched by it. In his heart he pitied
+ the men about him, who laughed wildly, and shouted, and climbed recklessly
+ to the rails and ratlines. He had been deceived too often not to know that
+ it was not real. He knew from cruel experience that in a few moments the
+ tall buildings would crumble away, the thousands of columns of white smoke
+ that flashed like snow in the sun, the busy, shrieking tug-boats, and the
+ great statue would vanish into the sea, leaving it gray and bare. He
+ closed his eyes and shut the vision out. It was so beautiful that it
+ tempted him; but he would not be mocked, and he buried his face in his
+ hands. They were carrying the farce too far, he thought. It was really too
+ absurd; for now they were at a wharf which was so real that, had he not
+ known by previous suffering, he would have been utterly deceived by it.
+ And there were great crowds of smiling, cheering people, and a waiting
+ guard of honor in fresh uniforms, and rows of police pushing the people
+ this way and that; and these men about him were taking it all quite
+ seriously, and making ready to disembark, carrying their blanket-rolls and
+ rifles with them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A band was playing joyously, and the man in the next cot, who was being
+ lifted to a stretcher, said, “There’s the Governor and his staff; that’s
+ him in the high hat.” It was really very well done. The Custom-house and
+ the Elevated Railroad and Castle Garden were as like to life as a
+ photograph, and the crowd was as well handled as a mob in a play. His
+ heart ached for it so that he could not bear the pain, and he turned his
+ back on it. It was cruel to keep it up so long. His keeper lifted him in
+ his arms, and pulled him into a dirty uniform which had belonged,
+ apparently, to a much larger man—a man who had been killed probably,
+ for there were dark-brown marks of blood on the tunic and breeches. When
+ he tried to stand on his feet, Castle Garden and the Battery disappeared
+ in a black cloud of night, just as he knew they would; but when he opened
+ his eyes from the stretcher, they had returned again. It was a most
+ remarkably vivid vision. They kept it up so well. Now the young Doctor and
+ the hospital steward were pretending to carry him down a gang-plank and
+ into an open space; and he saw quite close to him a long line of
+ policemen, and behind them thousands of faces, some of them women’s faces—women
+ who pointed at him and then shook their heads and cried, and pressed their
+ hands to their cheeks, still looking at him. He wondered why they cried.
+ He did not know them, nor did they know him. No one knew him; these people
+ were only ghosts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a quick parting in the crowd. A man he had once known shoved two
+ of the policemen to one side, and he heard a girl’s voice speaking his
+ name, like a sob; and She came running out across the open space and fell
+ on her knees beside the stretcher, and bent down over him, and he was
+ clasped in two young, firm arms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Of course it is not real, of course it is not She,” he assured himself.
+ “Because She would not do such a thing. Before all these people She would
+ not do it.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But he trembled and his heart throbbed so cruelly that he could not bear
+ the pain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She was pretending to cry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “They wired us you had started for Tampa on the hospital ship,” She was
+ saying, “and Aunt and I went all the way there before we heard you had
+ been sent North. We have been on the cars a week. That is why I missed
+ you. Do you understand? It was not my fault. I tried to come. Indeed, I
+ tried to come.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She turned her head and looked up fearfully at the young Doctor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Tell me, why does he look at me like that?” she asked. “He doesn’t know
+ me. Is he very ill? Tell me the truth.” She drew in her breath quickly.
+ “Of course you will tell me the truth.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When she asked the question he felt her arms draw tight about his
+ shoulders. It was as though she was holding him to herself, and from some
+ one who had reached out for him. In his trouble he turned to his old
+ friend and keeper. His voice was hoarse and very low.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Is this the same young lady who was on the transport—the one you
+ used to drive away?”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In his embarrassment, the hospital steward blushed under his tan, and
+ stammered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Of course it’s the same young lady,” the Doctor answered briskly. “And I
+ won’t let them drive her away.” He turned to her, smiling gravely. “I
+ think his condition has ceased to be dangerous, madam,” he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ People who in a former existence had been his friends, and Her brother,
+ gathered about his stretcher and bore him through the crowd and lifted him
+ into a carriage filled with cushions, among which he sank lower and lower.
+ Then She sat beside him, and he heard Her brother say to the coachman,
+ “Home, and drive slowly and keep on the asphalt.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The carriage moved forward, and She put her arm about him and his head
+ fell on her shoulder, and neither of them spoke. The vision had lasted so
+ long now that he was torn with the joy that after all it might be real.
+ But he could not bear the awakening if it were not, so he raised his head
+ fearfully and looked up into the beautiful eyes above him. His brows were
+ knit, and he struggled with a great doubt and an awful joy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Dearest,” he said, “is it real?”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Is it real?” she repeated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even as a dream, it was so wonderfully beautiful that he was satisfied if
+ it could only continue so, if but for a little while.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Do you think,” he begged again, trembling, “that it is going to last much
+ longer?”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She smiled, and, bending her head slowly, kissed him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “It is going to last—always,” she said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0003" id="link2H_4_0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE MAN WITH ONE TALENT
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The mass-meeting in the Madison Square Garden which was to help set Cuba
+ free was finished, and the people were pushing their way out of the
+ overheated building into the snow and sleet of the streets. They had been
+ greatly stirred and the spell of the last speaker still hung so heavily
+ upon them that as they pressed down the long corridor they were still
+ speaking loudly in his praise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A young man moved eagerly amongst them, and pushed his way to wherever a
+ voice was raised above the rest. He strained forward, listening openly, as
+ though he tried to judge the effect of the meeting by the verdict of those
+ about him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the words he overheard seemed to clash with what he wished them to be,
+ and the eager look on his face changed to one of doubt and of grave
+ disappointment. When he had reached the sidewalk he stopped and stood
+ looking back alternately into the lighted hall and at the hurrying crowds
+ which were dispersing rapidly. He made a movement as though he would
+ recall them, as though he felt they were still unconvinced, as though
+ there was much still left unsaid.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A fat stranger halted at his elbow to light his cigar, and glancing up
+ nodded his head approvingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Fine speaker, Senator Stanton, ain’t he?” he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young man answered eagerly. “Yes,” he assented, “he is a great orator,
+ but how could he help but speak well with such a subject?”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Oh, you ought to have heard him last November at Tammany Hall,” the fat
+ stranger answered. “He wasn’t quite up to himself to-night. He wasn’t so
+ interested. Those Cubans are foreigners, you see, but you ought to heard
+ him last St. Patrick’s day on Home Rule for Ireland. Then he was talking!
+ That speech made him a United States senator, I guess. I don’t just see
+ how he expects to win out on this Cuba game. The Cubans haven’t got no
+ votes.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young man opened his eyes in some bewilderment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “He speaks for the good of Cuba, for the sake of humanity,” he ventured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “What?” inquired the fat stranger. “Oh, yes, of course. Well, I must be
+ getting on. Good-night, sir.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The stranger moved on his way, but the young man still lingered
+ uncertainly in the snow-swept corridor shivering violently with the cold
+ and stamping his feet for greater comfort. His face was burned to a deep
+ red, which seemed to have come from some long exposure to a tropical sun,
+ but which held no sign of health. His cheeks were hollow and his eyes were
+ lighted with the fire of fever and from time to time he was shaken by
+ violent bursts of coughing which caused him to reach toward one of the
+ pillars for support.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the last of the lights went out in the Garden, the speaker of the
+ evening and three of his friends came laughing and talking down the long
+ corridor. Senator Stanton was a conspicuous figure at any time, and even
+ in those places where his portraits had not penetrated he was at once
+ recognized as a personage. Something in his erect carriage and an unusual
+ grace of movement, and the power and success in his face, made men turn to
+ look at him. He had been told that he resembled the early portraits of
+ Henry Clay, and he had never quite forgotten the coincidence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The senator was wrapping the collar of his fur coat around his throat and
+ puffing contentedly at a fresh cigar, and as he passed, the night watchman
+ and the ushers bowed to the great man and stood looking after him with the
+ half-humorous, half-envious deference that the American voter pays to the
+ successful politician. At the sidewalk, the policemen hurried to open the
+ door of his carriage and in their eagerness made a double line, through
+ which he passed nodding to them gravely. The young man who had stood so
+ long in waiting pushed his way through the line to his side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Senator Stanton,” he began timidly, “might I speak to you a moment? My
+ name is Arkwright; I am just back from Cuba, and I want to thank you for
+ your speech. I am an American, and I thank God that I am since you are
+ too, sir. No one has said anything since the war began that compares with
+ what you said to-night. You put it nobly, and I know, for I’ve been there
+ for three years, only I can’t make other people understand it, and I am
+ thankful that some one can. You’ll forgive my stopping you, sir, but I
+ wanted to thank you. I feel it very much.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Senator Stanton’s friends had already seated themselves in his carriage
+ and were looking out of the door and smiling with mock patience. But the
+ senator made no move to follow them. Though they were his admirers they
+ were sometimes skeptical, and he was not sorry that they should hear this
+ uninvited tribute. So he made a pretence of buttoning his long coat about
+ him, and nodded encouragingly to Arkwright to continue. “I’m glad you
+ liked it, sir,” he said with the pleasant, gracious smile that had won him
+ a friend wherever it had won him a vote. “It is very satisfactory to know
+ from one who is well informed on the subject that what I have said is
+ correct. The situation there is truly terrible. You have just returned,
+ you say? Where were you—in Havana?”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “No, in the other provinces, sir,” Arkwright answered. “I have been all
+ over the island, I am a civil engineer. The truth has not been half told
+ about Cuba, I assure you, sir. It is massacre there, not war. It is partly
+ so through ignorance, but nevertheless it is massacre. And what makes it
+ worse is, that it is the massacre of the innocents. That is what I liked
+ best of what you said in that great speech, the part about the women and
+ children.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He reached out his hands detainingly, and then drew back as though in
+ apology for having already kept the great man so long waiting in the cold.
+ “I wish I could tell you some of the terrible things I have seen,” he
+ began again, eagerly as Stanton made no movement to depart. “They are much
+ worse than those you instanced to-night, and you could make so much better
+ use of them than any one else. I have seen starving women nursing dead
+ babies, and sometimes starving babies sucking their dead mother’s breasts;
+ I have seen men cut down in the open roads and while digging in the fields—and
+ two hundred women imprisoned in one room without food and eaten with
+ small-pox, and huts burned while the people in them slept—”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young man had been speaking impetuously, but he stopped as suddenly,
+ for the senator was not listening to him. He had lowered his eyes and was
+ looking with a glance of mingled fascination and disgust at Arkwright’s
+ hands. In his earnestness the young man had stretched them out, and as
+ they showed behind the line of his ragged sleeves the others could see,
+ even in the blurred light and falling snow, that the wrists of each hand
+ were gashed and cut in dark-brown lines like the skin of a mulatto, and in
+ places were a raw red, where the fresh skin had but just closed over. The
+ young man paused and stood shivering, still holding his hands out rigidly
+ before him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The senator raised his eyes slowly and drew away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “What is that?” he said in a low voice, pointing with a gloved finger at
+ the black lines on the wrists.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A sergeant in the group of policemen who had closed around the speakers
+ answered him promptly from his profound fund of professional knowledge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “That’s handcuffs, senator,” he said importantly, and glanced at Stanton
+ as though to signify that at a word from him he would take this suspicious
+ character into custody. The young man pulled the frayed cuffs of his shirt
+ over his wrists and tucked his hands, which the cold had frozen into an
+ ashy blue, under his armpits to warm them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “No, they don’t use handcuffs in the field,” he said in the same low,
+ eager tone; “they use ropes and leather thongs; they fastened me behind a
+ horse and when he stumbled going down the trail it jerked me forward and
+ the cords would tighten and tear the flesh. But they have had a long time
+ to heal now. I have been eight months in prison.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young men at the carriage window had ceased smiling and were listening
+ intently. One of them stepped out and stood beside the carriage door
+ looking down at the shivering figure before him with a close and curious
+ scrutiny.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Eight months in prison!” echoed the police sergeant with a note of
+ triumph; “what did I tell you?”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Hold your tongue!” said the young man at the carriage door. There was
+ silence for a moment, while the men looked at the senator, as though
+ waiting for him to speak.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Where were you in prison, Mr. Arkwright?” he asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “First in the calaboose at Santa Clara for two months, and then in
+ Cabanas. The Cubans who were taken when I was, were shot by the fusillade
+ on different days during this last month. Two of them, the Ezetas, were
+ father and son, and the Volunteer band played all the time the execution
+ was going on, so that the other prisoners might not hear them cry ‘Cuba
+ Libre’ when the order came to fire. But we heard them.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The senator shivered slightly and pulled his fur collar up farther around
+ his face. “I’d like to talk with you,” he said, “if you have nothing to do
+ to-morrow. I’d like to go into this thing thoroughly. Congress must be
+ made to take some action.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young man clasped his hands eagerly. “Ah, Mr. Stanton, if you would,”
+ he cried, “if you would only give me an hour! I could tell you so much
+ that you could use. And you can believe what I say, sir—it is not
+ necessary to lie—God knows the truth is bad enough. I can give you
+ names and dates for everything I say. Or I can do better than that, sir. I
+ can take you there yourself—in three months I can show you all you
+ need to see, without danger to you in any way. And they would not know me,
+ now that I have grown a beard, and I am a skeleton to what I was. I can
+ speak the language well, and I know just what you should see, and then you
+ could come back as one speaking with authority and not have to say, ‘I
+ have read,’ or ‘have been told,’ but you can say, ‘These are the things I
+ have seen’—and you could free Cuba.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The senator coughed and put the question aside for the moment with a wave
+ of the hand that held his cigar. “We will talk of that to-morrow also.
