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| author | Roger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org> | 2025-10-15 02:31:08 -0700 |
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| committer | Roger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org> | 2025-10-15 02:31:08 -0700 |
| commit | b9cd5d20a226fe81f487d00fb8b2aaa8b6abc9d1 (patch) | |
| tree | 79b6e7185171a6368eae6bccc1c3d983e3f7c3ab | |
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diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6833f05 --- /dev/null +++ b/.gitattributes @@ -0,0 +1,3 @@ +* text=auto +*.txt text +*.md text diff --git a/26599-8.txt b/26599-8.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..10cf3f5 --- /dev/null +++ b/26599-8.txt @@ -0,0 +1,10020 @@ +The Project Gutenberg eBook, A Black Adonis, by Linn Boyd Porter + + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere 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 www.gutenberg.org + + + + + +Title: A Black Adonis + + +Author: Linn Boyd Porter + + + +Release Date: September 12, 2008 [eBook #26599] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + + +***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A BLACK ADONIS*** + + +E-text prepared by Mark C. Orton, Linda McKeown, and the Project Gutenberg +Online Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net) + + + +Transcriber's note: + + Every effort has been made to replicate this text as faithfully + as possible; please see detailed list of printing issues at the + end of the text. + + + + + +A BLACK ADONIS. + +by + +ALBERT ROSS. + + + * * * * * + + THE + ALBATROSS NOVELS + + By ALBERT ROSS + + 23 Volumes + + May be had wherever books are sold at the price you paid for this volume + + Black Adonis, A + Garston Bigamy, The + Her Husband's Friend + His Foster Sister + His Private Character + In Stella's Shadow + Love at Seventy + Love Gone Astray + Moulding a Maiden + Naked Truth, The + New Sensation, A + Original Sinner, An + Out of Wedlock + Speaking of Ellen + Stranger Than Fiction + Sugar Princess, A + That Gay Deceiver + Their Marriage Bond + Thou Shalt Not + Thy Neighbor's Wife + Why I'm Single + Young Fawcett's Mabel + Young Miss Giddy + + G. W. DILLINGHAM CO. + Publishers :: :: New York + + * * * * * + + +A BLACK ADONIS. + +by + +ALBERT ROSS. + +Author of + "Out of Wedlock," "Speaking of Ellen," "Thou Shalt Not," + "Why I'm Single," "Love at Seventy," Etc., Etc. + + + "You see!" he answered, bitterly. "Because I am black I + cannot touch the hand of a woman that is white. And yet you + say the Almighty made of one blood all nations of the + earth!"--Page 212. + + + + + +New York: +Copyright, 1896, by G. W. Dillingham. +G. W. Dillingham Co., Publishers. +[All rights reserved.] + + + + + +CONTENTS. + + Chapter Page + + I. A Rejected Manuscript 9 + + II. "Was my story too bold?" 23 + + III. "Her feet were pink" 35 + + IV. With Titian Tresses 49 + + V. Studying Miss Millicent 65 + + VI. "How the women stare!" 79 + + VII. A Dinner at Midlands 93 + + VIII. Holding Her Hand 99 + + IX. "Daisy, my darling!" 110 + + X. "Oh, so many, many maids!" 121 + + XI. Archie Pays Attention 136 + + XII. Dining at Isaac's 143 + + XIII. A Question of Color 155 + + XIV. "Let us have a betrayal" 166 + + XV. The Green-Eyed Monster 177 + + XVI. "I've had such luck!" 190 + + XVII. A Burglar in the House 198 + + XVIII. Black and White 204 + + XIX. "Play out your farce" 215 + + XX. Like a Stuck Pig 226 + + XXI. "We want Millie to understand" 238 + + XXII. Where Was Daisy? 246 + + XXIII. An Awful Night 254 + + XXIV. "This ends it, then?" 263 + + XXV. An Undiscoverable Secret 273 + + XXVI. "I played, and I lost" 282 + + XXVII. Absolutely Blameless 292 + + XXVIII. Trapping a Wolf 301 + + XXIX. "The Greatest Novel" 309 + + + + +TO MY READERS. + + +I do not know how better to use the space that the printer always leaves +me in this part of the book than to redeem the promise I made at the end +of my last novel, and tell you in a few words what became of Blanche +Brixton Fantelli and her husband. + +But, do you really need to be told? + +Could they have done anything else than live in connubial felicity, +after the man had proved himself so noble and the woman had learned to +appreciate him at his true worth? + +Well, whether they could or not, they didn't. Blanche is the happiest of +wedded wives. She still holds to her theory that marriage is based on +wrong principles, and that the contract as ordinarily made is +frightfully immoral; but she says if all men were like "her Jules" there +would be no trouble. + +In this she proves herself essentially feminine. She is learning, albeit +a little late, that man was not made to live alone, and that the love a +mother feels for her child is not the only one that brings joy to a +woman's breast. + +Fantelli does not claim that Blanche is his property. He is her lover +still, even though he has gained the law's permission to be her master. +He recognizes that she has rights in herself that are inviolable. This +is why they live together so contentedly. She would not be his mate on +any other terms. + +If it is not the ideal existence, it is very near it. As near as a man +and woman who care for the world's opinion can live it in these days. + +And now, with heartfelt thanks for the continued favor of the reading +public, which I am conscious is far beyond my desert, I bid a temporary +farewell to American shores. By the time this book is on the shelves of +the dealers I shall be on European soil, there to remain, I trust, for +the better part of a year. Wherever I am, my thoughts will always turn +to you who have made these journeys possible, and there as here my pen +will continue devoted to your service. + + ALBERT ROSS. + + Cambridge, Mass., + _June 1, 1895._ + + + + +A BLACK ADONIS. + + + + +CHAPTER I. + +A REJECTED MANUSCRIPT. + + +"A letter for Mr. Roseleaf," he heard his landlady say to the +chambermaid. And he was quite prepared to hear the girl reply, in a tone +of surprise: + +"For Mr. Roseleaf! This is the first letter he has had since he came." + +The young man referred to stood just within his chamber door, waiting +with some anxiety for the letter to be brought to him. He was about +twenty years of age, of medium height, with rather dark complexion, +curling hair and expressive eyes, and with a natural delicacy of manner +that made him seem almost feminine at first view. + +He had the greatest possible interest in the letter that the postman had +just brought, but he was far too polite to disturb the landlady or her +servant, who were not yet through with it. + +"You can see that it is from a publishing house," commented Mrs. +Ranning, inspecting the envelope with care. "It is from Cutt & Slashem, +who bring out more novels than any other firm in the city. I told you he +was some kind of a writer. Perhaps they are going to publish a book for +him! If they do he will leave us for finer quarters. Novelists make a +mint of money, I have heard. We must do our best to keep him as long as +we can. Be very polite to him, Nellie. He appears to be an excellent +young man." + +Shirley Roseleaf's anxiety to get possession of his letter was not +lessened by this conversation. It seemed as if his entire future hung on +the contents of that envelope tarrying so long in Nellie's hands. The +great publishers, Cutt & Slashem, had had a manuscript of his in their +hands for nearly a fortnight. When they had definitely accepted it, his +path would be perfectly clear. If they rejected it--but he had not got +so far as that. + +The manuscript was a romance--a romance of love! Its author had spent a +great deal of time upon it. He had rewritten it with care, and finally +made a neat copy, of which he was very proud. Then he had thought a long +time over the question of a publishing firm. Cutt & Slashem stood at the +top of their profession, and they finally received the preference. With +the MSS. Roseleaf sent a pretty note, in which he included a delicate +compliment on their success. The MSS. and the note were arranged +tastefully in a neat white package and tied with pink twine. + +After all of those precautions it is no wonder that the novelist felt +surprise when days passed and no reply was sent to him. But never at any +time was he discouraged. Had they intended to reject the novel, he +reasoned, they could as easily have done so in three days as ten. + +He pictured the members of the firm hugging themselves over their good +fortune, passing the manuscript from one to the other, all eager for a +taste of such a marvelous work. He did not think it egotism to believe +they did not get stories like that every day. + +His thoughts flew rapidly as Nellie slowly climbed the stairs. Now he +would be famous, he would be courted, he would be envied! He would also +be very, very rich, though that was not of so much account. + +As Nellie handed him the letter he responded to her pleasant smile with +one of his own, and even pressed a twenty-five cent piece into her hand. +Then he closed his door behind him, bolting it in his eagerness to be +alone. The morning was foggy, and he sank into a chair by the window, +the only part of the room where he could see to read distinctly. + +There was an attraction about the envelope. It was light buff in color, +bearing the address of Cutt & Slashem in large letter on one side of the +front face, besides the names of several of the most famous authors +whose publishers the firm had the happiness to be. + +"Shirley Roseleaf!" It would not look so badly in print. + +So lost was he in the pleasant pictures which these thoughts conjured +up that it was some minutes before he tore open the envelope. Then his +astounded eyes rested upon these lines: + + "Messrs. Cutt & Slashem regret to be obliged to decline + with thanks the MSS. of M. Shirley Roseleaf, and request to + be informed what disposition he desires made of the same." + +Roseleaf read this dizzily. For some moments he could not understand +what that sentence meant. "Obliged to decline" was plain enough; but his +confused mind found some grains of comfort in the request of the firm to +know what he wished done with his manuscript. They must, he reasoned, +consider it of value, or they would not respond in that courteous +manner. Still, he could not comprehend how they had had the asininity to +"decline" it at all. + +Were they unwilling to add another star to their galaxy? + +Could they actually have read the tale? + +A firm of their reputation, too! + +When Roseleaf emerged from his temporary stupor it was into a state of +great indignation. Why, the men were fools! He wished heartily he had +never gone to them. They would yet see the day when, with tears in their +eyes, they would regret their lack of judgment. His first act should be +to go to their office and express his opinion of their stupidity, and +then he would take his MSS. to some rival house. And never, never in the +world--after he had become famous, and when every publisher on both +sides of the Atlantic were besieging him--never, he said, should these +ignorant fellows get a scrap of his writing, not even if they offered +its weight in gold! + +He was too excited for delay, and donning his hat, he took his way with +all speed to Cutt & Slashem's office. At that instant he had more faith +in his novel than ever. As he walked rapidly along he compared it with +some of the stories issued by the firm that had rejected it, to the +great disadvantage of the latter. + +"I wish to see Mr. Cutt or Mr. Slashem," he said, imperiously, as he +entered the counting room. + +"Both are in," said the office boy, imperturbably. "Which will you +have?" + +"I will see them together." + +Had they been tigers, fresh from an Indian jungle, it would have made no +difference to him. + +The boy asked for his card, vanished with it, returned and bade him +follow. Up a flight of stairs they went, then to the left, then to the +right, then across a little hall. A door with the name of the house and +the additional word "Private" loomed before them. + +"Come in!" was heard in response to the knock of the office boy. + +Roseleaf entered, something slower than a cannon ball, and yet +considerably faster than a snail. The two principal members of the firm +were sitting together, with lighted cigars in their mouths, examining a +lot of paper samples that lay upon a table. They did no more at first +than glance up and nod, not having finished the business upon which +they were engaged. + +"Is it any better than the last?" asked Mr. Slashem, referring to the +sample his partner was examining. + +"It's just as good, at least," was the answer. "And an eighth of a cent +a pound less. I think we had better order five hundred reams." + +"Five hundred reams," repeated the other, slowly, making a memorandum in +a little book that he carried. "And the other lot we'll wait about, eh? +Paper is not very steady. It's gone off a sixteenth since Thursday." + +This conversation only served to infuriate still more the visitor who +stood waiting to pour out his wrath. Were these men wasting time over +fractions of a cent in the price of stock, just after they had rejected +one of the greatest romances of modern times! + +With the precision of a duplex machine both partners finally looked up +from the table at the young man. + +"Mr. Shirley Roseleaf?" said Mr. Slashem, interrogatively, glancing at +the card that the office boy had brought. + +"Yes, sir!" was the sharp and disdainful reply. + +"We need nothing in your line," interrupted Mr. Cutt. "I suppose Mr. +Trimm has our other order well under way?" + +The look of indignant protest that appeared in Roseleaf's face caused +Mr. Slashem to speak. + +"This is not Mr. Roseberg," he explained. "My partner took you for an +agent of our bookbinder," he added. + +The novelist thought his skin would burst. + +"I am quite complimented," he said, in an icy tone. "Let me introduce +myself. I am the author of 'Evelyn's Faith.'" + +The partners consulted each other. + +"The similarity of names confused me," said Mr. Cutt. "Is your book one +that we have published?" + +Saints and angels! + +"It is one that was sent to you _for_ publication," replied Roseleaf, +with much heat, "and has been returned this morning--_rejected_!" + +"Ah!" said Mr. Cutt. + +"We have nothing to do with that department," said Mr. Slashem, coming +to the rescue. "You should see Mr. Gouger, on the second floor above; +though if he has rejected your story a visit would be quite useless. He +never decides a matter without sufficient reason." + +"Oh, dear, no!" added Mr. Cutt, feeling again of the paper samples. + +Shirley Roseleaf listened with wild incredulity. + +"Do you mean to tell me," he said, "that you, the members of the firm of +Cutt & Slashem, have rejected my story without even reading it?" + +The partners glanced at each other again. + +"We never read books," said Mr. Cutt. + +"Never," said Mr. Slashem, kindly. "We have things much more important +to attend to. We pay Mr. Gouger a large salary. Why, my young friend, +there are probably a dozen manuscripts received at our office every +week. If we were to try to _read_ them, who do you think would attend +to the _essential_ points of our business?" + +Roseleaf's contempt for the concern was increasing at lightning speed. +He did not care to mince his words, for it could make no difference now. + +"I should imagine that the selection of the books you are to print would +be at least as important as the paper you are to use," he retorted. + +Mr. Cutt looked at him in great astonishment. + +"You are much mistaken," said he. + +"Entirely mistaken," confirmed Mr. Slashem. + +The author had no desire to remain longer, as it was evident he was +losing his temper to no purpose. If it was Mr. Gouger who had rejected +his work, it was Mr. Gouger that he must see. + +Bowing with ironical grace to the examiners of printing paper, he took +leave of them, and mounted to the sanctum of the man who he had been +told was the arbiter of his fate. A girl with soiled hands pointed out +the room, for there was nothing to indicate it upon the dingy panel of +the door; and presently Roseleaf stood in the presence of the individual +he believed at that moment his worst enemy. + +There were two men in the room. One of them indicated with a motion of +his hand that the other was the one wanted, and with a second motion +that the caller might be seated. Mr. Gouger was partly hidden behind a +desk, engaged in turning over a heap of manuscript, and it appeared from +the manner of his companion that he did not wish to be disturbed. + +Somewhat cooled down by this state of affairs, the young novelist took +the chair indicated and waited several minutes. + +"What d--d nonsense they are sending me these days!" exclaimed Mr. +Gouger at last, thrusting the sheets he had been scanning back into the +wrapper in which they had come, without, however, raising his eyes from +his desk. "Out of a hundred stories I read, not three are fit to build a +fire with! This thing is written by a girl who ought to take a term in a +grammar school. She has no more idea of syntax than a lapdog. Her father +writes that he is willing to pay a reasonable sum to have it brought +out. Why, Cutt & Slashem couldn't afford to put their imprint on that +rot for fifty thousand dollars!" + +He had finished saying this before he learned that a third person was in +the room. Upon making this discovery he lowered his voice, as if +regretting having exhibited too great warmth before a stranger. The +novelist rose and handed him a card, and as Mr. Gouger glanced at the +name a gleam of recognition lit up his face. + +"I am glad to see you, Mr. Roseleaf," he said. "I had half a notion to +ask you to call, when I felt obliged to send you that note yesterday. +There are several things I would like to say to you. Archie, perhaps you +would let us have the room for a few minutes." + +The last remark was addressed familiarly to the man who occupied the +third chair, and who looked so disheartened at the prospect of having to +rise therefrom that Roseleaf hastened to express a hope that he would +not do so on his account. + +"Very well," said Mr. Gouger, abruptly. "You heard what I said about +this copy I have just read, though it was not my intention that you +should. I supposed I was talking only to Mr. Weil, who is not in the +profession and does not expect to be. Now, let me say at once, Mr. +Roseleaf, that your contribution is not open to any of the objections I +have cited. You have evidently been well educated. Your English is pure +and forcible. It is a real delight to read your pages. Every line shows +the greatest care in construction. I did with your story what I have not +done with another for a long time--I read it through. Why then did I +reject it?" + +The question was too great for the one most interested to answer, but in +the glow of pleasure that the compliment brought he forgot for the +moment his bitter feelings. + +"Possibly," he suggested, "Cutt & Slashem have more novels on hand than +they feel like producing at present." + +"No," responded Mr. Gouger, disposing of that theory in one breath. "A +house like ours would never reject a really desirable manuscript. If you +will reflect that only one or two of this description are produced each +year you will the more readily understand me. Your story has a cardinal +fault for which no excellence of style or finish can compensate. Shall I +tell you what it is, and before this gentleman?" + +He indicated Mr. Weil as he spoke. Roseleaf's heart sank. For the first +time he felt a deadly fear. + +"Tell me, by all means," he responded, faintly. + +Mr. Gouger's face bore its gentlest expression at that moment. He was +taking valuable time, time that belonged to his employers, to say +something that must temporarily disappoint, though in the end it might +benefit his hearer. + +"Let me repeat," he said, "that your work is well written, and that I +have read it with the greatest interest. Its fault--an insuperable +one--is that it lacks fidelity to nature. Mr. Roseleaf, I think I could +gauge your past life with tolerable accuracy merely from what that +manuscript reveals." + +The novelist shook his head. There was not a line of autobiography in +those pages, and he told his critic so. + +"Oh, I understand," replied Mr. Gouger. "But this I have learned: Your +life has been marvelously colorless. Yet, in spite of that, you have +undertaken to write of things of which you know nothing, and about +which, I may add, you have made very poor guesses." + +Mr. Weil, leaning back in his chair, began to show a decided interest. +Mr. Roseleaf, sitting upright, in an attitude of strained attention, +inquired what Mr. Gouger meant. + +"Well, for instance, this," responded the critic: "You attempt to depict +the sensations of love, though you have never had a passion. Can you +expect to know how it feels to hold a beautiful girl in your arms, when +you never had one there? You put words of temptation into the mouth of +your villain which no real scamp would think of using, for their only +effect would be to alarm your heroine. You talk of a planned seduction +as if it were part of an oratorio. And you make your hero so +superlatively pure and sweet that no woman formed of flesh and blood +could endure him for an hour." + +The color mounted to Roseleaf's face. He felt that this criticism was +not without foundation. But presently he rallied, and asked if it were +necessary for a man to experience every sensation before he dared write +about them. + +"Do you suppose," he asked, desperately, "that Jules Verne ever traveled +sixty thousand leagues under the sea or made a journey to the moon?" + +Mr. Weil could not help uttering a little laugh. Mr. Gouger struck his +hands together and clinched them. + +"No," said he. "But he could have written neither of those wonderful +tales without a knowledge of the sciences of which they treat." + +"He has read, and I have read," responded Roseleaf. "What is the +difference?" + +"He has studied, and you have not," retorted the critic. "That makes all +the difference in the world. He has a correct idea of the structure of +the moon and what should be found in the unexplored caverns of the +ocean; while you, in total ignorance, have attempted to deal in a +science to which these are the merest bagatelles! You know as little of +the tides that control the heart of a girl as you do of the personal +history of the inhabitants of Jupiter! Your powers of description are +good; those of invention feeble. Either throw yourself into a love +affair, till you have learned it root and branch, or never again try to +depict one." + +Mr. Archie Weil smiled and nodded, as if he entirely agreed with the +speaker. + +"What a novel _I_ could make, my dear fellow!" he exclaimed, "if I only +had the talent. I have had experiences enough, but I could no more write +them out than I could fly." + +"It is quite as well," was the response, "your women would all be +Messalinas and fiction has too many now." + +"Not _all_ of them, Lawrence," was the quick and meaning reply. + +"In that case," said Gouger, "I wish heartily you could write. The world +is famishing for a real love story, based on modern lines, brought up to +date. I tell you, there has been nothing satisfactory in that line since +Goethe's day." + +Mr. Weil suggested Balzac and Sand. + +"Why don't you include George William Reynolds?" inquired Gouger, with a +sneer. "Neither of them wrote until they were depraved by contract with +humanity. If we could get a young man of true literary talent to see +life and write of it as he went along, what might we not secure? But I +have no more time to spare, Mr. Roseleaf. I was sorry to be obliged to +reject your story. Some day, when you have seen just a little of the +world, begin again on the lines I have outlined, and come here with the +result." + +Quite dispirited, now that the last plank had slipped from under him, +the novelist walked slowly down the stairs. He did not even ask for his +manuscript. After what he had heard, it did not seem worth carrying to +his lodgings. His plans were shipwrecked. Instead of the fame and +fortune he had hoped for, he felt the most bitter disappointment. All +his bright dreams had vanished. + +A step behind him quicker than his own, made him aware that some one was +following him, and presently a voice called his name. It was Mr. Archie +Weil, who had put himself to unusual exertion, and required some seconds +to recover his breath before he could speak further. + +"I want you to come over to my hotel and have a little talk with me," he +said. "Gouger has interested me in you immensely. I believe, as he says, +that you have the making of a distinguished author, and I want to +arrange a plan by which you can carry out his scheme." + +Mr. Roseleaf stared doubtfully at his companion. + +"What scheme?" he said, briefly. + +"Why, of imparting to you that knowledge of the world which will enable +you to draw truthful portraits. You have the art, he says, the talent, +the capacity--whatever you choose to call it. All you lack is +experience. Given that, you would make a reputation second to none. What +can be plainer than that you should acquire the thing you need without +delay?" + +"The 'thing I need'?" repeated Roseleaf, dolefully. + +Mr. Weil laughed, delightfully. + +"Yes!" he explained. "What you need is a friend able to interest you, to +begin with. Pardon me if I say I may be described by that phrase. Come +to my hotel a little while and let us talk it over." + +It was not an opportunity to be refused, in Roseleaf's depressed +condition, and the two men walked together to the Hoffman House, where +Mr. Weil at that time made his home. + + + + +CHAPTER II. + +"WAS MY STORY TOO BOLD?" + + +"Well, Millie, your letter has come," said Mr. Wilton Fern, as he +entered the parlor of his pleasant residence, situated about twenty +miles from the limits of New York City. "Open it as quick as you can, +and learn your fate." + +His daughter started nervously from her seat near the window, where she +had been spending the previous hour in speculations regarding the very +missive that was now placed in her hands. She was a handsome girl, +neither blonde nor brunette, with eyes of hazel gray and hair of that +color that moderns call Titian red. She took the envelope that her +father gave her, and though she wanted intensely to know the contents +she hesitated to open it. + +"Read it, Millie," smiled Mr. Fern. "Let us learn whether we have an +authoress in our house who is destined to become famous." + +But this remark made Miss Millicent less willing than before to open the +letter in her father's presence. She slowly left the room without +answering and did not break the seal of her communication till she was +in the seclusion of her chamber. + +And it was quite a while, even then, before she summoned the necessary +courage. Some days previous she had sent a MSS. to the great publishing +house of Cutt & Slashem. The writing had taken up the best of her time +for a year. She had high hopes that it was destined to lay the +foundation of an artistic success. Her plot was novel, not to say +startling. It was entirely out of the conventional order. It would be +certain to arouse talk and provoke comment, if it got into print; and to +make sure that it _would_ get into print she had persuaded her father to +write a little note, which she enclosed with the MSS., saying that he +would pay a cash bonus, if the firm demanded it, to guarantee them +against possible loss. + +With this note in her mind, Miss Millicent had felt little doubt that +her story would be accepted and printed. She only wondered how warmly +they would praise her work. It was not enough to have them print it; she +wanted something to justify her in saying to her father, "There, you see +I was not wrong after all in thinking I could have a literary career!" + +At last the envelope was removed, and the girl's astonished eyes lit +upon this cold, dry statement: + + "Messrs. Cutt & Slashem regret to be obliged to decline + with thanks the MSS. of Miss M. Fern, and request to be + informed what disposition she desires made of the same." + +Millicent felt a ringing in her ears. Her hands grew clammy. A dull pain +pressed on her forehead. She felt a faintness, a sinking at the heart. +Was it possible she had read aright? Rejected, in this cruel way, +without even a reference to her father's offer! It was atrocious, and, +girl-like, she burst into a spasm of weeping. + +How could she ever face her father? The sacrifices she had made came +back to her, sacrifices of which she had thought little at the time, but +which now seemed gigantic. There had been nights when she had not gone +to bed till three, other nights when she had been too full of her +subject to sleep and had risen in the small hours to finish some +particularly interesting chapter. Twelve hundred pages there were in +all, note size, in her large, round, almost masculine hand. And this +time was all lost! She had mistaken her vocation. The greatest +publishing house in the country had decided against her. + +Gradually she dried her eyes. It would do no good to weep. She read the +curt answer that had come in the mail, a dozen times. Why could not the +firm have sent her a reason, an excuse that meant something? She wanted +to know wherein her fault lay. It might be possible to correct it. +Perhaps the state of business was to blame. The more she thought, the +more determined she grew to investigate this strange affair, and within +an hour she had donned her street clothes and started, without saying +anything to the rest of the household of her intention, for the office +of Cutt & Slashem in the city. + +She knew that each large concern had one or more "readers," on whose +judgment they relied in such matters. She, therefore, paused only long +enough at the counting-room to get directed to Mr. Gouger. Her knock on +the critic's door brought forth a loud "Come in," and as she entered she +saw two men standing with hats in their hand, as if about to take their +departure. + +"I beg your pardon," she said, "but I wish to see Mr. Gouger." + +"That is my name," responded one of the men, stepping forward. + +"I am Miss Fern." + +Mr. Gouger did not seem very glad to hear it. The hour of one had just +struck, and he was about to go to his lunch. He recognized the girl's +name, as that of the author of the MSS. he had criticized so severely to +his friend, Weil, who was, by-the-way, the third person in the room at +this moment. Had she sent up her card, as is usual with women, he would +have avoided seeing her at any hazard. + +Mr. Weil took a long survey of the young lady, and then retired to the +vicinity of the front windows. He pretended to interest himself in the +rush of traffic that was going on in the street below, but he missed +nothing of what was said, and stole from time to time a glance at his +two companions, particularly the younger one. + +"A mighty pretty girl," was his mental comment. "I hope Lawrence isn't +going to be nasty with her." + +Mr. Gouger motioned Miss Fern rather stiffly to a seat. + +"I do not wish to detain you," she said, with feminine inconsistency, as +she accepted it. "I only want to know, if you will be so kind as to tell +me, what is the trouble with my story." + +The critic was pleased at one thing. Miss Fern's voice was reasonably +clear. She had finished her weeping at home. There was to be no scene, +something he dreaded, and in the course of his connection with this +house he had experienced scores of them. He inspected his caller +critically in the few seconds that elapsed while she was asking this +question, and when she paused he decided to answer her with as much of +the truth as he dared use. + +"The fact is," he began, "a firm like ours is unable to use more than +one novel out of fifty that is submitted to it. Of our friends who send +us manuscripts, the vast majority must, therefore, be disappointed. Now, +your story--shall I be frank?" + +"By all means," answered Miss Fern. + +"Your story, though written with spirit and power, needs a great deal of +revision from a--from a rhetorical standpoint. It is, in fact, +carelessly put together. That is a cardinal fault in a literary +production, and one for which no amount of talent, or even of genius, +can compensate." + +The girl listened with deep interest. She tried to think where the +blemishes alluded to could be, for she had read the story twenty times. +To say nothing of several girl friends, who had listened with evident +wonder and delight, to various parts of the tale, as it progressed. + +"If that is true," answered Miss Fern, slowly--, "could not the trouble +be remedied by sending the MSS. to some very competent person and having +the errors made right?" + +Mr. Gouger smiled. + +"Hardly," he said. "A novel is like a painting. The _ensemble_--do you +understand?--is the thing. Can you conceive a painting being 'done +over'? Your book would lose its quality if subjected to that process." + +A look of discouragement crossed the features of the young woman. + +"Of course, you know best," she stammered. "What would you advise +me--try again?" + +Mr. Gouger raised both his hands. + +"It is difficult to say, in such a case," he replied. "But--if you want +my best opinion--" + +"That is just what I want," said the girl, with ill-concealed +impatience. + +"You are not dependent upon your exertions, I suppose, for a living?" + +Millicent shook her head, almost sorry at the moment that she could not +reply in the affirmative. + +"Then--I should give up the idea of being an authoress." + +This was very unpalatable medicine, and the critic realized it as he +looked at the sombre face before him. + +"Is your rejection of my story based at all," asked Miss Fern, after a +pause, "on the--boldness of its subject?" + +Mr. Gouger smiled again. + +"We publish the works of Hall Caine and George Moore," he said. "I +should not consider your story overbold, if there was nothing else +against it. It is a wonder to me, and always will be, why such young +girls as you choose _risqué_ themes, but if the work is well done the +public will pay for it." + +There was a slight blush on Miss Fern's face, partly at the insinuation +and partly at the adverse criticism that had crept thoughtlessly into +the sentence. + +"For my part," she explained, "I wanted to write something that would +attract attention--that would put my name prominently before the public +and keep it there. The girls I read it to thought the scenes just +lovely, though some said perhaps their mothers would not feel that way. +And I told them that the mothers of to-day were very old-fashioned, and +that the public taste was changing rapidly. If the story is too bold, +there are things I could cut out of it, but if you say that would make +no difference, I would rather let them stand. I intend to try some other +concern before I give up." + +Mr. Archie Weil had abandoned all pretence of looking out the window. He +stood with his eyes fastened on the pretty girl, as she made these +statements in such a matter-of-fact way. He wondered what the dickens +the story was about, and made up his mind that he would try to get +possession of it. + +"All the same," responded Mr. Gouger, who had apparently forgotten his +lunch in his growing interest in the conversation, "I don't see where +girls like you obtain such an intimate knowledge of things. You are not +over twenty--excuse me, I am old enough to tell you this without +offence. It is not you alone, but a hundred others who have made me ask +myself this question. As soon as the modern girl gets a bottle of ink +and a pen and begins to let her thoughts flow over paper, it transpires +that she knows everything--more than everything, almost. Why, I was +twenty-five before I was as wise as the heroine of sixteen, in this +story of yours!" + +Miss Fern reddened again, all the more because she had glanced up and +encountered the bright eyes of Mr. Weil fixed upon her. + +"Why, Archie," pursued the literary man--he turned toward Mr. Weil--"you +remember Lelia Danté, you have seen her here. Five or six years ago I +got a letter from that young girl's mother asking me to come to their +residence and hear a story she had written. It was her first one, and +the child was not a day over seventeen. I couldn't believe it when she +came into the room, with her hair tumbled about her shoulders, and began +to read to me the first chapter of 'Zaros.' 'Did _she_ write that?' I +asked her mother, incredulously. 'Certainly,' she replied. 'Without aid +from any one?' 'Absolutely alone.' My hair stood on end. I could not +keep it down for the next week with a brush. You know the story. We +printed it, and it sold well, and that is all that C. & S. cared about +it; but I never understood how that infant could conceive it. No more +than I can understand your ability to write this story of yours, Miss +Fern," he added, pointedly. + +The young woman bridled a little. + +"It does not matter much, if you are not going to print it," she said, +raising her eyes to his. + +He bowed low to express whatever apology might be necessary. + +"I would have accepted it if I could," he said. "My entire life is spent +in reading manuscripts in the hope of discovering one that will make a +hit with the public to whom we cater. When successful I am as pleased as +a South African who fishes a diamond of the first water out of the mine. +Your story, Miss Fern, shows decided talent. You have a greater +knowledge of some of the important things of life, I will wager, than +your grandmother had at eighty, if she lived so long. As I am obliged to +go now, let me add, without mincing matters, that you are very deficient +in English grammar, and that nothing you can write will be acceptable to +any first-class house until that fault is remedied. Are you ready, +Archie?" + +Mr. Weil felt indignant. He could not have spoken to any girl as pretty +as this one in such language, and he thought it quite inexcusable on the +part of his friend to do so. Mr. Gouger, though feeling that it was best +to use little circumlocution, had not meant to wound his caller. But +her countenance showed that he _had_ wounded her, and the natural +gallantry of his younger companion came to the rescue. + +"I am not ready yet," said Mr. Weil, telegraphing at the same time a +series of signals with his eyes. "I want a few minutes' talk with Miss +Fern, if you will introduce me. I think I can say something she will +like to hear." + +Mr. Gouger, who now stood in such a position that Miss Fern could not +see him, shook his head to imply that he did not fancy this arrangement; +but he ended by saying, "Very well." He then abruptly made the +presentation, put on his hat, said good-by, and vanished. + +Miss Millicent, who had risen, turned with an air of puzzled inquiry +toward Mr. Weil. + +"Be seated again, for a moment," he said, politely. "I want your +permission to read your story." + +"Why, I don't know," she answered. "Are you one of the employes of Cutt +& Slashem?" + +He smilingly denied the imputation. + +"I have not that felicity," he added, "but I am much interested in +things literary, and have a rather wide acquaintance in this line of +business. If I could be allowed to read your MSS. perhaps I should form +a milder opinion of its faults than my unbending friend. And in that +case a word from me, to another house, would certainly do you no harm." + +A brighter light came into Miss Millicent's eyes. + +"I shall be only too glad to have you read it," she answered. "It is +hard to believe that I have wasted almost a year in something entirely +worthless. You may take it with pleasure." + +Mr. Weil went to Mr. Gouger's desk, from which he soon came with the +parcel in question. He untied the string and for a moment his gaze +rested on the handwriting. + +"Do you live far from here?" he began; and then added, as he noticed the +address on an enclosed card, "Ah, I see! At Midlands." + +She explained herself rather more to him, giving the full address of her +father, and some particulars about the manner in which she had been +drawn into attempting literary work. He listened intently, all the time +engaged in rapid thought. + +"The best way for me to get a thoroughly correct impression of this +novel," he said, when she came to a pause, "is to hear you read it +aloud. In that manner," he added, as he saw that she was about to +interrupt, "a hundred meanings would come to the surface that a mere +inspection of the pages might fail to show. Beside, there would be an +opportunity for discussion. If convenient to you I would gladly come to +your residence for this purpose." + +The eyes of the young girl brightened. She was greatly pleased at the +idea and said so without delay. + +"Very well," said Mr. Weil, more than delighted with the success of his +experiment. "To-day is Tuesday; shall I come for the first time, say, +Thursday evening?" + +"That would suit me perfectly; or to-morrow, if you wish. I shall put +aside everything and have my time free for you." + +Mr. Weil nodded. + +"Let it be Thursday then. And the hour--shall we call it eight?" + +The time was promptly agreed to. + +"In the meantime, I will take the MSS. and look it over, to form a +general idea of the plot. Here is my card. By-the-way, you will of +course arrange it so that we shall not be interrupted during our +conference. It disturbs anything of that kind to have people coming in +and out. We want to be entirely alone so as to give our full attention +to the work in hand." + +Miss Fern smilingly acquiesced, saying that it was exactly what she +would wish. + +"And do you think there may be hope for it yet--that poor little +manuscript?" she asked, as she stood by the door ready to take her +departure. + +"That is a question I can hardly answer," he replied. "I shall be better +able to tell you in a week or two, I trust." + +She lingered, with her hand on the door knob. + +"My father is willing to take all the financial risks," she said. "That +ought to make a difference, don't you think so?" + +"It would, with many houses," he admitted. "I am glad to know these +things. Thursday, then, Miss--Miss Fern." + +He wanted to call her "Millicent," for he had read the name on the +package he still held in his hand; but on the whole he concluded that +this would be a little premature. + + + + +CHAPTER III. + +"HER FEET WERE PINK." + + +When Miss Millicent Fern entered the office of Lawrence Gouger, as +detailed in the preceding chapter, it will be remembered that she found +that gentleman and his friend, Archie Weil, with their hats in their +hands. The fact was that Mr. Weil had but just entered the room, and +that Mr. Gouger had accepted an invitation to take lunch with him, an +arrangement that was by no means an infrequent one between them. The +entrance of Miss Fern, and the subsequent proceedings, compelled the +literary critic to go out alone, as has been seen. When he returned he +found Mr. Weil still there. + +"Haven't you been to lunch yet!" exclaimed Mr. Gouger. + +"I have not been out of this office," was the reply, "and all appetite +for anything to eat has left me. Lawrence, that is one of the most +interesting girls I ever met." + +Mr. Gouger pursed up his lips, and uttered an impatient, "Pah!" He then +remarked that Mr. Weil had a habit of finding such a quality in the +latest women of his acquaintance. + +"What does she amount to?" he asked. "An overgrown schoolgirl, who did +not half learn her lessons. Read that MSS. she left here, and get +disillusionized in short order. Why, she doesn't even know how to +spell, and her periods and commas are in a hopeless tangle." + +His companion eyed him quizzically. + +"Are periods and commas, even a correct spelling of the English +language, the only things you can see in a bright, handsome girl?" he +demanded. "For shame, Lawrence! You are a dried-up old mummy. Your +senses are numb. A lively wind will come in at the keyhole some day and +blow you out of that chimney." + +Mr. Gouger heaved a sigh, as if to say that discussion with such a +nonsensical fellow was useless, and took his seat at his desk, where an +unfinished pile of MSS. awaited his reading. + +"She's given me leave to take her story home," said Mr. Weil, with a +mischievous expression. + +The critic stared at his friend. + +"Given it to you?" he repeated. "How did that happen?" + +"I asked her for it, naturally. You were so severe on the poor child, +that I couldn't help putting in a cheering word. We talked of the whole +business, and she was willing I should see if my opinion agreed with +yours." + +"_Your_ opinion!" echoed Gouger, testily. "What is that worth? But take +the stuff, if you want it, and when you are done, send it to her; it +will make less rubbish in this confounded hole. One thing I'll tell you, +though, in advance. You'll never be able to make sense of it, unless you +get some one to straighten it out." + +"That's all right," replied the other. "After I have read it through, I +am going to Miss Fern's house, where she will read it to me." + +Mr. Gouger started from his chair. + +"You don't mean that!" he exclaimed. + +"But I do. She asked me, and I'm going. I understand that it's a rather +bold tale, and I can conceive nothing more entertaining than to hear +that kind of thing from the red lips of such a pretty piece of flesh and +blood as has just left here." + +There was an uneasy expression on the face of the critic as he heard +these words. He liked Weil, although they were as different in their +natures as two men could well be. He wanted to please him, but the +aspect of this affair was not agreeable. + +"Look here, Archie," he said, earnestly, "there are some things that I +can't permit, you know. My office must not be made a starting-place for +one of your lawless adventures. You met Miss Fern here. Now, I protest +against your going to her house, pretending that you are interested in +that novel, when your real purpose is of a much more questionable kind." + +Mr. Weil put on the air of one whose feelings are lacerated by an unjust +suspicion. + +"My dear Lawrence--" he began. + +"That's all right," growled the critic. "I may or may not be your 'dear +Lawrence,' but I know you like--like a book," he added, hitting by +accident on a very excusable simile. "You are an old dog that is not +likely to learn new tricks. I shall send this MSS. back to Miss Fern, +myself, enclosing a letter warning her to have nothing to do with you." + +A laugh escaped the lips of Archie Weil at this proposition. + +"If you knew the feminine mind half as well as you do modern +literature," he answered, "you would see how little that would avail. I +have met Miss Fern and made a distinctly favorable impression. Her +address is in my pocket, and I have received a pressing invitation to +call. If you choose to send the MSS. by another messenger you will +relieve me of the task of carrying a bundle, but you will accomplish +nothing more." + +Mr. Gouger's mouth opened in astonishment at the evident advantage which +his friend had gained in so short a time. + +"You must have convinced her that your literary opinions are of value," +he said, presently. "If I write that you are a charletan and entirely +unworthy of attention, what will happen then?" + +The smiling gentleman opposite crossed his hands over his left knee, and +did not delay his answer. + +"I will tell you," he said. "In the same mail she will receive a letter +from me, warning her that a certain party, who has given an adverse +judgment on her writings, may attempt to influence her against others +more likely to decide in her favor. She will be told that, having +rejected a book, this certain party does not wish any one else to print +it. Send the severest note you can construct, Lawrence. I have few +talents, but I know how to write letters." + +The critic could hardly believe that fate had thrown so many cords +around his neck in the brief space of one hour, but the more he thought +the more he became convinced that his best course was to shut his eyes. + +"Well, gang your gait," he said, after a long pause, during which the +look of triumph deepened on his companion's face. "You will have to +answer for your own sins. But I'll tell you one thing, that may save +your time. Women who write racy novels are almost without exception +remarkably correct in their own lives." + +Mr. Weil inquired if his friend was certain of this, and there was a +suspicion of disappointment in his tone. + +"Absolutely," said Mr. Gouger, refreshing his memory. "I can think of a +dozen instances to prove the point. There is Lelia Danté, for instance, +who writes like a--like a--well, you know how she writes. She sticks to +her mother's apron strings like a four-year-old child. They never are +seen apart, I am told. Then there is Mrs. Helen Walker Wilbur, the +poetess. We have a volume of her verse that is positively combustible +from its own heat. The sheets had to be run off the press soaked in +water to keep them from igniting. The room was full of steam all the +time the work was going on. Warm! I should say so! Now, that woman is +vain, and she dresses foolishly, and she does odd things for the sake of +being talked about--but nobody questions her loyalty to her husband. You +would think by some of her poems that an East Indian regiment would not +suffice for her, and yet she is the straightest wife on Manhattan +Island. Oh, I know so many cases. You remember that girl who wrote, +'Love's Extremities,' a work as passionate as Sappho. She is a little +Quaker-like maiden,[A] who dresses and talks like a sister of one of the +Episcopal guilds. These women are on fire at the brain only. They would +repel a physical advance with more indignation than those endowed with +less esthetic perceptions. So, see Miss Fern as much as you like. Should +you attempt anything improper you will prove the truth of my +assertions." + + [Footnote A: Now dead, alas!--A. R.] + +Mr. Weil changed the knee he had been nursing, but the quiet smile did +not leave his countenance. + +"What an inconsistent fellow you are, Lawrence," he said. "I could +convict you of a hundred errors of logic. Do you remember telling Mr. +Roseleaf that a man should have a passion before he attempts to depict +one." + +"And I say so still," retorted Gouger. "_You_ don't call the ravings of +these poetesses and female novelists real life, do you? _You_ know the +actual lover isn't content with kissing the hair and the feet of his +divinity! There is more about women's _feet_ in these poems and novels +than all the rest of their anatomy put together. And what is a woman's +foot? Did you ever see one that was pretty--that you wanted to put to +your lips?" + +"Yes," interrupted Archie, dreamily, "once. At Capri. She was fifteen. +Her feet were pink, like a shell. She was walking along the shore in the +early evening." + +"With the dirt of the soil on them!" exclaimed Mr. Gouger, in disgust. + +"No, she had just emerged from her bath. The sand there was clean as a +carpet, cleaner, in fact. Gods! They were exquisite!" + +The critic uttered an exclamation. + +"I waste time talking to you," he said, sharply. "You are like the rest +of the imaginative crowd. It is a pity you were not gifted with the +divine afflatus, that you could have added your volumes to the nonsense +they print." + +"And which you are always glad to get," interpolated Mr. Weil. + +"Because it will sell. Cutt & Slashem are in this business to make +money, and my thoughts must be directed to the saleable quality of the +manuscripts submitted. If _I_ was running the concern, though, I would +touch the mooney, maundering mess. It makes my flesh creep, sometimes, +to read it." + +Archie Weil uttered another of his winsome laughs. + +"How would you like to be a serpent," he asked, "and have your flesh +creep all the time? But before we dismiss this matter of Miss Fern, I +want you to clear your mind, if you can, of the haunting suspicions you +always have when a woman is concerned. You know there are concerns in +the city who would print her book, with a proper amount paid down, if it +had neither sense, syntax nor orthography. If she wants it fixed up, I +can find tailors to help her out; and if her papa wants it on the +market, why shouldn't he be able to get it there? Now, let us talk a +little about Roseleaf." + +Mr. Gouger brightened at the change of subject. His interest in Mr. +Roseleaf was genuine, and he had already learned that Archie had formed +a sort of copartnership with the novelist, in the hope of making his +future work a success. While the critic could not be said to have any +real faith in the arrangement, it certainly interested him. + +"What strange freak will you take to next?" he asked. "And do you really +expect to make a novelist out of that young man?" + +Mr. Weil's eyes had a twinkle in them. + +"Didn't you say, yourself, that it could be done?" he inquired. "If I +have made any mistake in my investment, I shall charge the loss to you." + +The critic reflected a minute. + +"I'm not so certain it _can't_ be done," he said. "But that's quite +different from investing money in it, as you are doing. A man wants +pretty near a certainty before he puts up the stuff." + +"You greedy fellow!" exclaimed Weil. "Will you never think of anything +but gain? I have to spend about so much money every year, in a continual +attempt to amuse myself, and it might as well be this way as another. I +have a document, signed and solemnly sealed, by which I am to back him +against the field in the interest of romantic and realistic literature, +and in return he is to give me a third of the net profits of his +writings. I don't know that I have done so badly. Perhaps you may live +to see Cutt & Slashem pay us a handsome sum in royalties." + +Mr. Gouger looked oddly at his friend, whose face was perfectly serious. + +"What are you going to begin with?" he asked. + +"Love, of course. It is the A B C, as well as the X Y Z of the whole +business." + +"What kind of love?" + +"The best that can be got," replied Weil, now laughing in spite of +himself. "The very finest quality in the market. Oh, we shall do this up +brown, I tell you." + +"What have you done so far?" asked Gouger. + +"You want to know it all, eh?" responded Mr. Weil. "I don't think I am +justified in letting you too deeply into our secrets. However, you are +too honorable to betray us, and so here goes: I have instructed my +protegé that he must fall violently under the tender passion before next +Saturday night." + +"With a lady whom you have selected, of course?" + +"By no means. He must catch his own sweethearts." + +Mr. Gouger played with his watchchain. + +"And this is Tuesday," he commented. "Do you think he will succeed?" + +"He must," laughed Weil. "It's like the case of the boy who was digging +out the woodchuck. 