+ Come to lunch with me at one. My apartments are in the Berkeley on Fifth
+ Avenue. But aren’t you afraid to go back there?” he asked curiously. “I
+ should think you’d had enough of it. And you’ve got a touch of fever,
+ haven’t you?” He leaned forward and peered into the other’s eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “It is only the prison fever,” the young man answered; “food and this cold
+ will drive that out of me. And I must go back. There is so much to do
+ there,” he added. “Ah, if I could tell them, as you can tell them, what I
+ feel here.” He struck his chest sharply with his hand, and on the instant
+ fell into a fit of coughing so violent that the young man at the carriage
+ door caught him around the waist, and one of the policemen supported him
+ from the other side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “You need a doctor,” said the senator kindly. “I’ll ask mine to have a
+ look at you. Don’t forget, then, at one o’clock to-morrow. We will go into
+ this thing thoroughly.” He shook Arkwright warmly by the hand and stooping
+ stepped into the carriage. The young man who had stood at the door
+ followed him and crowded back luxuriously against the cushions. The
+ footman swung himself up beside the driver, and said “Uptown Delmonico’s,”
+ as he wrapped the fur rug around his legs, and with a salute from the
+ policemen and a scraping of hoofs on the slippery asphalt the great man
+ was gone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “That poor fellow needs a doctor,” he said as the carriage rolled up the
+ avenue, “and he needs an overcoat, and he needs food. He needs about
+ almost everything, by the looks of him.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the voice of the young man in the corner of the carriage objected
+ drowsily—
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “On the contrary,” he said, “it seemed to me that he had the one thing
+ needful.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By one o’clock of the day following, Senator Stanton, having read the
+ reports of his speech in the morning papers, punctuated with “Cheers,”
+ “Tremendous enthusiasm” and more “Cheers,” was still in a willing frame of
+ mind toward Cuba and her self-appointed envoy, young Mr. Arkwright.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Over night he had had doubts but that the young man’s enthusiasm would
+ bore him on the morrow, but Mr. Arkwright, when he appeared, developed, on
+ the contrary, a practical turn of mind which rendered his suggestions both
+ flattering and feasible. He was still terribly in earnest, but he was
+ clever enough or serious enough to see that the motives which appealed to
+ him might not have sufficient force to move a successful statesman into
+ action. So he placed before the senator only those arguments and reasons
+ which he guessed were the best adapted to secure his interest and his
+ help. His proposal as he set it forth was simplicity itself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Here is a map of the island,” he said; “on it I have marked the places
+ you can visit in safety, and where you will meet the people you ought to
+ see. If you leave New York at midnight you can reach Tampa on the second
+ day. From Tampa we cross in another day to Havana. There you can visit the
+ Americans imprisoned in Morro and Cabanas, and in the streets you can see
+ the starving pacificos. From Havana I shall take you by rail to Jucaro,
+ Matanzas, Santa Clara and Cienfuegos. You will not be able to see the
+ insurgents in the fields—it is not necessary that you should—but
+ you can visit one of the sugar plantations and some of the insurgent
+ chiefs will run the forts by night and come in to talk with you. I will
+ show you burning fields and houses, and starving men and women by the
+ thousands, and men and women dying of fevers. You can see Cuban prisoners
+ shot by a firing squad and you can note how these rebels meet death. You
+ can see all this in three weeks and be back in New York in a month, as any
+ one can see it who wishes to learn the truth. Why, English members of
+ Parliament go all the way to India and British Columbia to inform
+ themselves about those countries, they travel thousands of miles, but only
+ one member of either of our houses of Congress has taken the trouble to
+ cross these eighty miles of water that lie between us and Cuba. You can
+ either go quietly and incognito, as it were, or you can advertise the fact
+ of your going, which would be better. And from the moment you start the
+ interest in your visit will grow and increase until there will be no topic
+ discussed in any of our papers except yourself, and what you are doing and
+ what you mean to do.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “By the time you return the people will be waiting, ready and eager to
+ hear whatever you may have to say. Your word will be the last word for
+ them. It is not as though you were some demagogue seeking notoriety, or a
+ hotel piazza correspondent at Key West or Jacksonville. You are the only
+ statesman we have, the only orator Americans will listen to, and I tell
+ you that when you come before them and bring home to them as only you can
+ the horrors of this war, you will be the only man in this country. You
+ will be the Patrick Henry of Cuba; you can go down to history as the man
+ who added the most beautiful island in the seas to the territory of the
+ United States, who saved thousands of innocent children and women, and who
+ dared to do what no other politician has dared to do—to go and see
+ for himself and to come back and speak the truth. It only means a month
+ out of your life, a month’s trouble and discomfort, but with no risk. What
+ is a month out of a lifetime, when that month means immortality to you and
+ life to thousands? In a month you would make a half dozen after-dinner
+ speeches and cause your friends to laugh and applaud. Why not wring their
+ hearts instead, and hold this thing up before them as it is, and shake it
+ in their faces? Show it to them in all its horror—bleeding, diseased
+ and naked, an offence to our humanity, and to our prated love of liberty,
+ and to our God.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young man threw himself eagerly forward and beat the map with his open
+ palm. But the senator sat apparently unmoved gazing thoughtfully into the
+ open fire, and shook his head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While the luncheon was in progress the young gentleman who the night
+ before had left the carriage and stood at Arkwright’s side, had entered
+ the room and was listening intently. He had invited himself to some fresh
+ coffee, and had then relapsed into an attentive silence, following what
+ the others said with an amused and interested countenance. Stanton had
+ introduced him as Mr. Livingstone, and appeared to take it for granted
+ that Arkwright would know who he was. He seemed to regard him with a
+ certain deference which Arkwright judged was due to some fixed position
+ the young man held, either of social or of political value.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “I do not know,” said Stanton with consideration, “that I am prepared to
+ advocate the annexation of the island. It is a serious problem.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “I am not urging that,” Arkwright interrupted anxiously; “the Cubans
+ themselves do not agree as to that, and in any event it is an
+ afterthought. Our object now should be to prevent further bloodshed. If
+ you see a man beating a boy to death, you first save the boy’s life and
+ decide afterward where he is to go to school. If there were any one else,
+ senator,” Arkwright continued earnestly, “I would not trouble you. But we
+ all know your strength in this country. You are independent and fearless,
+ and men of both parties listen to you. Surely, God has given you this
+ great gift of oratory, if you will forgive my speaking so, to use only in
+ a great cause. A grand organ in a cathedral is placed there to lift men’s
+ thoughts to high resolves and purposes, not to make people dance. A street
+ organ can do that. Now, here is a cause worthy of your great talents,
+ worthy of a Daniel Webster, of a Henry Clay.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The senator frowned at the fire and shook his head doubtfully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “If they knew what I was down there for,” he asked, “wouldn’t they put me
+ in prison too?”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Arkwright laughed incredulously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Certainly not,” he said; “you would go there as a private citizen, as a
+ tourist to look on and observe. Spain is not seeking complications of that
+ sort. She has troubles enough without imprisoning United States senators.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Yes; but these fevers now,” persisted Stanton, “they’re no respecter of
+ persons, I imagine. A United States senator is not above smallpox or
+ cholera.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Arkwright shook his head impatiently and sighed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “It is difficult to make it clear to one who has not been there,” he said.
+ “These people and soldiers are dying of fever because they are forced to
+ live like pigs, and they are already sick with starvation. A healthy man
+ like yourself would be in no more danger than you would be in walking
+ through the wards of a New York hospital.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Senator Stanton turned in his armchair, and held up his hand impressively.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “If I were to tell them the things you have told me,” he said warningly,
+ “if I were to say I have seen such things—American property in
+ flames, American interests ruined, and that five times as many women and
+ children have died of fever and starvation in three months in Cuba as the
+ Sultan has massacred in Armenia in three years—it would mean war
+ with Spain.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Well?” said Arkwright.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stanton shrugged his shoulders and sank back again in his chair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “It would either mean war,” Arkwright went on, “or it might mean the
+ sending of the Red Cross army to Cuba. It went to Constantinople, five
+ thousand miles away, to help the Armenian Christians—why has it
+ waited three years to go eighty miles to feed and clothe the Cuban women
+ and children? It is like sending help to a hungry peasant in Russia while
+ a man dies on your doorstep.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Well,” said the senator, rising, “I will let you know to-morrow. If it is
+ the right thing to do, and if I can do it, of course it must be done. We
+ start from Tampa, you say? I know the presidents of all of those roads and
+ they’ll probably give me a private car for the trip down. Shall we take
+ any newspaper men with us, or shall I wait until I get back and be
+ interviewed? What do you think?”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “I would wait until my return,” Arkwright answered, his eyes glowing with
+ the hope the senator’s words had inspired, “and then speak to a
+ mass-meeting here and in Boston and in Chicago. Three speeches will be
+ enough. Before you have finished your last one the American warships will
+ be in the harbor of Havana.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Ah, youth, youth!” said the senator, smiling gravely, “it is no light
+ responsibility to urge a country into war.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “It is no light responsibility,” Arkwright answered, “to know you have the
+ chance to save the lives of thousands of little children and helpless
+ women and to let the chance pass.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Quite so, that is quite true,” said the senator. “Well, good-morning. I
+ shall let you know to-morrow.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Young Livingstone went down in the elevator with Arkwright, and when they
+ had reached the sidewalk stood regarding him for a moment in silence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “You mustn’t count too much on Stanton, you know,” he said kindly; “he has
+ a way of disappointing people.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Ah, he can never disappoint me,” Arkwright answered confidently, “no
+ matter how much I expected. Besides, I have already heard him speak.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “I don’t mean that, I don’t mean he is disappointing as a speaker. Stanton
+ is a great orator, I think. Most of those Southerners are, and he’s the
+ only real orator I ever heard. But what I mean is, that he doesn’t go into
+ things impulsively; he first considers himself, and then he considers
+ every other side of the question before he commits himself to it. Before
+ he launches out on a popular wave he tries to find out where it is going
+ to land him. He likes the sort of popular wave that carries him along with
+ it where every one can see him; he doesn’t fancy being hurled up on the
+ beach with his mouth full of sand.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “You are saying that he is selfish, self-seeking?” Arkwright demanded with
+ a challenge in his voice. “I thought you were his friend.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Yes, he is selfish, and yes, I am his friend,” the young man answered,
+ smiling; “at least, he seems willing to be mine. I am saying nothing
+ against him that I have not said to him. If you’ll come back with me up
+ the elevator I’ll tell him he’s a self-seeker and selfish, and with no
+ thought above his own interests. He won’t mind. He’d say I cannot
+ comprehend his motives. Why, you’ve only to look at his record. When the
+ Venezuelan message came out he attacked the President and declared he was
+ trying to make political capital and to drag us into war, and that what we
+ wanted was arbitration; but when the President brought out the Arbitration
+ Treaty he attacked that too in the Senate and destroyed it. Why? Not
+ because he had convictions, but because the President had refused a
+ foreign appointment to a friend of his in the South. He has been a free
+ silver man for the last ten years, he comes from a free silver state, and
+ the members of the legislature that elected him were all for silver, but
+ this last election his Wall Street friends got hold of him and worked on
+ his feelings, and he repudiated his party, his state, and his constituents
+ and came out for gold.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Well, but surely,” Arkwright objected, “that took courage? To own that
+ for ten years you had been wrong, and to come out for the right at the
+ last.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Livingstone stared and shrugged his shoulders. “It’s all a question of
+ motives,” he said indifferently. “I don’t want to shatter your idol; I
+ only want to save you from counting too much on him.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Arkwright called on the morrow Senator Stanton was not at home, and
+ the day following he was busy, and could give him only a brief interview.
+ There were previous engagements and other difficulties in the way of his
+ going which he had not foreseen, he said, and he feared he should have to
+ postpone his visit to Cuba indefinitely. He asked if Mr. Arkwright would
+ be so kind as to call again within a week; he would then be better able to
+ give him a definite answer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Arkwright left the apartment with a sensation of such keen disappointment
+ that it turned him ill and dizzy. He felt that the great purpose of his
+ life was being played with and put aside. But he had not selfish
+ resentment on his own account; he was only the more determined to
+ persevere. He considered new arguments and framed new appeals; and one
+ moment blamed himself bitterly for having foolishly discouraged the
+ statesman by too vivid pictures of the horrors he might encounter, and the
+ next, questioned if he had not been too practical and so failed because he
+ had not made the terrible need of immediate help his sole argument. Every
+ hour wasted in delay meant, as he knew, the sacrifice of many lives, and
+ there were other, more sordid and more practical, reasons for speedy
+ action. For his supply of money was running low and there was now barely
+ enough remaining to carry him through the month of travel he had planned
+ to take at Stanton’s side. What would happen to him when that momentous
+ trip was over was of no consequence. He would have done the work as far as
+ his small share in it lay, he would have set in motion a great power that
+ was to move Congress and the people of the United States to action. If he
+ could but do that, what became of him counted for nothing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But at the end of the week his fears and misgivings were scattered
+ gloriously and a single line from the senator set his heart leaping and
+ brought him to his knees in gratitude and thanksgiving. On returning one
+ afternoon to the mean lodging into which he had moved to save his money,
+ he found a telegram from Stanton and he tore it open trembling between
+ hope and fear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Have arranged to leave for Tampa with you Monday, at midnight” it read.
+ “Call for me at ten o’clock same evening.—STANTON.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Arkwright read the message three times. There was a heavy, suffocating
+ pressure at his heart as though it had ceased beating. He sank back limply
+ upon the edge of his bed and clutching the piece of paper in his two hands
+ spoke the words aloud triumphantly as though to assure himself that they
+ were true. Then a flood of unspeakable relief, of happiness and gratitude,
+ swept over him, and he turned and slipped to the floor, burying his face
+ in the pillow, and wept out his thanks upon his knees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A man so deeply immersed in public affairs as was Stanton and with such a
+ multiplicity of personal interests, could not prepare to absent himself
+ for a month without his intention becoming known, and on the day when he
+ was to start for Tampa the morning newspapers proclaimed the fact that he
+ was about to visit Cuba. They gave to his mission all the importance and
+ display that Arkwright had foretold. Some of the newspapers stated that he
+ was going as a special commissioner of the President to study and report;
+ others that he was acting in behalf of the Cuban legation in Washington
+ and had plenipotentiary powers. Opposition organs suggested that he was
+ acting in the interests of the sugar trust, and his own particular organ
+ declared that it was his intention to free Cuba at the risk of his own
+ freedom, safety, and even life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Spanish minister in Washington sent a cable for publication to Madrid,
+ stating that a distinguished American statesman was about to visit Cuba,
+ to investigate, and, later, to deny the truth of the disgraceful libels
+ published concerning the Spanish officials on the island by the papers of
+ the United States. At the same time he cabled in cipher to the
+ captain-general in Havana to see that the distinguished statesman was
+ closely spied upon from the moment of his arrival until his departure, and
+ to place on the “suspect” list all Americans and Cubans who ventured to
+ give him any information.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The afternoon papers enlarged on the importance of the visit and on the
+ good that would surely come of it. They told that Senator Stanton had
+ refused to be interviewed or to disclose the object of his journey. But it
+ was enough, they said, that some one in authority was at last to seek out
+ the truth, and added that no one would be listened to with greater respect
+ than would the Southern senator. On this all the editorial writers were
+ agreed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The day passed drearily for Arkwright. Early in the morning he packed his
+ valise and paid his landlord, and for the remainder of the day walked the
+ streets or sat in the hotel corridor waiting impatiently for each fresh
+ edition of the papers. In them he read the signs of the great upheaval of
+ popular feeling that was to restore peace and health and plenty to the
+ island for which he had given his last three years of energy and life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was trembling with excitement, as well as with the cold, when at ten
+ o’clock precisely he stood at Senator Stanton’s door. He had forgotten to
+ eat his dinner, and the warmth of the dimly lit hall and the odor of rich
+ food which was wafted from an inner room touched his senses with
+ tantalizing comfort.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “The senator says you are to come this way, sir,” the servant directed. He
+ took Arkwright’s valise from his hand and parted the heavy curtains that
+ hid the dining-room, and Arkwright stepped in between them and then
+ stopped in some embarrassment. He found himself in the presence of a
+ number of gentlemen seated at a long dinner-table, who turned their heads
+ as he entered and peered at him through the smoke that floated in light
+ layers above the white cloth. The dinner had been served, but the
+ senator’s guests still sat with their chairs pushed back from a table
+ lighted by candles under yellow shades, and covered with beautiful flowers
+ and with bottles of varied sizes in stands of quaint and intricate design.
+ Senator Stanton’s tall figure showed dimly through the smoke, and his deep
+ voice hailed Arkwright cheerily from the farther end of the room. “This
+ way, Mr. Arkwright,” he said. “I have a chair waiting for you here.” He
+ grasped Arkwright’s hand warmly and pulled him into the vacant place at
+ his side. An elderly gentleman on Arkwright’s other side moved to make
+ more room for him and shoved a liqueur glass toward him with a friendly
+ nod and pointed at an open box of cigars. He was a fine-looking man, and
+ Arkwright noticed that he was regarding him with a glance of the keenest
+ interest. All of those at the table were men of twice Arkwright’s age,
+ except Livingstone, whom he recognized and who nodded to him pleasantly
+ and at the same time gave an order to a servant, pointing at Arkwright as
+ he did so. Some of the gentlemen wore their business suits, and one
+ opposite Arkwright was still in his overcoat, and held his hat in his
+ hand. These latter seemed to have arrived after the dinner had begun, for
+ they formed a second line back of those who had places at the table; they
+ all seemed to know one another and were talking with much vivacity and
+ interest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stanton did not attempt to introduce Arkwright to his guests individually,
+ but said: “Gentlemen, this is Mr. Arkwright, of whom I have been telling
+ you, the young gentleman who has done such magnificent work for the cause
+ of Cuba.” Those who caught Arkwright’s eye nodded to him, and others
+ raised their glasses at him, but with a smile that he could not
+ understand. It was as though they all knew something concerning him of
+ which he was ignorant. He noted that the faces of some were strangely
+ familiar, and he decided that he must have seen their portraits in the
+ public prints. After he had introduced Arkwright, the senator drew his
+ chair slightly away from him and turned in what seemed embarrassment to
+ the man on his other side. The elderly gentleman next to Arkwright filled
+ his glass, a servant placed a small cup of coffee at his elbow, and he lit
+ a cigar and looked about him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “You must find this weather very trying after the tropics,” his neighbor
+ said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Arkwright assented cordially. The brandy was flowing through his veins and
+ warming him; he forgot that he was hungry, and the kind, interested
+ glances of those about him set him at his ease. It was a propitious start,
+ he thought, a pleasant leave-taking for the senator and himself, full of
+ good will and good wishes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He turned toward Stanton and waited until he had ceased speaking.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “The papers have begun well, haven’t they?” he asked, eagerly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had spoken in a low voice, almost in a whisper, but those about the
+ table seemed to have heard him, for there was silence instantly and when
+ he glanced up he saw the eyes of all turned upon him and he noticed on
+ their faces the same smile he had seen there when he entered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Yes,” Stanton answered constrainedly. “Yes, I—” he lowered his
+ voice, but the silence still continued. Stanton had his eyes fixed on the
+ table, but now he frowned and half rose from his chair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “I want to speak with you, Arkwright,” he said. “Suppose we go into the
+ next room. I’ll be back in a moment,” he added, nodding to the others.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the man on his right removed his cigar from his lips and said in an
+ undertone, “No, sit down, stay where you are;” and the elderly gentleman
+ at Arkwright’s side laid his hand detainingly on his arm. “Oh, you won’t
+ take Mr. Arkwright away from us, Stanton?” he asked, smiling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stanton shrugged his shoulders and sat down again, and there was a
+ moment’s pause. It was broken by the man in the overcoat, who laughed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “He’s paying you a compliment, Mr. Arkwright,” he said. He pointed with
+ his cigar to the gentleman at Arkwright’s side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “I don’t understand,” Arkwright answered doubtfully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “It’s a compliment to your eloquence—he’s afraid to leave you alone
+ with the senator. Livingstone’s been telling us that you are a better
+ talker than Stanton.” Arkwright turned a troubled countenance toward the
+ men about the table, and then toward Livingstone, but that young man had
+ his eyes fixed gravely on the glasses before him and did not raise them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Arkwright felt a sudden, unreasonable fear of the circle of
+ strong-featured, serene and confident men about him. They seemed to be
+ making him the subject of a jest, to be enjoying something among
+ themselves of which he was in ignorance, but which concerned him closely.
+ He turned a white face toward Stanton.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “You don’t mean,” he began piteously, “that—that you are not going?