'The minister's coming to dinner.'" + +"You might at least have got an introduction for him," said Gouger, +reflectively. + +"Not I. There's nothing in our agreement that puts such a task on me. +Besides, there's no romance in an introduction. He would write a story +as prosy as one of Henry James' if he started off like that." + +Mr. Gouger nodded his head slowly. + +"That would be something to avoid at all hazards," he assented. + +And at this juncture, to the surprise of both the parties to this +conversation, the young man of whom they were speaking entered the room. + +"I was telling Mr. Gouger of our agreement," said Mr. Weil, as soon as +the greetings were over. "How do you get along? Have you discovered your +heroine yet?" + +Mr. Roseleaf answered, with an air of timidity, in the negative. + +"I don't quite know where to find one," he said. + +Mr. Weil spread out his arms to their fullest capacity. + +"There are thirty millions of them in the United States alone," he +exclaimed. "Out of that number you ought to find a few whom you can +study. What a pity that _I_ cannot write! I would go out of that door +and in ten minutes I would have a subject ready for vivisection." + +The younger man raised his eyebrows slightly. + +"But, that kind of a woman--would be what you would want--the kind that +would let you talk to her on a mere street acquaintance!" + +Mr. Weil leaned back in his chair and stretched his legs. + +"Oh, yes," he said. "She would do for a beginning. Don't imagine that +none of these easy going girls are worth the attention of a novelist. +Sometimes they are vastly more interesting than the bread and butter +product of the drawing rooms. It won't do, in your profession, to +ignore any sort of human being." + +Roseleaf breathed a sigh as soft as his name. + +"You were right, Mr. Gouger," he said, turning to that gentleman. "I do +not know anything. I have judged by appearances, and I now see that +truth cannot be learned in that way." + +"All the better!" broke in Archie. "The surest progress is made by the +man who has learned his deficiencies. You remember the hare and the +tortoise. I have read somewhere that the race is not always to the +swift. You must treat your fellow men and women as if you had just +arrived on this earth from the planet Mars. You must dig through the +strata of conventionality to the virgin soil beneath. The great human +passions are lust and avarice, though they take a thousand forms, in +many of which they have more polite names. For instance, the former, +when kept within polite boundaries, is usually known as Love. As Avarice +makes but a sorry theme for the romantic writer, Love is the subject +that must principally claim your attention. All the world loves a lover, +while the miser is despised even by those who cringe beneath the power +of his gold. Study the women, my lad, and when you know them thoroughly +begin your great novel in earnest." + +Roseleaf listened with rapt attention. + +"And the men?" he asked. + +"The men," was the quick reply, "are too transparent to require study. +It is the women, with their ten million tricks to cajole and wheedle us, +that afford the best field for your efforts." + +Mr. Gouger, who had never been known to take so much time from his work +during business hours, tried to begin his reading, but without success. +When at his usual occupation he would not have been disturbed by the +conversation of a room full of people, so preoccupied was he with what +he had to do; but on this occasion he was too much entertained with his +companions to do anything but hear them through. + +"Is there no such thing as unselfish love--in a woman--love that +sacrifices itself for its object?" asked Roseleaf, with a trace of +anxiety in his tone. + +"M----m, possibly," drawled Mr. Weil. "A female animal with young +sometimes evinces the possession of that sort of thing, and women may +have touches of it on occasions. That will be a good point for you to +remember when you are deeper in your investigations. However, I ought +not to fill your head with ideas of my own. I think what we most desire +in our friend," he added, turning to the critic, "is complete +originality." + +The young man shifted his feet nervously. + +"Pardon me," he said, "would it not be well to talk with people and +learn their impressions? Then I can compare these with my own +experiences, when they come. You would not send a blind man out on the +street unled." + +Archie Weil laughed deliciously. + +"You are ingenious, when you should only be ingenuous," he replied. "You +do not act at all like the young man from Mars that I have in mind. +Perhaps, nevertheless, you are not wholly wrong, for even my traveler +from that planet might have to ask his way to the nearest town. +Supposing you had just reached the earth, and had met me with a thousand +questions. What could I answer that would be of any use?" + +Mr. Roseleaf reflected a moment. + +"You could tell me your idea of a perfect woman," he suggested. + +"Well, I will," said Weil, glancing meaningly at Mr. Gouger. "The +perfect woman is about nineteen years of age. She is neither very light +nor very dark. Her eyes are hazel, with a touch of gray in them. She +measures, say, five feet, four inches in height, and--about--twenty-two +inches around the waist. She has a plump arm, not too fleshy, a +well-made leg, a head set on her shoulders with enough neck to give it +freedom and grace of movement, but not sufficient to warrant comparison +with a swan, or even a goose. Her hands match her feet, being not too +slender nor too dainty. Her hips are medium, but not bulging. She weighs +in the vicinity of a hundred and twenty-five pounds. And her hair--there +is but one color for a woman's hair--is Titian red." + +The young man had taken out his note-book and rapidly sketched this list +of attractions. + +"Every woman cannot have Titian hair," remarked Mr. Gouger. "Would you +condemn one with all the other attributes on account of missing that?" + +"I would, decidedly," was the reply, "when it is obtained so easily. I +think it only costs two dollars a bottle, for the finest shade. Have +you written it all down, Mr. Roseleaf?" + +The young man ran over his notes. + +"I have it--all but the hair," he said. "Of course I could not forget +that." + +"Very well. And this hair must be long enough, but not too long, +remember, for everything unduly accentuated spoils a woman. It should +hang about five inches below the waist, when unfastened, and be thick +enough to make a noticeable coil. There should be sufficient to hide her +face and her lover's when he takes her in his arms." + +Mr. Roseleaf started slightly. + +"Then she should have a lover?" he remarked, curiously. + +"Undoubtedly. Else why the hair and the arms, and the five feet four! It +is a woman's business to be loved and to make herself lovable. When you +have found this woman, if she has no lover, you will be expected to +officiate in that capacity. If she has one, you must supplant him as +soon as possible. And when you have fallen desperately, ravingly in love +with such a creature, you will not have to come to me for further +advice." + +The young man surveyed the speaker with the utmost gravity. + +"Have _you_ ever been in love?" he inquired. + +"Never." + +"Why?" + +"It was not necessary; _I_ did not intend to write novels," said Archie, +with a laugh. "But, come, we have bothered Lawrence enough. Let us go." + +He took the package containing Miss Fern's story, and sauntered out, +paying no attention to the peculiar glances that his friend, the critic, +threw at him as he was leaving. + + + + +CHAPTER IV. + +WITH TITIAN TRESSES. + + +Mr. Weil deciphered the MSS. of Miss Fern with some difficulty. Not that +the handwriting was particularly illegible, though it did not in the +least resemble copperplate engraving; but, as Mr. Gouger had intimated, +the sentences were so badly constructed, and the punctuation so +different from that prescribed by the usual authorities, that he was +continually obliged to go back over his tracks and hunt for meanings. +Nevertheless, within an hour from the time when he sat down in his room +at the Hoffman House and opened the package he had brought, he had to +confess himself deeply interested. + +Miss Fern had conceived some entertaining characters, and some very +unconventional situations. Her people were virile; her hero was strong +if not always grammatical; her heroine did and said things not common in +real life, and yet that were quite reasonable when her peculiar nature +and environment were considered. + +Archie paused once in awhile to wonder how much of all this record was +within the direct knowledge of the young authoress; which expressions +conveyed her own ideas and which sentiments she would personally +endorse. Gouger might be right as to the exceeding purity of most of the +ladies who dealt in eroticism, but in this especial case Mr. Weil meant +to make an investigation on his own account before he accepted as a +universal rule the one his friend had laid down. + +He did not go to sleep that night until he had finished his story. Had +it been arranged by a competent hand he could have read it in four +hours, but as it was he consumed eight in the work. With all its faults, +he liked it. There was something breezy about it, and it had a theme +that he did not remember had been treated exactly in the same way +before. Though, as he himself had said, without much talent for +composition, Archie had read a great many books. It is no proof because +a person cannot write that he would make a poor critic. Mr. Weil might +almost have filled Lawrence Gouger's place at Cutt & Slashem's. He had +written fugitive pieces in his time for the papers, in reference to his +travels, which had been extensive, and had even contributed occasional +book reviews to the magazines. His connection with Gouger enabled him to +keep in touch with what was going on in the literary world, and the +dozens of new volumes which passed through that office were always at +his disposal. + +"She's not a fool, by any means," he remarked to himself, when he put +down the last sheet of Miss Fern's work. "A fellow who understood his +business might put that into such shape that it would be worth using. I +mean to find some one who can do it, and suggest the idea to her, when I +get to that stage in this affair. Let me see, who do I know that could +undertake it?" + +He had begun to undress, and was in the act of taking off his collar as +he spoke. His mind ran over a list of struggling literary men. Something +seemed the matter with most of them. There was Hamlin, but he would be +too exacting, and would want to suggest alterations in the story itself, +which would never do. There was Insley, whose last three books had been +flat failures, and for whom Cutt & Slashem had positively refused to +print anything more; but Insley had gone into the country for the summer +and nobody knew his address. Then there was-- + +"_Roseleaf!_" + +Archie received this thought like an inspiration. He threw his cravat on +the bureau and began tugging at his shoestrings to the imminent danger +of getting them into hard knots that no one could unravel. Roseleaf! Why +not? The boy would do almost anything he suggested, so great was his +confidence that a road to literary preferment could be staked out over +that path. Roseleaf would not undertake the work for the sake of +pecuniary compensation, but the thing could be presented to him in quite +another light. In Miss Fern's story there were living, breathing men and +women. In his own there were beautifully drawn marionettes. He could be +made to see that the study of the young lady's method was worth his +while. And then! + +Mr. Weil's shoes lay on the floor, in the disorder of a bachelor who had +never in his life taken pains to put anything in the place where it +really belonged. He took out the studs of his shirt, pulled that garment +over his head, and then sat for some minutes wrapped in active thought. + +"They must be introduced to each other!" he exclaimed, at last. "Between +them they have every qualification for success; apart they are like the +separated wheels of a watch. There is Shirley, with a style so sweetly +subtle, a grace so perfect, every line a gem; and with it all not a sign +of human emotion. There is Millicent, full of plot and daring and +breathing characters, and bold conceptions, and no more able to write +good English than an Esquimaux squaw. I have both these interesting +persons on my hands, and I must combine them, for their mutual good. + +"I wonder what Gouger will say when I unfold my plan. Perhaps I had best +not tell him. He actually came near threatening, to-day, to send a line +to Miss Fern, warning her against me. He wouldn't have done it, though. +Lawrence has a bark that is worse than his bite by a great deal. Yes, +I'll bring these young folks together. I'll take them as Hermann does +the rabbits, and press them gently but firmly into one. And then sha'n't +we get a combination! And won't Mr. Lawrence Gouger hug himself when the +product of their joint endeavor comes to him for a reading!" + +The muser finished disrobing and donned his night robes, but it was a +long time before he felt like slumber. He could think of nothing but his +scheme. As he revolved it over in his mind, it took many new forms. At +first Roseleaf was to be asked to rewrite the story that Miss Fern had +offered Cutt & Slashem. And afterwards there must be an entirely new +novel, conceived together and worked out slowly, using the best of what +was brightest in both of them. + +The last idea Mr. Weil had before he relapsed into unconsciousness +contained two novels, worked out at the same time. Roseleaf was all +right, if he could only get a glimpse of realism into his work. Miss +Fern would have no trouble if her ideas could find a garb that suited +them. + +There would be a way to make them of service to each other, and the time +to cross a bridge is always when you come to it. So thought Archie Weil, +as he fell asleep. + +In the morning he laughed to think of the description he had given to +Shirley, in his offhand way, of "the perfect woman." It was a faithful +list of Miss Millicent's charms, so far as they were apparent to him. +Shirley had noted them down with great carefulness, and would be sure to +notice how fully the authoress met the ideal he now had in mind. It only +remained for the schemer to say something to Miss Fern that would +suggest Roseleaf to her, whenever they were made acquainted. + +It must be plain to the reader that Mr. Weil's principal intention in +this whole matter was to dispose of the _ennui_ which idleness brings +even to its most adoring devotees. He had a fair fortune, accumulated +by a father who had denied himself every luxury to amass it. Drifting to +New York, he had found the vicinity of the Hoffman House very agreeable, +and his companions, with the exception of Mr. Gouger, were of about as +light views of life as himself. The critic was one of those strange +exceptions with which most of us come in contact, where persons of +entirely opposite tastes and inclinations become attached friends. + +Breakfast was served so late to Mr. Weil that he had not finished that +repast when the young novelist made his appearance. Seating himself on +the side of the table that faced his friend, Mr. Roseleaf responded to +the latter's inquiries in regard to his health by saying that he was +quite well. Indeed, he looked it. His eye was bright, his cheek rosy. +His attire showed just enough of a negligent quality to be attractive. +There was an air about him such as is often associated with an artist of +the pencil and brush. + +"Never better in health," he said, "but very anxious to begin something +definite in the way of work." + +Mr. Weil smiled his most affable smile. + +"What did I tell you to do, first?" he asked, playfully. + +"To fall in love." + +"Which you have not yet done!" + +The young man shook his head. + +"Good Heavens! And you have lost more than a week!" + +Roseleaf colored more than ever. + +"Isn't there something else--that I could--begin on?" he asked, humbly. + +"I don't know of anything. Love is the alphabet of the novelist. You'd +best go straight. Aren't there any eligible young women at your lodging +house?" + +The younger man thought a moment. + +"No; only the chambermaid." + +Mr. Weil sipped his coffee with a wise expression. + +"It may come to that," he said, putting down the cup, "but we'll hope +not. We will hope not. What's the matter with Central Park? There are +five hundred nice girls there every afternoon." + +"But I don't know them," said Roseleaf, desperately. "And--I have been +there. Yesterday one of them looked at me and smiled. I walked toward +her, and she slackened her speed. When I came within a few feet she +almost stopped. Then--I could think of nothing to say to her, and I +walked on, looking in the other direction." + +Several breakfasters in the vicinity turned their heads to note the +couple at the table, from which a laugh that could be heard all over the +room came musically. + +"Why didn't you say 'Good-morning?'" + +"Yes! And she might have said 'Good-morning.' And then it would be my +turn, and what could I have done?" + +Mr. Weil folded up his napkin and laid it by his plate. + +"You coward," he replied, affably, "you could have done a thousand +things. You could have remarked that the day was fair, or that you +wondered if it would rain. And you could have asked her to stroll over +to a restaurant and take a little refreshment. Once opposite to her, the +rest would have come fast enough." + +The novelist took out a handkerchief and wiped the perspiration from his +forehead. It all seemed very easy the way Archie described it, but he +was sure it would be very different in practice. How could he know, he +demanded, that the young lady would go to the restaurant with him? She +might have declined, and then he would have been in a worse position +than ever. + +"Declined!" echoed Archie. "Declined a lunch? Declined ice cream? +Declined champagne frappé! Well, you _are_ ignorant of the sex. My dear +boy, it is evident that I shall have to introduce you to the leading +lady of your company, and if you will be patient for a very few days, I +hope to be able to do so." + +Rousing himself with a show of genuine interest, Roseleaf inquired for +further particulars. + +"Listen," replied the other. "I expect, to-morrow evening, to spend a +few hours in the company of one of the most charming members of her sex. +She, like you, has an ambition to become a successful writer. Like you, +also, she lacks some of the prime qualities that are needed for that +end. It happens, however, that the things wanting are entirely different +in each of your cases--that you will, if you choose, be able to +supplement and perfect each other. I shall tell her that I know a young +man of literary taste who will give her advice on the points in which +she is deficient. With such an opening you will be at once on Easy +street, and if you cannot fall in love within forty-eight hours, I shall +regard you as a case too hopeless to merit further attention at my +hands." + +The young man's cheek glowed with pleasure. + +"That is more like it," he said. "When do you think I shall be able to +meet this young lady?" + +"Within a week or two, at the latest. I must sound her before I trust +you with her, for she is nearly as much a stranger to me, so far, as to +you. Of course there is no objection--quite the contrary--to your +falling in love elsewhere in the meantime, if opportunity serves." + +At this moment Mr. Weil called his companion's attention to a rather +corpulent gentleman who had just entered the breakfast room and was +stopping near the door to hold a brief conversation with some one he had +met there. + +"You see that fellow?" he remarked. "Wait a minute, and I will get him +over here. If you ever want to put a real character into one of your +stories you will only need to take his photograph. In actual life he is +as dull as a rusty meat axe, but for literary purposes he would be a +godsend." + +Catching the eye of the person of whom he was speaking, Mr. Weil +motioned to him to come to his part of the room, and as he approached +arranged a chair for him invitingly. + +"Mr. Boggs, I want to present a young friend of mine to you," said +Archie, rising. "Mr. Walker Boggs--Mr. Shirley Roseleaf." + +Mr. Boggs went through the usual ceremony, announcing that he was most +happy, etc., in the perfunctory style that a million other men follow +every day. Then he took the chair that was offered him, and gave an +order for his breakfast to a waiter. + +"Are you a New Yorker, Mr. Roseleaf?" he asked, when this important +matter was disposed of. + +"Mr. Roseleaf is staying here for the present," explained Mr. Weil. "He +is a novelist by profession, and I tell him there is no better place to +study the sensational than this vicinity." + +The young man's color deepened. He doubted if it was right to introduce +the subject in exactly these terms. Mr. Boggs' next question did not +detract from his uneasiness. + +"Excuse me--I am not altogether up in current literature, and I must ask +what Mr. Roseleaf has written." + +Mr. Weil helped his young friend out of this dilemma as well as he +could. + +"He has written nothing, as yet; at least nothing that has been +printed," he said. "He is wise, I think, in laying a deep foundation for +his romances, instead of rushing into print with the first thoughts that +enter his head, as so many do, to their own subsequent regret and the +distress of their readers. I want him to meet men and women who have +known what life is by their own experiences. You ought to be worth +something to a bright writer, Walker. You have had many an adventure in +your day." + +Mr. Walker Boggs shrugged his shoulders. + +"In my 'day,' yes," he assented. "Enough to fill the Astor and Lenox +libraries and leave enough for Charlie Dillingham and The American News +Company. But that is nothing but history now. My 'day' is over and it +will never return." + +He paused and ran his right hand dejectedly across his vest in the +vicinity of the waist band. Though he knew perfectly what Mr. Boggs +referred to, Archie Weil wanted him to express it in his own words to +Shirley. + +"You wouldn't think," continued Mr. Boggs, after a pause which seemed +filled with strange emotions, "that my figure was once the admiration of +every lady who saw it, that they used to stop and gaze at me with eyes +of positive envy. And now--look at this!" + +He indicated his embonpoint again, and shook his head wrathfully. + +"It is simply damnable," he continued, as neither of the others thought +best to interrupt him. "When I was twenty-four I had a reputation that +was as wide as the continent. When I walked down Broadway you would have +supposed a procession was passing, the crowds gathered in such numbers. +If it was mentioned that I would spend a week at Saratoga or Newport, +the hotels had not a room to spare while I remained. The next year I +married, and as one of the fashion journals put it, two thousand women +went into mourning. For a decade I devoted myself entirely to my wife +and to business. I made some money, and kept out of the public eye. +Then my wife died, and I retired from the firm with which I had been +connected. The next twelve months dragged terribly. I did not know what +to do. Finally I decided that there was but one course open to me. I +must resume again the position I had vacated as a leader of fashion." + +Mr. Weil bowed, as if to say that this was a very natural and +praiseworthy conclusion; precisely as if he had not heard the story told +in substantially the same way a dozen times before. He was watching +Roseleaf's interested expression and had difficulty in repressing an +inclination to laugh aloud. + +"I sought out the best tailor in the city," continued Mr. Boggs. "I went +to the most fashionable hair dresser. I spent considerable time in +selecting hats, cravats and gloves. When all was ready I took a stroll, +as I had done in the old days, from Fiftieth street, down Fifth Avenue +and Broadway to Union Square. I met a few acquaintances who stared at me +slightly, but did not act in the least impressed. The women merely +glanced up and glanced away again. What was the matter? I went home and +took a long survey of myself in the mirror, a cheval glass that showed +me from crown to toe. My costume was perfect. There was not a wrinkle in +my face--this was several years ago, remember. There was not a gray hair +in my head then--there are a few now, I admit. 'What is it?' I asked +myself a hundred times as I stood there, studying out the cursed +problem. My tie was all right, my shirt front of the latest cut, my +watch chain straight from Tiffany's, my--ah! I saw it all in a moment!" + +Roseleaf, who did not see it even yet, wore such an astonished +expression that Mr. Weil had to stuff his napkin into his mouth to +prevent an explosion. + +"It was this devilish abdomen!" said Mr. Boggs, slapping that portion of +his frame as if he had a special grudge against it and would be glad if +he could hit it hard enough to bring it to a realizing sense of its +turpitude. "My figure had gone to the devil! It was not as large as it +is now, but it was large enough to cook my gruel. My waist had increased +so gradually that I had never noticed it. I got a tape and took its +measure. Forty-two inches, sir! The jig was up. With a heart as young as +ever, with a face as good and a purse able to supply all reasonable +demands, I was knocked out of the race on the first round by this +adipose tissue that no ingenuity could hope to conceal!" + +Mr. Weil could wait no longer. His musical laugh rang out over the room. + +"Let this be a warning to you, Shirley," he said, "to wear corsets." + +"It is no joke," was the indignant comment of Mr. Walker Boggs, as he +proceeded to add to his rotundity by devouring the hearty breakfast that +the waiter had just brought him. "I am left like a marooned sailor on +the sea of life. The only occupation that could have entertained me is +gone. It is no time to enter business again, I couldn't have selected a +wiser one to leave it. I don't want to marry, once was enough of that. +The only women I can attract are those commercially inclined females +that any other man could have as well as I. What is the result? My life +is ruined. I take no pleasure in anything. I eat, walk about, go to a +play, sleep. A _pig_ could do as much; and a pig would not have these +memories to haunt him, these recollections of a time so different that I +am almost driven wild." + +Roseleaf felt a sincere pity for the unfortunate gentleman, and did not +see the slightest element of humor in his melancholy recital. But Archie +Weil could not be restrained. + +"You're right about that pig business," he remarked. "You recall the +incident in Mother Goose, where-- + + 'A little pig found a fifty dollar note, + And purchased a hat and a very fine coat.' + +"There are strange parallels in history." + +Mr. Boggs would have replied to this remark in the terms it deserved had +he not been too much engaged at the moment in masticating a particularly +fine chop. As it was he growled over the meat like a mastiff in bad +humor. + +"Are there no remedies for excessive accumulation of fat in the +abdominal region?" asked Weil, taking his advantage. "It seems to me I +have read advertisements of them in the newspapers." + +"Remedies!" retorted the other, having swallowed the food and +supplemented it with a glass of ale. "There are a thousand, and I have +tried them all. I have taken things by the gross. I have paid money to +every quack I could find. For awhile I starved myself so nearly to death +that I went to making my will. And every day I grew stouter. I don't +know what I measure now, and I don't care. A few fathoms more or less, +doesn't count, when one falls from a steamer in midocean." + +Mr. Weil took occasion to say that there was no need for this extreme +discouragement. A little coin in the hand, or a new diamond ring, would +still bring youth and beauty to his disconsolate friend. + +"That's just it," retorted Boggs. "It's the contrast that's killing me. +The only women who would look at me to-day are mercenary ones that +wouldn't care if I was black as Othello or big as George IV. Why, I +could show you a trunkful of letters, written me by the finest women in +this country, when I was at my best. They breathe but one thing--love, +love, love! I lived on it! It was the air that kept my lungs in motion. +And I thought to go back to it so easily! _Ah!_" + +Mr. Boggs commenced upon his fourth chop and emptied the last of the +quart bottle into his glass. + +"Well, I'm sorry for you," said Weil. "I think the times must have +changed, as well as yourself, though. Now, here's a young fellow, with +all the qualifications of face, figure and address that you once had, +and he claims to be unable to make the acquaintance of a single +interesting woman between Brooklyn Bridge and Spuyten Duyvil." + +The heavy eyes of Mr. Walker Boggs rested upon the youthful face +opposite to him. Under the scrutiny to which he was subjected Roseleaf +reddened, in the way he had. He had never looked more handsome. + +"This is evidently a jest of yours," said Boggs, turning to Mr. Weil. + +"Not in the least, I assure you." + +"Then I say he can do what he likes, and I know it," replied the stout +man. "If I had his form I'd have to ask the police to clear the way for +me. I have seen circulation impeded in front of this very hotel because +I was coming out to take my carriage. If he won't look at them, why, of +course, the women can't do it all, but it lies with him." + +Roseleaf's eyes glistened with a strange mixture of hope and fear. He +did not think he would care to be in such great demand as that, but he +dearly wished to break through the iron bars that enclosed him. He +glanced in a glass that paneled the wall near by. He was good-looking +enough, it was no vanity to say so. What he lacked was confidence. + +"He is afraid of them, that's his trouble," smiled Weil. "We will cure +him of that, and when he gets to know women as they are he will give us +a novel that will set all creation by the ears. Gouger--you know +Gouger--says he writes the purest English. All he needs is a taste of +life." + +To this Mr. Boggs gave his unqualified assent. And he added that if he +could be of any service in the matter he would only be too glad. + +"We thank you for the offer, and may be able later to make use of it," +said Mr. Weil. "And now good-morning, for we have important business to +attend to." + +Roseleaf looked long and earnestly at the person they were leaving. He +seemed to him a very ordinary individual. If such a man had won the +love of scores of beautiful women, surely he himself could gain the +affections of one. When he stood with Weil in front of the hotel, by +which an unrivaled procession of ladies and gentleman was already +beginning to pass, though it was only eleven o'clock, he felt much +encouraged. + +"They are looking at you," whispered Archie, "plenty of them. Did you +see those two girls in pink in that landau? Why, they nearly broke their +necks to get the last glimpse of you. There is another lady who would +stop if you asked her, pretty as any of them, though she must be nearly +thirty. Your eyes are not open. Ah, here is something better! In that +carriage, with the Titian tresses!" + +It was Miss Millicent Fern, and she bowed to Mr. Weil. Then her bright +eyes lit up with a new lustre as they fell upon his companion. + + + + +CHAPTER V. + +STUDYING MISS MILLICENT. + + +When Mr. Weil made his appearance at the residence of Mr. Wilton Fern, +the door was opened for him by a young negro of such superb proportions +that the caller could not help observing him with admiration. He thought +he had never seen a man more perfectly formed. The face, though too dark +to suggest the least admixture of Caucasian blood, was well featured. +The lips were not thick nor was the nose flat, as is the case with so +many of the African race. The voice, as the visitor heard it, was by no +means unpleasant. Mr. Weil could not imagine a better model for an ebony +statue than this butler, or footman, or whatever position, perhaps both, +he might be engaged to fill. + +"Yes, sir, Miss Millicent is in, and she is expecting you," said the +negro, in his pleasant and strong tones. "Let me take your hat and +stick. Now, sir, this way." + +Miss Fern came in a few moments to the parlor, where Archie was left, +and greeted him most cordially. + +"There is a sitting-room on the next floor," she said, "where we shall +not be disturbed. I have given Hannibal orders to admit no one, saying +that we shall want the evening entirely to ourselves." + +"Hannibal?" repeated the visitor. "Is that the name of the remarkable +individual who received me just now?" + +"Yes," said Miss Fern, rather coldly. "Though I do not know why you call +him 'remarkable.'" + +"He is so tall, so grand, so entirely overpowering," explained Mr. Weil. +"One would think he might be the son of an African king. I never saw a +black man that gave me such an impression of force and power." + +Millicent elevated her eyebrows a little, as if annoyed at these +expressions. She answered, still frigidly, that she had noticed nothing +unusual about Hannibal. She did not believe she had looked closely +enough at his face to be able to identify him in a court. + +"He would make a fine character for a novel," said Mr. Weil, as they +walked together up the broad staircase. "I could almost write one +myself, around such a personality." + +The young lady looked disgusted. + +"A negro servant!" she exclaimed. "What kind of a novel could you write +with such a central figure?" + +"Perhaps I should not put him in the centre," laughed Archie, determined +to win her good nature. "Every story needs lights and shades. You can't +deny that he would cast a magnificent shadow." + +The humor of this observation struck Miss Fern and she joined mildly in +her companion's mirth. Then she remarked that the central figure of a +novel--the main thing in it--to her mind, should be a being who could be +given the attributes of beauty and grace. The minor characters were of +less account, and would come into existence almost of their own accord. + +"And now, before we do anything more," she said, "I want you to tell me +about that excessively handsome young man that I saw with you yesterday +in Madison Square." + +Weil was delighted at this introduction of his young friend. He began a +most flattering account of Shirley Roseleaf, describing him as a genuine +paragon among men, both in talent and goodness. He drew heavily on his +imagination as he proceeded, feeling that he was "in for it," and might +as well do his best at once. And he could see the cheek of the young +listener taking on a new and more enticing color as he went farther and +farther into his subject. + +"If I have to rearrange my novel--the one Mr. Gouger rejected--I shall +draw my hero after that model," she cried, when he paused for breath. "I +never saw a man who came so near my ideal." + +"But--you would have to alter your hero's character, in that case?" he +said. "I have read your MSS., and your description does not tally with +my young friend at all." + +Miss Fern reddened. + +"You don't mean to claim, do you," she replied, "that physical beauty +and moral goodness always go hand in hand?" + +"They should," he answered, in a tone that was meant to be impressive. + +"Ah, that is another question! _Do_ they? that is all the novelist needs +to know. Did you ever read Ouida's 'Sigma?' There are the two sisters, +one as pure as can be, the other quite the opposite, and the beauty +belongs to the depraved one. I know Oscar Wilde takes a different view +in 'Dorian Grey,' but he is wrong. I am sure that the worst man or woman +in the world--reckoning by what are called the 'amiable vices'--might be +the most lovely to look upon, the most delightful to associate with. Eve +found the serpent attractive, remember." + +Where did she learn all these things? Weil looked at her with +increasing astonishment. "Amiable vices." He liked the appellation. + +"Perhaps you are right," he assented, as if slowly convinced. "If you +wish to be acquainted with Mr. Roseleaf, I will bring him here with +pleasure. My only fear is that he will not interest you. He seems almost +too perfect for earth. Think of a young man who knows nothing of women, +who says he has no idea what it is to be in love, who does not +understand why the ladies who pass down Fifth Avenue turn their heads to +look at him! He, like yourself, is a novelist, but his characters are +beautiful images that lack life. He carves marble figures and attempts +to palm them off as flesh and blood. He really thinks they _are_, +because he has never known the difference. If you could take him, Miss +Fern, and teach him what love really is--" + +The young lady blushed more than before. + +"_I_--" she stammered. + +"In a strictly literary way," he explained. "But," he added, thinking he +was getting upon the edge of a quicksand, "we must not forget the object +of my visit." + +He took the parcel containing her MSS. that he had obtained from Mr. +Gouger, and began to untie the string. Manlike he soon had it in a hard +knot, and Miss Millicent, coming to his rescue, her young hands touched +his and made his heart beat faster. + +"There," she said, when the knot had given way to their joint endeavors. +"It is all right, now. But, before we begin on this, tell me a little +more about Mr. Roseleaf. What has he written? Where was it published? I +will send to-morrow morning and buy a copy." + +Her enthusiasm was agreeable under the circumstances, but the truth had +to be explained to her. + +"What he has written I will let you see, one of these days," he replied. +"As for publishing, he ran upon the same rock that you did--that of Mr. +Lawrence Gouger." + +The beautiful eyes opened wider. + +"So he rejected his work, too! And yet you say that it was well done?" + +"Exquisitely. Shirley's lines are as symmetrical as his face and figure. +His people are dead, that is all the trouble. Gouger scented the +difficulty under which he labors, in a moment. 'Go and fall in love!' he +said to him, 'and you will write a story at which the world will +marvel!'" + +Miss Fern arranged one of her locks of Titian red that had fallen down. + +"And hasn't he taken the advice?" she inquired, in a low voice. + +"Not yet," smiled the other. "He says, like a very child, that 'he +cannot find any one to love.' I walked up the avenue with him to-day, +and afterwards rode in the Park. There were hundreds of the prettiest +creatures, all looking their eyes out at him. And he hadn't the courage +to return one glance, not one. Ah, Miss Fern, it will be genuine love +with Shirley Roseleaf, if any. The imitations one finds in the +fashionable world will never answer for him." + +The young lady breathed a gentle sigh, as her thoughts dwelt on the +handsome figure she had seen in front of the Hoffman House. + +"You may bring him here--yes, I should be glad to have you," she said, +slowly. "But I must ask one favor; do not tell him what I said so +thoughtlessly about his being my ideal. Let me talk with him on fair +terms. It may be, as you suggest, that we shall be of advantage to each +other. When can you arrange it?" + +"Almost any day," smiled Weil. "I will let you know, by mail or +otherwise. And now, this story of yours," he added, thinking it a shrewd +plan to divert her attention from the other matter while it was still +warm in her mind. "Though I have read it through, and think I understand +it fairly well, I am all the more anxious to hear it from your lips. You +will put into the text new meanings, I have no doubt, that have escaped +my observation." + +Miss Fern flushed pleasantly and inquired with a show of anxiety whether +Mr. Weil had found its construction as bad as his friend, Mr. Gouger, +had intimated. + +"To be perfectly honest, it might be improved," he replied. "But the +germ is there, Miss Fern--that necessary thing for a good novel--an +interest that will hold the reader in spite of himself. I disagree with +Lawrence in his essential point. I am sure that a good writer of English +with a taste for fiction could make all the necessary alterations +without in the least detracting from the value of the story. For +instance, I believe if Mr. Roseleaf would take hold of it I could +guarantee to get you a publisher this winter." + +"And do you think he would?" she cried. + +"I think so." + +The authoress was so delighted with this announcement that she conquered +the slight wound to her pride. It would be herself still who had drawn +the picture, who had put the coloring into it; all that the other would +have to do might be described as varnishing. She took up the first sheet +of her writing, and turned up an oil lamp that stood upon the table at +her elbow, the better to see the lines. + +"Are you ready?" she asked. + +"Quite ready," smiled Mr. Weil. + +In a voice that trembled a little, and yet not unpleasantly to the +listener, Miss Fern began to read her manuscript. The opening chapter +introduced the heroine and two gentlemen, either one of whom might be +the hero. As the book is now so well known it is needless to transfer +its features to these pages. + +Presently the authoress paused and seemed to wait for her guest's +criticism. + +"That is one chapter," she said. + +"Yes. I remember. And the second one is where Algernon begins to +disclose a very little of his true nature. Shall we not have that now?" + +"As you like. I thought perhaps you would give me advice as we +proceeded, some fault-finding here and there, a suggestion of +alterations." + +He shook his head affably. + +"Not yet," he answered. "Up to this point I see nothing that requires +condemnation." + +"Nor praise, perhaps?" she said, in a low tone. + +"That might be true, also," he replied. "The first chapter of a novel is +only the laying of the cloth and the placing of a few dishes. The viands +that form the meal are still in the kitchen." + +She smiled at the simile. + +"But even the laying of the cloth is important," she said. + +"Your cloth is laid most admirably," he answered. "And now we will have +the castor, which in this case, I believe, contains a certain quantity +of mustard and red pepper." + +At this she laughed the more, and glanced through a few of the sheets in +her hands before she spoke again. + +"Did you form any opinion about--about _me_--from this story?" she +asked, constrainedly. "Did you, in brief, think it had taken a bold girl +to write it?" + +He hesitated a moment. + +"Yes," he said, at last. "A bold girl, a daring girl, a brave girl. Not +one, however, whose own conduct would necessarily be like that of the +woman she has delineated." + +She was so pleased that she put down the MSS. and leaned toward him with +both hands clasped together. + +"You are very, very kind," she said, impressively. + +"No, merely truthful," he replied. "With your permission I want to +retain that last quality in all my conversations with you. When you ask +me a question I wish to be perfectly free to answer according to my +honest convictions." + +"It is what I especially desire," she said, brightening. "No one able to +judge has heard anything of this story except your friend, Mr. Gouger. I +know it is bold, sometimes I think it is brazen. I can conceive that +there are excellent people who would say it never should have been +written. To my mind, the moral I have drawn more than justifies the +plainness of my speech. You can tell better than I where I have +overstepped the proper bounds, if there be such places. You are, of +course, a man of the world--" + +The protesting expression on the face of her companion arrested her at +this point. + +"That depends on what you mean by 'a man of the world?'" + +"It is a common expression." + +"And has many definitions. Before I plead guilty to it, I want to know +just how much you intend by it." + +Miss Fern put down the page she had taken up and a puzzled look crossed +her pretty face. + +"You make it hard for me to explain myself," she said. "I suppose I +meant--" + +"Now, be as honest as you asked me to be," he interrupted. + +"Well, then, I suppose you are a man like--like other men." + +"But there are many kinds of other men." + +The young lady tried several times to make herself clearer, and then +asked, with a very pathetic pout, that she might be permitted to +proceed with her reading, as the hour was growing later. It was not a +very important point, any way, she said. + +"I cannot entirely agree with you," replied Archie. "If you are to be a +writer of fiction, you should not consider any time wasted which informs +you in reference to your fellow creatures. It is from them that you must +draw your inspiration; it is their figures you must put, correctly or +incorrectly, on your canvas. Don't understand me as dictating to you, my +dear Miss Fern. I only wish, as long as you have referred to me, to know +of what I am accused." + +To this Miss Fern answered, with many pauses, that she had not intended +to accuse her visitor of anything. And once more--with evident +distress--she begged to be permitted to drop the matter and return to +her reading. + +"Very well," he assented, thinking he had annoyed her as much as was +advisable for the present. "As they say in parliamentary bodies, we will +lay the question on the table, from which it can be taken at some more +fitting time. I am as anxious as you can be to get into Chapter II." + +She read this chapter to the end, and paused a few seconds to see if he +had any comments to make, but he shook his head without breaking +silence, and she went on with the story. He pursued the same plan till +the end of the fifth chapter. + +"It is interesting, exciting and true," he remarked, referring to the +closing scene. "And I cannot help feeling arise in my brain the question +that Mr. Gouger put when he read it: How could a young, innocent girl +like you depict that situation with such absolute fidelity." + +He had come to the point with a vengeance. But to Miss Fern his manner +was far more agreeable than if he had approached it by stealth, or in an +insinuating way. She had anticipated something of the sort and had tried +to prepare herself to meet it. + +"Does not nature teach us some things?" she asked, speaking +straightforwardly, though her color heightened in spite of her efforts. +"Given a certain condition, an intelligent mind can prophesy results." + +He shook his head in mild disagreement with her. + +"Gouger is an expert, and he denies this, as a regular rule, at least. +You should have heard him argue it with Roseleaf. 'Either throw yourself +into a love affair,' he said, 'or never try to depict one.' Excuse me, +Miss Fern, you bade me be frank--" + +She assented, with a grave nod of her shapely head. + +"You may have been in love--I do not ask you whether you have or +not--but you cannot have known personally of the sort of love that you +have depicted in these pages. I call it little less than miraculous that +you should draw the scene so accurately." + +She colored again, this time partly with pleasure, for she was very +susceptible to compliments. + +"Perhaps your statement may explain to you," she said, pointedly, "what +I meant a few minutes ago by calling you 'a man of the world.' You +recognize at a glance what I had to construct from my imagination." + +Archie Weil's face changed as he realized how deftly he had been caught. +He had meant to pretend to this girl that he was more than usually +ignorant of the nether side of life. + +"Don't think too badly of me because I happen to know what is clear to +every man," he said, impressively. + +"To every one?" she answered. "To your friend, Mr. Roseleaf?" + +"Ah! He is an exception to all rules. And yet, Gouger says he can never +write a successful book till he is more conversant with life than he is +at present." + +She looked troubled. + +"With life?" she echoed. "With sin, do you mean?" + +"With the ordinary things that men know, and that most of them at some +time experience." + +Her bright eyes were temporarily clouded. + +"What a pity!" she exclaimed. + +"Yes," he said, for it was his humor to agree with her. "It is a pity." + +There was a pause of a minute, and then she asked if she had read enough +for one evening. He answered that as it was now past ten o'clock it +would not be easy to get much farther and that he would come again +whenever she chose to set the time. + +"You do not say much about my work," she said, anxiously, as he prepared +to go. + +"Silence is approval," he responded. "I can talk it over with you +better when you have reached the end. I have things to say, and I shall +not hesitate to say them then." + +"When is it most convenient to you to come?" she inquired. + +"Any time," he answered. "I don't do much that is really useful. But +wait till you see Shirley. He will atone for the shortcomings you find +in me." + +She repeated the word "Shirley," as if to test its sound. + +"You are your father's only child, are you not?" he asked, thoughtfully. + +"No. I have a sister, Daisy, a little younger than I." + +"And has she a literary turn, also?" + +"Not in the least." + +Archie arose, and Miss Millicent accompanied him to the front door. The +tall negro came to open the portal, but Miss Fern told him, with the +same quality of dislike in her tone which Weil had noticed before, that +he need not wait. + +"He is really a magnificent piece of humanity," said Archie, when the +man had disappeared. "I never saw anything quite like him." + +"You admire negroes, then?" said the young lady, almost impolitely. + +"I like representatives of every race," he answered, as if not noticing +her. "There are interesting specimens in all. I number among my +acquaintances several Chinamen, a Moor, a Mexican, Jews, Portuguese and +Russians innumerable. If that fellow was not in your employ I would +engage him to-morrow, merely as a study." + +Miss Fern took the hand he held out to her and set the next meeting for +Saturday evening. Then she said: + +"If you want Hannibal, perhaps papa would oblige you. I certainly would +do all I could to persuade him." + + + + +CHAPTER VI. + +"HOW THE WOMEN STARE!" + + +The next day Archie Weil lunched with Lawrence Gouger. He wanted to talk +with his friend about the young author and authoress. Gouger listened +with interest to the story he had to relate, and nodded approval when it +appeared that Archie had behaved admirably thus far in relation to Miss +Millicent. + +"Do you know anything about Mr. Fern?" he asked, when the other had +reached a period. + +"Nothing." + +"Well, neither did I, a week ago, but I have taken pains to inform +myself. He is a highly respectable elderly party, who deals in wool. He +married a very beautiful lady, who has now been dead eight or ten years +and he lives altogether in the society of his two daughters. If you +succeed in getting Millicent's book on the counters you will earn his +everlasting gratitude. They say he is not literary enough himself to be +a judge of its merits, and if she has fifty copies to present to the +family friends it will probably be all he will ask." + +Mr. Weil uttered a low whistle. + +"I don't know what the family friends will say of it," he replied, "but +I call it pretty warm stuff. If the list includes many prudes they will +hardly thank the girl for sending such a firebrand into their houses." + +"Pshaw!" said Gouger. "The world is getting used to that sort of thing, +and they won't mind it a bit. Besides, they will be so lost in +admiration of their cousin's name on the cover that they will think of +nothing else. What did you make out of her? Is she as innocent as I +predicted?" + +Archie poured out a glass of Bass' ale and sipped it slowly. + +"Quite," he said, as he put it down on the table. "And she's no dunce, +either." He went on to tell of the trap he had fallen into. "I'm dying +with impatience to get her and Roseleaf together. They'd make an idealic +couple." + +Mr. Gouger inquired what he was waiting for. + +"Oh, I want to do the thing right," said Weil. "I want to learn her as +thoroughly as I can, before I bring him upon the stage. It will take +three or four evenings more to hear the rest of her novel, and another +to discuss it. I shall get around to him in about a fortnight, at the +rate things are going. He will keep. What do you suppose he is doing +now? Writing poetry! He sent a piece a few days ago to the _Century_, +and they accepted it." + +"He will be gray when it appears," said the critic. "It takes a long +time for anything to see the light in that publication." + +"But in this case an exception will be made," said Weil. "They have +assured him that it will come out in their very next issue. He will be +so proud to see his name in print that I expect to find difficulty in +holding him back. A poet who appears in the Century has certainly +stepped a little higher on the ladder." + +The critic agreed to this, and remarked that such a man as Roseleaf +should give his whole attention to poetry. + +"Wait!" cried Archie. "Give him time. See him after he has fallen head +over ears in love with charming Millicent Fern. There is something in +him, I feel sure, and between that dear girl and myself we will bring it +out. By-the-way, there is a character I want you to meet," he added, as +Mr. Walker Boggs came into the room. "You have never had the pleasure, I +think, though you have heard me speak of him." + +Mr. Boggs had his attention attracted by a waiter who was sent for the +purpose and came with great willingness to occupy a seat with Mr. Weil +and his friend. + +"We were talking of a New York merchant just now," said Archie, when the +introductions were over, "and it occurs to me that you, who know almost +everybody, may have some knowledge of him. He is in the wool business, +I hear, and I think you once told me you had done something in that way. +His name is Wilton Fern, and he lives at Midlands." + +"Do I know anything about him?" echoed Mr. Boggs. "I should say so. He +was my partner for seven years, and I still have a little stake left in +the concern, on which I am drawing interest." + +Mr. Weil showed his astonishment at this statement. What a very small +world it was, after all! Then, after pledging his friend not to mention +that he had ever discussed the matter with him, he went guardedly into +the particulars of Miss Millicent's book, and of his having called at +the house for the purpose of passing judgment upon it. + +"I didn't know that was in your line," replied Boggs. + +"Well, it was this way," answered Archie. "Mr. Gouger's decision didn't +exactly suit the young lady, as it was not very favorable. Mine will be +quite to her taste, as I view her abilities in a more favorable light. +Now tell us all about the family, as the only one of them I have met is +Miss Millicent. Why, this is a regular find, old man! You should have +told me a week ago that you possessed all this information that I have +been aching to get hold of." + +Thus adjured, Mr. Boggs entered upon his story. From which it appeared +that he knew the Ferns, root and branch, and had dined with them dozens +of times. + +"What sort of a chap is the pater?" asked Weil. + +"A very well-kept man of nearly seventy, with a great deal of what is +called 'breeding' in his manner, and a face like the portrait of a +French marquis cut out of a seventeenth century frame. He doesn't look +like a business man at all, and between ourselves he's not much of a +one. All the money he ever made--saving my apparent egotism--was when I +was in the concern. I've heard he's got a big mortgage on his residence +and is going down hill generally. Too bad; nice fellow; sorry for him; +such is life." + +Archie asked if Boggs would do him a personal and particular favor, if +it would not cause him much trouble; and on being answered in the +affirmative, said he would esteem it a great honor if he could be +introduced to Mr. Fern by that gentleman's former business associate. + +"I suppose I shall run across him at Midlands, some evening," he said, +"and get one of those presentations that are the most aggravating things +in the world. I don't want that to happen, and the best way, to use an +elegant phrase, is to take the bull by the horns, or in this case, the +sheep by the tail. Will you make an accidental call on him to-morrow +afternoon and let me be of the party?" + +Mr. Boggs responded that he would be delighted. And this matter being +settled, all parties could give more direct attention to their lunch +than they had been doing for the preceding ten minutes. + +"You must have heard of my friend Boggs, in the days when he was a +figure on the streets of this town," said Weil, presently, returning to +what he knew was the favorite subject of that personage. "You've lived +here for twenty years, and of course the name of Walker Boggs is +familiar to you." + +Mr. Gouger looked a good counterfeit of complete mystification for some +seconds, and then a gleam as of sudden recollection shot across his +face. + +"Certainly, certainly!" he said. "Mr. Boggs was what is popularly known +as a lady killer, if I am not mistaken. You got married, did you not, +Mr. Boggs, some ten or eleven years ago?" + +The party addressed acknowledged the practical correctness of the date. + +"Why, it comes back as plain as day," said the critic. "The _Herald_ had +a page about you, including your portrait and some verses by a well +known poet. It said your marriage had cast a gloom over Manhattan Island +and some of the up-river counties." + +Mr. Boggs gloomily nodded, to show that the statement was true. Then he +touched his most rotund portion with a significant look. + +"I'm a widower now," he said, "and nothing but this--_this_--stands in +my way. As Shakespeare says, ''Tis not as deep as a well, nor as wide as +a church door, but--' The ladies never look at me now, and all on +account of this d--d flesh, which hangs like a millstone around my +neck." + +Cutt & Slashem's critic, ignoring the peculiar character of the metaphor +used, remarked politely that he thought no lady of sense would put great +stress on such an insignificant matter. + +"Insignificant!" echoed Boggs. "I'll bet it's fifty inches around, +come! And it's not the 'ladies of sense' I'm after. Quite the contrary." + +One of Archie Weil's explosive laughs followed this statement, which +caused an expression of mild injury to settle over the countenance of +Mr. Boggs. + +"You're getting on toward forty, and you ought to quit," said Weil. +"Confound the women! Let them go." + +"That's well enough to talk about," replied Boggs, gruffly. "How would +you like to follow your own advice?" + +Weil uttered an exclamation. + +"I? I have precious little to do with them, I assure you. For a man of +my correct habits I have the worst name of any one I know. Everybody +insinuates things about me, and they can prove nothing." + +"We'll ask Isaac Leveson about that," sneered Boggs. "By-the-way, that +wouldn't be a bad place to take young Roseleaf to, when you get to +instructing him in earnest. I met the young fellow on the avenue last +night and walked around with him for a couple of hours. He's a darling!" + +"Roseleaf?" cried both the other gentlemen, in one breath. + +"To be sure. How the women stared at him! I couldn't blame them; his +waist isn't over thirty, and he's as handsome as--as I was at his age. I +told him he could have all the loveliness in New York at his feet, if he +liked." + +Weil smiled significantly at Gouger. + +"What did he reply to that?" he asked. + +"Oh, he had an ideal in his head, and none of those we saw quite came up +to it; for I did get him to raise his eyes and look at the prettiest +ones. I drew out of him slowly that he would have nothing to do with a +girl unless she had red hair; that--" + +Mr. Weil uttered a laugh so hearty that it attracted the attention of +everybody in the room. Mr. Boggs paused to inquire the cause of this +outbreak, but Archie assured him that something entirely out of the +present discussion had just occurred to him, which was to blame for his +impoliteness. + +"A girl must have _Titian_ hair," repeated Mr. Boggs, accepting the +explanation, "or he would not consider her. He ruled out all the +striking blondes and brunettes, saying that he liked only those of a +medium shade. We came across one that answered these descriptions, an +exquisite little creature who looked as if she would swallow him could +she get the chance. And then there came out another idea. He would not +think of this fairy because she was so short. 