+ Is that it—tell me—is that what you wanted to say?”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stanton shifted in his chair and muttered some words between his lips,
+ then turned toward Arkwright and spoke quite clearly and distinctly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “I am very sorry, Mr. Arkwright,” he said, “but I am afraid I’ll have to
+ disappoint you. Reasons I cannot now explain have arisen which make my
+ going impossible—quite impossible,” he added firmly—“not only
+ now, but later,” he went on quickly, as Arkwright was about to interrupt
+ him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Arkwright made no second attempt to speak. He felt the muscles of his face
+ working and the tears coming to his eyes, and to hide his weakness he
+ twisted in his chair and sat staring ahead of him with his back turned to
+ the table. He heard Livingstone’s voice break the silence with some
+ hurried question, and immediately his embarrassment was hidden in a murmur
+ of answers and the moving of glasses as the men shifted in their chairs
+ and the laughter and talk went on as briskly as before. Arkwright saw a
+ sideboard before him and a servant arranging some silver on one of the
+ shelves. He watched the man do this with a concentrated interest as though
+ the dull, numbed feeling in his brain caught at the trifle in order to put
+ off, as long as possible, the consideration of the truth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And then beyond the sideboard and the tapestry on the wall above it, he
+ saw the sun shining down upon the island of Cuba, he saw the royal palms
+ waving and bending, the dusty columns of Spanish infantry crawling along
+ the white roads and leaving blazing huts and smoking cane-fields in their
+ wake; he saw skeletons of men and women seeking for food among the refuse
+ of the street; he heard the order given to the firing squad, the splash of
+ the bullets as they scattered the plaster on the prison wall, and he saw a
+ kneeling figure pitch forward on its face, with a useless bandage tied
+ across its sightless eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Senator Stanton brought him back with a sharp shake of the shoulder. He
+ had also turned his back on the others, and was leaning forward with his
+ elbows on his knees. He spoke rapidly, and in a voice only slightly raised
+ above a whisper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “I am more than sorry, Arkwright,” he said earnestly. “You mustn’t blame
+ me altogether. I have had a hard time of it this afternoon. I wanted to
+ go. I really wanted to go. The thing appealed to me, it touched me, it
+ seemed as if I owed it to myself to do it. But they were too many for me,”
+ he added with a backward toss of his head toward the men around his table.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “If the papers had not told on me I could have got well away,” he went on
+ in an eager tone, “but as soon as they read of it, they came here straight
+ from their offices. You know who they are, don’t you?” he asked, and even
+ in his earnestness there was an added touch of importance in his tone as
+ he spoke the name of his party’s leader, of men who stood prominently in
+ Wall Street and who were at the head of great trusts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “You see how it is,” he said with a shrug of his shoulders. “They have
+ enormous interests at stake. They said I would drag them into war, that I
+ would disturb values, that the business interests of the country would
+ suffer. I’m under obligations to most of them, they have advised me in
+ financial matters, and they threatened—they threatened to make it
+ unpleasant for me.” His voice hardened and he drew in his breath quickly,
+ and laughed. “You wouldn’t understand if I were to tell you. It’s rather
+ involved. And after all, they may be right, agitation may be bad for the
+ country. And your party leader after all is your party leader, isn’t he,
+ and if he says ‘no’ what are you to do? My sympathies are just as keen for
+ these poor women and children as ever, but as these men say, ‘charity
+ begins at home,’ and we mustn’t do anything to bring on war prices again,
+ or to send stocks tumbling about our heads, must we?” He leaned back in
+ his chair again and sighed. “Sympathy is an expensive luxury, I find,” he
+ added.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Arkwright rose stiffly and pushed Stanton away from him with his hand. He
+ moved like a man coming out of a dream.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Don’t talk to me like that,” he said in a low voice. The noise about the
+ table ended on the instant, but Arkwright did not notice that it had
+ ceased. “You know I don’t understand that,” he went on; “what does it
+ matter to me!” He put his hand up to the side of his face and held it
+ there, looking down at Stanton. He had the dull, heavy look in his eyes of
+ a man who has just come through an operation under some heavy drug. “‘Wall
+ Street,’ ‘trusts,’ ‘party leaders,’” he repeated, “what are they to me?
+ The words don’t reach me, they have lost their meaning, it is a language I
+ have forgotten, thank God!” he added. He turned and moved his eyes around
+ the table, scanning the faces of the men before him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Yes, you are twelve to one,” he said at last, still speaking dully and in
+ a low voice, as though he were talking to himself. “You have won a noble
+ victory, gentlemen. I congratulate you. But I do not blame you, we are all
+ selfish and self-seeking. I thought I was working only for Cuba, but I was
+ working for myself, just as you are. I wanted to feel that it was I who
+ had helped to bring relief to that plague-spot, that it was through my
+ efforts the help had come. Yes, if he had done as I asked, I suppose I
+ would have taken the credit.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He swayed slightly, and to steady himself caught at the back of his chair.
+ But at the same moment his eyes glowed fiercely and he held himself erect
+ again. He pointed with his finger at the circle of great men who sat
+ looking up at him in curious silence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “You are like a ring of gamblers around a gaming table,” he cried wildly,
+ “who see nothing but the green cloth and the wheel and the piles of money
+ before them, who forget in watching the money rise and fall, that outside
+ the sun is shining, that human beings are sick and suffering, that men are
+ giving their lives for an idea, for a sentiment, for a flag. You are the
+ money-changers in the temple of this great republic and the day will come,
+ I pray to God, when you will be scourged and driven out with whips. Do you
+ think you can form combines and deals that will cheat you into heaven? Can
+ your ‘trusts’ save your souls—is ‘Wall Street’ the strait and narrow
+ road to salvation?”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The men about the table leaned back and stared at Arkwright in as great
+ amazement as though he had violently attempted an assault upon their
+ pockets, or had suddenly gone mad in their presence. Some of them frowned,
+ and others appeared not to have heard, and others smiled grimly and waited
+ for him to continue as though they were spectators at a play.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The political leader broke the silence with a low aside to Stanton. “Does
+ the gentleman belong to the Salvation Army?” he asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Arkwright whirled about and turned upon him fiercely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Old gods give way to new gods,” he cried. “Here is your brother. I am
+ speaking for him. Do you ever think of him? How dare you sneer at me?” he
+ cried. “You can crack your whip over that man’s head and turn him from
+ what in his heart and conscience he knows is right; you can crack your
+ whip over the men who call themselves free-born American citizens and who
+ have made you their boss—sneer at them if you like, but you have no
+ collar on my neck. If you are a leader, why don’t you lead your people to
+ what is good and noble? Why do you stop this man in the work God sent him
+ here to do? You would make a party hack of him, a political prostitute,
+ something lower than the woman who walks the streets. She sells her body—this
+ man is selling his soul.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He turned, trembling and quivering, and shook his finger above the
+ upturned face of the senator.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “What have you done with your talents, Stanton?” he cried. “What have you
+ done with your talents?”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The man in the overcoat struck the table before him with his fist so that
+ the glasses rang.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “By God,” he laughed, “I call him a better speaker than Stanton!
+ Livingstone’s right, he IS better than Stanton—but he lacks
+ Stanton’s knack of making himself popular,” he added. He looked around the
+ table inviting approbation with a smile, but no one noticed him, nor spoke
+ to break the silence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Arkwright heard the words dully and felt that he was being mocked. He
+ covered his face with his hands and stood breathing brokenly; his body was
+ still trembling with an excitement he could not master.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stanton rose from his chair and shook him by the shoulder. “Are you mad,
+ Arkwright?” he cried. “You have no right to insult my guests or me. Be
+ calm—control yourself.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “What does it matter what I say?” Arkwright went on desperately. “I am
+ mad. Yes, that is it, I am mad. They have won and I have lost, and it
+ drove me beside myself. I counted on you. I knew that no one else could
+ let my people go. But I’ll not trouble you again. I wish you good-night,
+ sir, and good-bye. If I have been unjust, you must forget it.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He turned sharply, but Stanton placed a detaining hand on his shoulder.
+ “Wait,” he commanded querulously; “where are you going? Will you, still—?”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Arkwright bowed his head. “Yes,” he answered. “I have but just time now to
+ catch our train—my train, I mean.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He looked up at Stanton and taking his hand in both of his, drew the man
+ toward him. All the wildness and intolerance in his manner had passed, and
+ as he raised his eyes they were full of a firm resolve.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Come,” he said simply; “there is yet time. Leave these people behind you.
+ What can you answer when they ask what have you done with your talents?”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Good God, Arkwright,” the senator exclaimed angrily, pulling his hand
+ away; “don’t talk like a hymn-book, and don’t make another scene. What you
+ ask is impossible. Tell me what I can do to help you in any other way, and—”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Come,” repeated the young man firmly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “The world may judge you by what you do to-night.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stanton looked at the boy for a brief moment with a strained and eager
+ scrutiny, and then turned away abruptly and shook his head in silence, and
+ Arkwright passed around the table and on out of the room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A month later, as the Southern senator was passing through the
+ reading-room of the Union Club, Livingstone beckoned to him, and handing
+ him an afternoon paper pointed at a paragraph in silence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The paragraph was dated Sagua la Grande, and read:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “The body of Henry Arkwright, an American civil engineer, was brought into
+ Sagua to-day by a Spanish column. It was found lying in a road three miles
+ beyond the line of forts. Arkwright was surprised by a guerilla force
+ while attempting to make his way to the insurgent camp, and on resisting
+ was shot. The body has been handed over to the American consul for
+ interment. It is badly mutilated.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stanton lowered the paper and stood staring out of the window at the
+ falling snow and the cheery lights and bustling energy of the avenue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Poor fellow,” he said, “he wanted so much to help them. And he didn’t
+ accomplish anything, did he?”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Livingstone stared at the older man and laughed shortly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Well, I don’t know,” he said. “He died. Some of us only live.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0004" id="link2H_4_0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE VAGRANT
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ His Excellency Sir Charles Greville, K. C. M. G., Governor of the Windless
+ Islands, stood upon the veranda of Government House surveying the new day
+ with critical and searching eyes. Sir Charles had been so long absolute
+ monarch of the Windless Isles that he had assumed unconsciously a mental
+ attitude of suzerainty over even the glittering waters of the Caribbean
+ Sea, and the coral reefs under the waters, and the rainbow skies that
+ floated above them. But on this particular morning not even the critical
+ eye of the Governor could distinguish a single flaw in the tropical
+ landscape before him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lawn at his feet ran down to meet the dazzling waters of the bay, the
+ blue waters of the bay ran to meet a great stretch of absinthe green, the
+ green joined a fairy sky of pink and gold and saffron. Islands of coral
+ floated on the sea of absinthe, and derelict clouds of mother-of-pearl
+ swung low above them, starting from nowhere and going nowhere, but
+ drifting beautifully, like giant soap-bubbles of light and color. Where
+ the lawn touched the waters of the bay the cocoanut-palms reached their
+ crooked lengths far up into the sunshine, and as the sea-breeze stirred
+ their fronds they filled the hot air with whispers and murmurs like the
+ fluttering of many fans. Nature smiled boldly upon the Governor, confident
+ in her bountiful beauty, as though she said, “Surely you cannot but be
+ pleased with me to-day.” And, as though in answer, the critical and
+ searching glance of Sir Charles relaxed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The crunching of the gravel and the rattle of the sentry’s musket at
+ salute recalled him to his high office and to the duties of the morning.
+ He waved his hand, and, as though it were a wand, the sentry moved again,
+ making his way to the kitchen-garden, and so around Government House and
+ back to the lawn-tennis court, maintaining in his solitary pilgrimage the
+ dignity of her Majesty’s representative, as well as her Majesty’s power
+ over the Windless Isles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Governor smiled slightly, with the ease of mind of one who finds all
+ things good. Supreme authority, surroundings of endless beauty, the
+ respectful, even humble, deference of his inferiors, and never even an
+ occasional visit from a superior, had in four years lowered him into a bed
+ of ease and self-satisfaction. He was cut off from the world, and yet of
+ it. Each month there came, via Jamaica, the three weeks’ old copy of The
+ Weekly Times; he subscribed to Mudie’s Colonial Library; and from the
+ States he had imported an American lawn-mower, the mechanism of which no
+ one as yet understood. Within his own borders he had created a healthy,
+ orderly seaport out of what had been a sink of fever and a refuge for all
+ the ne’er-do-wells and fugitive revolutionists of Central America.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He knew, as he sat each evening on his veranda, looking across the bay,
+ that in the world beyond the pink and gold sunset men were still panting,
+ struggling, and starving; crises were rising and passing; strikes and
+ panics, wars and the rumors of wars, swept from continent to continent; a
+ plague crept through India; a filibuster with five hundred men at his back
+ crossed an imaginary line and stirred the world from Cape Town to London;
+ Emperors were crowned; the good Queen celebrated the longest reign; and a
+ captain of artillery imprisoned in a swampy island in the South Atlantic
+ caused two hemispheres to clamor for his rescue, and lit a race war that
+ stretched from Algiers to the boulevards.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And yet, at the Windless Isles, all these happenings seemed to Sir Charles
+ like the morning’s memory of a dream. For these things never crossed the
+ ring of the coral reefs; he saw them only as pictures in an illustrated
+ paper a month old. And he was pleased to find that this was so. He was
+ sufficient to himself, with his own responsibilities and social duties and
+ public works.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was a man in authority, who said to others, “Come!” and “Go!” Under him
+ were commissioners, and under the commissioners district inspectors and
+ boards of education and of highways. For the better health of the colony
+ he had planted trees that sucked the malaria from the air; for its better
+ morals he had substituted as a Sunday amusement cricket-matches for
+ cock-fights; and to keep it at peace he had created a local constabulary
+ of native negroes, and had dressed them in the cast-off uniforms of London
+ policemen. His handiwork was everywhere, and his interest was all sunk in
+ his handiwork. The days passed gorgeous with sunshine, the nights breathed
+ with beauty. It was an existence of leisurely occupation, and one that
+ promised no change, and he was content.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As it was Thursday, the Council met that morning, and some questions of
+ moment to the colony were to be brought up for consideration. The question
+ of the dog-tax was one which perplexed Sir Charles most particularly. The
+ two Councillors elected by the people and the three appointed by the crown
+ had disagreed as to this tax. Of the five hundred British subjects at the
+ seaport, all but ten were owners of dogs, and it had occurred to Sassoon,
+ the chemist, that a tax of half-a-crown a year on each of these dogs would
+ meet the expense of extending the oyster-shell road to the new
+ cricket-grounds. To this Snellgrove, who held the contract for the
+ narrow-gauge railroad, agreed; but the three crown Councillors opposed the
+ tax vigorously, on the ground that as scavengers alone the dogs were a
+ boon to the colony and should be encouraged. The fact that each of these
+ gentlemen owned not only one, but several dogs of high pedigree made their
+ position one of great delicacy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was no way by which the Governor could test the popular will in the
+ matter, except through his secretary, Mr. Clarges, who, at the
+ cricket-match between the local eleven and the officers and crew of H. M.
+ S. Partridge, had been informed by the other owners of several
+ fox-terriers that, in their opinion, the tax was a piece of “condemned
+ tommy-rot.” From this the Governor judged that it would not prove a
+ popular measure. As he paced the veranda, drawing deliberately on his
+ cigar, and considering to which party he should give the weight of his
+ final support, his thoughts were disturbed by the approach of a stranger,
+ who advanced along the gravel walk, guarded on either side by one of the
+ local constabulary. The stranger was young and of poor appearance. His
+ bare feet were bound in a pair of the rope sandals worn by the natives,
+ his clothing was of torn and soiled drill, and he fanned his face
+ nonchalantly with a sombrero of battered and shapeless felt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Charles halted in his walk, and holding his cigar behind his back,
+ addressed himself to the sergeant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “A vagrant?” he asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The words seemed to bear some amusing significance to the stranger, for
+ his face lit instantly with a sweet and charming smile, and while he
+ turned to hear the sergeant’s reply, he regarded him with a kindly and
+ affectionate interest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Yes, your Excellency.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Governor turned to the prisoner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Do you know the law of this colony regarding vagrants?”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “I do not,” the young man answered. His tone was politely curious, and
+ suggested that he would like to be further informed as to the local
+ peculiarities of a foreign country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “After two weeks’ residence,” the Governor recited, impressively, “all
+ able-bodied persons who will not work are put to work or deported. Have
+ you made any effort to find work?”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again the young man smiled charmingly. He shook his head and laughed. “Oh
+ dear no,” he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The laugh struck the Governor as impertinent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Then you must leave by the next mail-steamer, if you have any money to
+ pay your passage, or, if you have no money, you must go to work on the
+ roads. Have you any money?”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “If I had, I wouldn’t—be a vagrant,” the young man answered. His
+ voice was low and singularly sweet. It seemed to suit the indolence of his
+ attitude and the lazy, inconsequent smile. “I called on our consular agent
+ here,” he continued, leisurely, “to write a letter home for money, but he
+ was disgracefully drunk, so I used his official note-paper to write to the
+ State Department about him, instead.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Governor’s deepest interest was aroused. The American consular agent
+ was one of the severest trials he was forced to endure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “You are not a British subject, then? Ah, I see—and—er—your
+ representative was unable to assist you?”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “He was drunk,” the young man repeated, placidly. “He has been drunk ever
+ since I have been here, particularly in the mornings.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He halted, as though the subject had lost interest for him, and gazed
+ pleasantly at the sunny bay and up at the moving palms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Then,” said the Governor, as though he had not been interrupted, “as you
+ have no means of support, you will help support the colony until you can
+ earn money to leave it. That will do, sergeant.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young man placed his hat upon his head and turned to move away, but at
+ the first step he swayed suddenly and caught at the negro’s shoulder,
+ clasping his other hand across his eyes. The sergeant held him by the
+ waist, and looked up at the Governor with some embarrassment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “The young gentleman has not been well, Sir Charles,” he said,
+ apologetically.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The stranger straightened himself up and smiled vaguely. “I’m all right,”
+ he murmured. “Sun’s too hot.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Sit down,” said the Governor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He observed the stranger more closely. He noticed now that beneath the tan
+ his face was delicate and finely cut, and that his yellow hair clung
+ closely to a well-formed head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “He seems faint. Has he had anything to eat?” asked the Governor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sergeant grinned guiltily. “Yes, Sir Charles; we’ve been feeding him
+ at the barracks. It’s fever, sir.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Charles was not unacquainted with fallen gentlemen, “beach-combers,”
+ “remittance men,” and vagrants who had known better days, and there had
+ been something winning in this vagrant’s smile, and, moreover, he had
+ reported that thorn in his flesh, the consular agent, to the proper
+ authorities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He conceived an interest in a young man who, though with naked feet, did
+ not hesitate to correspond with his Minister of Foreign Affairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “How long have you been ill?” he asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young man looked up from where he had sunk on the steps, and roused
+ himself with a shrug. “It doesn’t matter,” he said. “I’ve had a touch of
+ Chagres ever since I was on the Isthmus. I was at work there on the
+ railroad.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Did you come here from Colon?”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “No; I worked up the Pacific side. I was clerking with Rossner Brothers at
+ Amapala for a while, because I speak a little German, and then I footed it
+ over to Puerto Cortez and got a job with the lottery people. They gave me
+ twenty dollars a month gold for rolling the tickets, and I put it all in
+ the drawing, and won as much as ten.” He laughed, and sitting erect, drew
+ from his pocket a roll of thin green papers. “These are for the next
+ drawing,” he said. “Have some?” he added. He held them towards the negro
+ sergeant, who, under the eye of the Governor, resisted, and then spread
+ the tickets on his knee like a hand at cards. “I stand to win a lot with
+ these,” he said, with a cheerful sigh. “You see, until the list’s
+ published I’m prospectively worth twenty thousand dollars. And,” he added,
+ “I break stones in the sun.” He rose unsteadily, and saluted the Governor
+ with a nod. “Good-morning, sir,” he said, “and thank you.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Wait,” Sir Charles commanded. A new form of punishment had suggested
+ itself, in which justice was tempered with mercy. “Can you work one of
+ your American lawn-mowers?” he asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young man laughed delightedly. “I never tried,” he said, “but I’ve
+ seen it done.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “If you’ve been ill, it would be murder to put you on the shell road.” The
+ Governor’s dignity relaxed into a smile. “I don’t desire international
+ complications,” he said. “Sergeant, take this—him—to the
+ kitchen, and tell Corporal Mallon to give him that American lawn-mowing
+ machine. Possibly he may understand its mechanism. Mallon only cuts holes
+ in the turf with it.” And he waved his hand in dismissal, and as the three
+ men moved away he buried himself again in the perplexities of the dog-tax.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ten minutes later the deliberations of the Council were disturbed by a
+ loud and persistent rattle, like the whir of a Maxim gun, which proved, on
+ investigation, to arise from the American lawn-mower. The vagrant was
+ propelling it triumphantly across the lawn, and gazing down at it with the
+ same fond pride with which a nursemaid leans over the perambulator to
+ observe her lusty and gurgling charge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Councillors had departed, Sir Charles was thinking of breakfast, the
+ Maxim-like lawn-mower still irritated the silent hush of midday, when from
+ the waters of the inner harbor there came suddenly the sharp report of a
+ saluting gun and the rush of falling anchor-chains. There was still a week
+ to pass before the mail-steamer should arrive, and H. M. S. Partridge had
+ departed for Nassau. Besides these ships, no other vessel had skirted the
+ buoys of the bay in eight long smiling months. Mr. Clarges, the secretary,
+ with an effort to appear calm, and the orderly, suffocated with the news,
+ entered through separate doors at the same instant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The secretary filed his report first. “A yacht’s just anchored in the bay,
+ Sir Charles,” he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The orderly’s face fell. He looked aggrieved. “An American yacht,” he
+ corrected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “And much larger than the Partridge,” continued the secretary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The orderly took a hasty glance back over his shoulder. “She has her
+ launch lowered already, sir,” he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Outside the whir of the lawn-mower continued undisturbed. Sir Charles
+ reached for his marine-glass, and the three men hurried to the veranda.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “It looks like a man-of-war,” said Sir Charles. “No,” he added, adjusting
+ the binocular; “she’s a yacht. She flies the New York Yacht Club pennant—now
+ she’s showing the owner’s absent pennant. He must have left in the launch.
+ He’s coming ashore now.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “He seems in a bit of a hurry,” growled Mr. Clarges.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Those Americans always—” murmured Sir Charles from behind the
+ binocular. He did not quite know that he enjoyed this sudden onslaught
+ upon the privacy of his harbor and port.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was in itself annoying, and he was further annoyed to find that it
+ could in the least degree disturb his poise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The launch was growing instantly larger, like an express train approaching
+ a station at full speed; her flags flew out as flat as pieces of painted
+ tin; her bits of brass-work flashed like fire. Already the ends of the
+ wharves were white with groups of natives.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “You might think he was going to ram the town,” suggested the secretary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Oh, I say,” he exclaimed, in remonstrance, “he’s making in for your
+ private wharf.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Governor was rearranging the focus of the glass with nervous fingers.
+ “I believe,” he said, “no—yes—upon my word, there are—there
+ are ladies in that launch!”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Ladies, sir!” The secretary threw a hasty glance at the binocular, but it
+ was in immediate use.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The clatter of the lawn-mower ceased suddenly, and the relief of its
+ silence caused the Governor to lower his eyes. He saw the lawn-mower lying
+ prostrate on the grass. The vagrant had vanished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a sharp tinkle of bells, and the launch slipped up to the wharf
+ and halted as softly as a bicycle. A man in a yachting-suit jumped from
+ her, and making some laughing speech to the two women in the stern, walked
+ briskly across the lawn, taking a letter from his pocket as he came. Sir
+ Charles awaited him gravely; the occupants of the launch had seen him, and
+ it was too late to retreat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Sir Charles Greville, I believe,” said the yachtsman. He bowed, and ran
+ lightly up the steps. “I am Mr. Robert Collier, from New York,” he said.
+ “I have a letter to you from your ambassador at Washington. If you’ll
+ pardon me, I’ll present it in person. I had meant to leave it, but seeing
+ you—” He paused, and gave the letter in his hand to Sir Charles, who
+ waved him towards his library.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Charles scowled at the letter through his monocle, and then shook
+ hands with his visitor. “I am very glad to see you, Mr. Collier,” he said.