'I want a woman five feet, +four inches tall,' he said, as if the article could be made to order, in +case the size did not happen to be in stock. Then, would you believe it, +he found a girl embracing every attribute he had mentioned. Her hair was +just the right shade, her height must have hit the mark exactly, her +complexion was medium. But no. She was too heavy. She would weigh a +hundred and forty-five, he said, quite twenty pounds too much. If we had +found a girl that filled all his description he would have invented +something new to bar her out of the race." + +Mr. Weil remarked that he was not so sure of Roseleaf's insincerity. He +believed the right woman would yet be discovered, and that a case of the +most intense affection would then spontaneously develop. + +"In fact," he added, "I have the identical creature in mind. It is clear +to us--to myself and Mr. Gouger here--that Shirley will never write a +thrilling romance till he has fallen wildly, passionately in love." + +Mr. Boggs smiled slightly, and then sobered again. + +"Shall you have him marry, also?" he inquired, pointedly. + +"Why not?" + +"Because it will finish him; that's why. The romance in a modern +marriage lasts six weeks. At the end of that time he will be useless for +literary purposes, or anything else." + +Mr. Weil shook his head in opposition to this rash statement. + +"My theory is," said he, "that a novelist should know everything. To +write of love he should have been in love; to tell of marriage he should +have had a wife--a real one, no mere imitation; to talk of fatherhood +intelligently he should become a father. How can he know his subjects +otherwise?" + +The stout man smiled significantly. + +"And if he wishes to write of murder, he must kill some one. And if he +wants to depict the sensations of a robber he must take a pistol and ask +people to stand, on the highway." + +"Now you are becoming absurd," said Archie. + +"No more than you," said Boggs. "You go too far, and you will find it +out. Let your novelist fall in love. That will do him good. But don't +let him marry, or you will lose him, mark my word. Let him contemplate +matrimony at a distance. Let him reflect on the glory of seeing his +children about his knees. So far, so good. But when you have shelved him +with a wife of the present era, when you have kept him up nights for a +month with a baby that screams--his literary capacity will be gone. Make +no mistake!" + +Mr. Weil, half convinced, and much surprised to hear such wisdom from +this unexpected source, made an effort to maintain his ground. + +"Nearly all the modern novelists _are_ married," he remarked. + +"Yes, and nice stuff they write, don't they? Namby-pamby, silly-billy +stories, misleading in every line! They are the most unsafe pilots on +the shores of human life. They start, without exception, from false +premises. Their chart is wrong, their compass unreliable, their +reckoning ridiculous from beginning to end. Where did you ever see a bit +of real life that resembled these abortions? Do lovers usually fall on +their knees when they propose? Is the modern girl an idiot, knowing less +of the facts of nature than an oyster? Is the conversation between men +and women filled exclusively with twaddle? You would think so, from +reading these books; and why? They are written by married people, most +of them, people who don't dare step over the line of the commonplace any +more than a woman would dare order her dressmaker to put pockets in her +gown!" + +Archie looked at Mr. Gouger, who nodded a partial approval of these +statements. Mr. Boggs betook himself with more interest to his chops. +And the other two gentlemen, remarking that time pressed, bade him +good-by for the day. + +"I see you agree with him that I shouldn't marry Roseleaf?" said Archie, +with a rising inflection. + +"There is certainly point in what he says," replied Mr. Gouger. + +"But--confound it! With the boy's disposition, it will be a delicate +business," retorted Weil. "I don't know as I can carry him to the point +of passionate love for pretty Miss Fern, and then shut off the steam +when it suits me." + +This matter was discussed for the next ten minutes, as the friends +walked along toward the office of Cutt & Slashem. + +"I think you are foolish to delay so long introducing him to her," said +Gouger, finally. "I don't see that you are making any progress +whatever." + +"Ah, but I am," replied Weil. "I am making both of them more and more +anxious for the meeting. Shirley walks the street feverishly impatient, +and I have no doubt mutters her name in his dreams. Millicent talks +about her ideal of manly beauty. When they get together failure will be +impossible." + +Mr. Gouger laughed at the idea that Roseleaf was "feverishly impatient" +to meet any girl, and ventured to predict that the young man would have +to be put in irons to get him to the residence of the Ferns when the +time came; or at least to keep him there. + +"Just the point I am working on," replied Weil. "Under ordinary +circumstances I would have to handcuff his wrists to mine, but I am +making such a strong impression on his imagination that he is crazy to +go. And once she gets him under her influence--I tell you, Lawrence, she +is no ordinary girl." + +"She certainly does not write like one," smiled the critic, "either in +her subject or her English. You may make something of him--I rather +think you will--but not of her. Her ideas are wild, and her realism a +little too pronounced even for the present age." + +"She has truth on her side, you admit," said Archie. + +"Yes, to a remarkable degree." + +"Well, that ought to be something, if Boggs' estimate of the modern liar +is correct. Shirley will help her to style, give her his own, if +necessary. I am going to land both of these fish, if only to spite you, +Lawrence. You tossed them away with that fine contempt of yours, and you +will weep hot tears for it before you die." + +At the door of Cutt & Slashem's they met the two members of that firm, +who paused to say a word to Mr. Gouger. They were anxious for a new book +to bring out as soon as possible, and were regretting with him that +nothing worth publishing seemed to present itself. + +"You may strain matters, it necessary," said Mr. Cutt. "We can't keep +up on reprints forever. I hope you made no mistake in rejecting that +book of Mrs. Hotbox. I hear it is selling well." + +Mr. Gouger's face was, as ever, immovable before his employers. + +"What 'Fire and Brimstone?'" he inquired. "The authorities seized the +entire edition this morning." + +Mr. Cutt looked at Mr. Slashem, with a startled expression. + +"In that case, I am glad we escaped it," he said. "We shouldn't like +that sort of an affair, of course." + +Mr. Weil, who knew both the gentlemen well, inquired what they thought +of Mrs. Hotbox's production. + +"I have never seen it," said Mr. Slashem. + +"Nor I," said Mr. Cutt. + +The partners disappeared into the counting-room, where they had an +interview with a binder who had offered to do their work at one-tenth of +a cent a hundred copies less than the concern with which they were then +dealing. Archie said good-by to Gouger, and went off to find Roseleaf, +with whom he had engaged to take, later in the day, a ride through the +Park. + +"How soon am I to see your paragon?" sighed the young man, as they were +making the grand round of that famous drive. + +"Within a week, I hope. Are you getting uneasy?" + +"I am getting lonesome," was the gloomy reply. "And I want to begin +work." + +"Well, it will soon pass now. To-morrow evening I am to hear another +installment of her novel. Two more sittings after that will finish it, I +should say. And the next thing will be--you. But have you seen no one +else in all this time that you care for?" + +The young man looked aimlessly at the fleecy clouds that hung low on the +horizon. + +"No," he answered. + +"And you think you are ready for a passionate affection, if the right +person is found?" + +"I will try," he said, simply. + +Mr. Weil roused himself and touched his horse with the whip. + +"Try!" he echoed. "You will not have to try. She will carry you off your +feet, at the first go. Shirley, I have found you a superb woman, that +you _must_ love. All I want to feel sure of is, that you can control +yourself enough to behave in a reasonable manner." + +Roseleaf looked up inquiringly. + +"She belongs to an eminently respectable family," explained Archie. "Her +father is a gentleman of the most honorable type. She has a young +sister, who--" + +Roseleaf, slow at all times, had at last begun to comprehend. + +"You surely don't think--" he began. + +"Ah, that is the question! A novelist must learn so very much--a +novelist who is to depict the truth, as you are to do. Where should he +stop? What experience should he refuse, provided it may be utilized in +his work? A responsibility that is no light one will rest on me, my dear +boy, when I have introduced you to this family, and left you to your +own devices." + +Roseleaf's eyes opened wider at these mysterious suggestions, but he did +not like to make any more inquiries. Weil changed the conversation, +calling attention to the women they met, who turned their handsome heads +to look at the young man, as their equipages almost touched his. + +"What an awfully wide swath you are cutting!" was Archie's exclamation, +as the throng increased. + + + + +CHAPTER VII. + +A DINNER AT MIDLANDS. + + +True to his appointment Walker Boggs met Mr. Weil on the following +afternoon, and set out with him for Wilton Fern's office. Though +engaged, as has been already stated, in the wool trade, Mr. Fern did not +have on the premises to which these worthies repaired a very large +assortment of that product. His warehouses were in another part of the +city, and all the wool that was visible to his customers was arranged in +sample lots that would easily have gone into a barrel. Mr. Weil, +notwithstanding the description that Boggs had given of his ex-partner, +was not prepared to see such an exceedingly fine specimen of humanity as +the one introduced to him. The word "gentleman" was written in large +characters on his broad forehead and in every word he spoke. It +certainly was not often, said Archie to himself, that one encountered +that sort of man in business. + +"I have already heard something of you, sir," said Mr. Fern, affably, +but with the dignity that was a part of his nature, no more to be +discarded than his eyes. "That is, if you are the same gentleman that +has kindly offered to assist my daughter in arranging a story she has +written." + +Mr. Weil admitted the correctness of the supposition, but disclaimed any +special credit for what he had done. He explained briefly how he was +drawn into the case. The visit lasted upwards of an hour, during which +the conversation wandered from literature to business and politics, and +all sorts of things. + +Mr. Weil could not tell from Mr. Fern's manner of alluding to his +daughter's work whether he had a very high idea of its value or not. +Indeed, there was very little to be learned from this grave gentleman +that was not expressed in the language he used. He was inclined, Archie +thought, to reticence, for when there was a lull in the conversation it +was always one of the others who had to start it going. The thing that +might be counted a substantial gain, out of the whole affair, was an +invitation to dinner for the following Wednesday, in which Mr. Roseleaf +was included, and Mr. Boggs also. + +Before the Wednesday set for the formal dinner at the Ferns', Mr. Weil +had heard the whole of Miss Millicent's novel read by the lips of that +charming young woman. There was certainly something very strong in it, +in spite of its grammatical faults. It would be a very good story when +"Dr." Roseleaf had put it into a little better English. + +The meeting between Roseleaf and Millicent was most interesting to the +one who had been the means of bringing them together. The girl put out +her hand with a straightforward motion of welcome, and it was accepted +with something resembling timidity by the young man, who did not even +raise his eyes to hers. The talk that followed was nearly all her own, +Shirley's part in it being largely monosyllabic replies to her +statements and suggestions. + +When Miss Daisy was presented to both the gentlemen, for the first +time--Mr. Boggs she remembered very well--she drew their attention for a +few moments from her sister, but soon relapsed into the more +insignificant place which she seemed to prefer. She was not as large in +any way, as Millicent, and did not seem likely to become so. Her hair +was of a soft shade of light brown, and her eyes a decided blue. In the +presence of her sister she did not expect to shine, and was evidently +relieved when she could go into a corner and talk over times long past +with Walker Boggs. + +Mr. Fern came in rather late, but still before the hour announced for +dinner. He had his habitual look of quiet elegance, but withal an +expression of care about his face, that Weil attributed to the business +troubles of which Boggs had spoken. The manner of the daughters toward +him was marked by the watchful eyes of the chief conspirator. Millicent +merely looked up and said, "Papa, this is Mr. Roseleaf, of whom we have +spoken," and then when the greetings that followed were exchanged, went +on talking with those about her as if there had been no interruption. +Daisy, on the other hand, crept softly to her father's side, and putting +an arm around his neck, kissed him when she thought no one observed her. + +"You are tired, papa," she whispered. + +"No, no!" he said, brightening. "I am very well." + +It was at the table that Mr. Fern had his first conversation with +Roseleaf, and the two men got along nicely together. Shirley acquitted +himself creditably. Weil, who saw everything, noticed that the negro, +Hannibal, in superintending the service in the dining-room, lingered +more about Miss Daisy's chair than any other, and took extra pains to +see that her wants were anticipated. In spite of this, however, Mr. Fern +frequently asked his younger daughter to have more of certain dishes, as +if his mind was constantly turned in that direction. + +"How long do you think it will require to do the work you have so +generously undertaken?" asked Mr. Fern of Roseleaf, when the dessert was +reached. + +"It is impossible to say," stammered the young man. "Some weeks, at +least." + +"So I supposed," said Mr. Fern. "That being the case I wish to tender +you the hospitality of my home. It would be a great deal of trouble for +you to come every day from the city, and I know we could make you +comfortable here." + +Roseleaf was about to decline the offer with thanks, when Mr. Weil spoke +to him in a low tone. + +"Take it, by all means," he said. "It's a chance in a lifetime. You know +nothing of family life. Don't dream of refusing." + +The delay allowed Miss Millicent to add her request to that of her +father, and fearing to let his protegé answer, Mr. Weil boldly spoke for +him. + +"It is a good idea," he said. "He will have his baggage brought up +to-morrow. There's nothing like being on the ground, when there's work +to be done. And, with the general permission, I am going to run out +pretty often myself, to see how things progress." + +The bright, off-hand way of the last speaker seemed to please Mr. Fern, +for he heartily seconded this suggestion. When the table was vacated, +Mr. Fern asked if he might be excused for a few minutes, while he wrote +a couple of important letters, and requested Walker Boggs to show the +guests through the grounds, where they could smoke their cigars till he +returned. + +Accordingly Weil and Roseleaf accompanied their new guide out of doors +and across an extensive lawn to an arbor at the further end, where a +handsome prospect of the Hudson unfolded itself. As Archie was wishing +for some feasible way of getting rid of Boggs, temporarily, that +gentleman espied an acquaintance in the adjacent road and went off to +speak to him. + +"Are you in love yet, you dog?" asked Archie, as soon as he and his +young friend were alone. "What! You're not! Don't let an hour pass, +then, before you are. The best of all proverbs is, 'Never put off till +to-morrow what you can do to-day.'" + +"How can I do this to-day?" was the doleful response. + +"How can you help it, you mean? There she was at the table--Titian hair, +hazel-grey eyes, lovely waist--everything. Love! _I_ could fall in love +with that girl, marry her, get a divorce and commit suicide, within +forty-eight hours." + +Even Roseleaf had to smile at this extravagant statement. + +"Do you want me to do all of those things?" he asked. + +"Only the first one, at present. If you can't do that, give up all ideas +of being a novelist and secure a place in some factory or counting-room. +Everything is ready for you. You are _persona grata_ here. Nothing can +come in your way. Oh, don't exasperate me!" + +Roseleaf haltingly said he would do his best; and the next day he came +to Midlands, prepared to spend a month or longer. + + + + +CHAPTER VIII. + +HOLDING HER HAND. + + +For the first three days Roseleaf gave most of his time to reading the +MSS. that Miss Fern had written. He could not say that he liked it, +exactly, but that was not necessary. To fill in the time, he consented +to let the girl read his own story that Gouger had rejected, though he +did this with trepidation, having a dread that she would think it +insipid. When she had finished it, however, her delight was unbounded. + +"It is lovely!" she exclaimed, in response to his inquiring eyes. "I +cannot see why they refused it. I haven't been so interested in a story +in years." + +When he had read _her_ story through he began to rewrite it, departing +as little as possible from the original. As soon as he had a chapter +finished he would give it to her, for comparison, and criticism, if she +chose to make any. She proved, however, a most charming critic, her +shafts falling mainly upon herself, for she declared that her novel +seemed unworthy of its elegant new dress. She conceived a shyness toward +this quiet youth, and blushed when the striking situations and bold +language of her tale came into the conversation. It was so different +from his own work! + +"It is too bold. I am sure it is," she said, repeatedly. "I ought to +begin again. My plot has too much freedom, too little conventionality. +People will say a very strange girl must have written it." + +And he would tell her that he did not think so; that the strength of her +ideas was very great, and that the public would find excuses enough for +anything that interested and entertained it. He even added that he +wished he possessed her knowledge, her insight into life, her +fearlessness to tread on any ground that her subject made desirable. + +Between them they were doing very good work, without doubt. Mr. Weil +took some of the completed chapters to Lawrence Gouger, who returned +them with a smile that spoke volumes. Cutt & Slashem would take the +story when it was ready, if the subsequent pages kept up to the mark of +the first ones. + +"Don't forget your own book," said Gouger, in a note he enclosed for +Roseleaf. + +Mr. Weil was not backward in accepting the cordial invitation he had had +to join the Ferns at dinner whenever he could make it convenient. +Besides this he called frequently at the wool office, and ingratiated +himself into Mr. Fern's good graces in many ways. Within a fortnight he +knew all there was to be known about wool, in which he seemed to have +conceived a great interest. In his talks with Roseleaf he spoke +learnedly on this subject, referring to the foreign and domestic +staples, like one who had made the matter a life study. + +"What a queer thing trade is!" he exclaimed, on one of these occasions. +"Here we find a man who ought to adorn an atelier, or a seat in +Congress, and yet is obliged to guide his entire existence by the price +of such a confoundedly dull thing as the hair on a sheep's back. He +votes a certain political ticket on account of the attitude of the party +on Wool; he dines off mutton and lambs' tongues; he casts his lot with +the Sheep at church. I don't know but he would feel a genuine pleasure +in having Wool pulled over his eyes. And still I am convinced that he +never ought to have been in the Wool business at all, and that +Boggs--what a drop--is right in his impression that it will eventually +swamp him." + +Roseleaf asked how Mr. Fern got into the trade in the first place. + +"Well, as I understand it, Boggs was looking for a partner. Mrs. Fern +had some cash and her husband wanted to put it into a good thing, from a +financial standpoint. They did well while they were together. When Boggs +pulled out they had a clear $200,000 apiece. Boggs--confound him!--has +his yet; Fern hasn't. He's proud as the devil, and didn't tell me this, +by any means. It would break him up completely to have to go into +bankruptcy. Really, I wish I could do something for him." + +Roseleaf looked up inquiringly. + +"Why, I've got a fair amount of money," explained Archie, "and perhaps a +lift over these hard times might be the making of him. I'm not +particularly a philanthropist, but I like this fellow wonderfully well +for such a new acquaintance. I shall give him a delicate hint in a day +or two, and if I can fix things without too much risk--we have to +protect ourselves, you know--I am willing to do so." + +This struck Shirley Roseleaf as rather odd. He had never thought about +Mr. Weil in that way. Whether he was rich or poor had never entered his +head. He began to wonder if he was very wealthy. He certainly lived +well, and had no visible occupation of the sort the census takers call +"gainful." + +"It is an interesting family, though," pursued Archie, in his rambling +way. "I wish I could get into it as you did, you rascal, and observe it +at shorter range. Even the servants are worth studying. Look at that +Hannibal; who can say that the African race is inferior when it produces +such marvels! I can hardly take my eyes off the black paragon when he is +present. How he passes the soup--as if it were some heavenly decoction, +made by the gods themselves and sent to earth by their favorite +messenger! With what grace he opens the carriage door! with what majesty +he mounts to his seat by the driver! I wonder if he has a sister. She +would be worth a journey to see. I have met such women on their native +soil, statuesque, slender, full-breasted, square-shouldered, with jars +of water on their heads and clinking silver anklets. What a cursed thing +is our American prejudice against color! No other people carries it to +such an extent. In the Latin Quarter the West India blacks are prime +favorites with the pretty grisettes." + +The young man could not help a slight shiver at this information. He did +not in the least agree with the sentiments his friend was advancing, but +neither did he think it wise to contradict him. + +"Then there is the little one--Miss Daisy"--continued Weil, branching +suddenly into that topic. "So quiet, so self-abased, as if she would not +for the world attract one glance that might be claimed by her elder +sister, who is perfectly willing to be a monopolist of attention. A nice +girl, sweet as a fresh-plucked lily. There must be treasures hidden +under all that reticence. Still waters run deep, the silent swine devour +the milk. I think I ought to investigate the child. If you are to have +that aggregation of beauty known as Millicent, what prevents me from +securing a slight hold in the affections of the junior?" + +Roseleaf shook his head in a way that might have meant almost anything. +He never could tell how much in earnest his friend was when he took up a +vein like this. Neither could he imagine little Daisy in the role of an +entertainer for such a very wise man as Archie, not only much her senior +but a thousand times her superior in knowledge and acquaintance with +things that people talk about. + +"Keep your eye on her--she will be worth watching," said Weil, with one +of his laughs at the sober face before him. "She is worth almost as much +to a rising author as the negro--not quite, but nearly. Then there is +the pater-familias; is there anything in him? No, he will be of no +service to you. And that brings us back to our superb Millicent, with +whom you must now be wildly infatuated." + +Roseleaf shook his head again. + +"No--not yet," he said. + +"But, what do you do all the time? How can you sit by the side of a +pretty girl, and kiss her cheeks, and put your arm around her, and yet +keep from falling in love?" + +The younger man gasped at each of these suggestions, like one who has +stepped into icy water and feels it gradually creeping upward. + +"I have done none of those things," he faltered. + +"None of them! Then I shall not let you stay here!" cried Archie. "What +does the girl expect? That we are going to make her reputation in the +literary world and get nothing for ourselves? I never heard such +effrontery! She refuses to give you the least opportunity, does she--the +jade!" + +More and more confused grew the other at these expressions. + +"You don't understand--you are quite in error," he articulated. +"She--she has refused me nothing, because--because I have asked +nothing." + +Mr. Weil uttered a disheartened groan. + +"But this will not do, my dear fellow!" he said. "How can you accomplish +anything unless you make a beginning? Rewriting the story that she has +written will not advance you one step on the path you profess such +anxiety to tread. That is only an excuse--a make-believe--a pretence +under which you have been given quarters in this house and allowed every +chance in creation to learn your lesson. Are you afraid of her, or what +is the matter? Does she overpower you with her beauty? Tell me where +your difficulty lies." + +But Shirley could hardly answer these apparently simple questions. He +said he feared the trouble might be in the formality of the situation. +How could Mr. Weil expect, he asked, that a spontaneous case of +love-making would develop from such a condition of things. + +"Stuff!" cried Archie, with a grimace. "If you and she were members of a +theatrical company, and were cast as a pair of lovers, you wouldn't find +so many pitfalls. You would go ahead and repeat the lines of your part, +wouldn't you? All you want is to do the same now." + +"But what _are_ the 'lines of my part?'" inquired the other, dolefully. + +"Take her hand once in yours and they will come to you," retorted Weil. + +Roseleaf reddened so much that Archie regretted the severity of his +tone, and hastened to turn the conversation to something more agreeable. +He made up his mind, however, to have a talk with Miss Fern, and at the +first opportunity he did so. It was on an afternoon when he knew +Roseleaf was in the city, and he came to the point at once, after his +own fashion. + +"How are you and my young friend getting along?" he asked her. + +"Oh, as well as possible," she responded. "I am learning to like him +more and more. I really shall be sorry when his task is done." + +Mr. Weil shrugged his shoulders. + +"There's a bit of selfishness in your words, Miss Fern," he said. "Have +you forgotten that he is not here to be useful to _you_ alone; that you +agreed to do what you could for _him_, as well?" + +The girl cast down her pretty eyes in confusion. + +"I am sure I have tried to be agreeable," she replied, gently. + +"That is not enough," replied Archie, gravely. "What he needs is +something--some one--to stir his blood, to awaken his fancy. I told you +in the first place that you ought to make him fall in love with you--for +literary reasons. He must feel a sensation stronger than mere friendship +for a woman before he can write such a story as will bring him fame." + +Miss Millicent did not grow more comfortable under this suggestion. She +remarked, after a long wait, that she did not see how the end sought was +to be accomplished. Love, she said, was not a mere expression, it was a +deep, actual entity. Two people, playing at love with each other, might +afterwards find that they were experimenting with fire. + +"I have heard," she continued, her fair cheeks growing crimson, "that +there are women--" + +Then she paused and could go no further. But he understood. + +"There are women--thousands of them," he admitted, "who would willingly +do what I ask. If it is necessary, he must go to them." + +She wanted to say that she hoped it would not come to that--she wanted +to convey to her companion the horror she felt for what she supposed his +words implied--but she could not. It was so much easier to write of +things than to talk of them to a man like him. + +"Do you call it quite fair," he asked, "to claim all and give nothing? +He does not require much. Could you not let him take your hand, and--" + +"And--" + +"Possibly, touch your lips with his?" + +Miss Fern rose to her feet with a fierce gesture. + +"Sir!" she exclaimed. + +"Very well," replied Mr. Weil, shortly, turning away. + +The girl resumed her seat, with rapidly rising and falling bosom. She +was in a quandary. The suggestion she had heard would have sounded from +any other lips like a premeditated insult. Coming from this man the +venom seemed to have vanished. + +Roseleaf felt somewhat discouraged after his latest talk with Weil. He +wanted to make a start, to do something, no matter how little, toward +the object he fully believed was to be attained. That evening while +walking with Miss Fern (for it was their frequent habit to go out of +doors unchaperoned) he found himself unconsciously taking her hand--that +hand for which he had until now felt a genuine fright. And she, after +all her resolutions never to permit anything of the sort, gave it to +him, as they strolled together along an unfrequented byway. + +"I want so much to make a Name," he was saying fervently. "I have tried +and tried to begin such a book as Mr. Gouger wants, but I cannot. Won't +you help me, dear Miss Fern? Won't you show me what I lack? I know you +can, if you will. They tell me I have had no experiences, and that I +must have--not a real affair, you know, but an inkling of what it is +like. I have tried to say things to you and have been in fear that you +would not like them, and have held my peace. But now, I can wait no +longer." + +In his exuberance Roseleaf spoke at last with ardor, and even went so +far as to attempt to put one of his arms around the waist of the fair +creature by his side. On her part Miss Fern was nearly overcome by +surprise. + +In one instant the timid young gentleman had changed into the similitude +of a most ardent swain; but in the next he became again his natural +self, with the added confusion resulting from his excited and mortified +state. + +"Let me take you home," he said, when he saw that she could find no +words even to chide him. "Let me take you home; and to-morrow I will go +away." + +Go away! She did not like that idea! Her book was not yet finished, for +one thing; and besides he was a nice young fellow, and had meant no +offense. + +"There is no reason why you should go," she stammered. "I forgive you, I +am sure." + +"Do you!" cried Roseleaf, grasping her hand again in his joy. "You are +kindness itself to say so. I must appear very stupid" (here he half put +his arm around her again, checking himself with difficulty from +completeing the movement) "and dull, and wanting in manners, but you are +the only young lady I have ever known on terms of the least intimacy." + +Miss Fern replied that she did not mind what had occurred, and hoped he +would forget it. She added that she would do anything she could for +him, and had the most earnest wish that they should be friends. + +At the gate they paused, and in some way their eyes were looking into +each other. The girl laughed, a relief to feelings that had been for the +past ten minutes somewhat overcharged. + +"Well, you have made a beginning," she said, mischievously, for she +wanted to drive the sober expression from his clouded face. + +"A beginning?" he echoed. + +"Yes," she said. "You have held my hand." + +He crimsoned. + +"You said you would forgive me," he murmured. + +"With all my heart," she responded, putting the hand in his again. + +He felt a thrill go through him, but it was a pleasant sensation. + +"I came very near putting my arm around you," said he, looking away from +her. "Do you forgive that, too?" + +She took the hand away and struck him playfully on the cheek with the +palm of it. + +Then, before he surmised what she intended, she ran brightly up the +steps of the house and vanished. + + + + +CHAPTER IX. + +"DAISY, MY DARLING!" + + +It was Roseleaf's full intention to say something about this adventure +to his instructor in the art of love, Mr. Archie Weil, but somehow he +was not able to summon the requisite courage. He had a delicate sense +that such a thing ought not to be repeated, where it might by any +possibility bring a laugh. And about this time the novelist's attention +began to be attracted toward the younger sister, who had till then +almost entirely escaped his observation. + +He noticed particularly the ceaseless devotion that the black servant of +the family exhibited toward her. She might have been a goddess and he a +devotee; a queen and he her slave. Hannibal moved about the girl like +her very shadow, ready to anticipate her slightest wants, while Daisy +seemed to take this excess of attention as a matter of course. + +Millicent constantly showed her dislike for the servant. + +"I don't see how you can endure to have him touch you," she said to +Daisy. "He knows better than to lay his hands on me. I have told papa +often that I want him discharged, and he ought to consider my wishes a +little." + +To this Daisy answered that the boy, as she persisted in calling the +giant, meant well and was certainly intelligent. Her father did not like +to change servants, for it took him a long time to get used to new +ones. So Millicent tossed her head, returned to her collaboration with +Mr. Roseleaf, and things went on as usual. + +Imperceptibly Shirley began to take an interest in Daisy. She did not +run away from him, and he discovered, much to his surprise, that she was +worth talking to. She was not exactly the child he had supposed, and she +had the full value of her eighteen years in her pretty head. He got into +the habit of taking short strolls with her, on evenings when Millicent +was occupied with Archie, and when, as often happened, Mr. Fern was away +with Hannibal in the city. There was a sequestered nook at the far end +of the lawn, in which the pair found retreat. Before he realized it, +Roseleaf had developed a genuine liking for these rambles, and was +pleased when the evenings came that brought Mr. Weil to dinner. + +Daisy was ingenuous, to a degree, if surface indications counted for +anything. The words that flowed from her red lips were as unstudied as +the pretty attitudes she assumed, or the exceedingly plain but very +becoming dresses that she wore. After she once got "used" to Roseleaf +she treated him quite as if she had been five years his senior. + +"Are you a rich man?" she asked him, on one of those early autumn +evenings that they passed together. + +Her manner was as simple as if she had said that it looked like rain, +and his answer was hardly less so. + +"No, Daisy. I have not much property, but I intend to earn more, +by-and-by. Did you think, because I seem so idle, that I was a +millionaire?" + +"No," she answered, a shade of disappointment in her face. "I only +wanted, in case you had plenty of money, to get you to lend me some." + +He stared at her through the half-light. Her features were turned in a +direction that did not reveal them very well. What did she want of +money! + +"How much do you need?" he inquired, wondering if it was within his +power to oblige her. + +"Oh, too much, I am afraid. And I cannot answer any questions, because +the object I have is a secret. I don't think my plan very feasible, for +it might be years and years before I could pay it back. You won't mind +my speaking of it, will you?" + +Curiosity grew stronger, and as politely as possible he renewed his +question as to how much the girl needed to carry out her plan. + +"I don't know, exactly," she said, thoughtfully. "Perhaps a thousand +dollars a year for five or six years; it might take less." + +"It is a great deal," he admitted. "Does your father know what you +contemplate?" + +The girl changed color at once. + +"Oh, no. I should not like to have him, either. He would say it was very +foolish. And yet I am sure it would not be. The money would do much +good--yes, ever so much." + +The young man thought hard for a few moments. A desire to see a brighter +light flash into those young eyes possessed him. He debated seriously +the idea of handing her his patrimony, as he would have given her a +pound of candy if she had wanted it. + +"I might give you part," he said, after a pause. "Perhaps your thousand +for the first year or two." + +She looked him full in the face, and put both her hands in his +impulsively. + +"You are too good," she exclaimed, with fervor. "But you cannot afford +so large a gift. No, I would only take it if you had a very large sum, +and could not possibly miss it. I asked carelessly. I should not have +done so--I was selfish to think of such a thing." + +"I want to speak to you about something, also," said Roseleaf, after a +strained pause. "I have noticed of late that your father has some +trouble on his mind." + +She started suddenly. + +"Ah!" was all she said. + +"And I have wondered if there was anything I could do to--to aid +_him_--to relieve him. Because, I would like it very much if I could, on +account of--of--" + +She looked up inquiringly. + +"I have been so much a member of your family, in a certain way, that a +grief like this appeals strongly to me," he said, haltingly. + +She paled slightly as she repeated his words. + +"A grief?" + +"Well, distress, annoyance, whatever it may be called. If there is +anything I can do, I shall be more than happy." + +The girl sat for some moments with her eyes on the ground. + +"He _is_ troubled," she said, finally. "I am glad to talk with you, for +I cannot get him to tell me anything. He is greatly troubled, and I am +worried beyond expression. I can't understand it. He has always confided +in me so thoroughly, but now he shakes his head and says it is nothing, +trying to look brighter even when the tears are almost ready to fall. +What can it be, Mr. Roseleaf? He has no companions outside of his office +and this house? He sits by himself, and isn't a bit like he used to be +and every day I think he grows worse." + +Roseleaf asked if Daisy had talked much with her sister about it. + +"No," she said, with a headshake. "I don't believe Millie has noticed +anything. She is so occupied with her literary matters"--there was a +sarcastic touch upon the word, that did not escape the listener--"she +has no time for such things. I hope you won't think I mean to criticise +her," added the young girl, with a blush. "I know you care a great deal +for my sister, and--" + +She stopped in the midst of the sentence, leaving it unfinished. And +Roseleaf thought how interesting this girl had become. + +"Let me confide in you, Daisy," he said, in his softest tone. "I do not +care 'a great deal,' nor even a very little for your sister. You see," +he went on, in response to the startled look that greeted him, "I am to +be a novelist. To be successful in writing fiction, I have been told +that I ought to be in love--just once--myself. And I came here and tried +very hard to fall in love with Miss Millicent; and I simply cannot." + +Daisy's fresh young laugh rang out on the air of the evening. + +"Poor man!" she cried, with mock pity. "And hasn't she tried to help +you?" + +"No. She hasn't. And as soon as I get the work done I have commenced for +her, I am going away." + +The child--she was scarcely more than that--grew whiter, but the shadows +of the evening hid the fact from her companion. + +"You ought not to go," she said, slowly, and rather faintly, "until you +have made another trial." + +"Oh! It is useless!" he replied. + +"Is it that you cannot love--Millie--or that you cannot love--any one?" + +He hesitated, puzzled, himself, at the question. + +"I never did love any one--any woman," he confessed, "and perhaps I +never shall. But your sister seems peculiarly hard to love. Yet she is a +very handsome girl and equipped with a mind of unusual calibre." + +Daisy acknowledged this description of her sister's charms. She remarked +that it was strange that such a combination did not suffice to +accomplish the desired result. + +"There are people who do find her entertaining," she added. "Mr. Weil is +one of them." + +"Oh, Archie!" said Roseleaf. "He finds everything entertaining. It is +nothing worth remarking. She is the exact description of his ideal in +feminine face and form. He once gave me the list of the excellencies of +a 'perfect woman,' and your sister has them all." + +The younger Miss Fern had her own opinions about this matter. She +thought the innocent man at her side had not quite gauged the interest +that Mr. Weil took in her family. + +"I will make a proposition," she said, with a light laugh, when they had +talked longer upon the subject. "I am afraid it won't seem worth much to +you, and perhaps you can do better; but why can't you stay here, and--if +Millie won't do--make love to _me_?" + +Darkness is responsible for many things. In the light, Daisy could not +have uttered those words, even in jest. There, when the sun had set and +the stars were not yet on duty, she found the courage to make that +suggestion. + +"You are very kind," he stammered, when he grasped her meaning. "But I +do not think it will answer. I am afraid love cannot be pushed to any +point without its own initiative." + +"That is probably the case with _real_ love," replied the girl, "but an +imitation that would serve your purpose might be evolved in the way I +have indicated. For instance, you could take my hand in yours--like +this--and I could lean toward you in--this way. And then, if you had +sufficient courage--" + +Before he dreamed of doing it, it was done! He had kissed her on her +tempting lips, placed within an inch of his own. + +"You are too good a scholar," she pouted, rising to her feet in some +confusion. "I did not give you leave to do that." + +"I beg your pardon most humbly," he answered, with intense contrition. +"May I assure you that the act was wholly involuntary and that I am very +sorry for it?" + +She turned and surveyed him in the shadow. + +"Are--you--_very_--sorry?" she repeated. + +"Yes." + +"Why?" + +"Because I have made you angry." + +"Do I seem angry?" + +"At least, I have injured your feelings." + +Her face was close to his again. + +"Well, I forgive you. There, let us make up." + +She raised herself on the tips of her toes and kissed him twice. + +All the blood in this young man's body seemed to rush to his head and +then back with violence to his heart. + +"_Daisy!_" he stammered. "_Daisy!_" + +But she sprang away as he tried to embrace her, and standing two yards +off, tauntingly cried that he did not know what love was, and that no +one could ever teach him. Taking up the challenge he started toward her. +She ran away, he in pursuit. She had gone but a few steps when she +tripped over an object in the path and went down. In trying to stop +himself Roseleaf fell by her side. + +"Daisy!" he cried. "Are you injured?" + +She did not answer. In the darkness he saw her lying there so still that +he was frightened. He caught her passionately in his arms, and knew no +better way to bring her to consciousness than to rain kisses on her +cheeks. As might be expected this only served to prolong her swoon, +which was not a very genuine one, if the truth must be told, and it was +some seconds before she opened her eyes and caught him, as one might +say, in the act. + +"How dare you!" she demanded, shrinking away from him. + +"Daisy, my darling!" he answered, his voice tremulous. "I thought you +were dead, and I knew for the first time how dearly, how truly I loved +you!" + +She laughed, not very heartily. She had hurt herself truly in her fall, +and her feminine nerves were jarred. + +"You are doing nicely," she said. "For a beginner, one could ask nothing +better. And now, if you will help to rise, I think it would be more +proper." + +"No." He spoke with force and passion. "You must not think I am +trifling. _I love you!_ Yes, I love you! _I worship you!_" + +"I do not see," she remarked, insisting in spite of him that she must +assume a standing position, "how you differ in your expressions from the +lovers I have read of in novels. It is quite time that we returned to +the house. To-morrow, if you like, I will give you another lesson." + +Shirley was a picture of utter despair. His new sensations almost +overwhelmed him. In one second the dead arteries in his body had leaped +into the fullest life. The touch of that young maiden's lips had +galvanized him. He could not bear to leave her with those mocking words. +But at that moment a voice was heard in the direction of the residence. + +"Miss--Dai-sy! Miss--Dai-sy!" + +It was Hannibal, who had returned from a drive with Mr. Fern. They could +see him dimly coming across the lawn with the girl's cloak in his hand. +Daisy, with one quick grasp of the fingers that hung close to hers, said +good-night to her companion, and started in the direction of the +servant. If she intended--as seemed probable--to pretend she was out +alone, Roseleaf did not mean to share in that deception, and he followed +close behind her. + +"Here I am, Hannibal," called Daisy. "Ah, you have my coat. It was very +kind of you. Has papa come home? I am coming in. I did not think how +late it was." + +The negro stopped as he saw the strollers, and knew that they had +undoubtedly been together. What more he suspected no one can say with +certainty. But he threw the cloak upon the grass that bordered the +pathway and turned on his heel without a word. + +"Confound his impudence!" exclaimed Roseleaf, when he had recovered +sufficiently from his surprise to speak. "I have a good notion to +follow him and box his ears." + +The soft hand of the girl was on his sleeve in a moment. + +"Say nothing to him--_please!_" she answered. "He--he is very thoughtful +for me--of my health--and I was careless. Papa must have sent him." + +The touch on his arm mollified the young man at once. He tried to make +out the lines of the pretty face that was so near him and yet so far +away. + +"We are to study again to-morrow, then," he said, taking up her +statement with an assumed air of gayety. "At what hour?" + +But she broke away from him abruptly, and ran into the house without a +word. Hannibal stood in the doorway and Roseleaf thought he +distinguished harsh sounds from the negro's lips; but this seemed so +incredible that he conceived his senses at fault. + +Looking at his watch the novelist saw that it was still early enough to +take a stroll by himself and ponder over his new happiness--or misery, +which was it?--under the open sky. It was two hours later that his +latchkey turned in the door, and in that time he had resolved either to +make Daisy Fern his wife or commit suicide in the most expeditious +fashion. + + + + +CHAPTER X + +"OH, SO MANY, MANY MAIDS!" + + +The only disagreeable thing about falling in love with Daisy was that +Roseleaf felt compelled to reveal the truth to Archie Weil. He believed +he was bound to do this by a solemn contract which he had no moral right +to ignore. Perhaps Weil might claim that he had no business to fall in +love with one sister when his "manager" had picked out the other for +this operation. Be that as it may, there was no use in evading the +question. It must be talked over, be the result what it might. + +"Well, I know what love is now," was the abrupt way in which the young +man opened the subject on the following afternoon. + +He had ridden to the city, as Weil was not expected at the residence of +Mr. Fern that day. The hope he had formed the previous evening of +getting another interview with Daisy had not materialized, she having +gone on some short journey before he could intercept her. + +"You do!" was the equally abrupt reply, uttered in a tone that betrayed +undoubted astonishment. "What do you mean?" + +Roseleaf reddened. + +"It came to me all at once, last evening," he said, avoiding the gaze of +his companion. "We were down at the end of the lawn, you know--" + +Archie interrupted him with a sudden shout. + +"Not _Daisy_!" + +"Yes." + +"You are in love with _Daisy_!" + +Roseleaf bowed. + +"Upon my word!" + +There was nothing in any of these expressions that conveyed the +information which the younger man craved, namely, whether his friend +approved what he had announced, but he stole a look at him and saw that +he appeared more astounded than angry. + +"You dear boy," he said, "I don't know what to say to you. You blush +like a maiden over the acknowledgment. I am half inclined to believe you +are the girl in the case, and your partner in love some great, strapping +fellow on whose bosom you intend to pillow your coy head. So it is +Daisy, eh? And last night it came to you? Tell me how it happened." + +Comforted in a measure by the good nature of his friend, Roseleaf +proceeded to give the outlines of what had occurred, suppressing the +more intimate facts with which the luckier reader is acquainted. He +admitted the touch of hands, but did not mention the pressure of lips to +lips. He told of the girl's swoon, but said nothing of the extraordinary +measures adopted to bring her to her senses. But, while he made no +insinuations, nor pretended to see through the meshes in this net, the +experience of Mr. Weil served him in good stead. He could fill in the +vacant places in the story with substantial correctness. + +"I don't know what Miss Millicent will say to all this," he remarked, +when the recital came to a pause. + +"I think she was just beginning to like you a little herself. Most of +our talk last evening was about you, and when I mentioned, as I took my +leave, that you were probably out walking with Daisy, I could see +distinct traces of jealousy. I want to be fair with my client. I told +her that you came there to learn love from her, not from her little +sister. If all this should result in breaking her heart, I don't see how +I could excuse myself. And the other one, she seems such a child, I +never thought of her in that connection. Why, how old is she--not over +eighteen, I think." + +Roseleaf answered that Daisy would be nineteen on her next birthday, an +ingenious way of stating age that was not original with him. + +"All right," said Archie, digesting this statement slowly. "And now, +what is your programme?" + +Roseleaf looked surprised at the business-like nature of the question. + +"I mean to secure her consent to marry me, as soon as possible," he +said. + +"And then?" + +"Why, see her father, I suppose. Isn't that the most important thing to +do?" + +Mr. Weil shook his head decidedly. + +"Not by any means. You must not act with undue haste. Mr. Fern would say +she was too young to think of matrimony, a proposition you could not +successfully dispute. Besides, should he happen to give his consent and +appoint a week from Wednesday for the happy occasion, see what a mess +it would put you in." + +The suggestion caused the brightest of smiles to illumine the +countenance of the listener. + +"It would make me the happiest of mortals!" he cried. "There is nothing +that could prevent my summoning the clergyman and securing the prize I +desire." + +Mr. Weil grunted. + +"H--m! And in the meanwhile what would become of your great novel?" + +This question brought a sober pause to the young novelist. + +"I could write it after my wedding," he answered, finally. + +"Could you? You could write nothing at all then--nothing that any one +would pay a cent to read. I have told you from the start that what you +want is a _grande passion_, something to stir your soul to its depths. +You are on the verge of that experience. Already you have had a glimpse +of what it will be like. For the first time the touch of a woman's +fingers has driven sleep from your eyelids. No, you didn't tell me you +laid awake all night, but I saw it by looking at you. You can shut +yourself up in your room now, and rhapsodize over the dear face, the +lovely mouth, the soft voice of your beloved. In another week, if this +keeps on, you can write like a combination of George Eliot (after she +met Lewes) and Amelie Rives (before her marriage). A month later, Gouger +might rave over your productions, for you will be on the Matterhorn of +bliss unsatisfied." + +A slight laugh, at his own excess of description, issued from the lips +of Mr. Weil, but the countenance of his companion was as firm as a rock. + +"You are right," said Roseleaf, gravely. "Already I see the vast +difference between this sensation of love and the thing I imagined it to +be when I wrote those silly pages that Cutt & Slashem did so well to +reject. But I am torn between two desires. I want to write my +novel--until yesterday I thought no wish could be so great. And I also +want my wife." He breathed the word with a simple reverence that +affected even the flinty heart of his hearer. "I shall never rest easy +until I find her wholly mine, to love, honor and cherish while God gives +me breath!" + +The hand of the elder man dropped heavily on the table by his side. + +"_Good!_" he exclaimed. "_Very_ good! You could not have said it better. +There is an opportunity before you to accomplish both of these things. I +only wish to impress upon you the fact that they must come in the order +I have indicated, or one of them will never come at all. Write your +story while the fever of passion is on you. The dead calm of married +life would only bring the sort of novel that the shelves are already +piled with, nauseating to the public and a drug in the hands of the +publishers." + +Roseleaf doubted the full correctness of these conclusions. He thought, +with that dear girl by his side, he could write with all the fervor of a +sweetheart, for his affection was to have no boundary, no limit, no end. +But he had a high opinion of the abilities of Mr. Weil, and he had no +idea of disputing the conclusions of that wise guide. + +"Do you think she will accept me?" he asked, wistfully, returning to the +main question. "It came so sudden, and there was very little said, and +it was late; and then Hannibal came after her, and she went into the +house. Everything was left in a state of uncertainty." + +"Did nothing show whether you were indifferent to her?" was the wily +interrogation that followed. "Usually I believe something conveys the +sweet word 'hope' to the waiting one. And what do you say about +Hannibal? That he came to call your charmer and took her away from you?" + +Without reserve the young man repeated what had happened. Archie seemed +deeply interested, but whatever his thoughts he did not express them at +the time. + +"And that reminds me of another thing," said Roseleaf. "Have you noticed +anything strange about Mr. Fern?" + +"Yes," said Mr. Weil, "I have noticed. I wondered if you had done the +same. Have you discovered what the trouble is?" + +"No, and Daisy doesn't know, either. Indeed, she is much distressed +about it. Remember, this is a secret between us, for perhaps I had no +right to talk of their affairs. He is in a state of great depression, +and as he is so regular in his habits I can't imagine what to lay it to. +You are so shrewd, couldn't you find out?" + +Mr. Weil rose and took a few paces up and down the room. + +"You are the fellow to do that, not I," he said, presently. "Yes, hear +me out. You are in a sense a member of his family, and would have a +natural right to allude to the state of his health. Then, if you were to +put in a word about Miss Daisy--why, you might kill several birds with +one stone." + +Roseleaf looked much puzzled. + +"I thought," he said, "that you wanted me to postpone the matter of my +marriage as long as possible." + +"Your marriage, yes. But not the preliminaries. They may require a dozen +bouts with the old gentleman. The first time he will probably laugh you +out of the room as a silly young noodle; the second he will say that he +has nothing against you personally, but that his 'baby' is too infantile +to think of such things for ten years yet; the third he will begin to +see the situation in its right light, and after that it will be only a +matter of detail. All these things will be of the greatest value to you +in the novel you are going to write, and you must not on your life miss +a single one of them. + +"Drop into the wool shop, catch his royal highness there, and for the +first thing express solicitude for his health. Unless he is on his guard +more than is likely you ought to catch some slight straw to show what +ails him. Then follow it up with a word or two about Miss Daisy, and you +will have spent a good afternoon, even if he doesn't smile on your suit +at first hand, and take you to his manly breast as his long-lost +son-in-law." + +The reasonings set forth in these propositions were so evidently correct +that Roseleaf resolved to adopt them just as soon as he could bring +himself into the proper mood. In the meantime, however, he wanted to +have a little further talk with Daisy, for he could hardly ask her +father for her hand without the semblance of permission on her part. He +tried to remember all she had said to him at the foot of the lawn, and +was compelled to admit that it was very little indeed. The only things +he was certain of were the kisses, but his experiences were so slight +that he could not tell how much weight to give even these. + +That evening he tried his best to get a word with her alone, but she +eluded him, and he was obliged to go to the boudoir of her sister and +read over that young lady's MSS. as it stood revised by his careful +hands. + +"Well, another chapter will finish it," said Miss Fern, when he put down +the pages. "And then Mr. Gouger will decide whether Cult & Slashem +consider it worth printing." + +"Yes," he answered, gravely. "They will print _your_ story now, without +doubt. But _I_ am as far as ever from satisfying their requirements." + +Millicent thought how supremely selfish she must seem, talking always of +her own hopes and doing nothing to help the one who had made her success +possible. She saw that he wore a dejected look, and she began to +sincerely pity him. When our own ships are safely in sight of the +harbor we have more time to dwell on the derelicts in which the property +of our friends is embarked. + +"Perhaps, when we get this disposed of, I can help you," she suggested. + +It was nearly a week before Roseleaf could get another talk with Daisy, +a week that tried him to the utmost, for he could think of nothing but +her, and could not understand her reasons for treating him so strangely. +At last he wrote her a letter, giving it to Hannibal to deliver, in +which he said that he was about to return to his city lodging and wanted +to know if she meant him to leave without a kind word at parting. He +thought the negro looked peculiar as he took the note, half as if he did +not intend to accept the commission to deliver it; but he concluded that +this must be imagination. He wondered why Archie Weil took such a fancy +to Hannibal. If Roseleaf was lucky enough to claim Daisy as his wife, he +would never have that figure darken his door. + +The letter must have been taken to its destination without delay, for an +answer was brought in the course of an hour, stating in the briefest +language that Miss Daisy would await him in the parlor, after lunch. + +At the table Miss Fern was present, as usual, but not her father, his +business in the city keeping him away at that hour. At meals it was +Daisy's habit to say little, leaving the conversation to her sister and +whoever else happened to be there. At the end of this particular lunch +Millicent went up stairs to her chamber and Daisy betook herself to the +parlor, followed a few minutes later by the young man. + +"Why have you treated me so coldly?" were his first words, when he found +himself alone with her. + +"Oh, dear, that is a very bad beginning!" she said, smiling. "I shall +have to instruct you in some of the simplest things, I see already. When +you wish to make friends with a woman, don't begin by scolding her. I am +here because you wrote that you wished a kind word. Don't give me too +many cross ones, please." + +He sighed impatiently. + +"Daisy," he exclaimed. "I hope you are not going to make fun of me! I +have passed a most miserable week. After the glimpse of heaven you gave +me, that evening--" + +She put on an air of mock surprise. + +"Did I do that! It was much more than I intended, then. I fear you are +inclined to use extravagant metaphors, Mr. Roseleaf. But, never mind. +You are going away, and I am very, very sorry. However, as you came here +on Millie's account, and not on mine, I suppose I have no right to say +so." + +The fair brow of the young man was a mass of wrinkles. + +"I can't understand why you speak so lightly," he answered. "You know--I +told you--that I love you--that there is nothing in all the world so +dear to me--that I want your promise to be my wife. I can't go from here +without that consolation. Daisy, I ask you, in all sincerity, to say +that as soon as your father's consent is obtained, you will name a day +when you will marry me." + +The smile faded from the girl's lips. Something brought to her mind a +very sad reflection. + +"You ask a great deal," she said. "Much more, I think, than you realize. +Until a week ago I was nothing to you. We lived under the same roof, we +took our evening strolls together, we talked like the commonest +acquaintances, and that was all. Then, in a moment, you discovered that +your heart was on fire. I have not ascertained what made the marvellous +change. I am sure you cannot tell yet if it be a genuine and lasting +one. Were I inclined to believe I ever should be willing to go to the +lengths of which you speak, I should assuredly want time for the +maturest reflection. In the first place, I know almost nothing about +you. One would not engage a--a coachman--without more inquiry. How can a +girl promise to trust her entire future to a man with whom she has but a +casual acquaintance? Such things need consideration. I know my father +would say so. And if he heard only the nicest things about you, I doubt +if he would like to have you take me from him--especially now, when his +heart is heavy and he leans so much on my love and care. No, you are in +too great haste." + +His impatience grew to boiling heat as he listened. How could she find +so many reasons, and (he was obliged to confess) such sensible ones, to +bring against him? + +"There is one thing you _can_ do," he said, with an attitude of deep +dejection. "You can tell me if you love me." + +She tossed her head with a feminine movement that was wholly charming. + +"Yes, I could tell you that, but it would be a very improper thing, +under the circumstances, provided I was able to give you the answer you +seem to wish. If I did care for you, would I like to say so in definite +words when anything further might turn out to be impossible? A girl +would not wish to have a man that she was never to marry going about +with the recollection that she said, 'I love you.'" + +"Then you can say nothing at all?" he asked sadly. "Shall I be uncertain +whether at the end of my term in purgatory I am to be raised to a state +of bliss or dashed into the Inferno?" + +She laughed; a delicious little laugh. + +"You are getting hyperbolical," she answered. "There are ten thousand +better women than I." + +"But I don't want them," pleaded the young man. "Did you ever read the +lines of Jean Ingelow: + + "'Oh so many, many, many + Maids and yet my heart undone. + What to me are all or any? + I have lost--my--one.'" + +Daisy replied that the sentiment was very sweet, and added that when a +lover could quote such admirable poetry with accuracy, there was hope +for him. Do what he would, Roseleaf could not make her see that +everything in his future life depended on "one little word" from her. +She persisted that he was misled by the violence of his first +affection, and that if he would only let a month or two pass he would +discover that his pulse would fall off a number of beats to the minute. + +"And is that what you want?" he asked, reproachfully. "Would you like to +have me come back two months later, and tell you my love had ceased?" + +"Yes, if it was the truth. How much better than to learn it after my +vows had been pledged and I was bound to you for the rest of my days!" + +He rose and went with quick steps to her side, catching up her hand and +covering it with kisses. She did her best to stop him, whispering, with +a glance toward the door, that they might be interrupted at any minute. + +"By whom!" he retorted, stung at her coldness. "Your sister has gone up +stairs, and there is no one else in the house." + +"Hannibal might come in," she said, in a low tone. "He has no way of +knowing that I do not wish to be interrupted." + +He grew angry at the mention of that name. But the warning had its +effect and he sat down, nearer to her than before, his heart beating +rapidly. + +"I hate the fellow!" he exclaimed bitterly. "It is a good thing I am +going away, or I should strike him some day for his insolence!" + +Daisy paled at the vehemence of her companion. + +"Has he been insolent to you?" she murmured. + +"To me? He would not dare! What angers me is the way he speaks to the +rest of you. He came with your cloak that night, acting as if he was +your master, instead of your servant. I have heard him speak to Mr. +Fern in a way that made me want to kick him! Why does your father bear +it? Why do you? Has Hannibal some mysterious hold on his situation?" + +The girl heard him patiently, though the roses did not come at once to +her white cheek. + +"I am afraid," she said, when he had finished his tirade, "that you +despise him for his color. It is a prejudice that seems to me--and to my +father--unchristian and uncharitable. Perhaps, in the anxiety to make +Hannibal forget that God gave him a darker skin than ours, we may have +gone to the other extreme, and treated him with too great consideration. +But I think you overstate the case." + +Her gentle words smote upon the ears that heard them, and in a moment +Roseleaf was affected by the most lively contrition. Without attempting +to excuse himself he begged her pardon, which she readily granted. + +"When do you leave us?" she asked. + +"To-morrow morning." + +"But you will call--occasionally?" + +"If I may." + +His tone was so sad that Daisy assured him he ought to have no doubt of +that. + +"I understand," she added, "that you have probably helped Millie to a +reputation that she craves above everything, and she ought not to prove +entirely ungrateful. We have enjoyed your stay here, and shall be most +sorry to have you go. I should be glad to think you would honor us with +your company to dinner not less often than once each week." + +For the first time a ray of light came into his face. + +"Oh, may I?" he cried. "Then I shall not be shut off entirely from +seeing you?" + +"No, indeed," she answered. "Father likes you and Mr. Weil too well--you +will bring him, of course. Once a week, at least--if it were twice it +wouldn't do any harm; and if it were three times--" + +His face was now one bright beam of light. + +"Daisy," he cried. "I believe you do not hate me after all!" + +"I hope you never thought I did," she responded. "Why is it that a man +can see no middle ground between positive dislike and marriage? I expect +to like a good many men in the course of my life, but I can only marry a +very few of them." + +He was obliged to laugh at this, and to say that she would only marry +_one_, if he had _his_ way. Before they had finished with this subject +Roseleaf was in a state of high good nature, though he had little +apparently upon which to base the rise in his spirits. + +"Can't I say something--just a hint, if no more, to your father?" he +asked, getting down again to business. + +"Pretty risky!" she answered, sententiously. "He wouldn't give you much +encouragement I fear." + +The young man caught eagerly at the word. + +"You _fear_!" he echoed. "God bless you, Daisy!" + +Bearing in mind what she had previously said about the unlocked doors, +he did not attempt to suit the action to the phrase. But his happy face +spoke volumes. + +"You had best say very little to father at present," said Daisy, +soberly. "He is most unhappy." + +"I wish I knew what troubled him!" he exclaimed. + +"I wish so, too, if you could aid him," she answered, earnestly. + +"Who knows but I may?" he asked, with a smile that she hoped would prove +prophetic. + + + + +CHAPTER XI. + +ARCHIE PAYS ATTENTION. + + +Roseleaf took rooms at his old lodgings in the city, and set in earnest +about the work of beginning his great novel. He had interviews with Mr. +Gouger, at which he detailed the slight thread of plot which he already +had in mind, profiting by the critic's shrewd suggestions. It was +decided that he should portray, at the beginning, a youth much like +himself, who was to fall in love with an angelically pure maiden. The +outline of their respective characters were to be sketched with care, +and sundry obstacles to their union were to be developed as the story +progressed. Gouger warned his young friend not to write too fast, and to +content himself for the present with delineating the phase of love with +which he had become familiar. + +"Later on," he said, "when your hero finds that this girl is not all his +bright fancy painted her--when it is proved beyond a doubt that she has +played him false, that she has another lover--" + +Roseleaf turned pale. + +"But that will never be!" he interrupted. + +"It will, of course--in the story," corrected Gouger. "She will lead him +a race that will make him an enemy to the entire sex, if she is used for +all the dramatic effect possible. People expect to find immaculate +purity in the earlier chapters of a story, as they do in small children. +With the progress of the action they look for something more exciting. +To sketch a seraph who remains one would only be to repeat the failure +you made in your other effort--the one you brought to me the day I met +you first. It is not the glory of heaven that attracts audiences to our +churches, but the dramatic quality of hell. A sermon without a large +spice of the devil in it would be much worse than a rendition of Hamlet +minus the Prince. Put your heroine in the clouds, if you will, at the +beginning. The higher she goes, the greater will be her fall, and the +greater, consequently, your triumph." + +The young novelist shivered as he listened to these expressions. How +could he build a heroine on the model of Daisy Fern, and conceive the +possibility that she would ever allow her white robes to touch the +earth? He might have constructed such a plot with Millicent as the +central figure, though that would be by no means easy; but Daisy! +Impossible! He asked the critic if it would not do to send the hero of +the tale to perdition, while leaving his sweetheart immaculate to the +close. + +"No," said Gouger, decidedly. "A man's fall is not much of a fall, any +way you put it. The public is not interested in such matters. It demands +a female sacrifice, like some of the ancient gods, and it will not be +appeased with less. I expect you to be new and original in your +treatment of the theme, but the subject itself is as old as fiction. You +have too little imagination, as I have told you before. You must +cultivate that talent. Having conceived your paragon, imagine her placed +under temptations she cannot resist; surround her with an environment +from which she cannot break; place her in situations that leave her no +escape." + +Roseleaf shook his head. + +"I am afraid I never shall be able to do it," he said. + +"Pshaw! Don't talk of failure at this stage of the game. All you have to +do is to introduce upon the scene a thoroughly unprincipled man of good +address, who is fertile in expedients. You will find your model for that +among a dozen of your acquaintances. Why, take Archie Weil, and hold him +in your mind till you are saturated with him." + +What did Mr. Gouger mean? That Mr. Weil would actually do these dreadful +things, would in his own person perpetrate the outrage of winning a pure +girl to shame. It seemed childish to ask such a question, and yet such a +meaning could easily be taken from what the critic had said. No, no! All +he could have meant was that Mr. Weil might serve as a figure on which +to lay these sins--that he could be carried in the writer's mind, as a +costumer uses a stuffed frame to hang garments on while in the process +of manufacture. + +"Then there is Boggs," added Gouger, with a laugh. "You ought to find +some place for a fellow like him, if only for the comic parts of your +novel, and there must be a little humor in a book that is to suit the +mass. A writer for a magazine said recently with much truth, 'He who +would hit the popular taste must aim low.' I think Boggs could furnish +the cheap fun for an ordinary novel, without too great a wear on the +writer. Go ahead, my boy. Write a half dozen chapters in your own +idyllic way, and then get Archie to take you to a few places where your +mind will be turned to opposite scenes. It takes all sorts of edibles to +suit the modern palate." + +So Roseleaf wrote, slowly, patiently, with devotion to his art, until he +had completed five chapters of his story. And Gouger read it and went +into ecstacies, declaring it the best foundation he had ever seen for a +most entrancing romance. + +"He has wrought his people up to such a superlative height," said the +critic to Mr. Weil, "that the _chute_ will be simply tremendous! How +simply, how elegantly his sentences flow! If he can handle the necessary +wickedness that must follow, the sale of 'Uncle Tom's Cabin,' or 'Thou +Shalt Not,' will be eclipsed without the least doubt. But, the question +still is, _can_ he?" + +"There's no such question," was the response. "He must, that's the way +to put it. Confound it, he shall! And the next thing for him to do is +to take a few visits with me to the underground regions, where he can +get such slight shocks to his literary system as will enable him to take +up the vein he must work." + +During this time Roseleaf did not forget the invitation he had received +to dine with the Ferns. It did him good to see Daisy, although he could +not now get her for a moment to himself. He sighed to her over the +table, and across the parlor, after the party had retired to that part +of the house, and she answered him with little bright smiles that acted +like an emollient on his hurt spirit. He had never found the courage to +beard her father in his den--of wool--and was not even sure that the +affair had reached a stage where anything could be gained by taking such +a step. What he wanted was a word of assurance from Daisy that she would +wait for him till he had made a Name in literature, or proved his +ability in some definite manner. There was no indication that any one +else was in the way; everything pointed to a contrary probability. But +there is nothing so desolate as the heart of a lover whose fair one is +just beyond his reach. + +Mr. Weil accompanied Shirley on most of these visits, and knew very well +what was going on. None of the glances exchanged between the young +people were so much their exclusive property as they believed. Had +Archie possessed eyes in the back and sides of his head, he could have +seen little more than he did. While appearing to devote his entire +attention to Mr. Fern and Millicent--principally the former, he found +time to watch Roseleaf and Daisy, and even the negro Hannibal. + +He noticed that the servant was no less devoted than formerly to the +youngest member of the household. He saw him hover around her at the +table like a protecting spirit, letting her want for nothing that +thoughtfulness could procure. And he noticed that Daisy seemed as +oblivious of this as she had always been. She accepted these +extraordinary attentions quite as if Hannibal were some automaton, +acting with a set of concealed springs--a mechanism in which there was +nothing of human life or intelligence. + +Mr. Fern was the same gentlemanly host as of yore, with the same dark +cloud hanging over him, whatever might be its cause. Courteous by nature +to an exceptional degree he could not assume a gayety he did not feel. +There was some terrible weight bearing him down, some awful incubus of +which he was unable to rid himself. The only person who did not notice +it was Millicent, and the one it troubled most was Daisy, on whose sweet +young face the share she had in her parent's griefs had already begun to +leave its impressions. + +Millicent's novel was soon placed in Mr. Gouger's hands, completed. The +original theme was unaltered, but in its new garb of perfect English no +one would have recognized the rejected work. The combination of the +girl's strength of mind and the man's elegance of diction was +successful. The critic recommended its acceptance without a word of +dissent, and Cutt & Slashem even consented, on his suggestion, to +forego the guarantee against loss which they had of late demanded from +all authors whose names were unknown to the reading public. + +"I have fixed it for you, Archie," he said, when that gentleman next +made his appearance at the sanctum. "No deposit or guarantee, and ten +per cent. of the retail price for royalty. So take a train to your +inamorata's house and tell her the news." + +Mr. Weil did not seem to wholly relish the announcement. + +"In the first place," he remarked, "you have no business to speak of +Miss Fern as my inamorata; and in the second you will pay her more than +ten per cent. or you won't get the book to print." + +At this, Mr. Gouger, after the manner of all publishers and their +agents, proceeded to show to Mr. Weil that it was perfectly impossible +to pay another cent more than the figure he had named; and before he had +finished he agreed to see the firm and get the amount raised +considerably, provided the sales should exceed five thousand copies. In +short, Mr. Weil secured a very respectable contract for a new author, +and one that was sure to please Miss Fern, if she was in the least +degree reasonable. + +"I wish you would hurry up Roseleaf," remarked Gouger, when this matter +was disposed of. "When will you take him down into the depths and let +him see that side of life?" + +"I have arranged a journey for to-morrow night," said Weil. "We shall go +to Isaac Leveson's and make an evening of it. Unless things are +different there from usual, he will lay the foundation for all the +wickedness he needs to put into his story." + +The critic nodded approval. + +"He will probably have a Jew in it, then--a modernized Fagan." + +"Yes," said Weil. "And a negro. A tall, well-built negro, who has a +white man for his slave!" + + + + +CHAPTER XII. + +DINING AT ISAAC'S. + + +On the following day, when Shirley Roseleaf presented himself at the +Hoffman House, he found Mr. Weil awaiting him in a state of great good +nature. + +"Go home and make yourself ready for a dive into the infernal regions," +he said, merrily. "I am going to take you to a place where the devil +spends his vacation, and show you a set of women as different from those +you have lately met as chalk is from indigo. Be here at nine o'clock +this evening, prepared for the descent." + +A vision of subterranean passages crossed the mind of the listener, and +he thought of tall boots and a tarpaulin. + +"How shall I dress--roughly, I suppose?" he inquired. + +"Certainly not. Put on your swallow tail, and white tie. Vice in these +days wears its best garments. You cannot tell a gambler from a +clergyman by his attire. Dress exactly as if you were going to the +swellest party on Fifth Avenue. The only addition to your toilet will be +a revolver, if you happen to have one handy. If you do not, I have +several and will lend you one." + +If he expected to startle the young man he was in error. Roseleaf merely +nodded and said he would take one of the weapons owned by Mr. Weil. + +"We shall not use them--there are a thousand chances to one," said +Archie. "New York is like Montana. You remember what the resident said +to the tenderfoot, 'You may be a long time without wantin' a we'p'n in +these parts, but when you do you'll want it d--d sudden.'" + +When Roseleaf returned, the hands of his watch indicated the time at +which he had been asked to make his appearance, but Mr. Weil did not +take him immediately to the point of destination. Instead he walked over +to a variety theatre that was then in operation on Twenty-third street, +and after spending a short time in the auditorium guided the young man +into the "wineroom." Here the ladies of the ballet were in the habit of +going when off the stage, for the sake of entertaining the patrons with +their light and frivolous conversation, and inducing them if possible, +to invest in champagne at five dollars the bottle. + +Archie was, it appeared, not unknown to the throng that filled this +place, for his name was spoken by several of both sexes as soon as he +entered. He nodded coolly to those who addressed him, and took a seat +at a table with his companion. With a shake of his head he declined the +offers of two or three fairies of the ballet to share the table, and +ordered a bottle of Mumm with the evident intention of drinking it alone +with his friend. + +Roseleaf slowly sipped the sparkling beverage. He was cautioned in a +whisper to drink but one glass, as it was necessary that he should keep +a perfectly clear head. Weil remarked in an undertone that he had only +ordered the wine as an excuse for remaining a few minutes. + +"I call this 'the slaughter house,'" he added, in a voice still lower. +"Girls are brought here to be murdered. Not to have their throats cut," +he explained, "but to be killed just as surely, if more slowly. I have +seen them come here for the first time, with good health shining out of +their rosy cheeks, delighted at the unwonted excitement and the amount +of attention the frequenters of the place bestowed. I have watched them +growing steadily paler, having recourse to rouge, the eyes getting +dimmer, the voice growing harsher, the temper becoming more variable. +And then--other fresh faces came in their stead. There are killed, on an +average, twenty girls a year here, I should say; killed to satisfy the +appetites of men, as beeves are killed in Chicago, but not so +mercifully." + +The novelist looked into the faces that were nearest to him and thought +he could discern the various grades of which his friend spoke--the new, +the older, the ones whose turn to give way to others would soon come. +All of them were drinking. Most had on the stage dresses they had just +worn or were about to wear in the performance. Some had finished their +parts and were enveloped in street clothes, ready to take their +departure with the first male who asked them. And they were drinking, +drinking, either in little sips or in feverish gulps, as they would at a +later day, when the five-dollar wine would be replaced by five cent beer +or perhaps the drainings of a keg on the sidewalk. + +Mr. Walker Boggs soon came into the wine-room and joined the pair at Mr. +Weil's table. He called for a whiskey straight, pushing the champagne +aside with an impatient movement. + +"I won't punish my stomach with such stuff, even if it _has_ gone back +on me," he exclaimed. "That will knock out any man who drinks it between +meals." + +Mr. Weil assented to this proposition, and to show his full belief in it +filled his own glass again and tossed its contents down his throat. + +"What brings you here?" he asked, quizzically. + +"Those creatures," replied Boggs, with a motion of his hand toward the +members of the ballet. "They're all that's left me now. _They_ don't +mind the size of my waist. My hold on _them_ is as strong as ever. But +_you_ ought not to be here," he broke in, turning to Roseleaf. "It will +be years before you get to this stage, I hope." + +Mr. Weil hastened to explain. + +"Shirley is merely observing," said he. "He came at my request. We are +going next to Isaac Leveson's." + +Mr. Boggs grew interested. + +"So, so! You intend to show him Isaac's to-night?" + +"Yes. Isn't it a good idea?" + +The stout man shrugged his shoulders as if he had nothing to say on that +point. The movement was essentially a Frenchy one and might have meant +anything. + +"Perhaps you would like to go with us," said Archie. + +"What do you intend to do there?" + +"Tell Mr. Roseleaf all the secrets." + +Mr. Boggs stared at the speaker. + +"Isaac won't let you," he answered, grimly. + +"Won't he? He'll have to. Why, what's the odds? The boy won't give him +away. And if he should--" His voice sank to a whisper. + +Mr. Weil then proceeded to explain to his young friend that "Isaac's" +was a peculiar affair, even for Gotham. It had entrances on two streets. +Into one door went the most respectable of people, intent on getting an +exceptionably good dinner, which was always to be had there, cooked in +the French style and elegantly served. At that end of the house there +were several dining-rooms that would hold forty or fifty guests, and +several others made to accommodate family parties of six to twelve. If a +couple happened to stray in and inquire for a room to themselves the +head waiter informed them that it was against the rule of the house to +serve a private dinner to less than four people. + +It was evident that the establishment was conducted on the most moral +principles, and in a way to prevent the possibility of scandal. For +though a great many couples undoubtedly take dinners in private rooms +with the utmost propriety, it must be admitted that such a course is +open to suspicion and might be used as a basis for unpleasant rumors. +Mr. Leveson, who kept this hotel, took great pride in saying that +nothing in all New York bore a better name, and no amount of bribery +would have induced one of his employes--on _that_ side of the house--to +vary the rules laid down. + +But on the _other_ side of the building--at the entrance on the other +street--ah, that was different! + +If only the most respectable customers entered the first door it was +almost equally true that none but those who lacked that quality used the +second. Mr. Leveson sometimes remarked with glee, at twelve o'clock at +night, that he would give a hundred dollar bill for an honest man or +woman in any of the rooms up-stairs. The waiters had instructions to +"size up" all comers with care, and to admit no accidental parties who +might apply for entrance under a misapprehension as to the character of +the place. + +"We are all full, sorry to say," was the established formula. "There is +a very good restaurant just around the corner, on ----th street." And in +this manner the shrewd restaurateur got all the custom he wanted, while +preserving the natural atmosphere in each part of his dominions. + +The meals served in these two places were prepared by one chef, and +served from one kitchen. Thus the virtuous and vicious patrons were +supplied with exactly the same dishes. But on what may be called the +Good side nothing stronger than wines were found on the bill of fare. On +the Wicked side every decoction known to the modern drinker was to be +had for the asking. Then, again, the doors of the Good side were closed +at eleven o'clock, while it was often daylight before the last patron of +the Sinful side reeled into his carriage. + +After a little more talk Mr. Boggs seemed satisfied and consented to +join the party. + +Mr. Leveson was notified of the presence of the newcomers and met them +at the door. Isaac was of a decidedly Jewish cast of countenance, +slightly gray, not very tall, and quite round shouldered. He put out a +lank hand toward Roseleaf, when that young gentleman was named as a +matter of introduction, but put it down again when Mr. Weil curtly said +handshaking was out of date. Archie had seen a disinclination in the eye +of his friend to touch the fingers of the Hebrew, and with his usual +quickness had solved the difficulty. The party entered a private office +at the left of the entrance, where Mr. Leveson inquired what he should +order for them to drink. + +"You will order nothing, at present," said Weil, in a contemptuous way +that excited the astonishment of Mr. Roseleaf. "When I wish for anything +I will ring. Who is there in the house?" + +The manager of the establishment bowed humbly, and proceeded to run over +the list of his customers. + +"There is Major Waters and his wife--" + +"Together!" exclaimed the questioner. + +"Oh, no! The Major has the little blonde that he has brought for the +last month; his wife has Mr. Nikles of the Planet. Then--" + +But Mr. Weil interrupted him again. + +"You'll let them run into each other some day and there'll be a nice +time." + +"Never fear that. The boys understand thoroughly. He comes earlier and +stays later than she. Besides, we never let anybody meet on the stairs. +The waiters cry out, 'You must go back; it is bad luck!' if any of them +seem in danger of running into each other. They are as safe from +discovery here as if they were in places a mile apart." + +Some one descended the stairs at this moment and Leveson tiptoed to the +door and opened it half an inch to peer at them. + +"You know I have no object in saying these things," said Weil, "except +to save your precious self from trouble. Who is that going out?" + +"Some new people; it is the third time they have been here." + +"Well," asked Weil, impatiently, "who are they?" + +Leveson held up both his hands as if to beg a moment to answer. + +"They come from Brooklyn. I don't know their names. I think neither is +married." + +"I have a curiosity about things," explained Weil to his friends, "that +I cannot account for. You remember how Silas Wegg used to talk about +'Aunt Jane' and 'Uncle Parker.' Well, I have the same way of studying +the men that wander in here of an evening, with other people's wives and +daughters. There is so little really entertaining in this confounded +world that I seize upon anything promising a change with avidity. Isaac +tells me all the secrets of his queer ranch, and they prove wonderfully +interesting, sometimes. You see," he added, addressing himself +particularly to Roseleaf, "not a couple comes into this place that would +like to have it known." + +Roseleaf bowed constrainedly. + +"And how does Mr. Leveson know them?" he inquired. "They surely do not +register, or if they do their names must be fictitious." + +Mr. Weil laughed. + +"He has ways of finding out," said he. "There are little birds that fly +in at the window and tell him." + +"I should not think he would wish to know," commented Roseleaf. +"Especially when it is evident they would not like to have him." + +Archie laughed again. + +"Let me explain, then," he said. "I need not mind Boggs here, who is +discretion itself. Leveson's reason--of course, I can rely on your +silence?" + +The young face reddened at the insinuation that he might betray a +secret. + +"I was sure of it," said Archie, so quickly that Roseleaf felt at ease +again. "Well, the reason why Isaac wants to know what is going on is, he +is connected with the police." + +Roseleaf said "Ah!" and opened his eyes wider. + +"People who go to places like this," continued Mr. Weil, "are of great +interest to the guardians of the peace. And by the police I do not mean +the members of the regular force so much as the special service. It is +to the latter that we go when a confidential clerk has robbed us or we +become suspicious that our wives are unfaithful. Nine times out of ten +the chief of the private detective office knows in advance all we wish +him to ferret out. When he has told us that we will set investigations +on foot, and that he hopes to learn something of the matter within a few +days, he bows us out of his bureau with an air that implies that we have +not come to the wrong party. And as soon as we are gone he turns to a +ledger, and in a few minutes has found an abstract that tells him +everything. + +"Let us suppose," said Mr. Weil, "that a jeweler misses twenty valuable +pieces of _bijouterie_ from his stock. The circumstances prove that they +were taken by some one in his employ. He thinks of his clerks, and +cannot find the heart to accuse any of them of such a grave crime. He +goes to the detective office and states his case. When he is gone the +chief turns to the book and finds this: + +"'L. M. Jenkins, clerk at Abram Cohen's, Sixth Avenue; about +twenty-three, medium height, dark, dresses well. Rooms at No. -- +Twenty-Ninth street. Has been giving expensive suppers as well as +valuable jewelry to Mamie Sanders, No. so-and-so, Such-a-street. They +dined together at Isaac Leveson's on such-and-such dates.' Etc., etc., +etc. + +"Now, he can recover the jewelry and get that clerk into quod in three +hours, if he likes. Naturally he won't expedite things in that way, +because he wants some excuse for running up a large bill, unless it be +a bank case, where he prefers to make a great impression and get himself +solid with the directors. But he will collar the fellow and recover the +stuff, and all because he knew about it long before any one in the store +had a suspicion." + +Mr. Leveson returned. Mr. Weil asked that one of the private rooms on +the second floor be put in order at once, for himself and friends. He +then inquired what ladies were in the house unoccupied by escorts. + +"Miss Pelham has been waiting an hour for the Judge," replied Isaac, +"but I don't think he'll come. He disappoints her half the time now. And +Mrs. Delavan, who has just come in, found a note from Col. Lamorest, +asking her to excuse him to-night." + +Archie looked pleased. + +"They'll do," he said. "Tell them to come and dine with us. But," he +paused, and looked at Roseleaf, "we need still another." + +The color mounted to the cheeks of the young novelist, as he understood +the thought that prompted this statement. + +"Not on my account--I would much rather not," he stammered. + +"You will kindly leave that to my judgment," replied Archie, +impressively. "Remember, you are not the instructor here, but the pupil. +There must be some one else, Isaac." + +Mr. Leveson hesitated. He was mentally going over the rooms upstairs and +taking stock of what was in them. + +"There are two girls," he said, at last, "who used to work in one of +the dry goods stores, but you wouldn't want them. They are very strict, +and they dress plainly,--and I am afraid the other ladies wouldn't like +to associate with them." + +Mr. Weil grew vastly irritated by this statement. He brought his hand +down on the table with a bang. + +"The other ladies!" he echoed, angrily. "When you tell Mrs. Delavan and +Jenny Pelham that you want them to dine with us, you know that ends it! +As to these shop girls, what do you mean by calling them _strict_? What +would a _strict_ girl be doing in _this_ house?" + +Mr. Leveson cringed before his interrogator and made the old, imploring +movement with his hands. + +"Let me explain," he said. "These girls came here a few weeks ago with +some traveling men. They took dinner, but Adolf says neither drank a +drop of wine. A few days later they came again, with other escorts, and +the same thing occurred." + +"Why did you let them in?" demanded Weil. + +"Because I knew the gentlemen." + +Archie started to say something, but checked himself. + +"And after that they came alone and asked to see me," pursued Isaac, +humbly. "They said they had been thrown out of work, and thought there +might be an opportunity to do something here, like waiting on the +guests. And while we were talking, two old customers of the house called +to dine, alone, and asked me if they could get some one to share the +meal with them. And, it seemed quite providential--" + +Archie stopped the voluble speech by striking his hands sharply +together. + +"Enough!" he said. "When the dinner is ready send one of them in. That +will make the three we need." + +In half an hour the dinner was ready to be served. Then Isaac came with +the information that the girls refused to be separated. + +"What a nuisance!" exclaimed Weil. "Well, send both of them, then. We'll +take care of them, somehow." + + + + +CHAPTER XIII. + +A QUESTION OF COLOR. + + +The next morning, when Roseleaf awoke, he was for some time in a sort of +stupor. Through the bright sunlight that filled his room he seemed to +scent the fumes of tobacco and of liquor. The place was filled, he +imagined, with that indefinable aroma that proceeds from a convivial +company made up of both sexes. He half believed that Jennie Pelham and +Mrs. Delavan were sitting by his bed, more brazen than the bell which, +from a neighboring steeple, told him the hour was ten. And surely, by +those curtains there, hiding the flame that filled their cheeks, were +the two "shop-girls," their pinched faces denoting slow starvation. +Boggs, and Isaac Leveson, and Archie Weil were there, all of them; and +the young man tossed uneasily on his pillow, struggling with the +remnant of nightmare that remained to cloud his brain. + +When he was able to think and see clearly he sat up and rang for a +pitcher of ice water. He was consumed by thirst, and his forehead ached +blindly. When he had bathed his head and throat he turned, by a sudden +impulse, to his table, and took out the MSS. of the story he had begun. +Slowly he read over the pages, to the last one. Then, seizing his pen, +he devoted himself to the next chapter, without dressing, without +breakfasting. + +It was four o'clock when he ceased work. He realized all at once that he +was feeling ill. The fact dawned upon him that he needed food, and +donning his garments, he took his way listlessly to a restaurant and +ordered something to eat. As he swallowed the morsels, he fell to +wondering how much temptation _he_ would be able to bear, with hunger as +a background. + +He passed a good part of the evening in walking the streets, selecting, +instinctively, sections where he was least likely to meet any one he +knew. When he returned to his room he read over the MSS. he had written +that day, and into his troubled brain there came a sense of pleasure. +Gouger was right. To tell of such matters in a novel, one should know +them himself. Roseleaf could never have written of vice before he saw +Leveson's. Now, it was as plain to him as print, almost as easy to use +in fiction as virtue. What was to follow? He pondered over the plot he +had mapped out, and it grew clearer. + +Daisy had given him no further encouragement--at least in words--since +that day she had said it was "risky" to ask her father, but he felt +certain that she regarded him with favor, and that if Mr. Fern put no +obstacles in the way she would not refuse to wed him when the right time +came. He thought it would be wise to obtain one more brief interview +with her, before proceeding to extremities, and determined to do his +best to draw her aside, when he made his next visit to her house. This +settled, he went to bed again and slept soundly. + +When the day to go to Midlands arrived Shirley's courage began to ooze a +little. So much depended upon the attitude of his dear one's mind, +which, for all he knew, had changed since he talked with her, that he +fairly trembled with apprehension. He avoided Mr. Weil, with whom he +usually took the train, and went out early. Alighting at a station a +mile or two away from the right one, he walked through the woods, trying +to think how to act in case matters did not turn out as he hoped. Under +the branches he strolled along, until he came within sight of the roofs +of Midlands; and then he threw himself at the foot of a tree close to +Mr. Fern's grounds, and gave himself up to reverie. + +When he laid down here it was only five o'clock, and he was not expected +at the house for a full hour. It pleased him to be so near the one he +loved, and to lie where he could dream of her sweet face and see the +outlines of the house that sheltered her, while she had no knowledge of +his presence. Just over there was the arbor, where he had first had the +supreme bliss of touching her lips with his own. If he could get her to +come there with him again--to-night--when the others were occupied with +their talk of earthly things, and if she would only tell him frankly +that he might go to her father, and that her prayers would go with him! +A soft languor came over his body at the deliciousness of these +reflections, but it was dissipated by the sound of voices which +presently came to him from the other side of the hedge. + +"I can't exactly understand, Miss Daisy," said one of the voices, which +he had no difficulty in recognizing as that of Hannibal, "why you wish +me to go away?" + +There was an assurance in the tone that Roseleaf did not like. He had +noticed it before in the intercourse of this negro with his employers. +There was something which intimated that he was on the most complete +level with them. + +"I want you to go," said Daisy, in her quiet way, "because education is +the only thing that will make you what you ought to be. There are a +hundred chances open to you, in the professions, if you can take a +college course. Unless you do, you can hope for nothing better than such +employment as you have now." + +It made the listener's blood boil to think that these people should be +consulting in that way, like friends. Daisy ought to have a better sense +of her position. + +"I will not refuse your offer, at least not yet," replied Hannibal, +after a slight pause. "It may be as you say--if I graduate as a doctor +or a lawyer. But I know that I live in a country where my color is +despised--and all that could possibly come to me here as a professional +man is work among my own race. I should be a black lawyer with black +clients; or a black physician, with black patients. To really succeed I +should go across the ocean to some land where the shade of my skin would +not be counted a crime." + +Daisy's face could not be seen by the listener, but he was sure it was a +kindly one, and this made him fume. The situation was atrocious. + +"It should not be considered so anywhere," said the girl, gently. + +"It is an outrage!" responded the black. "Having stolen our ancestors +and brought them here from their native country, the Americans hate us +for the injury they have done. In France, they tell me, it is not so. +Oh, if I _could_ gain an education, and become what God meant to make +me--a man!" He paused as if the thought was too great to be conceived in +its fullness, and then said, abruptly: "Where can you get this money?" + +Roseleaf's suspicions were now keenly aroused and he dreaded lest she +should bring his name into the conversation. + +"Your father would not give it to you--without an explanation," pursued +the negro. "And you have no fortune of your own." + +"I will get it--let that suffice," interrupted the girl. "I can give you +$1000 a year for two years, at least, and I hope for two or three more, +if you will go to Paris and put yourself under instruction. Can you +hesitate to accept a proposal of that kind? I thought you would seize it +with avidity." + +As Daisy said this she arose, and started slowly toward the house. +Hannibal walked by her side talking in a tone so low that nothing more +was intelligible to the eavesdropper she little suspected was so near. +But suddenly the girl stopped, and Roseleaf heard her cry with startling +distinctness: + +"_How dare you!_" + +The voice that uttered these words was filled with rage, and the girl's +attitude, as Roseleaf could see--for he had risen hastily to his +feet--was one of intense excitement. Then she added: + +"If you ever speak of that again, they will be the last words I will +ever exchange with you. My offer is still open--you can have the money +if you wish it--but never another syllable like this! Understand me, +Hannibal, never!" + +Miss Daisy passed on toward the house, alone. The negro stood where she +had left him, his head bowed on his breast, as if completely cowed by +the rebuke. Roseleaf's heart beat rapidly. What gave this fellow such +power over these people? How could he say things to call out such an +exclamation as that of Daisy's, and yet hold her promise to pay him a +large sum of money, instead of getting the prompt discharge he merited? + +And this was what the girl wanted to do with the $1,000, she had asked +him to lend her! Should he still give it to her? Yes, if it would rid +the country of that insolent knave who, from whatever cause, occupied a +position that must be growing unendurable to those who had to bear with +him. + +What had Hannibal said, that made her turn as if grossly insulted, and +speak with a vehemence so foreign to her nature? Roseleaf would have +enjoyed following the negro and giving him a severe trouncing. Though +Hannibal was twenty pounds heavier and considerably taller than he, the +novelist had not the least doubt of his ability to master him. He +believed the courage of an African would give way when confronted by one +of the superior race; and at any rate, righteous indignation would count +for something in so just a contest. + +There were no traces of excitement on Daisy's pretty face as she +welcomed the guests of the family. Weil arrived at about the same time +as Roseleaf, coming directly from the station, and Mr. Fern arrived a +little later. Millicent looked her best, which is saying no less than +that she was a beauty, and Archie told her politely that she ought to +sit for a painting. When the dinner was served, Hannibal took charge as +usual. Shirley watched him with an interest he had never felt before, +and nodded assent when Weil whispered behind his napkin, "Good material +for a novel in that fellow, eh?" + +The opportunity for a word alone with Daisy came earlier than Roseleaf +expected. In fact she herself proposed it, while passing out of the +dining room. She said she had something particular to tell him. + +"It is about that money you were so kind as to say I could have," she +explained, when they were far down the lawn, and out of hearing of the +others. "I want it very much and very soon. It--it will be all right, I +hope, and--and not cause you any inconvenience." + +"I will bring it, or send it to-morrow," he replied, instantly. "But I +still wonder what you intend to do with it." + +She smiled archly. + +"A good act, I assure you," she replied. "Something of which you would +certainly approve, if you knew all the circumstances. You are very kind, +and if it was darker here I should be--almost--tempted to kiss you." + +He replied that it was growing darker rapidly, and that the requisite +shadow could be obtained if they stayed out long enough; but she said +she could remain but a few moments, and turned in the direction of the +house. + +"But, Daisy!" he cried, and then paused. "You--you know there is +something of very great importance that I want to talk about. I get so +little chance, and I want so much to tell you things. I have been trying +to go to your father's office, and I can't find courage." + +"I didn't know you were thinking of buying wool," she said, +mischievously. + +"I want one little lamb, to be my own," he answered, "to love and +cherish all my life long. Am I never to have it?" + +She sobered before the earnestness of his sad face. + +"You are a dear boy," she said, "and I love you. There! Don't say +anything more to me to-night. I have made a foolish confession, for +which I may yet repent. We must go in. They will be looking for us." + +She looked at his countenance and saw that it was radiant. + +"I can endure anything now," he said. "You love me, Daisy--can it be +true? I will go in with you--and I will wait. But not too long, my +sweetheart; do not make me wait too long. Repent your confession, +indeed! If you do, it will be from no fault of mine. _Daisy!_" + +As he said these things they were gradually nearing the piazza, where +the negro was taking in the chairs. + +"I have something pleasant to tell you," whispered Daisy. "You don't +like Hannibal. Well, he is going away soon." + +Roseleaf assumed surprise. + +"Has your father discharged him?" he asked. + +"No, he intends to leave of his own accord. He believes himself fitted +for better work. Hush! He may hear you." + +As they passed the servant, Daisy said, "Good-evening, Hannibal." It was +her invariable custom, and she spoke with the greatest courtesy. But in +this case the negro did not raise his eyes, nor turn his head toward +her, nor make the slightest sign to show that he heard. + +It was too much for Roseleaf, and he stopped. + +"Did you hear Miss Daisy address you?" he demanded, sharply. + +Hannibal looked up, with a curious mixture of amusement, contempt and +hate in his dark face. + +"I did," he answered. + +"Why did you not answer?" + +"Because I did not choose." + +Daisy threw herself in front of Roseleaf, just in time to prevent +Hannibal's receiving a blow. + +"Oh, stop!" she exclaimed, "I beg you!" + +The noise and the sound of raised voices brought Mr. Fern and his other +daughter, with Archie Weil, to the door. Mr. Fern took in the situation +at a glance, and his troubled face grew more distressed. + +"Mr. Roseleaf," he said, speaking as if the words choked him, "I am +surprised--that you should--hold an altercation like this--in my +daughter's presence." + +Roseleaf did not know what to do or say. Daisy's pleading eyes decided +him, much against his judgment, to drop the matter where it was, galling +to his pride though it might be. He escorted his sweetheart into the +parlor, where the entire party followed, in a most uncomfortable state +of mind. + +"How can you permit that negro to insult your guests?" demanded +Millicent, as soon as the door was closed. "It is beyond belief. If he +is master of this house it is time the rest of us left it. I am certain +Mr. Roseleaf did not act without great provocation." + +Before Mr. Fern could answer, Daisy had spoken. + +"It is over now, and there is nothing to be said. Hannibal is going away +in a few days, and that will end your trouble." + +The father turned such an incredulous look toward his daughter that it +was evident he had heard nothing of this. + +"Going?" he echoed, faintly. "Going?" + +"Yes," said Daisy. "He told me to-day. He is going to some country where +his color will not be counted a misdemeanor." + +Roseleaf had difficulty in maintaining the silence with which he had +determined to encase himself. But Daisy did not wish him to speak, and +her will was law. + +"Well, I am glad of that!" exclaimed Millicent. "In a country where they +consider such people their equals, he will not meet the pity and +consideration he has so abused here. Still, I do think, father, that you +ought to apologize to Mr. Roseleaf for the way in which you have +addressed him." + +This freed the young man's tongue. + +"By no means," he said. "Very likely I was wrong to say anything." + +"You were not wrong!" retorted Millicent. "You were entirely right. You +would have been justified in punishing the fellow as he deserved. It is +others who are wrong. If he were not going, I would never stay to see +repeated what I have witnessed in the last six months." + +Mr. Fern seemed to have lost all ambition for controversy. His elder +daughter's cutting words evidently hurt, but he would not reply. + +Mr. Weil came to the rescue by introducing a new topic of conversation, +that of a European tenor that was soon expected to startle New York. +Daisy went to the piano, and played softly, talking in whispers to +Roseleaf, who leaned feverishly over her shoulder. But she made no +allusion to Hannibal, and he did his best to forget him. + +"What do you make of that?" asked Mr. Weil, when he was in a railway +car, on the way back to the city with his young friend. "A glorious +chance for a novelist to find the reason that black Adonis is allowed +such latitude." + +But Roseleaf was not listening. He was thinking of a sweet voice that +had said: "You are a dear boy and I love you!" + + + + +CHAPTER XIV. + +"LET US HAVE A BETRAYAL." + + +Mr. Archie Weil had become quite intimate with Mr. Wilton Fern; so much +so that he called at his office every few days, took walks with him on +business errands, went with him to lunch (to the annoyance of Lawrence +Gouger, who did not like to eat alone) and sometimes took the train home +with him at night, on evenings when Shirley Roseleaf was not of the +party. Everybody in the Fern family liked Archie. Even Hannibal, who had +conceived a veritable hatred for Roseleaf, brightened at the entrance of +Mr. Weil either at the house or office, the negro seeming to alternate +between the two places very much as he pleased. Millicent liked him +because he was so "facile," as she expressed it; a man with whom one +could talk without feeling it necessary to pick each step. Daisy liked +him because her father did, and because Roseleaf did, and because he +treated her with marked politeness that had apparently no double +meaning. + +And they all got confidential with him, which was exactly what he wanted +them to do; only the one he most wanted to give him confidence gave him +the least. This was Mr. Fern, himself. + +Try as he might, Archie could not discover what clouded the brow of the +wool merchant, what made him act like a person who fears each knock at +the door, each sound of a human voice in the hallway of his office. He +could find no reason for Mr. Fern's attitude toward Hannibal, whose +manners were as far removed as possible from those supposed to belong to +a personal servant. There must be a cause of no ordinary character when +this polished gentleman permitted a negro to insult him and his +daughter, in a way to excite comment. What it was Mr. Weil was bent on +discovering, but as yet he had made little progress. + +It was on account of this plan that Mr. Weil affected to like Hannibal +so well. He used to spend hours in devising ways for securing the truth +from that source. Hannibal, however, gave no signs of intending to +reveal his secret, and if he was going abroad to study, it seemed +unlikely that the investigator would get at many facts in that quarter. + +One day, Mr. Weil happened to call at the office of the merchant at an +hour when the latter was out, and found Hannibal in possession. As this +was an opportunity seldom available, Archie entered into a lively +conversation with the fellow. + +"They tell me you are soon going to leave us," he said, as a beginning. +"I hear that you are going to Europe." + +"Yes," said Hannibal, with a certain wariness. + +"If I can tell you anything about the country I shall be glad," said +Weil, affably. "I have spent considerable time there. You don't +understand the language, I believe?" + +The negro simply shook his head. + +"It's easy enough to acquire. Get right into a hotel with a lot of +students, and pitch in. Though they _do_ say," added the speaker, +archly, "that the best method is to engage a pretty grisette. The poet +was right: + + "'Tis pleasing to be schooled in a strange tongue + By female eyes and lips; that is, I mean, + When both the teacher and the taught are young-- + +"You know the rest." + +The answering smile that he expected, did not come into the negro's +face. If possible, it grew still more reserved and earnest. + +"There's one good thing, if you'll excuse my mentioning it," pursued +Archie, "and that is, the French have no prejudice whatever against +color. Indeed, a colored student gets a little better attention in Paris +than a white one." + +Then the silent lips were unlocked. + +"Could a black man--_marry_--a white woman, of the upper or middle +classes?" asked Hannibal, slowly. + +"To be sure. There was the elder Dumas, and a dozen others. I tell you +there's absolutely no color line there. They judge a man by what he is, +not by the accident of race or skin. You'll see such a difference you'll +be sorry you didn't go years before." + +Hannibal sat as if lost in thought. + +"Mr. Fern will miss you, though," continued Archie. "Yes, and the +family. You seem almost indispensable." + +A suspicious glance was shot at the speaker, but his face bore such an +ingenuous look that the suggestion was dismissed. What could he know? + +"They will get some one else," said the negro, quietly. + +"Yes, but in these days it is not easy to get people one can trust. Mr. +Fern will not find any one to take your place in a moment. And just now, +when he evidently has a great deal of trouble on his mind, it will be +unpleasant to make a change." + +Hannibal was completely deceived by the apparently honest character of +these observations. He could not resist the temptation to boast a +little, that peculiar trait of a menial. + +"I know all about Mr. Fern's affairs," he agreed. "Both here and at the +house. He would not trust the next man as he has me." + +Mr. Weil nodded wisely. + +"I see, I see," he answered. "You know then what has annoyed him of +late--that which has puzzled all the rest of us so much. You know, but +having the knowledge in a sort of confidential capacity, you would, of +course, have no right to reveal it." + +Hannibal straightened himself up in an exasperating way. + +"You will not find what troubles Mr. Fern," he said, loftily. "And now, +may I ask _you_ something. Do you expect to marry his eldest daughter?" + +An inclination to kick the fellow for his impudence came so strong upon +Mr. Weil that it required all of his powers to suppress the sentiment. +But through his indignation there struggled his old admiration for this +elegant physical specimen. He wished he could get a statue modeled from +him, before the original left the country. + +"That is a delicate question," he managed to say. + +"I know it," replied Hannibal. "But I have observed some things which +may have escaped you. Shall I tell you what I mean?" + +Not at all easy under this strain, the curiosity of Mr. Weil was so +great that he could only reply in the affirmative. + +"Miss Millicent," explained Hannibal, slowly, "is in love--very much in +love--with another person." + +A stare that could not be concealed answered him. + +"You have not seen anything to indicate it?" asked the negro. "I thought +as much. She has done her best to cover it, and yet I can swear it is +true. She _likes_ you, as a friend. But she _loves_ him, passionately." + +He was in for it now and might as well follow this strange matter to the +end. + +"Do I know this individual?" asked Archie. + +"Yes. You brought him to the house and introduced him to her." + +The man gave a slight cry, in spite of himself. + +"Not Roseleaf!" + +Hannibal bowed impressively; and at the moment Mr. Fern's footsteps were +heard in the entry. + +Mr. Weil did not know, when he tried to think about it afterwards, +whether the wool merchant noticed particularly that