+ “He says here you are preparing a book on our colonies in the West
+ Indies.” He tapped the letter with his monocle. “I am sure I shall be most
+ happy to assist you with any information in my power.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Well, I am writing a book—yes,” Mr. Collier observed, doubtfully,
+ “but it’s a logbook. This trip I am on pleasure bent, and I also wish to
+ consult with you on a personal matter. However, that can wait.” He glanced
+ out of the windows to where the launch lay in the sun. “My wife came
+ ashore with me, Sir Charles,” he said, “so that in case there was a Lady
+ Greville, Mrs. Collier could call on her, and we could ask if you would
+ waive etiquette and do us the honor to dine with us to-night on the yacht—that
+ is, if you are not engaged.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Charles smiled. “There is no Lady Greville,” he said, “and I
+ personally do not think I am engaged elsewhere.” He paused in thought, as
+ though to make quite sure he was not. “No,” he added, “I have no other
+ engagement. I will come with pleasure.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Charles rose and clapped his hands for the orderly. “Possibly the
+ ladies will come up to the veranda?” he asked. “I cannot allow them to
+ remain at the end of my wharf.” He turned, and gave directions to the
+ orderly to bring limes and bottles of soda and ice, and led the way across
+ the lawn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Collier and her friend had not explored the grounds of Government
+ House for over ten minutes before Sir Charles felt that many years ago he
+ had personally arranged their visit, that he had known them for even a
+ longer time, and that, now that they had finally arrived, they must never
+ depart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To them there was apparently nothing on his domain which did not thrill
+ with delightful interest. They were as eager as two children at a
+ pantomime, and as unconscious. As a rule, Sir Charles had found it rather
+ difficult to meet the women of his colony on a path which they were
+ capable of treading intelligently. In fairness to them, he had always
+ sought out some topic in which they could take an equal part—something
+ connected with the conduct of children, or the better ventilation of the
+ new school-house and chapel. But these new-comers did not require him to
+ select topics of conversation; they did not even wait for him to finish
+ those which he himself introduced. They flitted from one end of the garden
+ to the other with the eagerness of two midshipmen on shore leave, and they
+ found something to enjoy in what seemed to the Governor the most
+ commonplace of things. The Zouave uniform of the sentry, the old Spanish
+ cannon converted into peaceful gate-posts, the aviary with its screaming
+ paroquets, the botanical station, and even the ice-machine were all
+ objects of delight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the other hand, the interior of the famous palace, which had been sent
+ out complete from London, and which was wont to fill the wives of the
+ colonials with awe or to reduce them to whispers, for some reason failed
+ of its effect. But they said they “loved” the large gold V. R.’s on the
+ back of the Councillors’ chairs, and they exclaimed aloud over the red
+ leather despatch-boxes and the great seal of the colony, and the
+ mysterious envelopes marked “On her Majesty’s service.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Isn’t it too exciting, Florence?” demanded Mrs. Collier. “This is the
+ table where Sir Charles sits and writes letters ‘on her Majesty’s
+ service,’ and presses these buttons, and war-ships spring up in perfect
+ shoals. Oh, Robert,” she sighed, “I do wish you had been a Governor!”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young lady called Florence stood looking down into the great arm-chair
+ in front of the Governor’s table.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “May I?” she asked. She slid fearlessly in between the oak arms of the
+ chair and smiled about her. Afterwards Sir Charles remembered her as she
+ appeared at that moment with the red leather of the chair behind her, with
+ her gloved hands resting on the carved oak, and her head on one side,
+ smiling up at him. She gazed with large eyes at the blue linen envelopes,
+ the stiff documents in red tape, the tray of black sand, and the
+ goose-quill pens.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “I am now the Countess Zika,” she announced; “no, I am Diana of the
+ Crossways, and I mean to discover a state secret and sell it to the Daily
+ Telegraph. Sir Charles,” she demanded, “if I press this electric button is
+ war declared anywhere, or what happens?”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “That second button,” said Sir Charles, after deliberate scrutiny, “is the
+ one which communicates with the pantry.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Governor would not consider their returning to the yacht for luncheon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “You might decide to steam away as suddenly as you came,” he said,
+ gallantly, “and I cannot take that chance. This is Bachelor’s Hall, so you
+ must pardon my people if things do not go very smoothly.” He himself led
+ them to the great guest-chamber, where there had not been a guest for many
+ years, and he noticed, as though for the first time, that the halls
+ through which they passed were bare, and that the floor was littered with
+ unpacked boxes and gun-cases. He also observed for the first time that
+ maps of the colony, with the coffee-plantations and mahogany belt marked
+ in different inks, were not perhaps so decorative as pictures and mirrors
+ and family portraits. And he could have wished that the native servants
+ had not stared so admiringly at the guests, nor directed each other in
+ such aggressive whispers. On those other occasions, when the wives of the
+ Councillors came to the semi-annual dinners, the native servants had
+ seemed adequate to all that was required of them. He recollected with a
+ flush that in the town these semi-annual dinners were described as
+ banquets. He wondered if to these visitors from the outside world it was
+ all equally provincial.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But their enjoyment was apparently unfeigned and generous. It was evident
+ that they had known each other for many years, yet they received every
+ remark that any of them made as though it had been pronounced by a new and
+ interesting acquaintance. Sir Charles found it rather difficult to keep up
+ with the talk across the table, they changed the subject so rapidly, and
+ they half spoke of so many things without waiting to explain. He could not
+ at once grasp the fact that people who had no other position in the world
+ save that of observers were speaking so authoritatively of public men and
+ public measures. He found, to his delight, that for the first time in
+ several years he was not presiding at his own table, and that his guests
+ seemed to feel no awe of him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “What’s the use of a yacht nowadays?” Collier was saying—“what’s the
+ use of a yacht, when you can go to sleep in a wagon-lit at the Gare du
+ Nord, and wake up at Vladivostok? And look at the time it saves; eleven
+ days to Gib, six to Port Said, and fifteen to Colombo—there you are,
+ only half-way around, and you’re already sixteen days behind the man in
+ the wagon-lit.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “But nobody wants to go to Vladivostok,” said Miss Cameron, “or anywhere
+ else in a wagon-lit. But with a yacht you can explore out-of-the-way
+ places, and you meet new and interesting people. We wouldn’t have met Sir
+ Charles if we had waited for a wagon-lit.” She bowed her head to the
+ Governor, and he smiled with gratitude. He had lost Mr. Collier somewhere
+ in the Indian Ocean, and he was glad she had brought them back to the
+ Windless Isles once more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “And again I repeat that the answer to that is, ‘Why not? said the March
+ Hare,’” remarked Mr. Collier, determinedly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The answer, as an answer, did not strike Sir Charles as a very good one.
+ But the ladies seemed to comprehend, for Miss Cameron said: “Did I tell
+ you about meeting him at Oxford just a few months before his death—at
+ a children’s tea-party? He was so sweet and understanding with them! Two
+ women tried to lionize him, and he ran away and played with the children.
+ I was more glad to meet him than any one I can think of. Not as a
+ personage, you know, but because I felt grateful to him.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Yes, that way, distinctly,” said Mrs. Collier. “I should have felt that
+ way towards Mrs. Ewing more than any one else.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “I know, ‘Jackanapes,’” remarked Collier, shortly; “a brutal assault upon
+ the feelings, I say.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Some one else said it before you, Robert,” Mrs. Collier commented,
+ calmly. “Perhaps Sir Charles met him at Apia.” They all turned and looked
+ at him. He wished he could say he had met him at Apia. He did not quite
+ see how they had made their way from a children’s tea party at Oxford to
+ the South Pacific islands, but he was anxious to join in somewhere with a
+ clever observation. But they never seemed to settle in one place
+ sufficiently long for him to recollect what he knew of it. He hoped they
+ would get around to the west coast of Africa in time. He had been Governor
+ of Sierra Leone for five years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His success that night at dinner on the yacht was far better. The others
+ seemed a little tired after the hours of sight-seeing to which he had
+ treated them, and they were content to listen. In the absence of Mr.
+ Clarges, who knew them word by word, he felt free to tell his three
+ stories of life at Sierra Leone. He took his time in the telling, and
+ could congratulate himself that his efforts had never been more keenly
+ appreciated. He felt that he was holding his own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The night was still and warm, and while the men lingered below at the
+ table, the two women mounted to the deck and watched the lights of the
+ town as they vanished one by one and left the moon in unchallenged
+ possession of the harbor. For a long time Miss Cameron stood silent,
+ looking out across the bay at the shore and the hills beyond. A fish
+ splashed near them, and the sound of oars rose from the mist that floated
+ above the water, until they were muffled in the distance. The palms along
+ the shore glistened like silver, and overhead the Southern Cross shone
+ white against a sky of purple. The silence deepened and continued for so
+ long a time that Mrs. Collier felt its significance, and waited for the
+ girl to end it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Miss Cameron raised her eyes to the stars and frowned. “I am not surprised
+ that he is content to stay here,” she said. “Are you? It is so beautiful,
+ so wonderfully beautiful.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a moment Mrs. Collier made no answer. “Two years is a long time,
+ Florence,” she said; “and he is all I have; he is not only my only
+ brother, he is the only living soul who is related to me. That makes it
+ harder.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The girl seemed to find some implied reproach in the speech, for she
+ turned and looked at her friend closely. “Do you feel it is my fault,
+ Alice?” she asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The older woman shook her head. “How could it be your fault?” she
+ answered. “If you couldn’t love him enough to marry him, you couldn’t,
+ that’s all. But that is no reason why he should have hidden himself from
+ all of us. Even if he could not stand being near you, caring as he did, he
+ need not have treated me so. We have done all we can do, and Robert has
+ been more than fine about it. He and his agents have written to every
+ consul and business house in Central America, and I don’t believe there is
+ a city that he hasn’t visited. He has sent him money and letters to every
+ bank and to every post-office—”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The girl raised her head quickly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “—but he never calls for either,” Mrs. Collier continued, “for I
+ know that if he had read my letters he would have come home.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The girl lifted her head as though she were about to speak, and then
+ turned and walked slowly away. After a few moments she returned, and
+ stood, with her hands resting on the rail, looking down into the water. “I
+ wrote him two letters,” she said. In the silence of the night her voice
+ was unusually clear and distinct. “I—you make me wonder—if
+ they ever reached him.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Collier, with her eyes fixed upon the girl, rose slowly from her
+ chair and came towards her. She reached out her hand and touched Miss
+ Cameron on the arm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Florence,” she said, in a whisper, “have you—”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The girl raised her head slowly, and lowered it again. “Yes,” she
+ answered; “I told him to come back—to come back to me. Alice,” she
+ cried, “I—I begged him to come back!” She tossed her hands apart and
+ again walked rapidly away, leaving the older woman standing motionless.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A moment later, when Sir Charles and Mr. Collier stepped out upon the
+ deck, they discovered the two women standing close together, two white,
+ ghostly figures in the moonlight, and as they advanced towards them they
+ saw Mrs. Collier take the girl for an instant in her arms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Charles was asking Miss Cameron how long she thought an immigrant
+ should be made to work for his freehold allotment, when Mr. Collier and
+ his wife rose at the same moment and departed on separate errands. They
+ met most mysteriously in the shadow of the wheel-house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “What is it? Is anything wrong with Florence?” Collier asked, anxiously.
+ “Not homesick, is she?”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Collier put her hands on her husband’s shoulders and shook her head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Wrong? No, thank Heaven! it’s as right as right can be!” she cried.
+ “She’s written to him to come back, but he’s never answered, and so—and
+ now it’s all right.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Collier gazed blankly at his wife’s upturned face. “Well, I don’t see
+ that,” he remonstrated. “What’s the use of her being in love with him now
+ when he can’t be found? What? Why didn’t she love him two years ago when
+ he was where you could get at him—at her house, for instance. He was
+ there most of his time. She would have saved a lot of trouble. However,”
+ he added, energetically, “this makes it absolutely necessary to find that
+ young man and bring him to his senses. We’ll search this place for the
+ next few days, and then we’ll try the mainland again. I think I’ll offer a
+ reward for him, and have it printed in Spanish, and paste it up in all the
+ plazas. We might add a line in English, ‘She has changed her mind.’ That
+ would bring him home, wouldn’t it?”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Don’t be unfeeling, Robert,” said Mrs. Collier.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her husband raised his eyes appealingly, and addressed himself to the
+ moon. “I ask you now,” he complained, “is that fair to a man who has spent
+ six months on muleback trying to round up a prodigal brother-in-law?”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That same evening, after the ladies had gone below, Mr. Collier asked Sir
+ Charles to assist him in his search for his wife’s brother, and Sir
+ Charles heartily promised his most active co-operation. There were several
+ Americans at work in the interior, he said, as overseers on the
+ coffee-plantations. It was possible that the runaway might be among them.
+ It was only that morning, Sir Charles remembered, that an American had
+ been at work “repairing his lawn-mower,” as he considerately expressed it.
+ He would send for him on the morrow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But on the morrow the slave of the lawn-mower was reported on the list of
+ prisoners as “missing,” and Corporal Mallon was grieved, but refused to
+ consider himself responsible. Sir Charles himself had allowed the vagrant
+ unusual freedom, and the vagrant had taken advantage of it, and probably
+ escaped to the hills, or up the river to the logwood camp.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Telegraph a description of him to Inspector Garrett,” Sir Charles
+ directed, “and to the heads of all up stations. And when he returns, bring
+ him to me.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So great was his zeal that Sir Charles further offered to join Mr. Collier
+ in his search among the outlying plantations; but Mr. Collier preferred to
+ work alone. He accordingly set out at once, armed with letters to the
+ different district inspectors, and in his absence delegated to Sir Charles
+ the pleasant duty of caring for the wants of Miss Cameron and his wife.
+ Sir Charles regarded the latter as deserving of all sympathy, for Mr.