he and Hannibal had +been talking together, or suspected that they might have confidences. +His head was too full of the startling statement he had heard, and when +he was again upon the street he wandered aimlessly for an hour trying to +reconcile this view with the facts as they had presented themselves to +his mind previously. + +Millicent in love with Roseleaf! She had said very little to the young +man, so far as he had observed. Her younger sister--sweet little +Daisy--had monopolized his attention. If it were true, what an instance +it was of the odd qualities in the feminine mind, that leave men to +wonder more and more of what material it is constructed. But _was_ it +true? Was Hannibal a better judge, a closer student, than the rest of +them? He did not like Millicent, any better than she liked him. Was he +trying a game of mischief, with some ulterior purpose that was not +apparent on the surface? + +Out of it all, Archie Weil emerged, sure of but one thing. He must use +his eyes. If Millicent loved Roseleaf, she could not hide it +successfully from him, now that he had this clue. + +The girl's novel was selling fairly well. Weil had made a bargain with +Cutt & Slashem that was very favorable. It gave him an excuse to talk +with the authoress as much as he pleased, and he used his advantage. He +brought her the comments of the press--not that they amounted to +anything, for it was evident that most of the critics had merely skimmed +through the pages. He came to tell her the latest things that Gouger had +said, what proportion of cloth and paper covers were being ordered, and +the other gossip of the printing house. And now he talked about the work +that Shirley was engaged on, and grew enthusiastic, declaring that the +young man would yet make a place for himself beside the Stevensons and +Weymans. + +Millicent struck him as caring much more for news of her own production +than that of the young man who had been represented as the object of her +adoration. If she was half as fond of Roseleaf as Hannibal intimated, +she was certainly successful in concealing her sentiments from the +shrewd observer. The result of a fortnight's investigation convinced +Weil that the negro had made a complete mistake, and all the hypotheses +that had arisen were allowed to dissipate into thin air and fly away. + +Another two weeks passed and Hannibal still remained with the Ferns. An +inquiry of Daisy produced the answer that he thought of remaining in +America till spring. The girl tried to act as if it made not the +slightest consequence to her whether he went or stayed, but she did not +succeed. Mr. Weil knew that she wished most heartily for the time when +the negro would take his departure. She was bound up in her father, and +Hannibal was worrying him to death--from whatever cause. She wanted the +tie between him and this black man broken, and hated every day that +stood between them and his hour of sailing. + +Roseleaf was almost as uneasy as Daisy over the delay. He had given her +the money she asked for, though no allusion to its purpose had been +made. + +She still had it, somewhere, unless she had given it to the one for whom +it was intended. When she took the package from his hand she rose on her +tiptoes and kissed him with the most affectionate of gestures. It was +the second occasion on which he had been permitted to touch her lips, +and he appreciated it fully. He realized from her action how deeply she +felt his kindness in providing her with the funds that were to relieve +her father of an incubus that was sapping his very life. + +"You don't find much use for our black Adonis yet, I see," said Weil, as +he laid down the latest page of the slowly building novel. "I had hoped +you would penetrate the secret of his power over your heroine's father, +by this time." + +"No, I cannot understand it at all," replied Roseleaf. "And if you, with +your superior quickness of perception, have found nothing, I don't see +how you could expect me to." + +"You have greater opportunities," said Weil, with a smile that was not +quite natural. "You have the ear of the fair Miss Daisy, remember," he +explained, in reply to the inquiring look that was raised to him. + +"Ah, but she knows nothing, either," exclaimed Roseleaf. "I am sure of +that." + +Mr. Weil was silent for some moments. + +"Well, if you cannot find the true cause," he said, "you will have to +invent a hypothetical one. Your novel cannot stand still forever. +Imagine something--a crime, for instance, of which this black fellow is +cognizant. A murder--that he peeped in at a keyhole and saw. How would +that do?" + +Roseleaf turned pale. + +"You know," he said, "that you are talking of impossibilities." + +"On the contrary, nothing is impossible," responded the other, +impatiently. "College professors, delicate ladies, children not yet in +their teens, have committed homicide, why not this handsome gentleman in +the wool business? Or if you _won't_ have murder--and I agree that blood +is rather tiresome, it has been overdone so much--bring a woman into the +case. Let us have a betrayal, a wronged virgin, and that sort of thing." + +The color did not return to the young man's cheek. + +"Which is still more incredible in the present case," he said. "Do you +think Wilton Fern could do evil to a woman? Look in his face once and +dismiss that libel within the second." + +A desperate expression crossed the countenance of the elder man. + +"You must agree that he has done something!" he cried. "He wouldn't +allow a darkey to annoy him like this for fun, would he? He wouldn't +wear that deathly look, and let his child grow thin with worriment, just +as a matter of amusement!" + +To this Roseleaf could not formulate a suitable answer. He felt the +force of the suggestions, but he would not associate crime with the +sedate gentleman who was the object of these suspicions. He simply could +not think of anything disreputable in connection with Daisy's father, +and it seemed almost as bad to invent an offense for the character in +his novel whose photograph he had thus far taken from Mr. Fern. + +Daisy was surprised, a month after this, to have Mr. Weil stop her in +the hallway, and speak with a new abruptness. + +"Why don't that cursed nigger start for Europe?" he asked. + +She glanced around her with a frightened look. She feared ears that +should not might hear them. But she rallied as she reflected that +Hannibal was miles away, in fact in the city with her father. + +"He is going soon," she replied. "But why do you allude to him by that +harsh term? I thought you rather liked him." + +"I do," he answered. "I like him so well that if he continues to talk +to--to your father--as I heard him the other day, I will throw him into +the Hudson: I can't stand by and see him insult an--an old man--much +longer." + +The girl looked at him with sad eyes. + +"I thought I had succeeded in silencing that kind of talk," she said. +"Mr. Roseleaf used to speak very violently of Hannibal, but he has +listened to reason of late. Let me beg you to see nothing and hear +nothing, if you are the friend of this family you have given us reason +to believe." + +She extended her hand, as if to ask a promise of him, but he affected +not to see it. + +"When does he intend to go?" he demanded. + +"Before the 1st of April." + +"I will give him till that date," he answered, "but not an hour beyond. +He will sail out of this country for some port or other, or there will +be a collision. You must not, you shall not defend him!" he added, as +she was about to speak. "I know the harm he is doing, and it must have +an end!" + +Turning from her suddenly he went out of doors. Far down the road he +stopped to look around, pressing his hand to his forehead, like one who +would make sure he is awake, and not the victim of some fearful dream. + + + + +CHAPTER XV. + +THE GREEN-EYED MONSTER. + + +Before the first of April came, Hannibal sailed. During the winter he +had taken lessons in French of a city teacher, until he believed he +could get along after a fashion with that language. He announced to +Daisy that he would go on the third of March, then he changed it to the +tenth, and again to the seventeenth. Each time, when the date +approached, he seemed to have a weakening of purpose, a dread of +actually plunging into the tide that set toward foreign shores. The girl +had interviews with him on each of these occasions, at which what passed +was known only to themselves. And each time, when she had reached her +own room, she threw herself on her bed and wept bitterly. + +But, at last, on the twenty-fourth, he went. With his overcoat on his +arm, his satchel and umbrella in his hands, he said "Good-by" to the +little party that gathered at the door. He had been treated with great +consideration in that home. Perhaps he realized this to some extent as +he was about to turn his back upon it. Certain it is that he could not +hide the choking in his throat, as he said the words of farewell. Archie +Weil, who stood there with the rest, thought he saw a strange look in +those black orbs as they dwelt a moment on the younger daughter; but it +passed so quickly he could not be sure. + +Mr. Fern was there, and Roseleaf. Millicent had responded, when a +servant went to inform her that Hannibal was going, that she was very +glad. Did she wish to go down? By no means. She hoped she was not such a +fool. + +Weil, who watched everybody, saw an unmistakable relief in the careworn +countenance of Mr. Fern, when the tall form of his late servant +disappeared at the gate. + +"I hope you will do well," had been the last words of the merchant, and +Daisy had added, "So do we all, I am sure." Roseleaf had not spoken. He +had stood a little apart from the others, his mind filled with varying +emotions. It was he who had furnished the money to carry out this plan, +and if it made one hour of Daisy's life happier he would be content. + +Within an hour it was evident that a cloud had been lifted from the +entire household. Everybody felt brighter and better. Roseleaf eyed Mr. +Fern with surprise, and had half a mind to go to his office the next day +and tell him how dearly he loved his daughter. It was the first time +anything like a smile had been upon that face since he had known its +lineaments. + +Archie Weil devoted his attention, as usual, to Millicent. He did not +talk to her about Hannibal, knowing how distasteful was the subject. He +discussed her novel, of which she never seemed to tire, and asked her +about another, which she had begun to map out. She told him she was sure +she could do better the next time, and spoke of the assistance Mr. +Roseleaf would furnish if needed, quite as if that was a matter already +arranged between her and the young novelist. + +Archie wondered if Millicent knew the extent of the attachment that had +grown up between Shirley and her sister. She seemed to feel sure that he +would be at hand when wanted. Could it be that she believed he would +ultimately become her brother-in-law? The negro's guess had almost been +blotted out of his mind. There had been absolutely nothing in his +observation to confirm it. + +A day or two after the departure of Hannibal, Mr. Fern had a +conversation with Daisy, in which he dwelt with more stress than she +could account for on a special theme. He was talking of Walter Boggs and +Archie Weil, and he cautioned her earnestly to treat both gentlemen with +the greatest consideration. The girl detected something strange in his +voice, and she stole apprehensive glances at him, hoping to read the +cause in his eyes. + +"Why, papa, I never see Mr. Boggs," she said. "It is weeks and weeks +since he came here. As for Mr. Weil, we all treat him nicely, I am sure, +and are glad to have him come." + +"Yes," he admitted. "You use him quite right, my child. I am not +complaining; only, if you could show him _particular_ attention, +something more than the ordinary--" He paused, trying to finish what he +wished to say. "There may be a time when he will be of great value to +me--and--I want him to feel--you observe things so cleverly--do you +think Millicent cares for him?" + +Daisy looked up astonished. + +"Cares--for--Mr. Weil?" + +Her father nodded. + +"He has been here several times a week for months, and most of his time +here has been spent with her. I thought--I hoped that she cared for +him." + +He thought! He hoped! Daisy had never had such an idea in her head until +that moment. She had a dim idea that her father would give up either of +his daughters with great regret, although she could not help knowing +that the relations between him and Millicent were not as cordial as +those between him and herself. And he "hoped" that Millie would marry, +and that she would marry Mr. Weil! Her mind dwelt upon this strange +thought. She tried to find a reason for it. Was there any stronger +incentive in her father's mind than a desire to see Millie well settled +in life, with a good husband? + +Had he a fear that the time might soon come when he could not provide +for her? + +Or was there a worse fear--the kind of fear that had haunted him in +relation to Hannibal? + +Every time Mr. Weil came to the house after that the young girl watched +him as closely as he had ever watched her. He did not exchange a word +with her father that did not engage her attention. And the conclusion +she came to was that, whatever the object of Mr. Fern in this matter, +Mr. Weil was honor itself. + +Daisy had never made much of a confidant of Millicent, and the latter +had the habit of keeping her affairs pretty closely to herself. It was +no easy task, then, that the young sister had in view when she came to +a decision to talk with Millie about Mr. Weil. + +Her father had expressed a hope that Millie and Weil would marry. Mr. +Fern had some strong reason for his wish. Whatever it was, Daisy, with +her strong filial love, wanted it gratified. + +"Millie, what do you think of marriage?" she asked, one day, when the +opportunity presented itself. + +"I suppose it's the manifest destiny of a woman," replied her sister, +quietly. + +Much encouraged, Daisy proceeded to allude to Mr. Weil, praising him in +the highest terms, and saying that any girl might be proud to be honored +with his addresses. Millie answered with confirmatory nods of the head, +as if she fully agreed with all she uttered. But when her sister spoke, +the words struck Daisy like a blow. + +"I am glad to hear this," she said, in a voice more tender than usual. +"I think Mr. Weil would have proposed to you long ago, but that he +feared the result." + +Daisy gasped for breath. + +"Millie!" she cried. "Do you mean that Mr. Weil--that--why, I do not +understand! He has hardly spoken to me, while he has spent nearly every +minute he has been here, with you!" + +"Of course he has," responded the other. "What could be more like a case +of true love? If ever a man lost his head over a woman he has lost his +over you, Daisy. And, at any rate, you must know that _I_ care nothing +for him. You certainly could see where _my_ affections were engaged." + +Daisy pressed her hand dreamily to her forehead. She had never known her +sister to show the least partiality to any other man. + +"I understand you less than ever," she faltered. + +"Are you so blind?" exclaimed Millicent, with superior wisdom. "Did you +think Mr. Roseleaf had been so closely engaged all this time in my +literary work without learning to care for me? I presume you will think +I ought to blush, but that is not my way. The strangest thing is that I +should have to explain what I thought every one knew." + +Poor little Daisy! She was so crushed by these statements that she did +not know what reply to make, which way to turn for consolation. + +"He has told you that he loves you?" she managed to articulate. + +"He has shown it, at least," was the answer. "He had not been here a +week before he tried to put his arms around me. I had to let him hold my +hand to avoid an absolute quarrel. He is not an ordinary man, Daisy, and +does not act like others, but we understand each other. He is waiting +for something better in his business prospects, and as I am so busy on +my new book I am glad to be left to myself for the present." + +It was the old story. Daisy could not doubt her sister's version of her +relations with Mr. Roseleaf. When he called the next time there was a +red spot in both her cheeks. He told her with happy eyes that he had at +last secured something which made it possible to speak to her father. +He had been offered a position on the Pacific Quarterly, at a good +salary, and another periodical had engaged him to write a series of +articles. + +"They tell me I have no imagination," he explained, "but that I do very +good work on anything that contains matters of fact. I have some money +of my own, but I did not want to tell your father I was an idle fellow, +without brains enough to make myself useful in the world. The novel on +which I base such great hopes might not seem to him worth considering +seriously, you know. So I can go with a better account of myself, and I +am going this very week." + +The bright light that shone from the face at which she looked made her +waver for a moment, but she found strength to answer that he must not +speak to Mr. Fern about her--now, or at any other time. She did not want +to marry, or to be engaged. She wanted to live with her father, and take +care of him, and she wanted nothing else. + +"Millie will marry," she added, as a parting thrust, meant to be very +direct and bitter. "One of us ought to stay with papa." + +For a while he was too overwhelmed by her changed attitude to make a +sensible reply. When it dawned on him that she meant what she said, he +appealed to her to take it back. He could not bear the thought of giving +her up, or even of waiting much longer for the fulfillment of his hopes. +He spoke in the most passionate tone, and his whole being seemed wrought +up by his earnestness. The girl was constantly thinking, however, that +this was the same way he had addressed Millicent, and that there was no +trust to be placed in him. + +"Calm yourself," she said, when he grew violent. "I have tried to be +honest with you. I have thought of this matter a great deal. You will +admit that it is of some importance to me." + +"To you!" he echoed. "Yes, and to me! I do not care whether I live or +die, if I am to lose you!" + +She wanted to ask him if he had told Millie the same thing, but she +could not without making an explanation she did not like to give. + +"There are others," was all she said. "Others, who will make you +happier, and be better fitted for you--in your career as a writer." + +He never thought her allusion had reference to any particular person, +and he answered that there was no one, there never could be any one, for +him, but her. He had never loved before, he never should love again. And +she listened, thinking what a capacity for falsehood and tragic acting +he had developed. + +After two hours of this most disagreeable scene, Roseleaf left the +house, moody and despondent. It would have taken little at that moment +to make him throw himself into the bosom of the Hudson, or send a bullet +through his brain. + +On the way to the station he met Mr. Weil, who could not help asking +what was the matter. + +"Oh, it's all up!" he answered. "She has refused me, and I am going to +the devil as quick as I can." + +"What are you talking about?" exclaimed the other, staring at him. "You +don't mean--Daisy!" + +"That's just what I mean. I went there to tell her of my good luck, and +to say I was going to ask her father's consent; and she met me as cold +as an iceberg, and said she had decided not to marry. So I'm going back +to town without a single reason left for living." + +Mr. Weil stood silent and nonplussed for a few seconds. Then a bright +idea came into his head. + +"Look here, Mr. Impetuousness," said he. "I know this can be arranged, +and I'm going to see that it's done. My God, the same thing happens in +half the love affairs the universe over! Give me a few days to +straighten it out. Go home and go to work, and I'll fix this, I promise +you." + +It took some time to persuade Roseleaf to follow this advice, but he +yielded at last. Weil pleaded his warm friendship, begged the young man +to do what he asked if only to please him, and finally succeeded. A few +minutes later Archie had secured an audience with Daisy. + +Too shrewd to risk the danger of plunging directly into the subject he +had in mind, Mr. Weil talked on almost everything else. It happened that +Millicent was away, which enabled him to devote his attention to the +younger sister without appearing unduly to seek her. But Daisy, only +half listening to what he said, was pondering the strange revelation her +sister had made, and thinking at each moment that a declaration of love +might be forthcoming. + +She remembered her father's injunction to treat this man with +particular courtesy, and was in a quandary what to do in case he came to +the crucial point. But to her surprise, instead of pressing his own +suit, Mr. Weil began to support in a mild manner the cause of Mr. +Roseleaf. + +"I met Shirley leaving here," he said, in a sober tone, "and he was in a +dreadful state. You didn't say anything cross to him, I hope." + +With these words there seemed to come to Daisy a new revelation of the +true character of this man. Loving her himself, he was yet loyal to his +friend, who he believed had a prior claim. As this thought took root it +raised and glorified its object, until admiration became paramount to +all other feelings. + +"Why should I be cross to him?" she asked, evading the point. "There are +no relations between us that would justify me in acting as his monitor +or mentor." + +Mr. Weil shook his head. + +"He loves you," he said. "You cannot afford, my child, to trifle with a +heart as noble as his." + +The expression, "my child," touched the girl deeply. It had a protective +sound, mingled with a tinge of personal affection. + +"I hope you do not think I would trifle with the feelings of any +person," she said. "Still, I cannot marry every man who may happen to +ask me. You know so much about this matter that I feel justified in +saying this; and I earnestly beg that you will ask no more." + +But this Mr. Weil said gently he could not promise. He said further that +Roseleaf was one of his dearest friends, and that he could not without +emotion see him in such distress as he had recently witnessed. + +"You don't know how fond I am of that boy," he added. "I would do +anything in my power to make him happy. He loves you. He will make you a +good husband. You must give me some message that will console him." + +He could not get it, try as he might; and he said, with a forced smile, +that he should renew the attack at an early date, for the cause was a +righteous one, that he could not give over unsatisfied. He took her arm +and strolled up and down the veranda, in such a way that any visitor +might have taken them to be lovers, if not already married. She liked +him better and better. The touch of his sleeve was pleasant. His low +tones soothed the ache in her bosom, severe enough, God knows! When her +father came from the city he smiled brightly to see them together, and +after hearing that Millicent was away, came to the dinner table with the +gayest air he had worn for months. + +Another week passed, during which Mr. Weil went nearly every day to +Midlands, and communicated to Roseleaf on each return the result of his +labors, coloring them with the roseate hues of hope, though there was +little that could legitimately be drawn from the words or actions of +Miss Daisy. The critic for Cutt & Slashem had also been given more than +an inkling of the state of affairs, and had perused with delight the +chapters last written on the famous romance. He saw that the next +experience needed by the author was a severe attack of jealousy, and as +there was no one else to play the part of Iago he himself undertook the +rôle. + +"Archie Weil is pretty popular with the Fern family, isn't he?" was the +way he began, when he called on Roseleaf. "I met the old gentleman the +other day and he seemed absolutely 'gone on' him, as the saying is. They +tell me he's out at Midlands every day. Got his eye on the younger +daughter, too, they intimate." + +It takes but little to unnerve a mind already driven to the verge of +distraction. The next time that Weil saw Roseleaf, the latter received +him with a coolness that could not be ignored. When he pressed for a +reason, the young man broke out into invective. + +"Don't pretend!" he cried. "You've heard of the case of John Alden. +What's been worked once may go again. I'm not entirely blind." + +Mr. Weil, with pained eyes, begged his friend to explain. + +"Tell me this," shouted Roseleaf. "Do you love that girl, yourself?" + +Unprepared for the question, Archie shrank as from a flash of lightning, +and could not reply. + +"I know you _do_!" came the next sentence, sharply. "And I know that it +is owing to the inroads you have made--not only with her but with her +father--that I have been pushed out. Well, go ahead. I've no objection. +Only don't come here every day, with your cock and bull stories of +pleading _my_ cause, for I've had enough of them!" + +The novelist turned aside, and Mr. Weil, too hurt to say a word, arose +and silently left the room. His brain whirled so that he was actually +giddy. Not knowing where else to turn he went to see Mr. Gouger, to whom +he unbosomed the result of his call. + +"Don't be too serious about it," said Gouger, soothingly. "It's a good +thing for the lad to get his sluggish blood stirred a little. In a day +or two he'll be all right. That novel of his is coming on grandly!" + +Weil was in no mood to talk about novels, and finding that he could get +no consolation of the kind he craved, he soon left the office. The +critic laughed silently to himself at the idea of the biter having at +last been bitten, and then took his way to Roseleaf's rooms. + +No answer being returned to his knock, he opened the door and entered. +At first he thought the place was vacant, but presently he espied a +still form on the bed. The novelist was stretched out in an attitude +which at first suggested death rather than sleep, and alarmed the +visitor not a little. Investigation, however, showed that he was simply +in a tired sleep, worn out with worry and restless nights. + +"What a beauty!" whispered Gouger. "A very dramatic scene could be +worked up if that sweetheart of his were brought here and made to stand +beside the couch when he awakes. Yes, it would be grand, but it would +need his own pen to trace the words!" + +The hardly dry pages of the great manuscript that lay on an adjacent +desk caught the eyes of the critic, and he sat down to scan them +closer. As he turned the leaves he grew so delighted as to become almost +uncontrollable. + +"He's a genius, nothing less!" he said, rapturously, and then tiptoed +softly from the chamber. + + + + +CHAPTER XVI. + +"I'VE HAD SUCH LUCK!" + + +One day Mr. Fern came home in a state of great excitement. He had not +acted naturally for a long time and Daisy, who met him at the door, +wondered what could be the cause of his strange manner. He caught his +daughter in his arms and kissed her like a lover. Tears came to his +eyes, but they were tears of joy. He laughed hysterically as he wiped +them away and told her not to mind him, for he was the happiest man in +New York. + +"I've had such luck!" he exclaimed, when she stared at him. "Oh, Daisy, +I've had such grand luck!" + +She led him to a seat on a sofa and waited for him to tell her more. + +"You can't imagine the relief I feel," he continued, when he had caught +sufficient breath. "I've had an awful time in business for years, but +to-day everything is all cleared up. The house over our heads was +mortgaged; the notes I owed Boggs were almost due; I had given out +paper that I could see no way of meeting. And now it is all provided +for, I am out of financial danger, and I have enough to quit business +and live in ease and comfort with my family the rest of my days!" + +Daisy could only look her surprise. She could not understand such a +transformation. But she loved her father dearly, and seeing that he was +happy made her happy, too; though she had had her own sorrows of late. + +"Tell me about it, father," she said, putting an arm around his neck. + +"You couldn't understand, no matter how much I tried to make it clear," +he answered, excitedly. "There was a combination that meant ruin or +success, depending on the cast of a die, as one might say. Wool has been +in a bad way. Congress had the tariff bill before it. If higher +protection was put on, the stocks in the American market would rise. If +the tariff rate was lowered they would fall. I took the right side. I +bought an immense quantity of options. The bill passed to-day and the +President signed it. Wool went up, and I am richer by two hundred and +fifty thousand dollars than I was yesterday!" + +For answer the girl kissed him affectionately, and for a few moments +neither of them spoke. + +"I don't wonder you say I can't understand business," said Daisy, +presently. "It would puzzle most feminine brains, I think, to know how a +man could purchase quantities of wool when he had nothing to buy with." + +The father drew himself suddenly away from her, and gazed in a sort of +alarm into her wide-opened eyes. + +"That is a secret," he said, hoarsely. "It is one of the things business +men do not talk about. When stocks are rising it is easy to buy a great +deal, if one only has something to give him a start." + +"And you _had_ something?" asked Daisy, trying to utter the words that +she thought would please him best. + +"Yes, yes!" he answered, hurriedly. "I--had--something! And to-morrow I +shall free myself of Boggs, and of--of all my troubles. I shall pay the +mortgage on the house, and we can have anything we want. Ah! What a +relief it is! What a relief!" + +He panted like a man who had run a race with wolves and had just time to +close the door before they caught him. + +"May I tell Millie?" asked the girl. "She has worried about the house, +fearing it would be sold." + +He shook his head as if the subject was disagreeable. + +"She will find it out," he said. "There is no need of haste. And at any +rate I don't want you to give her any particulars. I don't want her to +know how successful I have been. You can say that I have made +money--enough to free the home. Don't tell any more than that to any +one. It--it is not a public matter. I was so full of happiness that I +had to tell you, but no one else is to know." + +Daisy promised, though she asked almost immediately if the prohibition +extended to Mr. Weil. He was such a friend of the family, she said, he +would be very much gratified. + +She had reached thus far in her innocent suggestion, when she happened +to glance at her father's face. He was deathly pale. His body was limp +and his chin sunken to his breast. + +"Father!" she exclaimed. And then, seized with a nameless fear, was +about to summon other help, when he opened his eyes slowly and touched +her hand with his. + +"You are ill! Shall I call the servants?" she asked, anxiously. + +He intimated that she should not, and presently rallied enough to say he +was better, and required nothing. + +"What were we speaking of?" he asked, in a strained voice. + +"We were talking of your grand fortune, and I asked if I might not tell +Mr.--" + +He stopped her with a movement, and another spasm crossed his face. + +"You will make no exception," he whispered. "None whatever. My affairs +will interest no one else. If you are interrogated, you must know +nothing. Nothing," he added, impressively, "nothing whatever!" + +Mr. Fern's recovery was almost as quick as his attack, although he did +not resume the gaiety of manner with which he had opened the subject. +After dinner he talked with Daisy, declaring over and over that she had +been on short allowance long enough, and asserting that she must be +positively in a state of want. She answered laughingly that she needed +very little, and then suddenly bethought herself of something and grew +sober. + +"Do you feel rich enough to let me exercise a little generosity for +others?" she inquired. + +He replied with alacrity that she could do exactly as she pleased with +whatever sum he gave her, and that the amount should be for her to name. + +"You don't know how big it will be," she replied, timidly. + +"I'll risk that. Out with it," he said, smiling. + +"Supposing," she said, slowly, "that I should ask for a thousand +dollars?" + +"You would get it," he laughed. "In fact I was going to propose that you +accept several thousand, and have it put in the bank in your name, so +you would be quite an independent young woman. You must have your own +checkbook and get used to keeping accounts. I will bring you a +certificate of deposit for three thousand dollars, and each six months +afterwards I will put a thousand more to your credit, out of which you +can take your pin money." + +It seemed too good to be true, and the girl's face brightened until it +shone with a light that the father thought the most beautiful on earth. +Now she could return the thousand dollars she had borrowed of Mr. +Roseleaf, a sum that had given her much uneasiness since she broke off +her intimate relations with the young novelist. More than this, she +would have sufficient on hand to send the future amounts that Hannibal +would need to keep him abroad. It was such a strange and delightful +thing to see smiles on her father's face that she did not want anything +to disturb them. She was quite as happy as Mr. Fern, now that this cloud +had been lifted from her mind. + +The next day was a bright one for the wool merchant. By noon he had sent +for Walker Boggs and astonished that gentleman by handing him a check in +full for the entire amount of his indebtedness. In answer to a question +he merely said he had been on the right side of the market. Mr. Fern +also settled with his mortgage creditor, and went home at night happy +that his head would again lie under a roof actually as well as in name +his own. Notes which he had given came back to him soon after, and he +burned them with a glee that was almost saturnine. Burned them, after +looking at their faces and backs, after scanning the endorsements; +burned them with his office door locked, using the flame of a gas-jet +for the purpose. + +The ashes lay on the floor, when a knock was heard and Archie Weil's +voice answered to the resultant question. Mr. Fern lost color at the +familiar sound, but he mustered courage. + +"I've come to congratulate you," said Archie, warmly. "They say you have +made a mint of money out of the rise in wool." + +"Who says so?" asked Mr. Fern, warily. + +"Everybody. Don't tell me it's not true." + +"I've done pretty well," was the evasive reply. "And I'm going out of +business, too. It seems a good time to quit." + +Mr. Weil made a suitable answer to this statement and the two men talked +together for some time. After awhile the conversation took a wider turn. + +"Where's your young friend, Roseleaf?" asked Mr. Fern, to whom the +matter did not seem to have occurred before. "I don't believe I have +seen him at Midlands for a month." + +"No, he doesn't come," replied Archie, growing darker. "If you wish a +particular reason, you will have to ask it of your daughter." + +Mr. Fern looked as if he did not understand. + +"He became very fond of her," explained Archie, "and for some reason, he +does not know what, she has evinced a sudden dislike to him." + +Mr. Fern looked still more astonished. + +"Millie is a strange girl," he ventured to remark. "But I supposed--I +was almost sure, her affections were engaged elsewhere; and, really, I +thought he knew it." + +Mr. Weil stared now, for it was evident his companion was far from the +right road. He was also interested to hear that Miss Fern had anything +like a love affair in mind, for he had supposed such a thing quite +impossible. + +"I was not speaking of Miss Millicent, but of Miss Daisy," he said. + +The wool merchant rose from his chair in the extremity of his +astonishment. + +"You meant that--that Mr. Roseleaf--was in love with Daisy!" he said. +"And that she seemed to reciprocate his attachment?" + +"I did. And also that a few weeks ago she asked him to cease his +visits, giving no explanation of the cause of her altered demeanor. He +is a most excellent young gentleman," continued Weil, "and one for whom +I entertain a sincere affection. Her conduct is a great blow to him, +especially as he does not know what he has done to deserve it. I trust +the estrangement will not be permanent, as they are eminently suited to +each other." + +The face of Mr. Fern was a study as he heard this explanation. + +"If he was an honorable man, why did he not come to _me_?" he asked, +pointedly. + +"He was constantly seeking Miss Daisy's permission to do so," replied +Archie. "Which she never seemed quite willing to give him." + +"She is too young to think of marriage," mused Mr. Fern, after a long +pause. + +"He is willing to wait; but her present attitude, giving him no hope +whatever, has thrown him into the deepest dejection." + +From this Mr. Weil proceeded to tell Mr. Fern all he knew about +Roseleaf. He said the young man was at present engaged on literary work +that promised to yield him good returns. He had a small fortune of his +own beside. Everything that could be thought of in his favor was dilated +upon to the fullest extent. + +"I don't believe I can spare my 'baby,'" said Mr. Fern, kindly, "for any +man. You plead with much force, Mr. Weil, for your friend. How is it +that _you_ have never married. Are you blind to the charms of the sex?" + +For an instant Archie was at loss how to reply. + +"On the contrary," he said, at last, "I appreciate them fully. I have +had my heart's affair, too; but," he paused a long time, "she loved +another, and there was but one woman for me. Perhaps this leads me to +sympathize all the more with my unfortunate young friend." + +Mr. Fern said he would have a talk with Daisy, and learn what he could +without bringing in the name of his informant. + +"We fathers are always the last to see these things," he added. "It +would be terrible to give her up, but I want her to be happy." + + + + +CHAPTER XVII. + +A BURGLAR IN THE HOUSE. + + +Millicent Fern lay wide awake a few nights later, at Midlands, when the +clock struck two. She was thinking of her second novel, now nearly ready +for Mr. Roseleaf's hand. There was a hitch in the plot that she could +best unravel in the silence. As she lay there she heard a slight noise, +as of some one moving about. At first she paid little attention to it, +but later she grew curious, for she had never known the least motion in +that house after its occupants were once abed. She thought of each of +them in succession, and decided that the matter ought to be +investigated. + +Millicent had no fear. If there was a burglar present, she wanted to +know. She arose, therefore, and slipped on a dress and slippers. Guided +only by the uncertain light that came in at the windows, she tiptoed +across the hall, and in the direction in which she had heard the noise. +She soon located it as being on the lower floor where there were no +bedrooms, and a thrill of excitement passed over her. She crept as +silently as possible down the back stairs, and toward the sound, which +she was now sure was in the library. + +What was the sound? It was the rustling of papers. It might be made by a +mouse, but Millicent was not even afraid of mice. She was afraid of +nothing, so far as she knew. If there was a robber there, he would +certainly run when discovered. At the worst she could give a loud +outcry, and the servants would come. + +She tiptoed along the lower hall. A man sat at her father's desk, +examining his private papers so carefully, that he seemed wholly lost in +the occupation. + +The room was quite light. In fact, the gas was lit, and the intruder was +taking his utmost ease. His face was half turned toward the girl, and +she recognized him without difficulty. + +It was Hannibal! + +Hannibal, whom she supposed at that moment in France! + +Without pausing to form any plan, Millicent stepped into the presence of +the negro. + +"Thief," she said, sharply, "what do you want?" + +They had hated each other cordially for a long time, and neither had +changed their opinion in the slightest degree. Hannibal looked up +quietly at the figure in the doorway. + +"I have a good mind to tell you," he said, smiling. + +"You will _have_ to tell me, and give a pretty good reason, too, if you +mean to keep out of the hands of the police," she retorted. "Come!" + +He laughed silently, resting his head on his hands, his elbows on the +desk. Millicent's hair hung in a loose coil, her shoulders were but +imperfectly covered by her half buttoned gown, the feet that filled her +slippers had no hosiery on them. She was as fair a sight as one might +find in a year. + +"Do you remember the time I saw you in this guise before?" he asked, in +a low voice. + +A convulsion seized the girl's countenance. She looked as if she would +willingly have killed him, had she a weapon in her hand. But she could +not speak at first. + +"It was you who sought me then," said the negro. "And because I bade you +go back to your chamber, you never forgave me. Have you forgotten?" + +Gasping for breath, like one severely wounded, Millicent roused herself. + +"Will you go," she demanded, hotly, "or shall I summon help?" + +"Neither," replied Hannibal. "If you inform any person that I am here, I +will tell the story I hinted at just now. Besides, I would only have to +wait until your father came down, when he would order them to release +me, and say I came here by his request." + +Millicent chafed horribly at his coolness. + +"Came here by my father's request!" she echoed. "In the middle of the +night! A likely story. Do you think any one would believe it?" + +"I do not think they would. It would not even be true. But he would say +it was, if I told him to, and that would answer. Don't you know by this +time that I have Wilton Fern in a vise?" + +Yes, she did know it. Everything had pointed in that direction. +Millicent could not dispute the insinuation. + +"What has he done, in God's name, that makes him the slave of such a +thing as you?" she cried. + +"I will answer that question by asking another," said the negro, after a +pause. "Do you know that Shirley Roseleaf hopes to wed your sister?" + +The shot struck home. With pale lips Millicent found herself trembling +before this fellow. + +"You love him," pursued the man, relentlessly. "You do not need to +affirm or deny this, for I know. He loves Daisy, and unless prevented, +will marry her. I hold a secret over your father's head which can send +him to the State prison for twenty years. If I confide it to you, will +you swear to let no one but him know until I give you leave?" + +The girl bowed quickly. She could hardly bear the strain of delay. + +"Then listen," said the negro. "To save himself in business he has +committed numerous forgeries upon the names of two men. One of them is +Walker Boggs and the other Archie Weil. Very recently he has been +successful in his speculations, and has called in many notes with these +forged endorsements. But the proofs of his crimes are ample, and I +possess them. If he ever proposes to let Roseleaf marry Daisy, hint to +him of what you know, and he will obey your will. I shall be in the +city. Here is my address. If you need me I am at your service. +Understand, I shall not harm your father unless he makes it necessary. I +only mean to use the fear of what might await him, and you can do the +same. It is time I was going. I have found all I want here, though I had +enough before." + +He handed Millicent a card on which was the address he had mentioned, +and she allowed herself to take it from his hand. Then he started to +pick up a package of papers that lay where he had put them on the table, +when a third figure, to the consternation of both, brushed Millicent +aside, and stepped into the room. It was the younger sister. + +"Give that to me!" she demanded, imperiously, reaching out her hand for +the package. + +The apparition was so unexpected that the previous occupants of the +library stood for a few seconds staring at it without moving a step. +Daisy was dressed in much the same manner as Millicent, but she thought +only of the danger that threatened one she loved better than life--her +father. + +"Give that to me!" she repeated, approaching Hannibal closer. + +Without a word the negro, his head bowed, handed it to her. + +"And now," she said, in the same quick, sharp tone, "the others!" + +"They are not here," he answered, huskily. + +"Where are they?" + +"At my lodgings in the city." + +Instantly Daisy snatched the card from her sister's hand. + +"At this place?" she asked, hastily scanning the writing. + +"Yes," said Hannibal, in a voice that was scarcely audible. + +"I will be there this morning at ten o'clock. See that they are ready." + +The negro bowed, while his chest heaved rapidly. + +"And now," said the girl, pointing to the door, "go!" + +He hesitated, as if he wanted to say more to her, but recollecting that +she would meet him so soon, he turned and obeyed her. At the threshold +he only paused to say, "You must come alone; otherwise it will be of no +use." And she answered that she understood. + +She followed some paces behind and closed the door after him, pushing a +bolt that she did not remember had ever been used before. + +Then she turned to encounter her sister; but Millicent had disappeared. + + + + +CHAPTER XVIII. + +BLACK AND WHITE. + + +When Daisy reached her own room again, she felt assured that no one but +herself and Millicent knew what had occurred. This was something. Had +her father awakened, she did not know what might have followed. She had +seen him too often, pale and distraught, in the presence of his +relentless enemy, not to entertain the greatest thankfulness that he had +slept through this terrible experience. At any cost it must be kept from +him. She would beg, pray, entreat Millicent to seal her lips. And in the +morning she would go to the address Hannibal had given her and obtain +his proofs of her father's guilt, removing the frightful nightmare that +had so long hung over that dear head. + +Would Hannibal surrender his documents? He had made a tacit promise to +do so, and she had faith that she could make him keep his word. She knew +the negro had a liking for her that was very strong. + +She had made it possible for him to become a man--by giving him the +money that took him to France. Why had he returned so suddenly? What new +fancy had caused him to give up his studies and recross the sea to enter +her doors at night, to plunder still further secrets from her father's +private desk? There were a thousand reasons for fear, but the devoted +daughter only thought of saving the one she loved at all risks. She +would dare anything in his behalf. + +And this father of hers--that she had revered from babyhood--was a +forger! He had made himself liable to a term of imprisonment in the +common jail! He was a criminal, for whom the law would stretch out its +hand as soon as his guilt was revealed! His previous high standing in +the community could not save him; nor the love of his children; nor his +new fortune--won by such means as this. Nothing could make his liberty +secure but the silencing of the witness to his fault, the negro who had +carefully possessed himself of certain facts with which to ruin his +benefactor. + +What did Hannibal want? Surely he had no revenge to gratify, as against +her or her father! They had treated him with the greatest consideration. +Only once--that day on the lawn--had Daisy spoken to him in a sharp +tone, and then the provocation was very great. Since then she had raised +the money that was to make a man of him. What did he require now? An +increased bribe to keep him away? Well, she would get it for him. She +would spend one, two, three thousand dollars if necessary to purchase +his silence; if it needed more she could borrow of--of Mr. Weil. + +Yes, Mr. Weil was the friend to whom she would turn in this emergency. +He had lost nothing, apparently, by the unwarranted use of his name. The +notes on which his endorsement had been forged were all paid. When she +met Hannibal she would ascertain his price and then the rest would be +easy. Her father need not even know the danger to which he had been +exposed. + +In the morning she went to Millicent's room early, in order to have a +conversation with her undisturbed. Millicent was sleeping soundly and +was awakened with some difficulty. + +"I've only been unconscious a little while," she said, in explanation. +"I thought I never should sleep again. Oh, what a disgrace! My father a +forger! Liable to go to prison with common criminals, to wear the +stripes of a convict! It seems as if my degradation could go no lower." + +Reddening with surprise at the attitude of her sister, Daisy answered +that the thing to be thought of now was how to save Mr. Fern from the +consequences of his errors. + +"You're a strange girl," was Millicent's reply. "You don't think of me +at all! Won't it be nice to have people point after me in the street and +say, 'There goes one of the Fern girls, whose father is in Sing Sing!' I +never thought I should come to this. There's no knowing how far it will +follow me. I doubt if any reputable man will marry me, when the facts +are known." + +Thoroughly disgusted with her sister's selfishness, Daisy cried out that +the facts must _not_ be known--that they must be covered up and kept +from the world, and that she was going to bring this about. She reminded +Millicent of the evident suffering their father had undergone for the +past two years, changed from a light-hearted man into the easily alarmed +mood they had known so well. + +"If he deserved punishment, God knows he has had enough!" she added. +"And there is another thing you and I ought not to forget, Millie. +Whatever he did was in the hope of saving this home and enough to live +on, for us! During the last week he has had an improvement in business. +He has paid all of those people whose claims distressed him. You have +seen how much brighter it has made him. Now, when he had a fair prospect +of a few happy days, comes this terrible danger. Surely you and I will +use our utmost endeavors to shield him from harm. Even if he were the +worst of sinners he is still our father!" + +But Millicent did not seem at all convinced. She could only see that her +reputation had been put in jeopardy, and that a dreadful fear would +constantly hang over her on account of it. + +"It is your fault, as much as his, too!" she exclaimed, angrily. "You +both made as much of that negro as if he were a prince in disguise. I've +told you a hundred times that he ought to be discharged. I hope you'll +admit I was right, at last." + +There was little use in reminding her sister that Hannibal had shown +himself the possessor of some information that endangered Mr. Fern +before either he or Daisy began to cultivate his good will; for she knew +it well enough. What Daisy did say was more to the point. + +"Have you _always_ hated him?" she asked, meaningly. "What did he mean +last night by his reference to a time when you _sought_ him, _en +dishabille_?" + +Millicent sprang up in bed, with flashing eyes. + +"He is a lying scoundrel!" she cried, vehemently. "I never did anything +of the kind, and I do not see how you can stand there and repeat such a +calumny!" + +"The strange thing about it," replied Daisy, quietly, "is that you did +not dispute him. But then, you did not know a third person was present. +When I meet him this morning I shall ask for further particulars." + +Millicent sprang from the bed and threw herself at her sister's feet. + +"Would you drive me mad!" she exclaimed. "I am distracted already with +the troubles of this house, and now you wish to hear the lying +inventions of one you know to be a blackmailer and a robber! Don't +mention my name to him, I entreat you. He is capable of any slander. You +can't intend to listen to tales about your sister from such a low, base +thing!" + +Having Millicent at her feet, Daisy was pleased to relent a little. + +"Very well," she said. "I will not let him tell me anything about you. +But I want you to promise in return that you will do all you can to +protect father from the slightest knowledge of what happened last night. +I am afraid it would kill him. So far he believes us ignorant of his +troubles. If I can make an arrangement to send Hannibal back to France +he will remain so. Be sure you do not arouse his suspicions in any way, +and we may come out all right yet." + +The promise was made, and, as nothing could be gained by prolonging the +conversation, Daisy withdrew. In the lower hall she met her father, and +his bright smile proved to her that he was still in blissful ignorance +that any new cloud had crossed his sky. Millicent did not appear at +breakfast, for which neither of the others were sorry. It enabled Mr. +Fern to talk over some of his plans with his younger daughter. Among +them was a possible trip abroad, for he said he felt the need of a long +rest after his troubled business career. + +The last suggestion opened a new hope for Daisy. If worse came to worst, +and there was no other way to escape the jail, flight in a European +steamer could be resorted to. It would mean expatriation for life, as +far as he was concerned, but that would be a thousand times better than +a lingering death inside of stone walls. He could raise a large sum of +ready money, and they would want for nothing. Millie would not wish to +go with them, probably. She would stay and marry--how the thought choked +Daisy--marry Mr. Roseleaf; unless indeed, the young novelist did what +she had foreshadowed, repudiated the thought of allying himself with a +tainted name. + +Roseleaf! The bright, happy love she had given him came back to the +child like a wave of agony. + +Making an excuse that she had shopping to do, Daisy took the train to +the city with her father, and parted from him at a point where the +downtown and uptown street cars separated. Then she took a cab and drove +to the address given her. + +It was not the finest quarter in the city, and she would have hesitated +at any other time before taking such a risk as going there alone. At +present she thought of nothing but the object of her visit. Inquiry at +the door brought the information that the lady was expected and that she +was to go upstairs and wait. The woman who let her in was a pleasant +faced mullatress, and several young children of varying shades were +playing on the stairs she had to ascend. Daisy mounted to the room +designated, which proved to be a small parlor, with an alcove, behind +the curtains of which was presumably a bed. + +As the weather was quite warm, the girl went to the front windows and +opened them, in order to admit the fresh air. Then she sat down and +waited impatiently. There was a scent in the room which she associated +with the Ethiopian race, a subtle aroma that she found decidedly +unpleasant. It gave her an indefinable uneasiness, and she mentally +remarked that she would be glad when the ordeal was over. Her nerves +were already beginning to suffer. + +After the lapse of fifteen minutes, Hannibal entered. He had the look of +one who had passed a sleepless night, and despite the blackness of his +complexion, his cheeks seemed pale. + +"Good-morning," said Daisy, rising. + +"Good-morning," he replied. + +And then there was a brief space of silence, each waiting for the other. + +"I am here, you see," said the girl, finally, with an attempt at a +smile. "And now will you give me the things I came for, as I cannot stay +long?" + +The negro tried to look at her, tried many times, but failed. His eyes +shifted uneasily to all the other objects in the room, resting on none +of them more than a second at a time. + +"You wonder," he said, after another pause, "why I returned to America, +why I came to your house last night. I thought I could tell you--this +morning--and I have been trying to prepare myself to do so--but I +cannot. You blame me a great deal, that is evident in every line of your +face, but you do not know what I have suffered. Were your father to go +to jail for the term the law prescribes, he would not endure the agony +that has been mine." + +He looked every word he spoke and more. + +"I am sorry, truly sorry for you," she replied. "But why could you not +leave all your troubles, when you went to France, and begin an entirely +new life? You found it true what I told you, I am sure, about the lack +of prejudice--on account of your--race." + +He nodded and cleared his throat before he spoke again. + +"Oh, yes; but it is not the prejudice _there_ that worries me. It is the +prejudice _here_. It is the barrier my color brings between me and the +only being whose regard I crave!" + +The girl's cheeks grew rosier than ever, but she affected not to +understand, and once more reverted to the errand that had brought her +thither. + +"You promised me the documents with which my poor father has been +tortured," she said, reproachfully; "let us not talk of other things +until you have given them to me." + +The negro drew from a pocket of his coat a fair-sized package tied with +a ribbon. + +"They are all there," he said. "Every scrap, every particle of proof, +everything that could bring the breath of suspicion upon your father's +honesty. All there, in that little envelope." + +She reached for it, but instead of giving it to her, Hannibal caught her +hand, and before she dreamed what he intended, pressed a kiss upon it. +The next moment the girl, with a look of outraged womanhood, was rubbing +the spot with her handkerchief, as if he had covered it with poison. + +"You brute!" she exclaimed. "You--you--" + +She could not find the word she wanted; nothing in the language she +spoke seemed detestable enough to fill the measure of her wrong. + +"You see!" he answered, bitterly. "Because I am black I cannot touch the +hand of a woman that is white. You have claimed to be without the hatred +of the African so ingrained among Americans; you have talked about the +Almighty making of one blood all the nations of the earth; and yet you +are like the rest! A viper's bite could not have aroused deeper disgust +in you than my lips. And all because the sun shone more vertically on my +ancestors than it did on yours!" + +Daisy was divided between her horror of the act he had committed and her +anxiety to do something to free her father from his danger. She +suppressed the hateful epithets that rose to her tongue and once more +entreated the negro to give her the packet he held in his possession. + +"You can do nothing with it but injure a man who has been kind to you," +she pleaded. "And if you use the information you have, and afterwards +repent, it will be too late to remedy your error. Give it to me, and +return to France with the proud consciousness that you are worthy the +position you wish to occupy." + +Hannibal shook his head with decision. + +"That would be very well if I ever could be considered a man by the one +for whose opinion I care most. But while I am to her a creature +something below the ape, a mere crawling viper whose touch is pollution, +I will act like the thing she thinks me. To-day I possess the power to +make a high-born gentleman dance whenever I pull the string. You ask me +to give up this power, and in return you offer--nothing." + +"One would suppose," remarked Daisy, struggling with herself in this +dilemma, "that the ability to inflict pain was one a true nature would +delight to surrender. My father has done no harm to you." + +The negro bent toward her and spoke with vehemence. + +"But his daughter has! She has made my life wretched. Whatever position +I may attain will be worthless to me, without the love I had hoped might +be mine." + +"_Love!