+ Collier, in his efforts to conceal the fact from the Governor that
+ Florence Cameron was responsible, or in any way concerned, in the
+ disappearance of the missing man, had been too mysterious. Sir Charles was
+ convinced that the fugitive had swindled his brother-in-law and stolen his
+ sister’s jewels.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The days which followed were to the Governor days and nights of strange
+ discoveries. He recognized that the missionaries from the great outside
+ world had invaded his shores and disturbed his gods and temples. Their
+ religion of progress and activity filled him with doubt and unrest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “In this century,” Mr. Collier had declared, “nothing can stand still.
+ It’s the same with a corporation, or a country, or a man. We must either
+ march ahead or fall out. We can’t mark time. What?”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Exactly—certainly not,” Sir Charles had answered. But in his heart
+ he knew that he himself had been marking time under these soft tropical
+ skies while the world was pushing forward. The thought had not disturbed
+ him before. Now he felt guilty. He conceived a sudden intolerance, if not
+ contempt, for the little village of whitewashed houses, for the rafts of
+ mahogany and of logwood that bumped against the pier-heads, for the sacks
+ of coffee piled high like barricades under the corrugated zinc sheds along
+ the wharf. Each season it had been his pride to note the increase in these
+ exports. The development of the resources of his colony had been a work in
+ which he had felt that the Colonial Secretary took an immediate interest.
+ He had believed that he was one of the important wheels of the machinery
+ which moved the British Empire: and now, in a day, he was undeceived. It
+ was forced upon him that to the eyes of the outside world he was only a
+ greengrocer operating on a large scale; he provided the British public
+ with coffee for its breakfast, with drugs for its stomach, and with
+ strange woods for its dining-room furniture and walking-sticks. He
+ combated this ignominious characterization of his position indignantly.
+ The new arrivals certainly gave him no hint that they considered him so
+ lightly. This thought greatly comforted him, for he felt that in some way
+ he was summoning to his aid all of his assets and resources to meet an
+ expert and final valuation. As he ranged them before him he was disturbed
+ and happy to find that the value he placed upon them was the value they
+ would have in the eyes of a young girl—not a girl of the shy,
+ mother-obeying, man-worshipping English type, but a girl such as Miss
+ Cameron seemed to be, a girl who could understand what you were trying to
+ say before you said it, who could take an interest in rates of exchange
+ and preside at a dinner table, who was charmingly feminine and clever, and
+ who was respectful of herself and of others. In fact, he decided, with a
+ flush, that Miss Cameron herself was the young girl he had in his mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Why not?” he asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The question came to him in his room, the sixth night of their visit, and
+ he strode over to the long pier-glass and stood studying himself
+ critically for the first time in years. He was still a fine-looking,
+ well-kept man. His hair was thin, but that fact did not show; and his
+ waist was lost, but riding and tennis would set that right. He had means
+ outside of his official salary, and there was the title, such as it was.
+ Lady Greville the wife of the birthday knight sounded as well as Lady
+ Greville the marchioness. And Americans cared for these things. He doubted
+ whether this particular American would do so, but he was adding up all he
+ had to offer, and that was one of the assets. He was sure she would not be
+ content to remain mistress of the Windless Isles. Nor, indeed, did he
+ longer care to be master there, now that he had inhaled this quick,
+ stirring breath from the outer world. He would resign, and return and mix
+ with the world again. He would enter Parliament; a man so well acquainted
+ as himself with the Gold Coast of Africa and with the trade of the West
+ Indies must always be of value in the Lower House. This value would be
+ recognized, no doubt, and he would become at first an Under-Secretary for
+ the Colonies, and then, in time, Colonial Secretary and a cabinet
+ minister. She would like that, he thought. And after that place had been
+ reached, all things were possible. For years he had not dreamed such
+ dreams—not since he had been a clerk in the Foreign Office. They
+ seemed just as possible now as they had seemed real then, and just as
+ near. He felt it was all absolutely in his own hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He descended to the dining-room with the air of a man who already felt the
+ cares of high responsibility upon his shoulders. His head was erect and
+ his chest thrown forward. He was ten years younger; his manner was alert,
+ assured, and gracious. As he passed through the halls he was impatient of
+ the familiar settings of Government House; they seemed to him like the
+ furnishings of a hotel where he had paid his bill, and where his luggage
+ was lying strapped for departure in the hallway.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In his library he saw on his table a number of papers lying open waiting
+ for his signature, the dog-tax among the others. He smiled to remember how
+ important it had seemed to him in the past—in that past of indolence
+ and easy content. Now he was on fire to put this rekindled ambition to
+ work, to tell the woman who had lighted it that it was all from her and
+ for her, that without her he had existed, that now he had begun to live.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They had never found him so delighful{sic} as he appeared that night. He
+ was like a man on the eve of a holiday. He made a jest of his past
+ efforts; he made them see, as he now saw it for the first time, that side
+ of the life of the Windless Isles which was narrow and petty, even
+ ridiculous. He talked of big men in a big way; he criticised, and
+ expounded, and advanced his own theories of government and the proper
+ control of an empire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Collier, who had returned from his unsuccessful search of the plantations,
+ shook his head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “It’s a pity you are not in London now,” he said, sincerely. “They need
+ some one there who has been on the spot. They can’t direct the colonies
+ from what they know of them in Whitehall.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Charles fingered the dinner cloth nervously, and when he spoke, fixed
+ his eyes anxiously upon Miss Cameron.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Do you know,” he said, “I have been thinking of doing that very thing, of
+ resigning my post here and going back, entering Parliament, and all the
+ rest of it.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His declaration met with a unanimous chorus of delight. Miss Cameron
+ nodded her head with eager approval.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Yes, if I were a man, that is where I should wish to be,” she said, “at
+ the heart of it. Why, whatever you say in the House of Commons is heard
+ all over the world the next morning.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Charles felt the blood tingle in his pulses. He had not been so
+ stirred in years. Her words ran to his head like wine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Collier raised his glass.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Here’s to our next meeting,” he said, “on the terrace of the House of
+ Commons.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Miss Cameron interrupted. “No; to the Colonial Secretary,” she
+ amended.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Oh yes,” they assented, rising, and so drank his health, smiling down
+ upon him with kind, friendly glances and good-will.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “To the Colonial Secretary,” they said. Sir Charles clasped the arms of
+ his chair tightly with his hands; his eyes were half closed, and his lips
+ pressed into a grim, confident smile. He felt that a single word from her
+ would make all that they suggested possible. If she cared for such things,
+ they were hers; he had them to give; they were ready lying at her feet. He
+ knew that the power had always been with him, lying dormant in his heart
+ and brain. It had only waited for the touch of the Princess to wake it
+ into life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The American visitors were to sail for the mainland the next day, but he
+ had come to know them so well in the brief period of their visit that he
+ felt he dared speak to her that same night. At least he could give her
+ some word that would keep him in her mind until they met again in London,
+ or until she had considered her answer. He could not expect her to answer
+ at once. She could take much time. What else had he to do now but to wait
+ for her answer? It was now all that made life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Collier and his wife had left the veranda and had crossed the lawn towards
+ the water’s edge. The moonlight fell full upon them with all the splendor
+ of the tropics, and lit the night with a brilliant, dazzling radiance.
+ From where Miss Cameron sat on the veranda in the shadow, Sir Charles
+ could see only the white outline of her figure and the indolent movement
+ of her fan. Collier had left his wife and was returning slowly towards the
+ step. Sir Charles felt that if he meant to speak he must speak now, and
+ quickly. He rose and placed himself beside her in the shadow, and the girl
+ turned her head inquiringly and looked up at him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But on the instant the hush of the night was broken by a sharp challenge,
+ and the sound of men’s voices raised in anger; there was the noise of a
+ struggle on the gravel, and from the corner of the house the two sentries
+ came running, dragging between them a slight figure that fought and
+ wrestled to be free.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Charles exclaimed with indignant impatience, and turning, strode
+ quickly to the head of the steps.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “What does this mean?” he demanded. “What are you doing with that man? Why
+ did you bring him here?”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the soldiers straightened to attention, their prisoner ceased to
+ struggle, and stood with his head bent on his chest. His sombrero was
+ pulled down low across his forehead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “He was crawling through the bushes, Sir Charles,” the soldier panted,
+ “watching that gentleman, sir,”—he nodded over his shoulder towards
+ Collier. “I challenged, and he jumped to run, and we collared him. He
+ resisted, Sir Charles.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mind of the Governor was concerned with other matters than
+ trespassers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Well, take him to the barracks, then,” he said. “Report to me in the
+ morning. That will do.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The prisoner wheeled eagerly, without further show of resistance, and the
+ soldiers closed in on him on either side. But as the three men moved away
+ together, their faces, which had been in shadow, were now turned towards
+ Mr. Collier, who was advancing leisurely, and with silent footsteps,
+ across the grass. He met them face to face, and as he did so the prisoner
+ sprang back and threw out his arms in front of him, with the gesture of a
+ man who entreats silence. Mr. Collier halted as though struck to stone,
+ and the two men confronted each other without moving.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Good God!” Mr. Collier whispered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He turned stiffly and slowly, as though in a trance, and beckoned to his
+ wife, who had followed him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Alice!” he called. He stepped backwards towards her, and taking her hand
+ in one of his, drew her towards the prisoner. “Here he is!” he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They heard her cry “Henry!” with the fierceness of a call for help, and
+ saw her rush forward and stumble into the arms of the prisoner, and their
+ two heads were bent close together.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Collier ran up the steps and explained breathlessly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “And now,” he gasped, in conclusion, “what’s to be done? What’s he
+ arrested for? Is it bailable? What?”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Good heavens!” exclaimed Sir Charles, miserably. “It is my fault
+ entirely. I assure you I had no idea. How could I? But I should have
+ known, I should have guessed it.” He dismissed the sentries with a
+ gesture. “That will do,” he said. “Return to your posts.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Collier laughed with relief.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Then it is not serious?” he asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “He—he had no money, that was all,” exclaimed Sir Charles. “Serious?
+ Certainly not. Upon my word, I’m sorry—”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young man had released himself from his sister’s embrace, and was
+ coming towards them; and Sir Charles, eager to redeem himself, advanced
+ hurriedly to greet him. But the young man did not see him; he was looking
+ past him up the steps to where Miss Cameron stood in the shadow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Charles hesitated and drew back. The young man stopped at the foot of
+ the steps, and stood with his head raised, staring up at the white figure
+ of the girl, who came slowly forward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was forced upon Sir Charles that in spite of the fact that the young
+ man before them had but just then been rescued from arrest, that in spite
+ of his mean garments and ragged sandals, something about him—the
+ glamour that surrounds the prodigal, or possibly the moonlight—gave
+ him an air of great dignity and distinction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Miss Cameron descended the stairs, Sir Charles recognized for the first
+ time that the young man was remarkably handsome, and he resented it. It
+ hurt him, as did also the prodigal’s youth and his assured bearing. He
+ felt a sudden sinking fear, a weakening of all his vital forces, and he
+ drew in his breath slowly and deeply. But no one noticed him; they were
+ looking at the tall figure of the prodigal, standing with his hat at his
+ hip and his head thrown back, holding the girl with his eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Collier touched Sir Charles on the arm, and nodded his head towards the
+ library. “Come,” he whispered, “let us old people leave them together.