_" cried the girl, recoiling. "_Love!_" + +"Love and marriage," he replied. "In France we could live without the +hateful prejudices that prevail in America. I have natural ability +enough, you have told me so a thousand times, and I could make myself +worthy of you. As my wife--" + +Daisy rose and interrupted him fiercely. + +"Cease!" she exclaimed. "There is a limit to what I can endure. If you +mean to make any promise of that kind a prelude to my father's freedom +from persecution, we may as well end this conversation now as later. He +would rather rot in prison than have his child sacrifice herself in such +a manner!" + +She started toward the door, and he did not interrupt her passage, as +she half expected he would do; but he spoke again. + +"All this because I am black," he said. + +"Because you are a cruel, heartless wretch!" she answered, her eyes +flashing. "Because you have abused the goodwill of a generous family; +because you have tortured a kind old man and a loving daughter. If you +were as white as any person on earth, I would not marry you. Worse than +all outward semblance is a dark and vile mind. Do what you like! I defy +you!" + +The door opened and closed behind her. Hannibal heard her retreating +footsteps grow fainter on the stairs, and then there was silence. + +"I might have known it," he said, aloud. "I did know it, but I kept +hoping against hope. She would wed a Newfoundland dog sooner than me. +Nothing is left but to make her repent her action. I will bring that +father of hers to the dust, if only to revenge the long list of injuries +his race has inflicted on mine!" + + + + +CHAPTER XIX. + +"PLAY OUT YOUR FARCE." + + +When Daisy left the house where she had the interview with Hannibal, she +walked for some minutes aimlessly along the street. Her mind was in a +state of great excitement. She realized that she had defied a man who +could inflict the deepest injury on the father she dearly loved. How she +could have done otherwise was not at all clear, but the terror which +hung over her was none the less keen. The proposal of the negro--to +marry her--filled her with a nameless dread that made her teeth chatter, +though it was a warm day. Rather would she have cast her body into the +tides that wash the shores of Manhattan Island. Even to save her father +from prison--if it came to that--she could not make this sacrifice. She +now felt for Hannibal a horrible detestation, a feeling akin to that she +might entertain for a rattlesnake. Whatever good she had seen in him in +other days had vanished under the revelations of his true character. + +What to do next was the absorbing question. A great danger hung over her +father. A dim idea of seeking the mayor--or the chief of police--and +imploring their mercy, entered her brain. Then she thought of Roseleaf, +whose aid she might have secured, if he had not proved himself a +double-dealer, capable of making love to herself and Millicent at the +same time. And then came the resolve to seek out Mr. Weil, the one +person in all this trouble that seemed clear of wrong. Her sister had +told her that he loved her. Well, if necessary she would marry him. At +least he was a man of honor, and white. Yes, she would go to him and +throw herself upon his mercy. + +Daisy knew that Archie made his headquarters at the Hoffman House, and +summoning a cab she asked to be taken to that hotel. Ensconced in the +ladies' parlor she awaited the coming of the man she wanted and yet +dreaded so much to see. Luckily he was in the house, and in a few +moments responded in person to her card. + +"Why, Miss Daisy," he stammered. "What is the matter? Nothing wrong, I +trust. You look quite pale. Is it anything--about--your father?" + +The girl was pale indeed. Now that Mr. Weil was so close, the danger +that he might not be willing to help her rose like a mountain in her +path. She did not know exactly how grave a matter forgery was--whether +it was something that the injured party would be able or likely to +forgive. If she should tell him everything, and he should refuse to be +placated--what could she do then? + +There was no one else in the parlor, but seeing that she wanted as much +seclusion as possible, Mr. Weil motioned the girl to follow him to a +remote corner, where the curtains of a recessed window partially +concealed them. He felt that she had come on a momentous errand. His +suspicions concerning Mr. Fern were apparently about to be verified, and +if so, he did not mean that other ears should hear the tale. + +"Mr. Weil," began Daisy, tremblingly, "I don't know what to say to you. +I am in great distress. Would you--will you--help me?" + +He responded gently that he would do anything in his power. He bade her +calm herself, and promised to be the most attentive of listeners. + +Reassured by his kind words and manner, the girl began again; but she +could not tell her story connectedly, and after making several attempts +to do so, she broke out in a new direction. + +"I want so very much of you, dear Mr. Weil. And I am nervous and afraid +to ask what I would like. I will give you anything you please in return. +Yes, yes, anything." + +He smiled down upon her face, on which the tears were making stains in +spite of her. + +"You are promising a great deal, little girl," he said. + +"I know it; I realize it fully," she responded quickly. "But I mean all +I say. I did not think I could, once, but I am quite resolved now. +Millie told me you were in love with me, and feared I would refuse you. +But I won't. No, no, I will marry you--indeed I will--if you will only +save my darling father!" + +The concluding words were spoken in the midst of a torrent of sobs that +shook the girlish frame and affected powerfully the strong man that +witnessed them. + +"Daisy, dear child, don't speak like this," he answered. "If I can do +anything for your father I will most gladly, and the price of your sweet +little heart shall not be demanded in payment, either. Leave that matter +entirely out of the question, and tell me at once what you desire." + +She heard him with infinite delight, and wiping her eyes she began, in +broken tones, to relate the history of Hannibal's revelations. As she +proceeded his brow darkened, and when she had finished he muttered +something that sounded very much like a curse. + +"And what do you wish of me?" he asked, when she had ended. + +"To keep him from having my father put in prison; to give us time to +escape, if there is no other way; and to forgive the harm to yourself. I +know," she added earnestly, "it is a great deal to ask, but I have no +one else to go to. He has paid every cent, and you will lose nothing. +Tell me, dear Mr. Weil, is there anything you can do?" + +He had the greatest struggle of his life to keep from bending over that +trembling mouth and pressing upon it the kiss he knew she would not +refuse; that mouth he had coveted so long and which must never be +touched by his lips! + +"Can I do anything?" he repeated. "Certainly. I can stop that fellow so +quickly he won't know what ails him. Have no fear Miss Daisy. Go home +and rest in peace. Before the sun sets I will remove the last particle +of danger from your father's path." + +The girl sprang to her feet and would have thrown her arms around his +neck had he not prevented her. + +"You are certain you can do this?" she cried, beaming with happy eyes +upon him. + +"There is not the least question of it. But--I must demand payment for +my trouble. I shall not do this work for nothing." + +With a hot blush Daisy lowered her eyes to the carpet. + +"I have already told you what I will do," she said, trembling. "If you +accomplish what you say, have no fear but I shall keep my word." + +There was an element of pride and truth in the way she spoke that struck +the hearer strongly. The reverent smile on his face grew yet deeper. + +"I am placed in a peculiar situation," he said, after a slight pause. +"Your sister has, unintentionally, no doubt, misrepresented matters in a +way that may be embarrassing for us both. When I have removed the +troubles that stand in your way, I will talk this over with you." + +Daisy looked up quickly. What could he mean? + +"I beg you to explain," she stammered. "If there has been any mistake no +time can be better to set it right than now." + +The man toyed with the lace of the window curtain. He had no intention +of evading his duty, and yet he did not find it agreeable as he +proceeded. + +"Your sister told me," he said, finally, "that--you loved me. She was +wrong. I knew all the time she was wrong. You have just offered to give +yourself to me in marriage in exchange for the efforts that I am to make +on your father's behalf. But I would not marry a woman who did not love +me--who only became mine from gratitude. No, I could not accept you +under such circumstances." + +The young girl glanced at him timidly. + +"I wish you knew how much I liked you," she said. "I never knew a man I +respected more." + +"That is most gratifying," he answered, "for I hold your good opinion +very highly. You must think I speak in riddles, for I have said that I +demand payment for my services, and yet that I would not accept the +greatest gift it is in your power to bestow upon me. Let me wait no +longer in my explanation. When I have put your father out of all danger +from this blackmailer--and I can easily do it, never fear--you must do +justice to Shirley Roseleaf." + +She shivered at the name, as if the east wind blew upon her. + +"He is not a true man," she replied, in a whisper. "He has forfeited all +claim to my consideration." + +"Why do you say that? I am afraid there is another misunderstanding +here, my child." + +Then he drew out of her, slowly at first, the revelations that Millicent +had made. And he disposed of the charges, one by one, until there was +nothing left of them. + +"Could you--would you--only go with me to his rooms," he added, "and see +him lying there, wan and pale, disheartened at the present, hopeless for +the future, you would change your mind. He has never in his life loved +but one woman, and that one is yourself. I will not undertake to say why +you have been told differently, though I could guess. Shirley Roseleaf +loves you, Miss Daisy, and you love him. When I have made good my +promise, I shall ask you to come to my friend's side and bring him back +to health with the sunshine of your presence." + +Daisy was more than half convinced, for the strong affection she had had +for the young man plead for him in every drop of her blood. + +"Is he so very ill?" she asked, dreamily. + +"He has not left his room for a week," was the answer. "Nothing his +friends can say will move him. He is in such a state of mind that he +even refuses to have me with him; me, until very lately, his closest +friend. But if I tell him you have relented, there is no medicine on +earth will have such an instant effect." + +The girl thought for some moments without speaking. + +"It is my father first, of course," she said at last. "But while you are +arranging matters concerning him, I do not see any reason to keep me +from helping a sick boy. I--yes, I will go with you now." + +He looked the gratitude he could not speak, and fearful that in her +mercurial mood she might change her mind, he accompanied her without +delay to the street, and procured a cab, in which they were driven +rapidly to Roseleaf's lodgings. On the way, with that loved form so near +him, Archie Weil had a constant struggle. She might be his, if he would +forget duty. + +And he loved her! God, how he loved her! He could marry her, and perhaps +after a fashion make her happy. The perspiration stood on his forehead +as he dwelt on the bliss that he had resolutely cast aside. + +Roseleaf's landlady came to the door in person and informed the callers +that her guest was in about the same condition as he had been for some +days. He was not ill in bed, but he did not leave his room. When she +sent up his meals he received them mechanically, and they were often +untouched when the domestic went for the dishes. He wrote several hours +a day, though he was undoubtedly feeble. Did he have any visitors? Only +one, Mr. Gouger, who was with him at the present moment. Should she go +up and announce them? Very well, if it was not necessary. Mr. Weil could +show the lady into the adjoining room, which was empty, until he had +announced her presence in the house to his friend. + +Archie whispered to Daisy when he left her at Roseleaf's door, that he +would come for her as soon as possible. He did not enter the sick boy's +chamber at once, for something in the conversation that came to his ears +arrested his steps at the threshold. Mr. Gouger's voice was heard, and +Archie's ears caught the sound of his own name. + +"You should let me send to Mr. Weil," said Gouger. "I am sure he can +explain everything. You have written all you ought for the present. He +would take you to ride and bring the color to those white cheeks of +yours." + +"But he cannot bring me the girl I love," responded Roseleaf, with a +profound sigh. "Even if I have done him injustice, she is lost to me +now. You know appearances were against him. Why, you agreed with me +about it. I don't want to see any one. I want to go away from here, and +forget my sorrows as best I can in some far distant place." + +There was a sadness in the tone that went to the listener's heart. The +door was slightly ajar and Archie took the liberty of looking into the +room. Roseleaf lay stretched out in a great chair, and Gouger leaned +over him, appearing for all the world like some sinister bird of prey. +Mr. Weil felt for the first time in his life that there was something +uncanny in the aspect of the book reviewer. He did not think he could +ever be close friends with him again. And what did Shirley mean by +saying that Lawrence had "agreed" with him when he heard such base +opinions? + +The critic was fingering with apparent satisfaction a pile of MSS. that +lay on the table. It had grown vastly since Archie saw it the last time, +and must be fifteen or twenty chapters in extent now. + +"You must not go away until you have finished this wonderful work," +replied Gouger, with concern. "A few more months--a little further +experience in life--and your reputation will be made! Ah, it is +wonderful! It is magnificent! The world will ring with your praises +before the year is ended. Such fidelity to nature! Such perfection of +detail! In all my career I have never seen anything to approach it!" + +Shirley moved uneasily in his chair. + +"Do you ever think at what cost I have done this?" he asked. "I know the +pain of a burn because I have held my hands in the fire. I know the +agony of asphyxiation, because I have dangled at the end of a rope. I +can write of the miner buried beneath a hundred feet of clay, because I +have had the load fall on my own head. To love and find myself beloved; +then to see happiness snatched without explanation from my grasp; to +feel that my best friend has been the one to betray me! That is what I +have passed through, and from the drops of misery thus distilled, I have +penned those lines you so much admire. I have written all I can of these +horrors. I will not begin again till I have caught somewhere in the +great sky a glimpse of sunlight!" + +Mr. Weil could wait no longer. He pushed open the door and went to the +speaker's side. + +"The sunlight is awaiting you," he said, gazing down upon the figure in +the armchair. "You have only to raise your curtain." + +Mr. Gouger sprang up in astonishment at the sudden arrival, and perhaps +a little in alarm also; for he could not tell how long the visitor had +been eavesdropping at the portal. But Roseleaf turned his languid eyes +toward his old friend, and was silent. + +"Shirley, my boy," pursued Weil, with the utmost earnestness, "I can +prove to you now that Daisy Fern loves you and you alone." + +Roseleaf did not move. His lips opened and the words came stiffly. + +"You can promise many things," he said, "but can you fulfill any of +them?" + +So cold, so unlike himself! + +"What will convince you?" demanded Weil. "Shall I bring a letter from +her? Or would you rather she came in person, to tell you I speak the +truth?" + +The shadow of a smile, a smile that was not agreeable, hovered around +the corners of the pale mouth. + +"I shall write no more," said the lips, when they opened, "until I have +seen her and heard the reason for my rejection. I will discover who my +enemy is. I will unmask the man or the woman that has done me this +injury. Till then, I shall write no more. No, not one line." + +Mr. Gouger was nonplussed by the new turn in affairs. He knew that Weil +had some basis for what he said, that he was not the man to come with +pretence on his tongue. Neither of the other persons in the room paid +the least attention to him, any more than if he had not been present. It +was like a play, at which Gouger was the only spectator. + +"Could you bear it if I brought her to you to-day, if I brought her here +now?" asked Archie, beseechingly. "If I go and get her, and she comes +with me, will the shock harm you?" + +The ironical smile deepened on the face of the younger man. + +"Play out your farce," he said. + +Casting one look of apprehension at Roseleaf, Mr. Weil turned toward +the door that entered the hallway. Before he could reach it, a female +form came into the room and caught his arm. Together they faced the +recumbent figure in the chair. This lasted but a moment. Then Daisy +broke from her escort and threw herself at her lover's feet. + +"Come," whispered Archie, to the critic. "Let us leave them alone." + + + + +CHAPTER XX. + +LIKE A STUCK PIG. + + +Hannibal was neither better nor worse, morally, because his color was +black. There are men with white complexions who would have done exactly +as he did. There are others as dark as Erebus who would have done +nothing of the sort. + +He was no ordinary negro. His intelligence was above the average. When +he first entered the employ of Mr. Fern, that gentleman took every pains +to encourage the aptitude for learning that he found in him. Hannibal +accompanied his employer to his office, where he was entrusted with +important commissions, which he seemed for a long time to execute with +faithfulness and discrimination. At home he performed his duties in a +way that gave great satisfaction. At the end of the first six months Mr. +Fern would have hated to part with a servant that he believed difficult +to replace. + +But the great source of trouble arose gradually. Hannibal began to +entertain a sentiment for his master's younger daughter that was +impossible of fruition. Daisy treated him in the most considerate +manner, never dreaming what was going on behind his serious brow. +Millicent, ungovernable in all things, began early to show the bitterest +enmity toward the negro, while her sister, seeing that her father liked +and appreciated him, tried by her own kindness to compensate for the +other's rudeness. What caused Millicent's feelings Daisy had no means of +knowing, and she had not the least suspicion until she heard the +conversation in the library the night the house was entered. Even then +she did not take the subject much to heart, for she did not comprehend +all that Hannibal had meant to convey in the brief and sarcastic +expression he used. Daisy had a mind too pure to believe anything so +heinous of her own sister as Hannibal had intimated. + +The passion of love is a thing that grows in curious ways. What made it +seem to Hannibal that there was hope for him was the discovery that Mr. +Fern was committing forgeries and that the proofs might be his for the +taking. If he could hold such a power as that over this gentleman, who +could say that even so great a mésalliance as his daughter's marriage to +an African might not be arranged? + +The negro proceeded cautiously. He secured the proofs he wished, and let +Mr. Fern know tacitly that he had them. The terror, the undisguised fear +that followed, the admittance of the menial to a totally different +position in the household and the office, showed that the servant had +not underrated the importance of his acquisition. + +Not one word bearing directly on the subject passed between them. The +condition of the merchant was more horrible than it would have been had +his employé said outright, "I have the proof that you are a forger--I +can send you to prison for twenty years, and I will do so unless you do +so-and-so for me." He did not know how Hannibal meant to use his +information. He was afraid to broach the matter to him. He could only +wait and suffer; and suffer he did, as a proud-spirited, high-minded man +who has made an error must suffer, when such a sword hangs over his +head, ready at any moment to fall. + +As Walker Boggs had said, Mr. Fern was not by nature a business man. +After the former's retirement from active participation in the concern +there was a series of losses. When Mr. Fern took his pen and began to +imitate the signature of his late partner on a sheet of paper, nothing +but some such course stood between him and bankruptcy. He felt certain +that if he could tide over twenty-four hours he would be saved. Before +he left his office he had made a note, written Mr. Boggs name across the +back of it, and raised money thereon. + +He did this many times afterwards, but finally, when he again wanted a +name to save himself with, he dared not use this one. Boggs had called +in to remark that he should withdraw the capital he had lent as soon as +the term arranged for had expired. The sum was already infringed upon, +had the investor known it. The next name used was that of Archie Weil. +Archie had been to the house a good deal to see Millicent. Mr. Fern +believed there was a love affair between them, and he caught at the +straw of possible protection in case of discovery. The forgeries became +numerous, and the total amount on that day when the passage of a new +tariff saved the venturesome speculator, was very large. Hannibal was at +this time in foreign parts, or at least so the merchant supposed. He +soothed his conscience with the reflection that this additional wrong +act would enable him to right the others that preceded it. And things +might have gone well had not the negro returned, consumed with the love +he bore the younger daughter, and had not his love turned to vinegar by +her contemptuous rejection of his advances. + +An hour after Daisy left him, Hannibal had made up his mind to be +revenged. He had faltered a little in the meantime, asking himself what +good it would do to bring disgrace on the head of this poor old man, but +his injuries were too strong for mercy. He was despised by them all; he +would show them that, black as he was, his ability to hurt was no less +strong than theirs. Roseleaf had made the first impression on that young +heart he himself had craved. It remained to be seen whether he would wed +the daughter of a convict. There would be something pleasant, too, in +disgracing Millicent, who had once placed herself in a position where he +could have blasted her reputation forever, and had afterwards dared to +treat him as if he were the dirt beneath her shoes. Yes, Hannibal +decided, he would go to Mr. Weil and Mr. Boggs, and show them the way +this man had used their names, hawking them in the public market without +their knowledge. + +When Hannibal reached the Hoffman House and inquired for Mr. Weil, he +was told that he was absent. An hour later he received the same answer. +A visit to the residence of Mr. Boggs elicited a reply precisely +similar. In fact, the day wore away and evening arrived before he found +them. + +In the meantime, Mr. Weil had not been idle. While Daisy and Shirley +Roseleaf were tearfully exchanging their explanations, he sent a +messenger to Mr. Boggs, asking that gentleman to come to him without +delay. An hour later the messenger arrived with the gentleman, and +having engaged a room for temporary use, and seen to it that Roseleaf +wanted nothing at present but his fair nurse, Archie pulled Boggs in and +locked the door securely. + +"What's all this?" exclaimed Boggs. "You look and act as if there was +the devil to pay." + +"There is," was the short answer. "I want you to do one of the most +creditable acts of your life. I want it as a personal favor, and I'm +going to have it, too." + +Mr. Boggs crossed his hands over his paunch and waited for further +information. + +"Are you a first-class liar?" was Mr. Weil's next question. "Could you, +in an emergency, do yourself justice as an eminent prevaricator? Are you +able, for a certain time, to banish truth from your vicinity?" + +Mr. Boggs remarked, in response to these astonishing suggestions, that +he could tell much better what his friend was about if he would drop +metaphor. + +Mr. Weil hesitated. He saw no way but to trust this man with the facts, +and yet he dreaded the possibility that he might prove obstinate. + +"By-the-way," he said, as if to change the subject temporarily, "have +you been out to see Fern lately?" + +Mr. Boggs shook his head. + +"You ought to," said Weil. "He's improved a thousand per cent. in the +last few weeks. His financial luck has made a new man of him." + +"I'm glad of that," responded the other. "And I'm glad too that I've got +my money out of his firm, for I had a strong suspicion at one time that +he was running pretty close to the wall." + +Mr. Weil nodded to show that he believed this statement, and then grew +sober. + +"Sometimes, when men get into a tight place financially," he said, "they +do queer things. Supposing I should tell you that Mr. Fern had endorsed +checks and notes in a way he was not authorized to do?" + +The stout man opened his eyes wider. + +"That would be a piece of news," he answered. "But, if he did, he's made +it all right by this time, of course, and nobody is the loser." + +Mr. Weil drew himself up in his chair, as if righteously indignant. + +"Do you think that is enough?" he demanded, raising his voice. "By Gad, +supposing I tell you my name was one of those he monkeyed with!" + +The other did not seem much perturbed. + +"If the paper is all in, I wouldn't make a fuss about it, if I were +you," he replied. "Fern is a good fellow. He has gone out of business, +and I hope he'll never go in again. Take my advice, if you have learned +anything to his discredit, and keep it to yourself." + +Weil could hardly control himself. + +"Do you think I intend to let him forge my name on his notes and checks +and not put him under arrest!" he cried; "when the proofs are beyond +question?" + +Mr. Boggs bowed and said he meant that, exactly. He further remarked +that he was astonished that his friend had any other idea in his mind. +The Fern family was one in which he had been favorably received and he +ought to do everything possible to prevent harm to any of its members. +As he proceeded in this vein, Mr. Boggs grew so earnest that he did not +notice the broad smile of happiness that was creeping over the face of +his companion, and was not prepared to find a pair of manly arms clasped +around his neck. + +"You--you!" Archie Weil was trying to say. "You dear, kind, sensible +fellow. You've made me the happiest man on earth! Of course _I_ wouldn't +trouble Fern, but I was afraid _you_ would. He used your name as well as +mine, the rascal! Everything is paid up, and all the trouble now is that +a miserable scamp has got hold of some of the paper and wants to +blackmail him. And what I called you here to-day for is to get you to +agree--with me--to acknowledge every scrap of that paper as being our +own!" + +The sudden change was more than Mr. Boggs could bear for a moment. He +sat, to use a common expression, "like a stuck pig," staring at Archie. + +"You remember the nigger that worked for Fern," explained Mr. Weil. "He +got hold of some of these notes and checks, in Fern's office, and is +coming to look us up to-day, for the purpose of having his employer +arrested. A nice game, eh? But we will foil him, won't we? We'll show +him a trick worth several of his! He's probably gone to the Hoffman +House and he'll hang round till he finds me. I'll send word that I am to +be home this afternoon at five. You will be there with me. We'll tackle +him together. When he tells us that he has some forged paper in his +possession we'll act astonished and enraged; we'll ask him to show it to +us; and when we've got it all in our hands we'll say the signatures are +our own, and kick him down stairs. Are you with me, Walker? Is it a go, +old boy?" + +The agreement was made without more ado. Mr. Boggs began to see the +humorous element in the affair, and actually came nearer laughing than +he had done since the day he discovered that the size of his waist +placed him out of the list of eligible "mashers." + +When everything was settled, Mr. Weil excused himself for a few moments, +while he tiptoed to Roseleaf's door and knocked. Daisy came to open it, +and when she saw who the visitor was she blushed charmingly. + +"Come in," she said. "I am sure both of us are glad to see you." + +Shirley's eyes met those of his friend with a strange expression. He +knew now that all his suspicions were unfounded, that Weil had proved +himself noble and true. But the apologies that he owed could not be +suitably made in the presence of a third person, and he made no +reference to them. His changed appearance was enough, however, for +Archie. The reconciliation with the girl of his heart was perfect, and +the happiness that shone from their faces repaid their good friend for +his sacrifice. + +"I think I ought to take Miss Daisy to her train now," said Archie, +after the exchange of a few ordinary remarks. "She can come to see you +to-morrow again, and before many days we will have matters arranged with +pater familias, so that Shirley can go out to Midlands in his proper +capacity. Oh, you need not redden, little woman! The love you two have +for each other does both of you credit." + +Returning to Mr. Boggs, for the sake of allowing the young couple a few +minutes for their good-bys, Archie dismissed that gentleman with the +understanding that not later than half-past four he would join him in +his room at the Hoffman House. Soon after he escorted Miss Fern to her +station, and before he left the building Archie sent a dispatch to her +father, asking him to come to the city and meet him at his hotel at four +that afternoon. + +Everything worked to a charm. Mr. Fern arrived at the time designated +and went promptly to Mr. Weil's apartments. A brief explanation of what +was about to occur threw the wool merchant into a state of extreme +agitation, but he was assured that the last particle of danger to +himself would be removed before he left the Hoffman House. He was asked +to step into an inner room of the suite, the door of which was to be +left ajar, and to make no move unless he was called. + +Mr. Boggs came at his appointed hour, and Hannibal soon after. Delighted +to find both gentlemen--accidentally, as he supposed--the negro began +without delay to explain the cause of his visit. He stated the manner in +which he had discovered the forgeries, and said he thought it only his +duty to let the facts be known. + +Messrs. Weil and Boggs exchanged glances of well-simulated surprise as +the discoverer proceeded. + +"How long is it since you first knew of this matter?" asked Mr. Weil, +when Hannibal came to a pause. + +"Something like eighteen months." + +"And you allowed this swindle to go on all that time without saying a +word!" said the questioner. "I am surprised, when I remember that for a +long time you saw me almost daily." + +"That is true," was the quiet response. "I could not easily bring myself +to disgrace one whose bread I was eating. But that does not matter now. +I have here a number of notes on which Mr. Fern has forged both of your +names. The law will hold him just as strongly as if I had exposed him at +the time." + +He exhibited a package of papers, and unsuspiciously passed them to the +two gentlemen. Undoing the band Archie Weil spread the documents on the +centre table and went over them carefully with Mr. Boggs, separating +those which bore their several names. A close perusal of all the notes +followed, and finally Mr. Weil looked up and asked if there were any +more. + +"No, those are all," said Hannibal. "I believe there are thirty-six of +them." + +Mr. Weil consulted in a low tone with Mr. Boggs. They seemed puzzled +over something. + +"If these are really all the notes you have," said Archie, "there has +been a great mistake on your part. These endorsements are genuine in +every case. Where are the forged papers of which you spoke?" + +The negro stared with all his might at the speaker. + +"Genuine!" he repeated. + +"Undoubtedly, as far as my name is concerned. I have lent my credit to +Mr. Fern for a long time." + +"That is equally true of myself," spoke up Boggs, slowly. "I wrote every +one of these signatures and I am willing to swear to them." + +Hannibal's eyes flashed with baffled rage. He had been trapped. These +men had conspired to save his late employer from his clutches. They had +lied, deliberately, and he was powerless against their combined +assertions, although he knew the falsity of all they said. + +"You will be as glad as we to learn the truth," said Archie, in a softly +modulated voice. "It would have grieved you to know that your kind +employer had made himself amenable to the criminal law. Your only +object in this matter was to ease your conscience, and do justice. There +is nothing, now, to prevent your returning at your earliest convenience +to France." + +The negro rose and took up his hat. + +"This is very nice," he growled, "but I want to tell you that you are +not through with me yet." + +Mr. Weil rose also. + +"I trust," he said, "that you are not going to be impolite. I certainly +would not be guilty of discourtesy to you. But let me assure you of one +thing: If you ever, hereafter, annoy in the slightest degree my friend, +Mr. Fern, or any member of his family, you will wish heartily that you +had never been born. We can spare you now, Mr. Hannibal." + +With the last words, Archie waved his hand toward the door, and without +further reply than a glare from his now blood-shot eyes, the African +strode from the apartment. + +"I want you to take a ride in the Park with me, for an hour or so, and +then we will return here for dinner," said Mr. Weil to Mr. Boggs. + +He did this to allow Mr. Fern to leave the house without Boggs' knowing +he was there, and also to avoid a meeting that he felt would be too full +of gratitude to suit his temperament just then. + + + + +CHAPTER XXI. + +"WE WANT MILLIE TO UNDERSTAND." + + +Millicent Fern had been so busy on her second novel that she had hardly +noticed the prolonged absence of Shirley Roseleaf from her father's +house. Her first story was selling fairly well and she had received a +goodly number of reviews in which it was alluded to with more or less +favor. Not the least welcome of the things her mail brought was a check +bearing the autograph of Cutt & Slashem, that tangible evidence which +all authors admire that her efforts had not been wholly in vain. She had +put a great deal of hard work into her new novel, and felt that, when +Mr. Roseleaf added his polish to the plot she had woven, it would make a +success far greater than the other. + +Millicent thought she understood the young man perfectly. To her mind he +was merely awaiting the moment when she was ready to name the day for +their marriage. To be sure he had not asked her to wed him, but his +actions were not to be misunderstood. She would accept him, for business +reasons, and the romance could come later. Together they would +constitute a strong partnership in fiction. While she was wrapped up in +her writing it was quite as well that he remained at a respectful +distance. Between her second and her third story she would have time to +arrange the ceremony. + +When Roseleaf made his next appearance at dinner, in the house at +Midlands, Miss Fern smiled on him pleasantly. She remarked that he +lacked color, and he replied that he had been suffering from a slight +illness. Then she spoke of her new story, revealing the plot to a +limited extent, and said it would be ready for him in about two weeks. +The astonished young man saw that she considered his services entirely +at her disposal, without question, whenever she saw fit to call upon +them. He talked it over with Daisy. + +"You know," stammered the girl, "that Millie thought you were in love +with her. That would account for everything, wouldn't it?" + +"But where did she ever get that idea!" he exclaimed, desperately. + +"She says you tried to put your arm around her." + +"Just to practice. Just to learn what love was like. I told you how +ignorant I was, the same as I did her. Archie said she would show me, +but it didn't amount to anything. It was only when I asked you, Daisy, +that I began to understand. Do you remember how you stood on your toes +and kissed me?" + +The girl bade him be quiet and not get too reminiscent, but he would +not. + +"It taught me all I needed to know, in one instant," he persisted. "Ah, +sweetheart, how much happiness and suffering I have had on your +account!" + +He stooped and kissed her tenderly as he spoke. + +"And after this it will be happiness only," she whispered. + +Another kiss answered this prediction. + +"What can I do if she asks me to rewrite the whole of another novel?" +asked Roseleaf, with a groan. + +"I think you might find time to oblige her," said Daisy. "But you ought +to explain things--you ought not to let her misunderstand your position +any longer." + +He said that this was true, and that he would act upon the suggestion. +He had her father's consent, and nothing could stand in the way of his +marriage to Daisy before the year ended. It was not right, of course, to +go on with the implication of being engaged to both the sisters. + +"But I wish I could escape doing that writing," he added. "I hate +fiction, any way; I have been at work on one of my own that I fear I +never shall finish. There is much sadness in novels, and I like joy so +much better. I believe I shall abandon the whole field." + +This she would not listen to. She said her husband that was to be must +become a famous writer, for she wanted to be very proud of him. And Mr. +Fern came in to the room, and having the question put to him, decided it +in the same manner, as he was sure to do when he learned that his +younger daughter held that opinion. + +The retired merchant bore the appearance of a man from whose shoulders +the severe burden of a great weight had fallen. The tiger that had +crouched so long in his path, ready at any moment to spring, had been +vanquished. Beyond the profound humiliation of knowing that his sin was +exposed to the gaze of two of his intimate friends, he had no cause for +present grief. Both of them had proved friends indeed, and nothing was +to be feared from any quarter. Hannibal had disappeared immediately +after the interview at the Hoffman House, and it was supposed had gone +back to France. + +There was to be no haste about the wedding, after all. Now that the +young couple felt perfectly sure of each other they were more willing +than they had been to wait. The freedom that an understood engagement +brings to Americans was theirs. If Millicent had only known the true +condition of affairs, and was content with them, they would have been +perfectly satisfied. + +An old story tells how a certain colony of mice came to the unanimous +conclusion that a bell should be hung around the neck of a cat for which +they had a well-defined fear; and it also relates that none of the +rodents were willing to undertake the task of placing the warning signal +in the desired position. Both Shirley and Daisy wished heartily that +Millicent could be told the exact condition of their hopes and +expectations, but neither had the courage to inform her. Many of their +long conversations referred to this matter, and one day, when they had +discussed it as usual, Daisy hit upon a bright idea. + +"You don't suppose, do you, that Mr. Weil would tell Millie for us? He +has done so many nice things, he might do one more." + +Roseleaf wore a thoughtful expression. He realized how much Archie had +already done for him--realized it more fully than Daisy did; but he said +the matter was worth thinking of. He wanted very much to have it +settled. + +"Would--would you--ask him?" he stammered. "He would do anything for +you." + +"Yes," she responded, softly, "I will ask him. But we had best be +together. I do not want to broach the matter unless you are there." + +In a few days the opportunity came. Mr. Weil heard the voice he loved +best explaining the situation. + +"We want Millie to understand," said Daisy. "If she--if she still likes +Shirley herself, there may be an unpleasant scene, and you will see how +difficult it is for either of us to tell her. But you, who have done so +many kindnesses for us, could convey the information to her without the +diffidence we should feel. Will you, dear Mr. Weil?" + +And Archie said he would, and that it would be a pleasure to him. And a +bright light illumined the faces of the young people, as another stone +was rolled out of the pathway their feet were to tread. + +Mr. Weil did not know how to approach his subject except by a more or +less direct route. One day he was talking with Miss Fern about her new +novel, and she spoke of Mr. Roseleaf in connection with its nearness to +the required revision. + +"I don't know as Shirley will find time to help you out," he replied. +"He is so busy just now with Miss Daisy." + +She did not seem to comprehend him in the least. + +"Oh, he is merely filling in the time, as a matter of amusement," she +answered. "When I am ready he will be." + +He looked at her earnestly. + +"Is it fair to speak of love-making as a matter of amusement, Miss +Fern?" + +"Love-making? Is he, then, practicing for his novel with Daisy, also?" +she inquired. "I am afraid he will get erroneous views of love in that +quarter. She is such a child that she can have little knowledge of the +subject." + +She had evidently no suspicion of the truth, and he determined to become +more explicit. + +"Perhaps that is exactly what he wishes," said he. "The virgin heart of +a young girl certainly affords tempting ground for the explorations of a +novelist." + +For the first time she showed a slightly startled face. + +"I trust you do not mean that Mr. Roseleaf is deceiving my sister with +pretended affection?" she said. "I did not think him that kind of man. +If he is making love to her, as you call it, surely she understands that +it is only for the purposes of his forthcoming novel?" + +Mr. Weil drew a long breath. + +"Is it possible," he asked, "that you do not know him better than even +to hint that suspicion? Shirley Roseleaf is honor personified. He would +not lead any woman to believe him her lover unless he truly felt the +sentiments he expressed." + +Miss Fern looked much relieved. + +"I am glad to hear you say so," she replied. + +Archie was plunged into a new quandary. He had evidently made no +progress whatever thus far. + +"No," he continued, slowly, "he has not deceived Miss Daisy. His love +for her is as true as steel. I understand their engagement is to be +announced in a few days." + +If he had known the pain that these words would bring to their +hearer--if he had foreseen the anguish that was portrayed on that brow +and in those eyes--friend as he was of the young couple who had set him +to this errand, he would have shrunk from it. Millicent made no verbal +reply. Spasms chased each other over her white face. She seemed stricken +dumb. Her hands, lifted to her forehead, trembled visibly. And Mr. Weil +sat there, uncertain what to do, as silent as herself. + +Gradually the force of the storm passed, and Miss Fern staggered faintly +to her feet. Mr. Weil offered to support her with his arms, but she +refused his aid with a motion that was unmistakable. She was making +every effort to conceal her agitation, and she dared not trust herself +with words. After taking a weak step or two, and finding that she could +not walk unassisted, she rested herself upon the arm of a large chair, +and signed to him to leave her. Much mortified, but knowing no other +course, he bowed profoundly and obeyed the signal. + +The next morning he received the following letter at his hotel: + + "MR. A. WEIL:--SIR: If you are in any respect a + gentleman--which I may be excused for doubting--you will + not allude in the presence of any one to the exhibition I + made to-day. Had I had the least preparation I could have + controlled myself. You adroitly took me at a complete + disadvantage, and you saw the result. + + "I leave to-morrow for a new home. Never again shall I live + under the roof of those who have betrayed me. Do not think + I shall succumb to grief because of my sister's conduct. + She is welcome to her victory. No answer to this is + expected. Yours, M. A. F." + +Luckily Archie had escaped from Midlands without meeting either Daisy or +Roseleaf, and he obeyed as strictly as possible the injunction he +received from the elder sister. All he would say was that he had +informed her of the engagement and that she had made no reply. When he +was told a day or two later that Millicent had left the house, he merely +remarked that he was not much surprised, as she was a girl of strong +will and usually did about as she pleased. + +Mr. Fern, at first much distressed over his daughter's action, grew +reconciled when he thought of it more at length. He sent a liberal +allowance to her, which she did not return, and made arrangements by +which she could draw the same sum at her convenience at a bank in the +city. + + + + +CHAPTER XXII. + +WHERE WAS DAISY? + + +The wedding was arranged to occur in the month of October, and the +preparations, so dear to the hearts of all young women, were pushed with +dispatch. There were to be no ceremonials beyond the ones necessary, and +the company to visit the nuptials was limited to a dozen of the family's +most intimate friends. When the evening came, Walker Boggs was on hand, +wearing an extra large waistcoat, and a countenance such as would have +best befitted a funeral. Lawrence Gouger came, his keen eye alert, +foreseeing several chapters in the great novel that Roseleaf was +writing, based on the experiences of the next few weeks. But Archie Weil +wrote a note at the last minute, regretting that a business engagement +that could not be postponed had called him to a distant point, and +sending a magnificent ornament in large pearls for the bride, to whom he +wished, with her husband, all health and happiness. + +Mr. Gouger had had many arguments with Mr. Weil, in opposition to the +early date set for the wedding. He had shown that, according to the best +models, the hero of Roseleaf's novel--which was practically the young +man himself, ought to pass through some very harrowing scenes yet before +his wedded happiness began. He feared an anti-climax, and was +apprehensive that the wonderful romance would lie untouched for long +months while Roseleaf sipped honey from the lips of his beloved. And he +acted as if these things were entirely at the disposal of Mr. Weil--as +if the young couple were mere marionettes whose actions he could +control. + +"You could put it off if you liked," Gouger said, complainingly. "You +could introduce other elements that would be the making of the novel, +and you ought to do it. They should not marry before next spring, at the +earliest. You run the risk of spoiling everything." + +"Good God!" cried Archie. "You talk like a fool. I would have postponed +it forever, if I could, and you know it. But she loves him, and there is +nothing to be gained by delay. Confound you and your old novel! With the +happiness of two human beings at stake you talk about a piece of fiction +as if it was worth more than a blissful life!" + +Gouger straightened himself up in his chair. + +"It is worth a hundred times more!" he answered, boldly. "A novel such +as Roseleaf's ought to be would give pleasure to millions. But I see you +are bound to have your way. The only hope left is that there will be +trouble enough after marriage to spice the story to the end. A milk and +water, nursing-bottle existence for them would make all the work already +done on this manuscript mere wasted time!" + +Weil turned from his friend in disgust. Could the man talk nothing, +think nothing, but shop? + +But Archie did not come to the wedding. He knew the final strain would +be more than he could bear. It was one thing to sacrifice the woman he +loved and quite another to see her given into the arms of the rival he +had encouraged. One may do the noblest things, at a respectful distance, +and find himself physically unable to view them at greater proximity. + +Of course Shirley Roseleaf was almost too happy to breathe. But even the +happiest of lovers somehow manage to inhale a sufficiency of oxygen to +keep life in them, though they have no knowledge of the process by which +this is accomplished. He had seen several of his productions in type, +some in the leading magazines, and he had a permanent position now on +the staff of a great periodical. When the month he had allowed himself +as necessary for a wedding journey was ended, he would settle down to +work, and he knew no reason why he might not make a success in his +chosen field. And there was Daisy--always Daisy--he would never again be +separated from Daisy! Who that has loved and been loved can doubt the +perfect content of this young man? + +The saddest face at Midlands was that of Mr. Fern, who failed in his +best attempts to appear cheerful. He was not sorry that his daughter was +to be married, he would not have put a single obstacle in her way; but +she was going from him, and the very, very dear relations they had so +long sustained would never be exactly the same again. It was the destiny +of a woman to cleave to her husband. He found no fault with the law of +nature, but he had clung to Daisy so devotedly that he could not welcome +very sincerely the hour that was to take her away. + +The marriage was to be early in the evening. Everything was ready, even +to the trunks, filled with traveling and other dresses. The night was to +be passed at the Imperial Hotel in the city, and the journey proper to +be begun some time on the following day. + +On the most momentous morning of her life, Daisy Fern announced that she +had an errand to do in the city and would return shortly after twelve +o'clock. As she was so thoroughly her own mistress nobody thought of +questioning her more particularly. But twelve o'clock came, and one +o'clock, and three, and five, and she neither was seen at Midlands nor +was any message received from her. + +By the latter hour Mr. Fern was in a state of excitement. The entire +house was in an uproar. The servants were catechised, one by one, to see +if perchance any of them could guess the young lady's destination. Word +was sent by telephone to various places in the city, asking information, +but none was received. She had left the house, ostensibly to go to New +York, and nothing could be learned of her from that moment. + +As Mr. Roseleaf was not expected until some time later, Mr. Fern went at +last to the city and sought the young man at his rooms. He found him in +the company of Lawrence Gouger, dressed for the ceremony, and impatient +for the arrival of the hour when he should start for his bride's abode. +It may be conceived that the news Mr. Fern brought was not the +pleasantest for him. + +"You--you have not seen Daisy?" came the stammering question, as the +father paused on the threshold of Roseleaf's room. + +"To-day? Why, certainly not!" was the stupefied answer. "I was just +about to start for your house." + +Mr. Fern sank upon a sofa just inside the door. + +"Something--has--happened!" he groaned. "Ah, my boy, something has +happened to my child!" + +Roseleaf looked at Mr. Gouger, who in turn looked at Mr. Fern. + +"She--went away--this morning--on an errand," enunciated the father, +slowly, "saying--she would return--at noon. And--that is the last +we--have seen--of her. Oh, it seems as if I should go mad!" + +It seemed as if Shirley Roseleaf would go mad, too. He looked like one +bereft of sense, as he stood there without uttering a word. + +"Perhaps she has returned since you left home," suggested Mr. Gouger, on +the spur of the instant. "Don't lose heart yet. Let me send to a +telephone office and have them inquire. You have a 'phone in your house, +have you not, Mr. Fern?" + +The father bowed in reply. He was too crushed to say anything +unnecessary. Touching a button, Mr. Gouger soon had a messenger +dispatched for the information desired, and in the meantime he tried, by +suggesting possibilities, to soothe the two men. + +"You shouldn't get so excited," he protested. "There are a hundred +slight accidents that might be responsible for Miss Daisy's delay. +Perhaps she has met with an insignificant accident, and the word she +has sent to her father has gone astray--as happens very often in these +days. That would account for everything. Or she may have taken the wrong +train--an express--that did not stop this side of Bridgeport, and +hesitated to telegraph for fear of alarming you. 'Don't cry till you're +hurt' is an old proverb. Why, neither of you act much better than as if +her dead body had been brought home!" + +They heard him, but neither replied. They waited--it seemed an hour--for +an answer to the telephonic message, and it came, simply this: "Nothing +has been heard as yet of Miss Fern." + +The thoroughly distressed and disheartened father shrank before the gaze +of the lover, when this news was promulgated by Mr. Gouger. + +"What swindle is this?" were the bitter words he heard. "Have you +decided on another husband for your daughter, and come to break the news +to me in this fashion?" + +Mr. Gouger interfered, to protect the old man whose suffering was +evidently already too acute. + +"Hush!" he exclaimed. "Can't you see that you are killing him? Be +careful!" + +Roseleaf waved him back with a sweep of his arm. + +"Your advice has not been asked," he replied, gutturally. "I can see +some things, if I _am_ blind. That girl has gone to the man she +loves--the man he," indicating the father, "wanted her to marry. He is +rich, and I am poor, and he has won! It is plain enough! And he +pretended, day by day, to my face, that he had given her up for my sake; +and she put her arms around me, and beguiled me into confidence, in +order to strike me the harder at the end. Well, let him have her! I +wouldn't take her from him. But there's an account between us that he +may not like to settle. When you see your friend, tell him that!" + +Mr. Fern heard these terrible sentences like a man in a dream. It could +not be Roseleaf that was uttering them--the man to whom his young +daughter had given the full affection of her innocent heart! He was mad +to talk that way. Mad! mad! + +"You will repent these rash statements," said the old gentleman, rising +faintly from his seat. "You will repent them, sir, in sackcloth. I wish +with all my heart that Mr. Weil was here, for he would at least try to +help me find my child." + +Mr. Gouger suggested that Mr. Weil would be at Midlands soon, as he had +an invitation to the wedding. + +"No," replied Mr. Fern, chokingly. "I received word from him to-day that +he could not attend. He is out of the city." + +Roseleaf gave vent to an expression of nausea. + +"Are you yourself deceived?" he exclaimed. "He will not attend _my_ +wedding; certainly not! He is attending _his own_. If, indeed, he does +not compass his ends without that preliminary." + +Weak and old as Mr. Fern was he would have struck the speaker had not +the third person in the room interfered. + +"Do you dare to speak in that manner of my daughter!" he cried. "Must +you attack the character not only of my best friend but of my child as +well? I thank God at this moment, whatever be her fate, that she did not +join her life to yours!" + +With a majestic step he strode from the presence of his late prospective +son-in-law. Gouger, with a feeling that some one should accompany him, +followed. But first he turned to speak in a low key to the novelist. + +"Do not go out to-night, unless you hear from me," he said, +impressively. "This may not be as bad as you think, after all. I will go +to Midlands and return with what news I can get. Don't act until you are +certain of your premises." + +The young man was removing his wedding suit, already. + +"I shall not go out," he responded, aimlessly. + +"You might write a few pages--on your novel," suggested the critic, as +he stood in the hallway. "There will never be a better--" + +A vigorous movement slammed the door in his face before he could +complete his sentence. + +Hastening after Mr. Fern, Gouger accompanied him home, where the first +thing he heard was that there was still no news of the missing one. + + + + +CHAPTER XXIII. + +AN AWFUL NIGHT. + + +It was an awful night for Wilton Fern. The presence in the house of Mr. +Gouger and Mr. Boggs aided him but little to bear the weight that +pressed upon his heart. It was better than being entirely alone, but not +a great deal. Together they listened whenever their ears caught an +unusual sound. Twenty times they went together to the street door and +opened it to find nothing animate before them. + +Morning came and still no tidings. The earliest trains from the city +were visited by servants, for the master of the house was too exhausted +to make the journey. And at nine o'clock the gentlemen who had passed +the night at Midlands took the railway back to New York, with no +solution of the great problem. + +Mr. Gouger had not been in his office an hour before the door opened and +in walked Archie Weil. The critic started from his chair at the +unexpected sight, and remarked that he had not expected to see his +visitor so early. + +"I presume you heard the news and came home at once," he added, +meaningly. + +Mr. Weil was pale, and wore the look of one whose rest has been +disturbed. + +"I don't know what you mean," he replied. "I was called away on business +that I could not evade, and came back as soon as I could. I fear the +Ferns thought it rather rough of me to stay away from the wedding, but I +could not very well help it. You were there, of course. Everything went +off well, I trust." + +The speaker had the air of a man who tries to appear at ease when he is +not. His voice trembled slightly and his hands roamed from one portion +of his apparel to another. + +"Then you have heard nothing!" repeated Gouger, gravely. "Prepare +yourself for a shock. There was no wedding last night at the Ferns'. +Miss Daisy disappeared yesterday morning, and has not been seen since." + +If Mr. Weil had been pale before, his face was like a dead man's now. +With many expressions of incredulity he listened to the explanations +that followed. He declared that the occurrence was past belief, and that +he could see no way to account for it. Clearly something had happened +that the girl could not prevent. She would never have absented herself +of her own accord. She loved the man who was to be her husband, and if +she had wished to postpone her marriage she could have easily arranged +it. + +"I can think of nothing but a fit of temporary insanity," he added, with +a sigh. "And Shirley--poor fellow--how does he take it? Completely +broken up, I suppose?" + +When he heard the attitude that Mr. Roseleaf had assumed, Mr. Weil +seemed stupefied. Little by little Mr. Gouger revealed to him the +answers that the young man had made to Mr. Fern, finally referring to +the charge that he (Mr. Weil) had eloped with the bride. Archie's face +grew more and more rigid as he listened, but the anger that the relator +had anticipated did not show there. + +"He is crazy," was the mild reply. "I will go and see him, at once, and +enlist his assistance in the thorough search that must be undertaken. +Come, Lawrence, leave your work for an hour and go with me." + +Remembering his promise to return in the morning with the latest +tidings, Mr. Gouger put on his hat and coat and entered the cab which +his friend summoned. He felt that he was about to witness another +chapter that would make most dramatic reading in that great novel! + +"You had best let me go in first," he whispered, when they stood at +Roseleaf's door. "He is in an excitable frame of mind, I fear." + +For answer, Archie brushed the speaker aside and preceded him into the +chamber, without the formality of a knock. Roseleaf lay before them in +his easy chair, bearing evidence in his attire that he had not disrobed +during the night. He greeted his visitors with nothing more than a look +of inquiry. + +"I only heard of your terrible disaster a few moments ago," said Mr. +Weil. "I learn that Miss Daisy had not been heard from up to nine +o'clock this morning. We must bring all our energies to bear on this +matter, Shirley. Her father is unable to help us much. For all we know +she may be in the most awful danger. Rouse yourself and let us consult +what is best to do." + +Incredulousness was written on the quiet face that looked up at him from +the armchair. + +"Why don't you tell us what you have done with her?" said the bloodless +lips, slowly. + +Mr. Weil trembled with suppressed emotion. + +"This is no time for recriminations," he replied, "or I might answer +that in a different way. We must find this girl. Before we go to the +police let us consider all the possibilities, for they will deluge us +with questions. Did any one think," he asked, suddenly, turning to +Gouger, "of sending word to her sister Millicent?" + +Mr. Gouger replied that they had done so. A servant had been dispatched +early in the evening to Millicent's residence and had returned with the +answer that she had heard nothing of Miss Daisy and did not wish to. She +had previously sent a sarcastic reply to an invitation to attend the +wedding. + +"And she never came to comfort her father in his distress!" exclaimed +Mr. Weil. "What a daughter!" + +They could get nothing out of Roseleaf. He answered a dozen times that +it would be much easier for Mr. Weil to send Daisy home or to write to +her father that she was in his keeping, than to attempt the difficult +task of deceiving the police, who would have enough shrewdness to unmask +him. + +"Then you will do nothing to help us?" demanded Archie, his patience +becoming exhausted, though he kept his temper very well. "In that case +we must lose no more time. Ah, Shirley! I thought you worthy of that +angelic creature, but now--" + +He checked himself before finishing the sentence, and went out into the +hall. + +"I think I had best go to Midlands and consult with Mr. Fern," he said +to Gouger in a low tone. "There is a possibility that his daughter has +returned since you came away. What an awful list of horrible thoughts +crowd on one! If you can help me any I will send you word later." + +When Mr. Weil was gone, Mr. Gouger opened the door and looked again into +Roseleaf's room. The young man had not changed his position in the +least. + +"He has started for Midlands," he said. "What do you think of his +explanation in regard to his absence last night?" + +"I think--I know--it is a lie!" was the quick reply. + +"You really believe she went away to meet him--and that he has passed +the last twenty-four hours with her." + +"Undoubtedly." + +The critic waited a minute. + +"Do you think they are married?" he asked. + +Roseleaf closed his eyes, as a terrible pain shot across them. He +wondered dimly why this fellow should delight in uttering things that +must cause suffering. Gouger deliberated whether to say more, but +thinking that he had left the right idea in the young man's mind for the +purpose he had in view, he softly withdrew from the chamber and left the +house. When Roseleaf looked up again, some minutes later, he was alone. + + * * * * * + +Mr. Weil's hand was grasped feebly by the owner of Midlands, when he +came into the presence of the gentleman. Though completely exhausted Mr. +Fern had not been able to sleep. He listened wearily while his caller +suggested possibilities to account for his daughter's absence, but could +not agree that any of them were probable. When the idea was broached of +communicating with the police he shrank from that course, but finally +admitted that it must be adopted, if all else failed. In answer to a +hundred questions he could only say that he had no idea of anything that +could make her absence voluntary. + +"She loved her chosen husband devotedly," said the old man. "When she +hears what I have to tell her she will hold a different opinion." + +"Then," said Archie, ignoring the latter expression, "she must either be +the victim of an accident, a fit of aberration, or--" + +He could not bear to finish the sentence, but the father bowed in +acquiescence. + +Lunch was served and Mr. Weil sat down to it, trying by his example to +persuade Mr. Fern to take a few mouthfuls. Neither of them had any +appetite, and the attempt was a dismal failure. + +"I leave everything to you," said the host, as Mr. Weil prepared to take +his departure. "You are the truest friend I ever had, and whatever you +decide upon I will endorse. But I have an awful sinking at the heart, a +feeling that I shall never see my child alive. Do you believe in +premonitions? I have felt for weeks that some misfortune hung over me." + +Before Mr. Weil could reply a servant entered with a telegraphic message +that had just been received. Tearing it open hastily Mr. Fern uttered a +cry and handed it to his companion: + + "I am alive and uninjured. Look for me to-morrow.--Daisy." + +A gush of tears drowned the exclamations of joy that the father began to +utter. + +"Alive!" he exclaimed. "And will be home to-morrow! Ah, Mr. Weil, hope +is not lost, after all. But why, _why_ does she leave me in my +loneliness another night? Is there any way in which you can explain this +mystery?" + +Mr. Weil confessed his inability to do so. He tried, however, to show +the father the bright side of the affair, and bade him rest tranquil in +the certainty that only a few hours separated him from the child he +adored. When Daisy came home she would explain everything to his +satisfaction. In the meantime he ought to indulge in thankfulness for +what he had learned rather than in regrets. + +"Go to bed and get a good rest," he added. "I will make a journey to the +telegraph office in the city and see if it is possible to trace this +message. If I learn anything I will ring you up on the telephone at +once. And remember, if you do not hear from me, there is a proverb that +no news is good news. Daisy has promised to come home to-morrow. This +is something definite. An hour ago we were plunged in despair. Now we +have a certainty that should buoy us up to the highest hope." + +Catching at this view of the case, Mr. Fern consented to seek rest and +Mr. Weil took the next train to the city. Engaging a carriage he bade +the driver take him with all speed to Mr. Roseleaf's residence. +Notwithstanding the harsh manner in which he had been treated by his +late friend, he wanted to be the first to inform him that Daisy had been +heard from. He was smarting, naturally, under the imputation upon his +own honor, and felt that the telegram in his hand would at least remove +that suspicion. + +"I couldn't help coming again, Shirley," he said, when he was in the +presence of the novelist. "I know, despite the cruel manner you have +assumed, that you still love Daisy Fern and will be glad to hear that +she is safe from harm. Here is a telegram that her father has just +received, stating that she is well and will be at home to-morrow." + +His face glowed with pleasure as he held out the missive, but darkened +again when Roseleaf declined to take it in his hand. The young man had +not moved, apparently, from the chair in which he had been seen three +hours before, and his expression of countenance was unchanged. + +"Does she say where she passed the night--_and with whom_?" he inquired. + +"No. But she says she is well and will return. Is not that a great deal, +when we have feared some accident, perhaps a fatal one?" + +The novelist uttered a sneering laugh. + +"My God, Shirley, why do you treat me like this!" exclaimed Mr. Weil, +excitedly. "I have been your friend in everything, as true to you as man +could be! If I had done the dastardly thing of which you accuse me, why +should I come to you at all? I could have taken my bride and gone to the +other end of the earth. We need not have adopted these contemptible +measures. But although I _did_ care for this girl--more than I ever +cared or ever shall care for another--I knew it was _you_ she loved and +I did all I could to aid you in your suit. Have you forgotten how I +brought her here, as you lay in that very chair, and removed the +misunderstandings that had grown up between you? As God hears me, I have +no idea what caused her absence last night! I am going now to the +telegraph office to trace, if possible, the message and find where she +is at present, for I want to relieve her father's mind still more." + +Roseleaf seemed partially convinced by this outburst. He left his chair, +and began slowly to arrange his attire before the mirror. + +"If you are sincere," he said, "I will accompany you. I will also do my +best to discover the resting-place of this young woman. You must remain +with me till she is found. If we do not see her before to-morrow +morning, we will walk into her presence at Midlands together. Do you +agree to this?" + +"With all my heart!" was the joyous reply. + +In ten minutes they entered the carriage at the door, and were driven to +the station from which the telegram had been sent. + + + + +CHAPTER XXIV. + +"THIS ENDS IT, THEN?" + + +There was nothing to be learned at the telegraph office. As near as +could be remembered a boy had brought the message, paid for it and +vanished. Only one discovery amounted to anything. The original dispatch +was produced and proved to be in Daisy's handwriting. Roseleaf attested +to this, and he knew the characters too well to be mistaken. + +It was not advisable, in Mr. Weil's opinion, to go to the police, after +the receipt of this word from the missing girl. It would only add to the +notoriety of the family in case the press got hold of the news. But he +did think it wise to go to see Isaac Leveson and find a man named Hazen, +whose reputation as a detective was great. He could rely on the absolute +silence of both of them. The ride to Isaac's was consequently made next, +and by good fortune Hazen happened to be in. He listened gravely to the +situation as it was outlined by Mr. Weil, but expressed his opinion that +nothing would be gained by doing anything before the next day. + +"That telegram is genuine," he said. "It follows that, unless she is +detained forcibly, she will be at home to-morrow. The writing in this +message is not like that of a person under threats, like one compelled +to send a false statement. Your best way is to wait till she comes home, +providing it is not later than she indicates, and hear her story. +Perhaps it will explain the mystery. If she declines to do this, I will +undertake to probe it to the bottom, if you wish." + +Mr. Roseleaf took no part in this discussion. He was becoming convinced +that Archie Weil was innocent of any complicity in this affair, but he +was still disinclined to talk much. + +"Where shall we go now?" he asked, when they came out of the restaurant. + +"To the Hoffman House?" said Weil, interrogatively. "I believe with +Hazen that we can do nothing to-night." + +Very well, to the Hoffman House they would go. But they had not been in +Weil's room five minutes when a boy came up with a telephonic message +from Mr. Fern, stating that Daisy was safe at Midlands. + +"Let us return without delay," said Weil, enthusiastically. "We should +not lose a moment in removing this terrible cloud! Come, Shirley, we can +catch the six o'clock train if we hasten." + +Mechanically the younger man followed his companion through the hall, +down the elevator and into a carriage at the door. Forty minutes later +they alighted from the train at Midlands and were soon in the familiar +parlor at Mr. Fern's. A servant who had admitted them, stated that Miss +Daisy had been home about two hours but that she was now lying down. He +would inquire whether she would receive the visitors. + +What seemed an interminable time followed before the appearance of Mr. +Fern and his daughter. When at last they came in together, leaning on +each other, they were two as forlorn objects as one can imagine. The +sight of his sweetheart's woe-begone face smote Roseleaf like a blow. He +regretted to the bottom of his heart the cruel things he had thought and +said of her. + +"Daisy!" he exclaimed, stepping forward. "Daisy--my--" + +He could get no further, for Mr. Fern, with a majestic motion of his +hand, waved him back. The presence of the intended bridegroom was +evidently not agreeable to the old gentleman. + +"Sit down," said Mr. Fern, in a quavering voice, addressing himself +wholly to Weil. "I telephoned _to you_ that my daughter had returned, +for I knew _you_ would be anxious." He bore with special stress on the +word "you." "I--I did not know that you intended to bring--any other +person." + +The allusion to Roseleaf was so direct, that he could not help +attempting some kind of a reply. + +"Who could be more anxious than I?" he asked, in a tone that was very +sweet and tender; in vivid contrast, the old man thought, to his manner +of the preceding evening. "No one has a greater interest to learn where +she has been these long, desolate hours." + +Mr. Fern abandoned his intention not to recognize the fact that Roseleaf +was present, and turned upon him with a fierce glare in his sunken eyes. + +"What right have _you_ to ask questions?" he demanded, pressing the +trembling form of his daughter to his own. "You were the first to doubt +her--even her innocence--this lamb that would have given her life for +you only yesterday! She has returned to _me_, and henceforth she is +_mine_! You could not have her though you came on your knees! You wish +to know where she has been! Well, you never _will_! She will not tell +you! It is her own affair. I am speaking for _her_ when I say that we +desire no more of your visits to this house; we are through with you, +thank God!" + +It would be hard to tell which of the two men who listened to this was +the more surprised. Mr. Weil felt his heart sink as well as did +Roseleaf. Daisy clung to her father, without raising her eyes, and there +was nothing to indicate that she disputed his assertions. + +All was over between her and Roseleaf! Nothing could bring them together +again! And she did not mean to divulge the cause of her remaining away a +day and a night--that day and night that had been expected to precede +and succeed her marriage. + +Shirley rose slowly. He bent his eyes earnestly on the father and +daughter, and his voice was firm. + +"When one is dismissed, there is nothing for him but to go. I regret +sincerely what I said last night, when the horror of this thing came +suddenly upon me. I love you, Daisy, and I know by what you have told me +so often that you love me. Are the foolish utterances of a distracted +man to separate us forever? Conceive the agony I was in when at the very +moment I was to start for my wedding I heard that my bride could not be +found! If I had not adored you passionately would I have been on the +verge of madness, saying and doing things without reason and excuse? I +am ordered to leave you, my sweetheart, and if you do not bid me stay I +can only obey the mandate. But I love you more at this moment than ever. +All I ask to know is why you made this flight. If your answer is +satisfactory there will be nothing on my part to prevent our marriage." + +Archie Weil wished that he could have led this young man aside for just +a moment, to show him that this was no time to make demands or exact +conditions. He had no doubt that Daisy would explain everything, a +little later. All that was wanted now was a revocation of the dismissal +that Mr. Fern had pronounced. But he could not control the stormy ocean +upon which they rode. + +"You seem singularly obtuse," came the shaking voice of the old +gentleman. "It is not for _you_ to dictate terms. We want to see you no +more. Is not that clear enough?" + +It certainly did not seem to be. Roseleaf lingered, wondering if these +were really to be the last phrases he would hear in that house--in that +very room where he had expected to hear the words that would make this +sweet girl his for life. + +"Daisy," he said, addressing himself once more to the silent figure, "I +cannot believe you have so soon learned to hate me!" + +She looked up at the solemn face and then dropped her eyes again. + +"You will tell me where you were?" he pleaded. "It is my right to +know." + +She looked up again, with a wild horror in her features. + +"Oh, I _cannot_!" she cried. "I _never_ can tell you. I never _can_!" + +This statement shocked more than one person in that room. Up to this +moment Mr. Fern had only understood, from the disjointed expressions of +his daughter when she entered the house, that she did not wish to be +questioned at that time. She had also explained to him that she had sent +the telegram to make the coast clear of all except her parent, as she +did not wish to meet others on her first arrival. When he had urged the +duty of informing Mr. Weil she had acquiesced, not dreaming that Mr. +Roseleaf would be in his company. + +And now the old man felt that there was more in the answer she had given +than he had suspected--something very like a confession of wrong. Mr. +Weil felt this also, though he could not believe Daisy meant anything +very heinous, and Shirley Roseleaf had a dagger in his breast as he +reflected what interpretation might be given to her words. + +"You _cannot_!" he repeated, ignoring the position in which he stood, +and the presence of the others. "_You must!_" + +Mr. Weil made haste to allay the storm that he saw was still rising. + +"Let us be considerate," he said. "Miss Fern is not well. She is tired +and nervous. To-morrow, when she has rested, she will be only too glad +to tell us the history of her strange disappearance." + +Mr. Fern looked uneasily from his daughter to the gentlemen and back +again. He loved her dearly, and in this new danger that seemed to +threaten her--danger perhaps even to her reputation--he wanted more than +ever to shield her from all harm. Whatever had happened she was his +child. She should not be baited and badgered by any one. But Daisy did +not give him time to speak in her defense. She answered Mr. Weil almost +as soon as the question left his lips. + +"It cannot be. Not to-morrow, nor at any other time, can I tell you--or +any person--anything. You must never ask me. It would merely give me +pain, and heaven knows I shall suffer enough without it. Let me say a +little more, for this is the last time I shall ever speak of these +things. To you, Mr. Weil, I want to give my warmest thanks. You have +been a true friend to me and mine. I do not mean to seem ungrateful, but +I can tell you no more. And as for you, Shirley," she turned with set +eyes to the novelist, "you know what we were to each other. It is all +ended now. Even if you had expressed no disbelief in me when you heard I +had disappeared, it would be just the same. I hold no hard feelings +against you, whatever my father may say. It is simply good-by. I shall +not remain here much longer. Do not let this make you unhappy any longer +than you can help. Now, you must excuse me, for my strength is gone." + +Daisy had been much longer saying these things than the reader will be +in perusing them. They had come in gasps, as from one in severe pain, +and there were pauses of many seconds. When she had finished she rose, +and leaning heavily on the feeble old man who escorted her, walked +slowly out of the room. + +"Well, this ends it, then," said Roseleaf, gloomily, following the fair +figure with heavy eyes. + +"No, Shirley, it does not; it _shall_ not!" replied Weil. "There is some +dreadful mistake here, and a little time will clear it away. Have +patience." + +The novelist gazed at the speaker with a strange look. + +"I have treated you like a brute," he said, slowly. "And I have treated +Mr. Fern just as badly. My punishment is well deserved. But how can this +puzzle of her absence be accounted for! Of course she would have had to +satisfy me on that point before I could have married her." + +The listener turned giddily toward a window. + +"And yet you talk of love!" he said, recovering. "If that girl had done +me the honor she did you I would not have _asked_ her such a question--I +would have refused to _listen_ if it gave her the slightest pain to +tell." + +"I wonder she did not love you instead of me--for she did love me once," +was the sober reply. "You would be a thousand times better, more +suitable, than I." + +There was no reply to this, but the two men walked slowly out of the +house and to the station, where they took the next train for the city. +On the way they talked little, and at the Grand Central Depot they +separated. + +Lawrence Gouger, who had in some strange way learned the news of Miss +Fern's return, was awaiting Roseleaf in his rooms. + +"Well, I hear the missing one is found," he said, as the novelist came +in. + +"Yes. She is with her father. But the peculiar thing is that she closes +her lips absolutely about her absence. She not only refuses to speak +now, but announces that her refusal is final." + +Mr. Gouger hesitated what card to play. + +"When does the marriage take place?" he asked, finally. + +"With me? Never. I have been thrown over. Unless she had explained I +could not have married her, any way; could I?" + +The critic said he did not know. It would certainly have been awkward. + +"And what is your theory?" he added. "Do you still lay anything to +Weil?" + +"No. I am completely nonplussed. But, never mind. It is over." + +Roseleaf stretched himself, and yawned. + +"Do you know, Gouger, I almost doubt if I have really been in love at +all. I feel a queer sense of relief at being out of it, though there is +a dull pain, too, that isn't exactly comfortable. I told Archie coming +in that she should have married _him_. Upon my soul I wish she would. +She's an awful nice little thing, and he has a heart that is genuine +enough for her. Well, it's odd, anyway." + +Astonishment was written on the face of the other gentleman as he heard +these statements. + +"You have at least gained one point," he said, impressively. "You have +done the best part of the greatest novel that ever was written. Sit down +as soon as you can and finish it, and we shall see your name so high up +on the temple of fame that no contemporary of this generation can reach +it." + +"So high the letters will be indistinguishable, I fear," responded +Roseleaf, with a laugh. "Where do you think I can get the heartiest +supper in New York? I am positively starved. I don't believe I've eaten +a thing since yesterday. If you can help me any to clear the board, let +us go together." + +This invitation was accepted, and Roseleaf began making a more +particular toilet, taking great pains with the set of his cravat and +spending at least ten minutes extra on his hair when he had finished +shaving himself. He never had allowed a barber to touch his face. + +"You won't lose any time on the novel, will you?" asked Gouger, +anxiously, while these preparations were in progress. "You must take +hold of it while the events are fresh in your mind." + +"All right. I'll begin again to-morrow morning, and stick to the work +till it's done. Where shall we go to supper? I'll tell you--Isaac +Leveson's." + +The critic could not conceal his surprise at the overturn that had taken +place so suddenly in the young man's conduct. He stared at him with a +look that approached consternation. + +"You want to go there!" he exclaimed, unable to control himself. "You +wish to dine with some pretty girl, eh?" + +Roseleaf started violently. + +"No, no! Not--yet!" he answered. "We can get a supper room without that +appendix. I wish to be among men as mean as myself. I want to dine in a +house full of people who would cut a woman's throat--or break her +heart--and sleep soundly when they had done it!" + + + + +CHAPTER XXV. + +AN UNDISCOVERABLE SECRET. + + +The Ferns did not stay much longer at Midlands. Crushed by their +misfortunes neither cared to remain near the scenes that had made them +so unhappy, nor where they would be likely to meet faces which kept +alive their grief. The father knew no more than at first concerning the +strange conduct of his daughter. She had told him nothing, and he had +not asked her a single question. It was enough for him that she was +bowed with a great trouble. His only thought was to mitigate her +distress in every possible way. He was old--how old he had not realized +until that week when she changed from a happy, laughing girl, standing +at the threshold of a marriage she longed for, to a sombre shadow that +walked silently by his side. He was the one who under ordinary +circumstances should have received the care and the thoughtfulness--but +everything was altered now. He guided and directed the younger feet, +even though his own were faltering and slow. + +Where they had gone no one seemed to know. Archie Weil received one +brief note from Mr. Fern thanking him again in touching phrase for his +many kindnesses, and saying that Daisy wished to add her most earnest +wish for his happiness. The letter said they were going away for some +time; but no more. He went one day to Midlands, hoping to learn +something from the servants, and found the home entirely deserted. A +neighbor told him a real estate agent near by had the keys, but that the +place was neither for sale nor to rent. The agent, when found, could add +nothing to his stock of information. Mr. Fern had merely mentioned that +he was going on a journey and asked to have a man sleep at the house +during his absence, as a precaution against robbery. + +Mr. Weil saw Roseleaf two or three times, but the interviews were so +unsatisfactory that he felt them not worth repeating. The novelist told +him, as he had told Gouger, that he did not believe he had ever really +loved Daisy, and was actually relieved now that the strain was ended. No +persuasion could turn him from this statement, which he made rather in +explanation of his present course than as a defense of it. Gouger had +persuaded him that a love affair was necessary to develop his talents as +a writer. Before he knew what he was about, such an affair had been +precipitated upon him. He had felt its pleasures and pains to the +uttermost, and now it was ended. All that was left as a result was a +pile of MSS. which the critic pronounced wonderful. It was as if he had +been in a trance, or mesmerized. Henceforth he would confine his +writings to actualities or to poetic imaginings. + +Talking with a man who held these views was not inspiring, to put it +mildly, and Archie reluctantly gave up all hopes of making Daisy Fern a +happy woman through this source. He had dreamed of unraveling the +mystery that surrounded her and placing the young couple again in the +position which, by some horrible mischance, had been so vitally changed +in the short space of one day. Though he still loved Daisy with all the +warmth of his nature, Archie had no thought of trying to win her for +himself. She had given the fullness of her innocent heart to Roseleaf +and he did not believe she was one to change her affections to another +so soon as this. + +What had happened! What had happened! He thought it over day by day, and +night by night. + +Among the things he did before leaving New York--for he felt that a +journey was necessary for him--was to seek out Millicent. He found the +elder sister adamant to every suggestion of love for her family. She +believed herself injured by them, and would have nothing more to do with +either. As to the strange affair regarding Daisy she declared she had no +theory. She did not think it sufficiently interesting even to try to +formulate one. Her time was given to writing, and she had found another +assistant that quite filled Roseleaf's place. The firm of Scratch & +Bytum had accepted her latest novel, as she did not care to have +anything more to do with Mr. Gouger. + +When she mentioned the name of Roseleaf, Mr. Weil looked at her +intently, and saw that she uttered it with the utmost calmness. She had +hardened. Her fancied grievances had made her a different woman. She was +cynical before, but now she was bitter. He would not have believed that +such an alteration could have taken place in so short a time. + +"What is your new book about?" he asked, trying to be polite. + +"Crime!" she answered briefly. "It deals with the lowest of the low. It +suits the mood I am in. I am writing of things so terrible that they +will hardly be credited. To get at my facts I have to go into the most +depraved quarters, and associate with the _canaille_. But I am going to +make a hit that has not been equaled in recent years!" + +He smiled sadly. + +"Roseleaf had the same expectation," he said. "And yet he tells me that +he is doing nothing on that wonderful tale over which I have heard +Gouger rave so often. He has reached a point where he can go no farther, +and unless he rouses himself, all he has done is merely wasted time." + +Millicent closed her eyes till they resembled those of a cat at noonday. + +"Keep watch for mine," she said. "It will be all I claim for it." + +During the winter Mr. Weil was in California. As spring approached he +returned to the East and visited a well known resort in North Carolina, +where by one of those curious coincidences that happen to travelers, he +found himself placed at table exactly opposite to Mr. Walker Boggs. The +ordinary salutations and explanations followed, and then Mr. Boggs +alluded to a more interesting subject. + +"I think I can surprise you," he remarked, "by something that I learned +the other day. Mr. Fern and Miss Daisy are living within five miles of +here." + +It was certainly news, and entirely unexpected at that. Those people +might be in Greenland, for all Archie had known, and indeed he had +supposed they were on the other side of the ocean. He listened with +interest while Boggs went on to say that they had hired an old +plantation house and grounds and were living a strictly secluded life. +The narrator had seen them in one of his drives through the country, and +had talked a few minutes with Mr. Fern; but--and he said it with a touch +of pique--he had not been invited to visit them, nor had any apology +been made for the neglect. + +"By George, I thought it rather tough!" he added, "considering the way +you and I got him out of that nigger's clutches." + +"But you must remember what he has since endured," replied Archie, +mildly. + +"And there's been no explanation, of any sort?" + +"Not the slightest. I'd give half I'm worth if I could get a clue. It +worries me all the time. A life like that girl's ruined--simply +ruined--in twenty-four hours, and nobody able to tell why! It's enough +to drive a man frantic!" + +Mr. Weil did not drive immediately to Oakhurst, which he learned was the +name of the estate that Mr. Fern rented, but he enclosed his card in a +hotel envelope and sent it there by mail, without a word of comment. If +they thought it best to see him he would be glad to go, otherwise he +would not intrude on their privacy. + +Several days after--mails were slow in the South--an answer came. It +briefly requested that Mr. Weil and Mr. Boggs, if the latter were still +in town, would come to lunch on the following Wednesday. Boggs fumed +slightly at the apparent difference made between him and Weil, but ended +by going with his friend to Oakhurst. + +Mr. Fern did not look any worse than when Archie had last seen +him--indeed, if anything, he had improved in appearance. Time helps most +griefs to put on a better face, and though the marks of what he had +passed through would not be likely to leave his countenance, the utter +hopelessness had in a measure disappeared. When Daisy came into the +parlor, she also wore a mien not quite so crushed as when she left the +room at Midlands with her words of farewell. Whatever her trouble was, +it had not left her without something to live for. Her youth was doing +its work, and it seemed to the anxious eyes of the onlooker that time +would restore her nearly, if not quite, to her former radiance. + +In the presence of Mr. Boggs, neither father nor daughter cared to +discuss the past. They talked of the plantation on which they resided, +of the pleasant drives in the vicinity, and of matters connected with +the world in general, of which they had learned through the newspapers. +But after the lunch was finished Archie found himself alone with Daisy, +wandering through the extensive oak forest that gave the place its +name. + +"How long shall you stay here?" he asked her, as a prelude to the other +questions he wanted to follow it. + +"I don't know," she replied. "We shall probably go north during the warm +weather, perhaps to the White Mountains." + +He suggested that it must be rather lonesome at Oakhurst. + +"Not for us," she said, quickly. "We are all in all to each other, and +require no thickly settled community to satisfy us." + +"Daisy," he said, after a pause, "there are things I must say to you, +and I hope--with all my heart--you will find a way to answer them. In +the first place, do you believe me, really, truly, your friend?" + +She placed her hand in his for answer. The action meant more than any +form of words. + +"Then, tell me--tell me as freely as if I were your brother, your +priest--why you stayed from home that night." + +She withdrew the hand he held, to place it with the other over her eyes. + +"It is impossible," she responded, with a gasp. "I told you that I never +could explain, and I never can." + +He looked sorely disappointed. + +"I know no person on earth--not even my father," she proceeded, giving +him back the clasp she had loosened, "that I would tell it to sooner +than you. I have not given him the least hint. I know it leaves you to +think a thousand things, and I can only throw myself on your mercy; I +can only ask you to remember all you knew of me before that day, and +decide whether a girl can change her whole mental and moral attitude in +a moment." + +He drew her arm caressingly through his, and breathed a sigh on her +forehead. + +"Not for one second have I doubted your truth!" he replied. "Believe +that, Daisy, through everything. But I hoped for an explanation, for +something that might assist me to punish the guilty ones, for such there +must have been." + +The face that she turned toward him was full of terror. + +"Why do you say that?" she exclaimed. + +"Because--" + +"No, no!" she cried, interrupting him. "I do not want to hear you! We +must not talk on the subject! There is nothing to be told, nothing to be +guessed. This must be alluded to no more between us. It must end here +and now!" + +Thoroughly disappointed, he could do no more than acquiesce in the +decision, and he indicated as much by a profound bow. Then she changed +the conversation by an abrupt allusion to Roseleaf. When he told her, as +he thought it wisest to do, how well the young man had borne his loss, +she said she was very thankful. She had feared that he would suffer when +he came to his senses, and it was a mercy that this reflection had been +spared her. + +He spoke of her sister, and of the call he had made upon her, +suppressing, however, the disagreeable features of her remarks. Daisy +said she had written twice and received no reply. It was evident that +the separation in the family was final. + +Toward evening the visitors drove back to their hotel, discussing the +strange events that had occurred. Archie Weil did not close his eyes +that night. The love he had tried to suppress broke forth in all its +original fervor. He could not sleep with the object of his adoration +five miles away, so lonely and so desolate. + + * * * * * + +The next day Mr. Boggs went away, and the next after this, a new visitor +carried from the north. On coming out upon the veranda to smoke, Mr. +Weil found Shirley Roseleaf there. + +The surprise was mutual. Dying of ennui, Archie was glad even to meet +the novelist. They talked for hours and afterward went to ride together. +It appeared that Roseleaf had come south to get material for an article +in the interest of the magazine on which he was employed. + +One night, a week later, Roseleaf came into Weil's room and asked if he +would like to take a moonlight canter with him. Glad of any means to +vary the awful monotony Archie accepted, and the horses were soon +mounted. Weil noticed that the route was in the direction of Oakhurst, +but as he supposed Roseleaf knew nothing of the presence of the Ferns +there, and as the family were doubtless abed at this time, he made no +attempt to induce him to take an opposite course. It was a sad pleasure +to pass within so short a distance of the roof that sheltered the one he +loved best. On they rode, until they were within a mile of Oakhurst, +and then Roseleaf drew his animal down to a walk. A little further he +turned sharply into a by-path and alighted. + +"What's all this?" asked Archie, stupefied with astonishment. + + + + +CHAPTER XXVI. + +"I PLAYED AND I LOST." + + +Roseleaf did not immediately reply. He busied himself by tying his horse +to a tree, taking particular pains to make the knot good and strong. He +apparently wanted a little time to think what form of words to use. + +"I want you to see something that will interest you," he said, finally, +in the lowest tone that could well be heard. "If you will follow my +example and accompany me some distance further I think you will be paid +for your trouble." + +Mr. Weil was pale. He felt certain that this strange visit had been +premeditated, and that some revelation regarding the Fern family was +about to be made. The dread of an unknown possibility for which he had +no preparation--affecting the girl for whom he had so deep a +love--unmanned him. + +"I have a right to ask you to explain," he responded. "If your statement +is satisfactory I will accompany you gladly. I do not see the need of +any mystery in the matter." + +The younger man drew a long breath and looked abstractedly at the ground +for some moments. Then he spoke again: + +"There are subjects," he said, "that one does not like to discuss. There +are names that one hesitates to pronounce. If you will tie your horse +and go with me, your eyes and ears will make questions unnecessary." + +A momentary suspicion flashed through the mind of the other--a suspicion +that he was being beguiled to this lonely spot from a sinister motive +that boded his safety no good. But it was immediately dismissed, and +after another second of delay, Archie slipped from his saddle and +followed the example of his companion. + +"Lead on," he said, laconically. + +Without waiting for a second invitation, Roseleaf began to penetrate the +wood. He found a footpath, after going a short distance, and crept along +it slowly, taking evident pains not to make unnecessary noise. They were +going in the direction of Oakhurst, and in less than ten minutes the +chimneys of that residence could be seen in front of them. A little +further and Roseleaf stopped, placing himself in the attitude of an +attentive listener. + +The silence was profound. A slight chill permeated the atmosphere, but +neither of the prowlers felt cold. On the contrary, perspiration covered +the bodies of both of them. Roseleaf went, very slowly, along the path, +till he came near a fence, and then, diverging from it, drew himself +quietly into a thick copse, motioning Weil to follow. Here the leader +sank to the ground, with a motion which indicated that the journey was +temporarily, at least, at an end, and the second member of the party +followed his example. + +Half an hour passed with nothing to indicate the reason for these most +peculiar actions. Half an hour that was interminable to Mr. Weil, torn +with a thousand fears as to what it might all portend. At last, however, +a faint sound broke the stillness. Some one was approaching. Roseleaf +touched the shoulder of his companion to indicate the necessity of +absolute silence. + +Hardly ten feet away there passed a tall, athletic form, walking with a +quick stride, as of one who has no suspicion that he is watched by +unfriendly eyes. As the man's face became visible in the moonlight it +was well that Roseleaf had a pressure of warning on his companion's +shoulder. It was almost impossible for the latter to restrain an +exclamation that would have ruined everything. + +It was the face of Hannibal, the negro! + +Horrified, Archie turned his bloodshot eyes toward Roseleaf. What could +this strange visit of Hannibal's to that vicinity presage? Did he intend +to murder the master of the house and abduct the daughter? What was he +doing there, at an hour not much short of midnight? The terrors of his +previous imaginings gave way to yet more horrible ones. + +But the mute appeal that he shot at his companion produced no answer, +except a resolute shake of the head--an absolute prohibition against +the least sound or movement. + +Hannibal reached the fence and, without any attempt at concealment, +climbed over it into the enclosure where were situated the house and +outbuildings of the Oakhurst estate. He acted like one who knows his +ground and has no occasion to pick his way. He went, however, but a +little farther in the direction of the residence. In a place where the +shadow of a smokehouse hid him from the possible view of any one looking +from the windows, he waited in an attitude of expectation. + +The difficulty of controlling himself grew stronger and stronger for +Archie Weil. He wanted to end this terrible doubt--to spring over that +fence, pinion this fellow by the throat and demand what business he had +on those premises at that hour. Roseleaf realized all that was passing +in his mind, and kept his hand still on his shoulder, at the same time +warning him by signs that the least movement would ruin everything. It +seemed to Archie, when he thought it over afterward, that he had never +endured such pain. He knew beyond reasonable doubt that Hannibal was +awaiting some one by appointment. Who could it be? That was the +stupendous question that Roseleaf might have answered in a whisper, but +that he preferred for some mysterious reason his friend should discover +in the natural course of events. And that course was horribly, +torturously slow! + +Everything has an end, and the dread of the watcher changed to another +feeling as he saw distinctly one of the outer doors of the residence +open and Daisy Fern's form come out. Without glancing to the right or +the left she walked in the direction where the negro was waiting. For an +instant, overcome by his apprehensions, Archie closed both his eyes in +despair. The voice of Roseleaf was at last heard in his ear, a whisper +nearly inaudible, conjuring him not to betray his presence whatever the +provocation. + +When Archie opened his eyes again he saw that Hannibal stood in an +attitude of respect. When the girl approached he bowed, without offering +any more intimate courtesy. Daisy had the look of one who has made up +her mind to endure an unpleasant interview and desires to end it as +quickly as possible. + +"Well?" she said, in a low tone. + +"I am going to-morrow," he replied, in a voice that shook with emotion. + +"Yes." + +"And, as I told you, I want to say good-by once more." + +Archie breathed a trifle easier. He could not tell what fears had +crowded upon him--they were indistinct in their horribleness--but some +of them had already flown. + +"You are as cold as ever," continued the rich voice of the negro, in a +cadence that was meant to be reproachful. + +"Do you think I could be anything else?" was the quick reply, as if +forced from lips that had meant to remain silent. "Has your conduct been +such as to make me like or respect you?" + +The negro's eyes fell before her indignant gaze. + +"No," he answered, humbly. "I expect nothing; I ask nothing. I can see +my mistakes now. And yet, it would have been no different had I played +the part of an angel toward you. The entire question with you was +settled in advance by the fact that my skin was black." + +The pressure on Weil's shoulder grew heavier, from time to time, as his +companion realized his temptation to break from his covert. + +"If it had been as white as any man's who ever lived," replied Daisy, +boldly, "your conduct would have earned the contempt of a +self-respecting person! A blackmailer, an abductor, a conspirator +against the peace of mind of an old man and a young girl who never +harmed you! I wonder you can talk of other reasons when you created so +many by your wicked acts!" + +Hannibal shrugged his shoulders. + +"It is true, nevertheless," he replied. "I am a negro. In a moment of +insanity I dreamed I was a Man! I dreamed I might gain for my wife a +woman whose ancestors had been born in a more northerly clime than my +own. To gain that end I took the only course that seemed open. I +possessed myself of an influence that would make her father fear me. +Well, I played and I lost--and then, like other players and losers, even +white ones, I was desperate. You were to be married to another--a man I +hated. Life had lost its only charm, I could not bear that you should be +his bride. My torture was intense. I asked but for death." + +These revelations, so novel to at least one of the listeners, smote him +with terrific force. + +"You asked for more!" said the girl, hoarsely. "You asked for my death +as well as your own. And you wanted me to die in such a situation that +all the world would say I had perished willingly with you. Could +anything more cowardly be conceived! Was anything more dastardly ever +devised! It was the morning of my wedding day; my father was waiting for +me at home; my promised husband was preparing for the bridal; my friends +were invited to the ceremony. What were all these to you? With +Mephistophelian cunning you sent me a letter in another person's +handwriting, saying that, if I would come to a certain address, and pay +fifty dollars, several forged notes given by my father would be returned +to me. You knew I would respond. You knew I would tell no one where I +was going, as I did not expect to be detained more than an hour, and +there was apparently the strongest reasons for secrecy. And when I was +completely in your clutches you gave me the alternative of _marrying_ +you--ugh!--or of taking the poison you had so carefully prepared. Oh, +how _could_ you! how _could_ you, when you professed to _like_ me!" + +There was a low gurgle in Archie Weil's throat, that he could not +suppress. Fearful that it might be heard in that dead silence, Roseleaf +shook his companion slightly. Mingled with his other emotions there now +came to Weil a stupefied wonder at the apparent coolness of the +novelist. + +"When one is willing to die for his love, it should not be questioned," +said the negro. "I could not have you in life--I wanted you in death. I +wanted the world, which had despised me, to think a beautiful woman had +preferred to die with me rather than marry a man she did not wish to +wed. But why should we recall that dreadful day and night? You won the +victory. You, with your superior finesse, triumphed over the African as +your race has always triumphed over mine. I demanded love or death. You +dissuaded me from both. And the next day I permitted you to depart, and +saw vanish with you the last hope of happiness I shall ever feel." + +The rich voice of the speaker broke completely at the close, but the +girl who heard him seemed to feel no sympathy for his distress. + +"Always yourself!" she exclaimed. "Do you ever think of the life you +left to _me_--a life hardly more kind than the murder you contemplated. +Before you opened the portals that you had meant for my tomb you made me +swear never to reveal where I had passed those hours. Never, no matter +what the provocation, was I to utter one word to implicate you in the +tragedy that had ruined two households. _You_ were the one to be +protected--_I_ the one to suffer! Had it not been for the sacrifice to +my reputation in being found there with you dead--no explanation being +possible from my closed lips--I would have accepted the alternative and +swallowed the poison rather than live to bear what I do to-day!" + +Weil closed his eyes again. His brain was swimming. + +"And you are sure," asked the negro, after a pause, "that you have not +violated that promise? You can still swear that you have never, even by +a hint, given the least cause of suspicion against me?" + +"Never!" said the girl. "I consider my oath binding, notwithstanding the +manner in which it was obtained. You may live in what peace your +conscience allows you, free at least from that fear." + +The negro evidently believed her, for he heaved a sigh of relief. + +"Well, good-by," he said. + +"Good-by," she replied. "And--you are not to come again, remember. There +is nothing to be gained from another meeting between us. If--if you want +money--I can send it to you." + +He lifted his head rather proudly at the last suggestion. + +"I do not want any," he said. "I am not low enough for that. I took the +sum from you to go to France, because I hoped--in my infatuation--that I +could make myself something that you would not despise. If I had wanted +money I could have got thousands out of your father, and I could still, +notwithstanding the pretence of those men that they wrote the signatures +I saw him forge. No, I mean to give you back what I had from you, if +ever I can compose my mind enough to go to work and earn it. I have no +ambition. I stay in my mother's cabin, day after day, unable to make the +least effort. Perhaps I can do something--in time." + +The negro took a step away, and then turned, as if unable to go so +abruptly. + +"Good-by," he said, again. + +"Good-by," answered Daisy, impassively. "I want to tell you, now I think +of it, where I got that $1,000 I gave you. It was lent to me by the man +you hated so, Mr. Roseleaf." + +Hannibal did not seem to care for this information. + +"He did not lend it for any good-will to me," he replied. "I have heard, +by-the-way, that he did not mind losing you--this man for whom you +spurned a heart that worshiped your very footprints. I believe some day +I'll take a shot at him." + +The girl shuddered. + +"It would be like you," she said, "if no one was looking, and he did not +know of your presence. I don't believe, with all your claims, there is a +manly trait in you." + +The tall form drew itself up and the athletic arms were folded firmly. + +"Take care!" said the red lips, sharply, and the ivory white teeth +gleamed. + +"Oh, I am not afraid," replied Daisy. "My maid is watching us from +behind the blinds of my room. I told her my own story about why I was to +meet you, but should harm happen to me the alarm bell would ring out." + +Startled visibly at this information, Hannibal glanced in the direction +indicated, and then began to take his departure in earnest. + +"All right," he said, as he mounted the fence. "Keep your word and I'll +keep mine. But if you play any tricks, remember that's a game for two." + +The men could not arise without startling Daisy, who would undoubtedly +have uttered a loud scream had they suddenly appeared before her vision. +They saw her stand there for at least ten minutes, before she went into +the house. When she was out of sight, Weil crawled into a safer place +and rose to his feet. + +"I am going to follow that cur!" he muttered, between his teeth. + +"To-morrow is soon enough," was the calm reply of his friend. "I know +where he lives." + + + + +CHAPTER XXVII. + +ABSOLUTELY BLAMELESS. + + +Most men who are by nature excitable surprise their friends on occasions +by exhibiting great calmness. Shirley Roseleaf, who had often been +thrown into the greatest heat by far less important happenings than the +one just narrated, seemed a picture of repose as he walked through the +wood with his friend in the direction of the horses they had tethered. + +"How did you discover they were going to have this meeting?" asked Weil, +nervously. "I am all at sea." + +"I have been on his track ever since the day I was to have been +married," was the reply. "I didn't intend to leave a mystery like that +unsolved. I discovered that the Ferns were living here, and that +Hannibal originated a few miles further on. I found that Miss Daisy was +still a little afraid of him, that he was using an influence over her +which was to say the least strange. Before I got at the truth I had some +queer misgivings, you may believe." + +Mr. Weil stared at his companion. + +"But how did you learn all this?" he demanded. + +"Oh," said Roseleaf, with a slight laugh, "I've been in this +neighborhood for two months. They haven't met once but I heard every +word they said. Little by little I gained the truth of the matter. And +to-night, as it was perhaps the last time they would be together, I +wanted you to understand it perfectly." + +Archie frowned at the thoughts that crept in upon his brain. + +"Excuse me for saying that you don't appear to mind it much," he +muttered. "If you have heard many conversations like the one to which I +just listened, and could go away without expressing the thoughts you +ought to feel, you are made up differently from me." + +"That may be so, too," smiled the other, good-humoredly. "But remember +that things are changed. I once was a man in love--now I am simply a +writer of romance." + +The elder man shivered. + +"Could one be actually in love with a girl like that and then recover +from it?" he asked, half to himself. + +"I don't think I ever was very much in love," was the quick reply. "But +never mind that. Let us talk of Hannibal. You spoke of going after him. +What would you have done had you carried out that intention?" + +Weil had not thought of the matter in this concrete form. He had wanted +to punish the negro for his crimes against the woman he so dearly loved, +against the old man for whom he had such a warm affection. How he would +have accomplished this he had not decided. The first thing was to follow +and tax the wretch with his offense. Subsequent events would have +depended on the way Hannibal met the accusation. Certainly the temper of +the pursuer would have been warm, and his conduct might have been +severe. + +"I don't know," he said. "I should have told him for one thing that he +would have to reckon with something more than a weak girl or a poor old +man if he annoyed that family again. In case he had been impertinent I +cannot say what I might have been tempted to do." + +"All the more reason for congratulating yourself," replied Roseleaf, as +they reached the horses, "that you did not follow him. He has promised +to keep away from the Ferns, and I think they have seen the last of him. +What is done can't be undone, ugly as it is. Now," he continued, +vaulting into his saddle, "your course is reasonably plain. You must +visit Miss Daisy soon, let her know that the extent of her misfortune is +in your possession, and after a reasonable time, ask her to marry you." + +Archie Weil, who had also mounted his horse, came near falling from the +back of the animal at this very abrupt suggestion. + +"That is just what you should do," continued Roseleaf, without allowing +him to speak. "You are desperately in love. Daisy likes you very well, +and it would take but little effort on your part to induce even a warmer +sentiment. Her father thinks you one of the angels that came down to +earth and forgot to return to heaven. She ought not to go through life +alone. Her only trouble is the suspicion that rests on her name--a +suspicion she considers herself bound in honor to do nothing to lift. +Show her that you know how innocent she is, and you will bring a new +light to her eyes, a new smile to her lips." + +"But," asked Archie, catching at the straw, "how can I tell her--how can +I explain the source of my information?" + +Roseleaf laughed. + +"By the novel method of using the truth, or at least a part of it," he +said. "Tell her you were out riding and saw Hannibal, and followed him. +You needn't count me into it. Why, you've got to let her know, or else I +have. It's a thing she would almost give her life to have revealed +without her aid. Go like a man and take that heavy weight off her young +soul." + +Finally Weil consented. He would not discuss the question of whether he +would afterwards speak of the hope that lay nearest his heart. But he +would go to her, as Roseleaf suggested, and relieve her of the strain +that had worn so deeply. He would go the very next day. The sooner it +was accomplished the better. The more he thought of it the more +delighted he grew that he could carry such tidings. He could make Daisy +happier. That was enough for him--at present. If he could make himself +happy at a future date--but there was time enough for that. + +He sat upright in his saddle and exulted as his horse bounded nimbly +over the ground. Why was it not already day, that he might turn the +beast in the opposite direction! The hours would be very long before the +sun rose and he could start on his joyful errand. The sombre hue of his +countenance disappeared before the contentment that began to fill his +breast. + +He slept well, notwithstanding the fact that he expected to lie awake +all night when he retired. In the morning, on going down to breakfast, +he found that Shirley had left still earlier, leaving word that he had +started on a quest for game. Weil did not mind. He had enough before him +for one day. He was going to see Daisy, and he had that to tell which +would lighten the load she had so long felt compelled to carry. + +He waited until after nine o'clock, feeling that some regard must be +paid to _les convenances_, even on such an important occasion as this. +When he was in the saddle he rode as slowly as he could bring himself to +do, to make his arrival still later. At last he reached the gate of +Oakhurst, and when he had summoned the porter he sent him for Mr. Fern, +stating that he had happened to ride in that direction and wanted merely +to make a short call. + +It was but a few minutes before the servant returned, and the +hospitable master of the premises came with him. Mr. Fern upbraided Weil +for using so much ceremony, remarking that although he was living in a +retired way, there was always one friend he was glad to see. Giving up +the horse, Archie accompanied his host to the house, where the latter +said he would send at once for Daisy. + +"A minute," interpolated Archie. "I want a little talk with you first, +alone." + +Mr. Fern looked up curiously. He believed he knew what his visitor was +about to say. He had long suspected the feelings which Archie +entertained for Daisy. He knew also that his daughter would consent to +wed no man, no matter who, while there hung over her fair fame the +terrible mystery of her wedding night. + +"I want to tell you," pursued Archie, before his host could interrupt, +"that I have made a great discovery--one of the utmost moment to your +family. I know what happened on that day so sad to all of us, +and--listen to me, Mr. Fern!