+ They’ve a good deal to say.” Sir Charles obeyed in silence, and crossing
+ the library to the great oak chair, seated himself and leaned wearily on
+ the table before him. He picked up one of the goose quills and began
+ separating it into little pieces. Mr. Collier was pacing up and down,
+ biting excitedly on the end of his cigar. “Well, this has certainly been a
+ great night,” he said. “And it is all due to you, Sir Charles—all
+ due to you. Yes, they have you to thank for it.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “They?” said Sir Charles. He knew that it had to come. He wanted the man
+ to strike quickly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “They? Yes—Florence Cameron and Henry,” Mr. Collier answered. “Henry
+ went away because she wouldn’t marry him. She didn’t care for him then,
+ but afterwards she cared. Now they’re reunited,—and so they’re
+ happy; and my wife is more than happy, and I won’t have to bother any
+ more; and it’s all right, and all through you.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “I am glad,” said Sir Charles. There was a long pause, which the men, each
+ deep in his own thoughts, did not notice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “You will be leaving now, I suppose?” Sir Charles asked. He was looking
+ down, examining the broken pen in his hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Collier stopped in his walk and considered. “Yes, I suppose they will
+ want to get back,” he said. “I shall be sorry myself. And you? What will
+ you do?”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Charles started slightly. He had not yet thought what he would do. His
+ eyes wandered over the neglected work, which had accumulated on the desk
+ before him. Only an hour before he had thought of it as petty and little,
+ as something unworthy of his energy. Since that time what change had taken
+ place in him?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For him everything had changed, he answered, but in him there had been no
+ change; and if this thing which the girl had brought into his life had
+ meant the best in life, it must always mean that. She had been an
+ inspiration; she must remain his spring of action. Was he a slave, he
+ asked himself, that he should rebel? Was he a boy, that he could turn his
+ love to aught but the best account? He must remember her not as the woman
+ who had crushed his spirit, but as she who had helped him, who had lifted
+ him up to something better and finer. He would make sacrifice in her name;
+ it would be in her name that he would rise to high places and accomplish
+ much good.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She would not know this, but he would know.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He rose and brushed the papers away from him with an impatient sweep of
+ the hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “I shall follow out the plan of which I spoke at dinner,” he answered. “I
+ shall resign here, and return home and enter Parliament.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Collier laughed admiringly. “I love the way you English take your
+ share of public life,” he said, “the way you spend yourselves for your
+ country, and give your brains, your lives, everything you have—all
+ for the empire.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Through the open window Sir Charles saw Miss Cameron half hidden by the
+ vines of the veranda. The moonlight falling about her transformed her into
+ a figure which was ideal, mysterious, and elusive, like a woman in a
+ dream. He shook his head wearily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “For the empire?” he asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0005" id="link2H_4_0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE LAST RIDE TOGETHER
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ A SKETCH CONTAINING THREE POINTS OF VIEW
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ What the Poet Laureate wrote.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ “There are girls in the Gold Reef City
+ There are mothers and children too!
+ And they cry ‘Hurry up for pity!’
+ So what can a brave man do?
+
+ “I suppose we were wrong, were mad men,
+ Still I think at the Judgment Day,
+ When God sifts the good from the bad men,
+ There’ll be something more to say.”
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ What more the Lord Chief Justice found to say.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “In this case we know the immediate consequence of your crime. It has been
+ the loss of human life, it has been the disturbance of public peace, it
+ has been the creation of a certain sense of distrust of public professions
+ and of public faith.... The sentence of this Court therefore is that, as
+ to you, Leander Starr Jameson, you be confined for a period of fifteen
+ months without hard labor; that you, Sir John Willoughby, have ten months’
+ imprisonment; and that you, etc., etc.”
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ London Times, July 29th.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What the Hon. “Reggie” Blake thought about it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “H. M. HOLLOWAY PRISON,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “July 28th.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “I am going to keep a diary while I am in prison, that is, if they will
+ let me. I never kept one before because I hadn’t the time; when I was home
+ on leave there was too much going on to bother about it, and when I was up
+ country I always came back after a day’s riding so tired that I was too
+ sleepy to write anything. And now that I have the time, I won’t have
+ anything to write about. I fancy that more things happened to me to-day
+ than are likely to happen again for the next eight months, so I will make
+ this day take up as much room in the diary as it can. I am writing this on
+ the back of the paper the Warder uses for his official reports, while he
+ is hunting up cells to put us in. We came down on him rather unexpectedly
+ and he is nervous.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Of course, I had prepared myself for this after a fashion, but now I see
+ that somehow I never really did think I would be in here, and all my
+ friends outside, and everything going on just the same as though I wasn’t
+ alive somewhere. It’s like telling yourself that your horse can’t possibly
+ pull off a race, so that you won’t mind so much if he doesn’t, but you
+ always feel just as bad when he comes in a loser. A man can’t fool himself
+ into thinking one way when he is hoping the other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “But I am glad it is over, and settled. It was a great bore not knowing
+ your luck and having the thing hanging over your head every morning when
+ you woke up. Indeed it was quite a relief when the counsel got all through
+ arguing over those proclamations, and the Chief Justice summed up, but I
+ nearly went to sleep when I found he was going all over it again to the
+ jury. I didn’t understand about those proclamations myself and I’ll lay a
+ fiver the jury didn’t either. The Colonel said he didn’t. I couldn’t keep
+ my mind on what Russell was explaining about, and I got to thinking how
+ much old Justice Hawkins looked like the counsel in ‘Alice in Wonderland’
+ when they tried the knave of spades for stealing the tarts. He had just
+ the same sort of a beak and the same sort of a wig, and I wondered why he
+ had his wig powdered and the others didn’t. Pollock’s wig had a hole in
+ the top; you could see it when he bent over to take notes. He was always
+ taking notes. I don’t believe he understood about those proclamations
+ either; he never seemed to listen, anyway.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “The Chief Justice certainly didn’t love us very much, that’s sure; and he
+ wasn’t going to let anybody else love us either. I felt quite the
+ Christian Martyr when Sir Edward was speaking in defence. He made it sound
+ as though we were all a lot of Adelphi heroes and ought to be promoted and
+ have medals, but when Lord Russell started in to read the Riot Act at us I
+ began to believe that hanging was too good for me. I’m sure I never knew I
+ was disturbing the peace of nations; it seems like such a large order for
+ a subaltern.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “But the worst was when they made us stand up before all those people to
+ be sentenced. I must say I felt shaky about the knees then, not because I
+ was afraid of what was coming, but because it was the first time I had
+ ever been pointed out before people, and made to feel ashamed. And having
+ those girls there, too, looking at one. That wasn’t just fair to us. It
+ made me feel about ten years old, and I remembered how the Head Master
+ used to call me to his desk and say, ‘Blake Senior, two pages of Horace
+ and keep in bounds for a week.’ And then I heard our names and the months,
+ and my name and ‘eight months’ imprisonment,’ and there was a bustle and
+ murmur and the tipstaves cried, ‘Order in the Court,’ and the Judges stood
+ up and shook out their big red skirts as though they were shaking off the
+ contamination of our presence and rustled away, and I sat down, wondering
+ how long eight months was, and wishing they’d given me as much as they
+ gave Jameson.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “They put us in a room together then, and our counsel said how sorry they
+ were, and shook hands, and went off to dinner and left us. I thought they
+ might have waited with us and been a little late for dinner just that
+ once; but no one waited except a lot of costers outside whom we did not
+ know. It was eight o’clock and still quite light when we came out, and
+ there was a line of four-wheelers and a hansom ready for us. I’d been
+ hoping they would take us out by the Strand entrance, just because I’d
+ like to have seen it again, but they marched us instead through the main
+ quadrangle—a beastly, gloomy courtyard that echoed, and out, into
+ Carey Street—such a dirty, gloomy street. The costers and clerks set
+ up a sort of a cheer when we came out, and one of them cried, ‘God bless
+ you, sir,’ to the doctor, but I was sorry they cheered. It seemed like
+ kicking against the umpire’s decision. The Colonel and I got into a hansom
+ together and we trotted off into Chancery Lane and turned into Holborn.
+ Most of the shops were closed, and the streets looked empty, but there was
+ a lighted clock-face over Mooney’s public-house, and the hands stood at a
+ quarter past eight. I didn’t know where Holloway was, and was hoping they
+ would have to take us through some decent streets to reach it; but we
+ didn’t see a part of the city that meant anything to me, or that I would
+ choose to travel through again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “Neither of us talked, and I imagined that the people in the streets knew
+ we were going to prison, and I kept my eyes on the enamel card on the back
+ of the apron. I suppose I read, ‘Two-wheeled hackney carriage: if hired
+ and discharged within the four-mile limit, 1s.’ at least a hundred times.
+ I got more sensible after a bit, and when we had turned into Gray’s Inn
+ Road I looked up and saw a tram in front of us with ‘Holloway Road and
+ King’s X,’ painted on the steps, and the Colonel saw it about the same
+ time I fancy, for we each looked at the other, and the Colonel raised his
+ eyebrows. It showed us that at least the cabman knew where we were going.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “‘They might have taken us for a turn through the West End first, I
+ think,’ the Colonel said. ‘I’d like to have had a look around, wouldn’t
+ you? This isn’t a cheerful neighborhood, is it?’
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “There were a lot of children playing in St. Andrew’s Gardens, and a crowd
+ of them ran out just as we passed, shrieking and laughing over nothing,
+ the way kiddies do, and that was about the only pleasant sight in the
+ ride. I had quite a turn when we came to the New Hospital just beyond, for
+ I thought it was Holloway, and it came over me what eight months in such a
+ place meant. I believe if I hadn’t pulled myself up sharp, I’d have jumped
+ out into the street and run away. It didn’t last more than a few seconds,
+ but I don’t want any more like them. I was afraid, afraid—there’s no
+ use pretending it was anything else. I was in a dumb, silly funk, and I
+ turned sick inside and shook, as I have seen a horse shake when he shies
+ at nothing and sweats and trembles down his sides.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “During those few seconds it seemed to be more than I could stand; I felt
+ sure that I couldn’t do it—that I’d go mad if they tried to force
+ me. The idea was so terrible—of not being master over your own legs
+ and arms, to have your flesh and blood and what brains God gave you buried
+ alive in stone walls as though they were in a safe with a time-lock on the
+ door set for eight months ahead. There’s nothing to be afraid of in a
+ stone wall really, but it’s the idea of the thing—of not being free
+ to move about, especially to a chap that has always lived in the open as I
+ have, and has had men under him. It was no wonder I was in a funk for a
+ minute. I’ll bet a fiver the others were, too, if they’ll only own up to
+ it. I don’t mean for long, but just when the idea first laid hold of them.
+ Anyway, it was a good lesson to me, and if I catch myself thinking of it
+ again I’ll whistle, or talk to myself out loud and think of something
+ cheerful. And I don’t mean to be one of those chaps who spends his time in
+ jail counting the stones in his cell, or training spiders, or measuring
+ how many of his steps make a mile, for madness lies that way. I mean to
+ sit tight and think of all the good times I’ve had, and go over them in my
+ mind very slowly, so as to make them last longer and remember who was
+ there and what we said, and the jokes and all that; I’ll go over
+ house-parties I have been on, and the times I’ve had in the Riviera, and
+ scouting parties Dr. Jim led up country when we were taking Matabele Land.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “They say that if you’re good here they give you things to read after a
+ month or two, and then I can read up all those instructive books that a
+ fellow never does read until he’s laid up in bed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “But that’s crowding ahead a bit; I must keep to what happened to-day. We
+ struck York Road at the back of the Great Western Terminus, and I half
+ hoped we might see some chap we knew coming or going away: I would like to
+ have waved my hand to him. It would have been fun to have seen his
+ surprise the next morning when he read in the paper that he had been
+ bowing to jail-birds, and then I would like to have cheated the tipstaves
+ out of just one more friendly good-by. I wanted to say good-by to
+ somebody, but I really couldn’t feel sorry to see the last of any one of
+ those we passed in the streets—they were such a dirty,
+ unhappy-looking lot, and the railroad wall ran on forever apparently, and
+ we might have been in a foreign country for all we knew of it. There were
+ just sooty gray brick tenements and gas-works on one side, and the
+ railroad cutting on the other, and semaphores and telegraph wires
+ overhead, and smoke and grime everywhere, it looked exactly like the sort
+ of street that should lead to a prison, and it seemed a pity to take a
+ smart hansom and a good cob into it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “It was just a bit different from our last ride together—when we
+ rode through the night from Krugers-Dorp with hundreds of horses’ hoofs
+ pounding on the soft veldt behind us, and the carbines clanking against
+ the stirrups as they swung on the sling belts. We were being hunted then,
+ harassed on either side, scurrying for our lives like the Derby Dog in a
+ race-track when every one hoots him and no man steps out to help—we
+ were sick for sleep, sick for food, lashed by the rain, and we knew that
+ we were beaten; but we were free still, and under open skies with the
+ derricks of the Rand rising like gallows on our left, and Johannesburg
+ only fifteen miles away.”
+ </p>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LION AND THE UNICORN ***</div>
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