--I know that your child is absolutely +blameless in the matter." + +The listener's face grew very white. He understood imperfectly, but it +seemed to him that a tale he could not bear to hear was about to be +forced upon him. + +"Mr. Weil," he said, earnestly, "I hope you will not continue this +subject. I do not know what occurred--I do not wish to know. I have +consulted my daughter's sentiments entirely. She prefers to have the +veil unlifted, and I respect her wish." + +The visitor could hardly contain himself for impatience. + +"That has been true hitherto," he replied. "But Miss Daisy herself will +be more than delighted when she knows I am aware of the entire +facts--which she has been prevented, by a promise extracted from her, +from revealing. Call her, let me tell her that I know everything, and +how I know it, and you will see the happiest girl in America." + +Mr. Fern shook his head doubtfully. He was much afraid of doing +something to injure Daisy's feelings. He could not believe she wanted to +have the trouble that had crushed her raked up by any one. Archie +persisted, however, and his arguments at last won the day. + +"You do not think I would come here with any tidings I did not believe +agreeable?" he said, interrogatively. "You know I care too much for--for +both of you--to do that." + +When Miss Daisy was summoned, which she was at last, and Mr. Weil gently +let drop a hint of what he had to tell, the girl was hardly less +agitated than her father had been. Instead, however, as the visitor +expected, of relying on her natural protector during the expected +recital, she whispered to Mr. Fern, who obediently rose and let her lead +him out of the room. Presently she returned, and took a chair opposite +to Mr. Weil. Her face was so pathetic, her attitude so entreating, that +he quite forgot what he had come to tell, and leaning toward her, took +her hands in his. + +"Daisy," he said, "I--I--" and he could go no further. + +"Yes, I know," she answered, in a low voice. "But there is a reason why +I cannot listen to you. I have told you that before. I ought not even to +say as much as this. I should not even remain in the room while you +explain the least thing." + +He choked down the rising in his throat and hastened, lest she should +follow literally the sentiment she had outlined and leave him to +himself. + +"This has all been true, until now," he said. "You were under a promise, +an oath. But--Daisy, last night I heard all that passed between you and +your persecutor, and there is no longer any need for mystery between +us." + +She gasped, as if her breath was going. + +"You--you heard!" + +"Everything. I was within forty feet of you. Are you sorry that the +awful cloud is blown away--that your perfect innocence is proved without +a violation of your plighted word?" + +For the girl was crying, slowly, without hysteria, crying with both her +hands tightly clasped over her eyes. + +"_I_ did not need it, not I," continued the man, earnestly. "I knew you +had done nothing of your free will that the whole world might not know. +But I knew, too, that you would be pleased to have your innocence +established. And I was glad for another reason. I love you, Daisy. I +have loved you a very long time. Your sister was right in that. Had you +not shown such a marked preference for my friend I would have done my +best to win you, months and months ago. While you felt that you were an +object of suspicion I knew you would not consent to be my wife. Now, +that obstacle is gone and--Daisy--I want you." + +The hands were withdrawn from the tear-stained face, a handkerchief was +hastily passed over it, and Daisy turned half away from the speaker. + +"You will not refuse, my love," he murmured, bending again toward her. +"You will promise?" + +One of her hands strayed toward him, and was clasped joyfully in his +own. + +"But, in relation to that other matter," said Daisy, some moments later, +when the sweet tokens of love had been given and taken, "I must be as +silent as before. I have listened to you, but I have not replied. You +can understand the reason. Never speak of it to me again, if you do not +wish to inflict pain. It is something I cannot discuss." + +"I may tell your father, though," he whispered. + +"It would be best not. He is content now. No, I beg you, say nothing to +any one." + +And he promised, like the lover he was, and sealed it with another kiss +on her pure mouth. + +"I may tell him of--of our love?" he asked. + +"Oh, yes; we will tell him of that together." + + + + +CHAPTER XXVIII. + +TRAPPING A WOLF. + + +When Shirley Roseleaf left the hotel that morning he carried a fishing +rod, a rifle, a gamebag and other acoutrements of the sportsman. In his +earlier years, before he ever came to the city, he had been accounted +something of an expert with these implements. Since being in this +country where there was so much to tempt a Nimrod he had made a number +of similar excursions. Although it was some distance to the locality +where he intended to go the young man did not take a conveyance of any +kind. He walked briskly over the road, breathing the pure air of that +early hour, and whistling in a low tone to himself as he went along. + +Among the other things he carried was a light lunch, for he did not care +to break his fast so early in the day. He had, besides, a contrivance +for making coffee and for broiling the fish he expected to catch. Even +if his jaunt lasted till night his physical needs were well provided +for. One would not have imagined, to see his free and easy swing over +the road, that he had anything of greater moment on his mind than to +watch for some stray rabbit, or a possible deer track. + +Not less than six miles from his starting point, he came to a small +lake, to reach which he had followed a narrow path that led through the +wood. On the shore was a primitive rowboat, or rather canoe, which he +had purchased on another occasion from a native for an insignificant +price. Into this boat the novelist stepped, and after safely depositing +his traps, took up the paddle and used it skillfully. When he had +reached approximately the centre of the lake, he sat down, prepared his +fishing tackle and began to angle for the denizens of the water below. + +With the patience of a true fisherman Roseleaf sat quietly for two +hours, during which time he had drawn out but few specimens. The long +walk had, however, given him the appetite he needed, and he now pulled +his frail craft toward the shore, with the intention of lighting a fire +and preparing a meal. But even when he had nearly reached land he saw +splinters flying beneath his feet, and immediately after heard a dull +sound which showed what had caused the trouble. + +A stray bullet, from some careless hunter, had penetrated his canoe. The +hole was large enough to render the boat useless, for the water began to +come in rapidly. With two more stout movements of the paddle Roseleaf +forced his craft against the shore and sprang upon dry land. Then he +quietly picked up the things he had brought with him, and walked a +little away from the scene. + +"These fellows are getting altogether too careless," he muttered, as he +inspected his damp belongings. "A little more and that thing would have +been tearing splinters in me." + +Scraping some dead wood together, he soon had a fire started, and the +cooking of his breakfast was begun. He went about the work +methodically, whistling again in that low key he had used when on the +way from his hotel, and stopping now and then as the noise of a woodbird +or some wild quadruped of the smaller kind came to his ears. He sniffed +the coffee that was boiling furiously and the freshly caught fish that +sent out an appetizing aroma. No meal served at the Hoffman, the +Imperial or the far-famed Delmonico restaurant, could equal this +primitive repast, for him. + +Finally, all was ready. Helping himself to a large plateful of the +delicious food, and pouring out a huge tin cup of the coffee, Roseleaf +sat down as if to take his ease while breakfasting. But, instead of +touching the viands he had been at such pains to prepare, the next thing +he did was to fall prone on the ground. And at the same instant a second +bullet whizzed past him and buried itself with a tearing of bark and +wood in the tree just behind him. + +If Roseleaf had laid down with suddenness he rose with no less speed. As +he sprang to his feet he picked up his rifle. He made a dozen steps +forward, and then, bringing the weapon to his shoulder, cried to some +one in front of him: + +"Halt, or I fire!" + +A human form that had been creeping away on its hands and knees, now +stood upright. It was perhaps thirty yards from the speaker, and when it +faced him he saw that the countenance was black. + +"Don't come any nearer and don't go any farther off," said the novelist, +gravely. "You are at a convenient distance. I can shoot you best where +you stand." + +The negro looked considerably crestfallen. He seemed doubtful whether to +break and run or stay and try to face it out. + +"I can't help an accident," he said, at last, when the other remained +covering him with the rifle. + +"No," was the answer. "An accident is liable to happen to any one, they +say. But two accidents, of the same kind, on the same day--accidents +that might either of them have been fatal if you were not such an +awfully bad marksman--are too many. When _I_ get ready to fire, there +will be no accident." + +The negro was plainly uneasy. He cast his eyes on the ground and +writhed. + +"You have dropped your gun," said Roseleaf. "That was right. It would +have incommoded your flight, and its only cartridge was used. You would +have had no time to reload. I know that gun very well; I have heard it +many times in the last six weeks. I knew the sound of it to-day when you +fired the first time. A rifle has a voice, like a man; did you know +that? I knew it was your gun and that you were at the end of it. With +that information in my possession, of course you couldn't catch me +napping twice. I pretended to watch my cooking, but in reality I watched +nothing but you. There is no need that you should say anything, +Hannibal. You could not tell me much, if you tried." + +The speaker examined his rifle carefully, still keeping the muzzle +turned toward the person he was addressing. The latter did not seem to +grow less uneasy. + +"I spent some time last evening," continued Roseleaf, presently, "in +listening to a little conversation you had with a certain young lady +living a mile or so from this spot. That surprises you, does it? I +thought it might. I learned how you had ruined her peace of mind, how +you had artfully contrived to make her appear the opposite of what she +really was. Now, you have tried twice within the last hour to murder me. +For this I could have forgiven you. What you did to that young woman is, +however, a more serious matter. I don't think anything less than pulling +this trigger will expiate that." + +He placed the rifle to his shoulder again, as he spoke, and glanced +along the sight. The negro half turned, as if of a mind to attempt an +escape, and then, realizing the hopelessness of such a move, sank on his +knees and raised his hands piteously. + +"If you have anything to say, be quick!" said the hard voice of the man +who held the rifle. + +Then Hannibal blurted out his story. He told how he had been led, step +by step, to hope that he might rise above his station, until the wild +idea entered his brain that he could even make Daisy Fern love and marry +him. He pleaded the disappointments he had suffered, the terrible +revulsion of feeling he had undergone, the broken life he had been +obliged to take up. He did not want to be killed. If allowed to go he +would swear by all that was good never to cross the path of the Ferns, +or Roseleaf, or any of their friends again. When his treaties brought +no verbal response he grew louder in his tone, feeling that something +must be done to move the deaf ears to which he addressed his petition. + +"If I allowed you to leave here, you would try to shoot me the next time +you had a chance," said the novelist. "I should merely be giving my life +in exchange for yours, which I do not consider a good bargain." + +"No, I swear it before God!" came the trembling words in reply. + +"I cannot trust you." + +A slight sound attracted the attention of Roseleaf as he uttered the +latter words. It was the sound that oars make when dipped in water. With +a quick glance to one side he beheld a rowboat, in which were seated +Archie Weil and Daisy Fern, and they were coming directly toward him. + +"Here are some of the others you have wronged," he said, pointing. "I +will wait to see if their opinions agree with mine." + +Daisy saw him first, as Weil was handling the oars, and she called her +companion's attention to him. Archie called his name. + +"Come here!" was Roseleaf's reply. "I have winged a black duck and I +cannot leave." + +A few more movements of the oars brought the boat to the shore, and the +surprise of its occupants can be imagined when they saw the tableau that +awaited them. Hannibal was still groveling on the earth, and the +attitude of Roseleaf plainly showed the cause of the negro's terror. + +"What has he done?" was the first question, and it was Daisy's voice +that asked it. + +"Let him tell," replied Roseleaf, nonchalantly. "Tell the lady what you +did, Hannibal." + +With a courage born of his knowledge of the young lady's kind heart, +Hannibal now turned his attention toward her. He begged her to plead +with his would-be executioner to give him one more chance for his life, +and reiterated his promises to cease meddling with all of their affairs +if this was granted. As he spoke Daisy crept nearer to Roseleaf's side, +and when he paused for a moment to gain breath, she laid her fair hand +on the rifle. + +"You would not kill a fellow creature?" she said, gently. + +"A fellow creature?" he retorted. "No! But a wolf, a snake, a +vulture--yes." + +She shook her head slowly, while Mr. Weil looked on, uncertain what to +do or say. He wanted more than anything else in his life to lay hands +upon the cause of all her woes. + +"You have not told me yet what he has done," she said. + +"He shall tell you," replied Roseleaf, sharply. "Stand up, Hannibal, and +answer truly the questions I am about to propound to you." + +The crouching figure tottered to his feet. The negro was weak from fear. + +"Did you try twice this morning to murder me?" + +"Yes," replied the shaking voice. "But I was insane with my troubles--I +did not realize what I was doing--I--" + +Daisy's slight hand, still on the barrel of the rifle, was bearing it +steadily to the ground. + +"Once," she said to Roseleaf, impressively, "you told me you loved me! +Have you regard enough left to grant me a favor?" + +He shook his head. + +"There are favors," he said, "that are crimes. It is one's duty to +exterminate vermin, in the interest of the human race." + +But, even as he spoke, she was having her way. Her slight strength had +taken the weapon from him. + +Then, with the face of a forgiving angel she turned toward the negro and +uttered very softly one word, "Go!" + +Glancing at the others to see if he might safely follow this direction, +Hannibal disappeared in the thick woods behind him. He walked with an +unsteady step. There was a strange lightness in his brain. Some distance +away he found the boat in which he had come, and entered it, +staggeringly. Pushing from the shore with a feeble touch on his paddle +he set out for his home. + + * * * * * + +The negroes who found his body, a week later, could not decide whether +he had perished by accident or by deliberate intention. The boat was not +capsized, but it was partially filled with water, indicating either that +he had tried to sink the craft or had leaned too heavily to one side in +something like a stupor. When his gun was discovered on the shore, new +speculations were set in motion. + +Those who knew him recalled that he had been moody for a long time--in +fact, ever since he came from the north. They remembered him as a young +fellow, four or five years previous, not very different from his mates; +and they had stared in wonder when he returned with fine clothes and +money in his pocket. The dislike between him and his old acquaintances +was mutual. They could not understand him; and what an inferior mind +does not comprehend it always views with suspicion. + +A grave was made near the border of the lake, and the single word +"HANNIBAL" was written on the board that marked the spot. But later some +envious hand scrawled beneath it: + +"HE WANTED TO BE A GENTLEMAN!" + + + + +CHAPTER XXIX. + +"THE GREATEST NOVEL." + + +Archie Weil and Daisy Fern were married in June. There was no need of +waiting longer. It was a case of true love sanctified by suffering and +devotion. The bright eyes and ruddy cheeks of the bride testified to her +renewed health and spirits. The news of Hannibal's death--albeit it +brought a tear to her eyes, had removed the only shadow that stretched +across her pathway. + +Shirley Roseleaf did not come to the wedding, to which he was the only +invited guest. He wrote that an important mission from his magazine made +it impossible to accept the invitation, but he sent a handsome present +and a letter to Archie, congratulating him in the warmest manner. + +For some time Lawrence Gouger had been urging the novelist to hasten the +wonderful story that was to make his fortune and give a new impetus to +the house of Cutt & Slashem. They had consulted together a hundred +times, and the thirty chapters already finished seemed to leave but a +few weeks' steady work to be accomplished. Shortly after the wedding +Gouger went to Roseleaf's rooms, one evening, and begged him to lose no +further time. + +"What is there to wait for now?" he asked. "All the dramatic incidents +have occurred. You only need to wind up with a glory of fireworks, +showing virtue triumphant and vice buried under a North Carolina +sycamore. Come, my dear boy, when may I expect to see the work +completed?" + +Roseleaf did not answer for some seconds. + +"There is a part of this story that you do not comprehend," he said, +finally. "A chapter is yet to be written at which you have not guessed." + +"Indeed!" exclaimed the listener. + +"Yes," nodded the other. "So far the character that is supposed to +represent myself appears that of a heartless, cold, unfeeling wretch. Do +you think I shall be satisfied to leave it that way?" + +The critic stared at the speaker in astonishment. + +"I--I do not understand," he replied. + +"I thought not," said Roseleaf, soberly. "Well, this story, to be +truthful, must do justice to the one who is supposed to personate its +author. And, in the first place, to avoid all circumlocution, let me +tell you there has never been a moment since I first loved Daisy Fern +that she has not been the dearest thing on this earth to me!" + +Mr. Gouger could not reconcile this statement with the events that had +taken place, and his puzzled countenance said as much. + +"I acted like a villain, did I not," continued Roseleaf, after a slight +pause, "when the news was brought that she had disappeared? I seemed to +have no faith in her, no confidence in Archie, no trust in that poor old +man, her father. Why? I was so madly, insanely in love that every +possible phantasy got possession of my excited brain. To lose her was to +deprive me of all hope, all ambition, all care for life. So far, I acted +my real self. If what I supposed true had been proven I think there +would have been a murder. Not of Daisy; ah, no! but of the man who had +robbed me of my treasure. Then I went to Midlands with Archie and I saw +her. I heard her speak, and like a lightning flash it came to me. He was +as honorable as a man could be and she cared more for him than for my +unworthy self. She had contrasted us and discovered how much he was my +superior. And I said to myself at that moment, 'I will give her up! If +it costs me my happiness as long as I live I will give her up! No matter +what happens, I will unite these people, who have been so faithful to me +and toward whom I have acted the part of a cur and a coward!'" + +The young man was speaking with perfect composure, but with intense +earnestness. + +"The first thing to be done," he continued, "was to take myself out of +their way. The next was to unravel the mystery that had made the +trouble. I knew, when my mind had resumed its natural state, that, +whatever had occurred, Daisy was blameless. I knew that something far +out of the common line had caused her to commit the act which had cast a +blight over her reputation. For weeks I could find no clue. Then, one +day, in the street, I saw Hannibal, the negro for whom she had borrowed +my money and who I supposed was still in France. I cannot help the quick +temper I have inherited, and I confess that the sight of that fellow +aroused my suspicions against this girl, only they took a new and more +horrible form. + +"I remembered distinctly what a strong hold Hannibal had on the Fern +family. I recalled, with frightful distinctness, the manner in which he +attended Daisy at table, his interest in her health, the $1,000 she had +given him, her quick movement to prevent my striking him when his +answers insulted us both. Perhaps--but I will not dilate on the things +that came to my distorted imagination. It was enough for me to put a +detective on his track. I engaged Hazen, and in three days he came to +tell me that a white woman had passed the night with Hannibal at a house +on Seventh Avenue, the date corresponding with the one on which I was to +have been married!" + +Gouger listened spellbound. It seemed to him that the most exciting +chapter of this weird tale was yet to be written. + +"If I had lost control of my senses before," pursued Roseleaf, "what do +you suppose happened when this information was brought to me? But then I +found an excuse for my beloved one. I considered her the victim of one +of those forms of hypnotism of which there can no longer be any doubt. +She could not have gone there without the demoniac influence of a +stronger personality. He had charmed her from her home by the exercise +of diabolic arts. My fury was entirely for him. I sought him at once, +only to learn that he had left the city a few days before, leaving +absolutely no trace. I could not give over the hunt, however. If he was +on the earth I must find him and be avenged for the wrong he had done. +It occurred to me that an influence so strong as he had exerted would +not be given up. Wherever the Ferns had gone, he would probably be +found. I discovered the whereabouts of the family, after a great deal of +effort, and went to North Carolina. With the patience of a dog and the +cunning of a fox I laid in wait for weeks, and one night I saw and heard +Daisy Fern and Hannibal in conversation!" + +There was no movement on the part of the critic. He sat as still as a +block of stone. + +"When they began to speak I could have sworn that my recent guesses were +correct ones. It was at about the hour of midnight, and she had crept +quietly and alone out of her house to meet this African. But the first +dozen sentences that were uttered gave me a new version of the affair. +It was by no mesmeric power, but by a threat of injury to her father +that this fellow held her under bond. I learned that Mr. Fern had done +something--I could not then tell what--which rendered him liable to +imprisonment. I learned, also, beyond question--for they spoke without +restraint, supposing themselves alone--that, whatever the purpose of +Hannibal when Daisy came to his rooms on the day she was to have been +married, it had not been accomplished. She was afraid of him, but only +for her father's sake. And I discovered beside, though not with perfect +clearness, that a promise of secrecy accounted for her refusal to +explain the cause of that absence which had altered the whole course of +our lives. + +"I have said I had watched with patience. I determined to continue my +watch till I understood the entire situation. About once a week they met +in the way I have described, and as the next date was always arranged in +my hearing there was no difficulty in my keeping the appointment. In the +meantime I learned that Hannibal was born in the vicinity, that he was +living a hermit life, and that nobody knew of the surreptitious visits +he was paying to Oakhurst. Then one day I heard that Archie was at the +hotel, and thinking it time that I let him into the secret I went there, +pretending I had just arrived from the north, when in reality I had been +boarding for months five miles away. The rest you know. I was enabled to +prove to him as well as to myself what had actually happened. Since +then justice has been done to us all." + +Mr. Gouger had to speak at last. + +"To _you_?" he asked. "Do you admit that all this is just to you?" + +"Without doubt," said Roseleaf. "I forfeited every right to the woman I +had insulted by my suspicions. There are certain metals that can only be +tried by fire. I was placed in the crucible, and found wanting." + +The critic shook his head sagely. + +"You are a regular Roman father to your own delinquencies," he answered. +"But tell me another thing. Would you have shot Hannibal if Mr. Weil and +Miss Fern had not made their appearance?" + +"I have not the least doubt of it. He was in my eyes at that moment a +crawling adder, whose fangs were liable to penetrate the flesh of some +one if he was not put out of the way. But I am more than glad I was +spared the infliction of his punishment." + +Gouger wore a strange look. + +"And yet he had one most human quality," said he. + +"Yes, I admit that now," was the reply. "In his passionate, barbaric +way, he certainly loved. When I revise my novel I shall try to deal +fairly with him." + +"And you will finish it very soon now?" + +"As soon as possible." + +A month later Lawrence Gouger received at his office a package marked on +the outside, "From Shirley Roseleaf." He could hardly control his +excitement until he had untied the strings, taken off the wrappings and +disclosed the tin box inside. It was a square box, just the right size +for manuscript paper such as he had seen Roseleaf use, and the heart of +the enthusiast beat high as he took it in his hands. A jewel case filled +with the costliest stones would not have seemed to him more precious. +The fame of a new author would soon resound through the world! Cutt & +Slashem would have the greatest work of fiction of recent years in their +next catalogue! And he, Lawrence Gouger, would be given the credit of +discovering--one might almost say of inventing--this wonder! + +Opening the box, the critic looked at its contents and then dropped it +with an exclamation. It contained nothing but a small sealed envelope +and _a heap of ashes_! + +Ashes! Ashes made from recently burned paper! + +When he recovered enough to open the envelope, this note was found +within: + + "TO LAWRENCE GOUGER, ESQ:--DEAR SIR: Enclosed herewith you + will find the novel for which you have waited so long. I + hope it will please you in all respects, as I certainly + have taken the greatest pains with it. + + "On reading it over I thought it best to more thoroughly + disguise the personality of the characters, lest any of + them might be injured by its publication. There was the + happiness of a newly-made bride to be considered; her + husband's ease of mind; her father's serene old age; her + sister's feelings. There was even a black man who had + perhaps suffered enough, and a critic employed by a large + publishing firm who would not like his true character made + manifest in type. In order to protect these people I have + applied a match to the pages. You can best tell whether I + have performed the work too well. + + "If this novel does not bring me the fame you anticipate I + shall not much care; I have lost some of my ambitions. If + it fails to add to my fortune, never mind; a single man has + no great need of wealth. + + "I go to-night on board a steamer which sails for Europe at + daybreak. When you read this I shall be on the sea. I have + secured a position as resident correspondent abroad for one + of the great newspapers. Perhaps I never shall return. + Truly your friend, S. R." + +"_The idiot!_" cried the reader, as he finished perusing this letter. +"_The imbecile!_ Was there ever such a fool born on this earth!" + +Then he apostrophised the heap of ashes that lay in the box before him. + +"There never was and never will be so great a work of fiction as you +were yesterday! And yet a little touch of flame, and all was +extinguished! How like you were to man! Let him have the brain of a +Shakespeare, and a pound weight falling on his skull ends everything. + +"There was a flood in Hungary last week, in which a thousand people were +drowned. There was an earthquake in Peru where five hundred perished. A +vessel went down off the Caroline Islands. Taken all together, they did +not equal to this world your loss. + +"The poet knew what he was saying: 'Great wits are sure to madness near +allied.' Oh, to think that a mind that could execute your thrilling +pages knew no more than to destroy them! + +"I will not cast you, sublime ashes, to the winds of heaven! I will keep +you reverently, as one preserves the cloak of a great man, or the bones +of a mastodon. Behold, I close you again in your covers, where the eye +of no mortal shall henceforth behold you." + +With the words the disappointed critic performed the action. And to this +day visitors to his room read with wonder the inscription he has placed +on the box: + +"_The greatest novel that ever was written._" + + +THE END. + + + + + * * * * * + + + + +Transcriber's note: + +Every effort has been made to replicate this text as faithfully +as possible, including obsolete and variant spellings. Obvious +typographical errors in punctuation (misplaced quotes and the +like) have been fixed. Corrections [in brackets] in the text are +noted below: + +Table of Contents: typographical error corrected + + I. A Rejected Manuscript 1[9] + +page 41: possible typographical error queried (not changed in + the text) + + would[wouldn't] touch the mooney, maundering mess. It makes + my flesh creep, sometimes, to read it." v + +page 106: duplicate word removed + + playing at love with each other, might afterwards find that + [that] they were experimenting with fire. + +page 108: possible typographical error queried (not changed in + the text) + + arm around her again, checking himself with difficulty from + completeing[completing] the movement) "and dull, and wanting + in manners, but you are the only young + +page 116: typographical errors corrected + + about this matter. She shought[thought] the innocent man at + her side had not quite guaged[gauged] the interest that Mr. + +page 118: typographical error corrected + + caught her passionately in his arms, and knew no better way + to bring her to consiousness[consciousness] than to rain + kisses on her cheeks. As might be expected this + +page 126: typographical error corrected + + abilities of Mr. Weil, and he had no idea of + dispuing[disputing] the conclusions of that wise guide. + +page 133: typographical error corrected + + "To me? He would not dare?[!] What angers me is the way he + speaks to the rest of you. He + +page 149: typographical errors corrected + + called the Good side nothing stronger that[than] wines were + found on the bill of fare. On the Wicked side every decoction + know[known] to the modern drinker was to + +page 155: typographical error corrected + + sexes. He half believed that Jennie Pelham and Mrs. + Delevan[Delavan] were sitting by his bed, more brazen + +page 194: typographical error corrected + + young novelist. More than this, she would have + sufficent[sufficient] on hand to send the future amounts that + +page 251: typographical error corrected + + Roseleaf waved him back with a sweeep[sweep] of his arm. + +page 278: typographical error corrected + + countenance, the utter hopelessness had in a measure + diappeared[disappeared]. When Daisy came into the parlor, she + +page 297: typographical error corrected + + came with him. Mr. Fern upraided[upbraided] Weil for using so + much ceremony, remarking that although he was + + + +***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A BLACK ADONIS*** + + +******* This file should be named 26599-8.txt or 26599-8.zip ******* + + +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: +http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/2/6/5/9/26599 + + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules, +set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to +copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to +protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. 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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 = "http://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a></pre> +<p>Title: A Black Adonis</p> +<p>Author: Linn Boyd Porter</p> +<p>Release Date: September 12, 2008 [eBook #26599]</p> +<p>Language: English</p> +<p>Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1</p> +<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A BLACK ADONIS***</p> +<p> </p> +<h3>E-text prepared by Mark C. Orton, Linda McKeown,<br /> + and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team<br /> + (http://www.pgdp.net)</h3> +<p> </p> +<div class="trans_note"><a name="top" id="top"></a> +<p class="center"><big>TRANSCRIBER'S NOTE:</big></p> +<p class="noindent"> +Every effort has been made to replicate this text as +faithfully as possible; please see <a href="#TN">list of printing issues</a> at the +end of the text.</p> +</div> +<p> </p> +<hr class="full" /> +<p> </p> +<p> </p> +<p> </p> + +<h1>A BLACK ADONIS.</h1> + +<h2><span class="smcap">By Albert Ross.</span> +</h2> + + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 373px;"> +<img src="images/fcover.jpg" width="373" height="600" alt="cover" title="" /> +</div> + +<div class="bbox"><h3>THE<br /> +ALBATROSS NOVELS<br /> +<br /> +By ALBERT ROSS</h3> + +<p class="center">23 Volumes<br /> +</p> + +<p class="center">May be had wherever books are sold at the price you +paid for this volume</p> + +<p class="center">Black Adonis, A<br /> +Garston Bigamy, The<br /> +Her Husband's Friend<br /> +His Foster Sister<br /> +His Private Character<br /> +In Stella's Shadow<br /> +Love at Seventy<br /> +Love Gone Astray<br /> +Moulding a Maiden<br /> +Naked Truth, The<br /> +New Sensation, A<br /> +Original Sinner, An<br /> +Out of Wedlock<br /> +Speaking of Ellen<br /> +Stranger Than Fiction<br /> +Sugar Princess, A<br /> +That Gay Deceiver<br /> +Their Marriage Bond<br /> +Thou Shalt Not<br /> +Thy Neighbor's Wife<br /> +Why I'm Single<br /> +Young Fawcett's Mabel<br /> +Young Miss Giddy<br /> +<br /> +<b>G. W. DILLINGHAM CO.</b><br /> +<b>Publishers :: :: New York</b><br /> +</p></div> + +<h1><big>A BLACK ADONIS.</big></h1> + +<h2><span class="smcap">By Albert Ross.</span></h2> + +<h4>AUTHOR OF</h4> + +<p class="center">"<span class="smcap">Out of Wedlock</span>," "<span class="smcap">Speaking of Ellen</span>,"<br /> +"<span class="smcap">Thou Shalt Not</span>," "<span class="smcap">Why I'm Single</span>,"<br /> +"<span class="smcap">Love at Seventy</span>," <span class="smcap">Etc., Etc.<br /><br /></span> +</p> + +<div class="blockquotit"><p><big><i>"You see!" he answered, bitterly. "Because +I am black I cannot touch the hand of +a woman that is white. And yet you say +the Almighty made of one blood all nations +of the earth!"—Page 212.</i></big><br /><br /></p></div> + +<p> </p> +<p> </p> +<p> </p> +<p class="center">NEW YORK:<br /> +<small>COPYRIGHT, 1896, BY G. W. DILLINGHAM.</small><br /> +<i>G. W. Dillingham Co., Publishers.</i></p> + +<p class="center">[<i>All rights reserved.</i>] +</p> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_v" id="Page_v">[v]</a></span></p> + +<h2><a name="contents" id="contents"></a>CONTENTS</h2> + +<table summary="Table of Contents"> +<tr> + +<th class="tda">CHAPTER</th> +<th class="tdc" colspan="2">PAGE</th> +</tr> + +<tr> +<td class="tda"> +I.</td> +<td class="tdb">A Rejected Manuscript</td> +<td class="tdc"><a name="Page_vt" id="Page_vt"></a><a href="#Page_vtn">*</a> <a href="#CHAPTER_I">9</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class="tda">II.</td> +<td class="tdb">"Was my story too bold?"</td> +<td class="tdc"><a href="#CHAPTER_II">23</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class="tda">III.</td> +<td class="tdb">"Her feet were pink"</td> +<td class="tdc"><a href="#CHAPTER_III">35</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class="tda">IV.</td> +<td class="tdb">With Titian Tresses</td> +<td class="tdc"><a href="#CHAPTER_IV">49</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class="tda">V.</td> +<td class="tdb">Studying Miss Millicent</td> +<td class="tdc"><a href="#CHAPTER_V">65</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class="tda">VI.</td> +<td class="tdb">"How the women stare!"</td> +<td class="tdc"><a href="#CHAPTER_VI">79</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class="tda">VII.</td> +<td class="tdb">A Dinner at Midlands</td> +<td class="tdc"><a href="#CHAPTER_VII">93</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class="tda">VIII.</td> +<td class="tdb">Holding Her Hand</td> +<td class="tdc"><a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">99</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class="tda">IX.</td> +<td class="tdb">"Daisy, my darling!"</td> +<td class="tdc"><a href="#CHAPTER_IX">110</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class="tda">X.</td> +<td class="tdb">"Oh, so many, many maids!"</td> +<td class="tdc"><a href="#CHAPTER_X">121</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class="tda">XI.</td> +<td class="tdb">Archie Pays Attention</td> +<td class="tdc"><a href="#CHAPTER_XI">136</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class="tda">XII.</td> +<td class="tdb">Dining at Isaac's</td> +<td class="tdc"><a href="#CHAPTER_XII">143</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class="tda">XIII.</td> +<td class="tdb">A Question of Color</td> +<td class="tdc"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIII">155</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class="tda">XIV.</td> +<td class="tdb">"Let us have a betrayal"</td> +<td class="tdc"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIV">166</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class="tda">XV.</td> +<td class="tdb">The Green-Eyed Monster</td> +<td class="tdc"><a href="#CHAPTER_XV">177</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class="tda">XVI.</td> +<td class="tdb">"I've had such luck!"</td> +<td class="tdc"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVI">190</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class="tda">XVII.</td> +<td class="tdb">A Burglar in the House</td> +<td class="tdc"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVII">198</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class="tda">XVIII.</td> +<td class="tdb">Black and White</td> +<td class="tdc"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVIII">204</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class="tda">XIX.</td> +<td class="tdb">"Play out your farce"</td> +<td class="tdc"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIX">215</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class="tda">XX.</td> +<td class="tdb">Like a Stuck Pig</td> +<td class="tdc"><a href="#CHAPTER_XX">226</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class="tda">XXI.</td> +<td class="tdb">"We want Millie to understand"</td> +<td class="tdc"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXI">238</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class="tda">XXII.</td> +<td class="tdb">Where Was Daisy?</td> +<td class="tdc"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXII">246</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class="tda">XXIII.</td> +<td class="tdb">An Awful Night</td> +<td class="tdc"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIII">254</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class="tda">XXIV.</td> +<td class="tdb">"This ends it, then?"</td> +<td class="tdc"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIV">263</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class="tda">XXV.</td> +<td class="tdb">An Undiscoverable Secret</td> +<td class="tdc"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXV">273</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class="tda">XXVI.</td> +<td class="tdb">"I played, and I lost"</td> +<td class="tdc"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXVI">282</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class="tda">XXVII.</td> +<td class="tdb">Absolutely Blameless</td> +<td class="tdc"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXVII">292</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class="tda">XXVIII.</td> +<td class="tdb">Trapping a Wolf</td> +<td class="tdc"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXVIII">301</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class="tda">XXIX.</td> +<td class="tdb">"The Greatest Novel"</td> +<td class="tdc"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIX">309</a></td></tr> +</table> + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_vii" id="Page_vii">[vii]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="TO_MY_READERS" id="TO_MY_READERS"></a>TO MY READERS.</h2> + +<p>I do not know how better to use the space that +the printer always leaves me in this part of the book +than to redeem the promise I made at the end of my +last novel, and tell you in a few words what became +of Blanche Brixton Fantelli and her husband.</p> + +<p>But, do you really need to be told?</p> + +<p>Could they have done anything else than live in +connubial felicity, after the man had proved himself +so noble and the woman had learned to appreciate +him at his true worth?</p> + +<p>Well, whether they could or not, they didn't. +Blanche is the happiest of wedded wives. She still +holds to her theory that marriage is based on wrong +principles, and that the contract as ordinarily made +is frightfully immoral; but she says if all men were +like "her Jules" there would be no trouble.</p> + +<p>In this she proves herself essentially feminine. She +is learning, albeit a little late, that man was not +made to live alone, and that the love a mother feels +for her child is not the only one that brings joy to a +woman's breast.</p> + +<p>Fantelli does not claim that Blanche is his property. +He is her lover still, even though he has +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_viii" id="Page_viii">[viii]</a></span>gained the law's permission to be her master. He +recognizes that she has rights in herself that are inviolable. +This is why they live together so contentedly. +She would not be his mate on any other +terms.</p> + +<p>If it is not the ideal existence, it is very near it. +As near as a man and woman who care for the +world's opinion can live it in these days.</p> + +<p>And now, with heartfelt thanks for the continued +favor of the reading public, which I am conscious is +far beyond my desert, I bid a temporary farewell to +American shores. By the time this book is on the +shelves of the dealers I shall be on European soil, +there to remain, I trust, for the better part of a year. +Wherever I am, my thoughts will always turn to you +who have made these journeys possible, and there as +here my pen will continue devoted to your service.</p> + +<p> +ALBERT ROSS.<br /> +<br /> +Cambridge, Mass.,<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><i>June 1, 1895.</i></span><br /> +</p> + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="A_BLACK_ADONIS" id="A_BLACK_ADONIS"></a>A BLACK ADONIS.</h2> + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_I" id="CHAPTER_I"></a>CHAPTER I.</h2> + +<h3>A REJECTED MANUSCRIPT.</h3> + +<p>"A letter for Mr. Roseleaf," he heard his landlady +say to the chambermaid. And he was quite prepared +to hear the girl reply, in a tone of surprise:</p> + +<p>"For Mr. Roseleaf! This is the first letter he +has had since he came."</p> + +<p>The young man referred to stood just within his +chamber door, waiting with some anxiety for the +letter to be brought to him. He was about twenty +years of age, of medium height, with rather dark +complexion, curling hair and expressive eyes, and +with a natural delicacy of manner that made him +seem almost feminine at first view.</p> + +<p>He had the greatest possible interest in the letter +that the postman had just brought, but he was far +too polite to disturb the landlady or her servant, +who were not yet through with it.</p> + +<p>"You can see that it is from a publishing house,"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span> +commented Mrs. Ranning, inspecting the envelope +with care. "It is from Cutt & Slashem, who bring +out more novels than any other firm in the city. I +told you he was some kind of a writer. Perhaps +they are going to publish a book for him! If they +do he will leave us for finer quarters. Novelists +make a mint of money, I have heard. We must do +our best to keep him as long as we can. Be very +polite to him, Nellie. He appears to be an excellent +young man."</p> + +<p>Shirley Roseleaf's anxiety to get possession of his +letter was not lessened by this conversation. It +seemed as if his entire future hung on the contents +of that envelope tarrying so long in Nellie's hands. +The great publishers, Cutt & Slashem, had had a +manuscript of his in their hands for nearly a fortnight. +When they had definitely accepted it, his +path would be perfectly clear. If they rejected it—but +he had not got so far as that.</p> + +<p>The manuscript was a romance—a romance of +love! Its author had spent a great deal of time +upon it. He had rewritten it with care, and finally +made a neat copy, of which he was very proud. +Then he had thought a long time over the question +of a publishing firm. Cutt & Slashem stood at the +top of their profession, and they finally received the +preference. With the MSS. Roseleaf sent a pretty +note, in which he included a delicate compliment on +their success. The MSS. and the note were arranged +tastefully in a neat white package and tied with pink +twine.</p> + +<p>After all of those precautions it is no wonder that +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span>the novelist felt surprise when days passed and no +reply was sent to him. But never at any time was +he discouraged. Had they intended to reject the +novel, he reasoned, they could as easily have done +so in three days as ten.</p> + +<p>He pictured the members of the firm hugging +themselves over their good fortune, passing the +manuscript from one to the other, all eager for a +taste of such a marvelous work. He did not think +it egotism to believe they did not get stories like +that every day.</p> + +<p>His thoughts flew rapidly as Nellie slowly climbed +the stairs. Now he would be famous, he would be +courted, he would be envied! He would also be +very, very rich, though that was not of so much +account.</p> + +<p>As Nellie handed him the letter he responded to +her pleasant smile with one of his own, and even +pressed a twenty-five cent piece into her hand. Then +he closed his door behind him, bolting it in his +eagerness to be alone. The morning was foggy, and +he sank into a chair by the window, the only part of +the room where he could see to read distinctly.</p> + +<p>There was an attraction about the envelope. It +was light buff in color, bearing the address of Cutt +& Slashem in large letter on one side of the front +face, besides the names of several of the most famous +authors whose publishers the firm had the happiness +to be.</p> + +<p>"Shirley Roseleaf!" It would not look so badly +in print.</p> + +<p>So lost was he in the pleasant pictures which +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span>these thoughts conjured up that it was some +minutes before he tore open the envelope. Then his +astounded eyes rested upon these lines:</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>"Messrs. Cutt & Slashem regret to be obliged to decline +with thanks the MSS. of M. Shirley Roseleaf, and request to +be informed what disposition he desires made of the same."</p></div> + +<p>Roseleaf read this dizzily. For some moments he +could not understand what that sentence meant. +"Obliged to decline" was plain enough; but his +confused mind found some grains of comfort in the +request of the firm to know what he wished done +with his manuscript. They must, he reasoned, consider +it of value, or they would not respond in that +courteous manner. Still, he could not comprehend +how they had had the asininity to "decline" it +at all.</p> + +<p>Were they unwilling to add another star to their +galaxy?</p> + +<p>Could they actually have read the tale?</p> + +<p>A firm of their reputation, too!</p> + +<p>When Roseleaf emerged from his temporary stupor +it was into a state of great indignation. Why, the +men were fools! He wished heartily he had never +gone to them. They would yet see the day when, +with tears in their eyes, they would regret their lack +of judgment. His first act should be to go to their +office and express his opinion of their stupidity, and +then he would take his MSS. to some rival house. +And never, never in the world—after he had become +famous, and when every publisher on both sides of +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span>the Atlantic were besieging him—never, he said, +should these ignorant fellows get a scrap of his writing, +not even if they offered its weight in gold!</p> + +<p>He was too excited for delay, and donning his hat, +he took his way with all speed to Cutt & Slashem's +office. At that instant he had more faith in his +novel than ever. As he walked rapidly along he +compared it with some of the stories issued by the +firm that had rejected it, to the great disadvantage +of the latter.</p> + +<p>"I wish to see Mr. Cutt or Mr. Slashem," he said, +imperiously, as he entered the counting room.</p> + +<p>"Both are in," said the office boy, imperturbably. +"Which will you have?"</p> + +<p>"I will see them together."</p> + +<p>Had they been tigers, fresh from an Indian jungle, +it would have made no difference to him.</p> + +<p>The boy asked for his card, vanished with it, +returned and bade him follow. Up a flight of stairs +they went, then to the left, then to the right, then +across a little hall. A door with the name of the +house and the additional word "Private" loomed +before them.</p> + +<p>"Come in!" was heard in response to the knock +of the office boy.</p> + +<p>Roseleaf entered, something slower than a cannon +ball, and yet considerably faster than a snail. The +two principal members of the firm were sitting +together, with lighted cigars in their mouths, examining +a lot of paper samples that lay upon a table. +They did no more at first than glance up and nod, +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span>not having finished the business upon which they +were engaged.</p> + +<p>"Is it any better than the last?" asked Mr. Slashem, +referring to the sample his partner was examining.</p> + +<p>"It's just as good, at least," was the answer. "And +an eighth of a cent a pound less. I think we had better +order five hundred reams."</p> + +<p>"Five hundred reams," repeated the other, slowly, +making a memorandum in a little book that he carried. +"And the other lot we'll wait about, eh? +Paper is not very steady. It's gone off a sixteenth +since Thursday."</p> + +<p>This conversation only served to infuriate still more +the visitor who stood waiting to pour out his wrath. +Were these men wasting time over fractions of a cent +in the price of stock, just after they had rejected one +of the greatest romances of modern times!</p> + +<p>With the precision of a duplex machine both partners +finally looked up from the table at the young +man.</p> + +<p>"Mr. Shirley Roseleaf?" said Mr. Slashem, interrogatively, +glancing at the card that the office boy +had brought.</p> + +<p>"Yes, sir!" was the sharp and disdainful reply.</p> + +<p>"We need nothing in your line," interrupted Mr. +Cutt. "I suppose Mr. Trimm has our other order +well under way?"</p> + +<p>The look of indignant protest that appeared in +Roseleaf's face caused Mr. Slashem to speak.</p> + +<p>"This is not Mr. Roseberg," he explained. "My +partner took you for an agent of our bookbinder," he +added.</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span></p> + +<p>The novelist thought his skin would burst.</p> + +<p>"I am quite complimented," he said, in an icy +tone. "Let me introduce myself. I am the author +of 'Evelyn's Faith.'"</p> + +<p>The partners consulted each other.</p> + +<p>"The similarity of names confused me," said Mr. +Cutt. "Is your book one that we have published?"</p> + +<p>Saints and angels!</p> + +<p>"It is one that was sent to you <i>for</i> publication," +replied Roseleaf, with much heat, "and has been +returned this morning—<i>rejected</i>!"</p> + +<p>"Ah!" said Mr. Cutt.</p> + +<p>"We have nothing to do with that department," +said Mr. Slashem, coming to the rescue. "You +should see Mr. Gouger, on the second floor above; +though if he has rejected your story a visit would be +quite useless. He never decides a matter without +sufficient reason."</p> + +<p>"Oh, dear, no!" added Mr. Cutt, feeling again of +the paper samples.</p> + +<p>Shirley Roseleaf listened with wild incredulity.</p> + +<p>"Do you mean to tell me," he said, "that you, the +members of the firm of Cutt & Slashem, have rejected +my story without even reading it?"</p> + +<p>The partners glanced at each other again.</p> + +<p>"We never read books," said Mr. Cutt.</p> + +<p>"Never," said Mr. Slashem, kindly. "We have +things much more important to attend to. We pay +Mr. Gouger a large salary. Why, my young friend, +there are probably a dozen manuscripts received at +our office every week. If we were to try to <i>read</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span> +them, who do you think would attend to the <i>essential</i> +points of our business?"</p> + +<p>Roseleaf's contempt for the concern was increasing +at lightning speed. He did not care to mince his +words, for it could make no difference now.</p> + +<p>"I should imagine that the selection of the books +you are to print would be at least as important as +the paper you are to use," he retorted.</p> + +<p>Mr. Cutt looked at him in great astonishment.</p> + +<p>"You are much mistaken," said he.</p> + +<p>"Entirely mistaken," confirmed Mr. Slashem.</p> + +<p>The author had no desire to remain longer, as it +was evident he was losing his temper to no purpose. +If it was Mr. Gouger who had rejected his work, it +was Mr. Gouger that he must see.</p> + +<p>Bowing with ironical grace to the examiners of +printing paper, he took leave of them, and mounted +to the sanctum of the man who he had been told was +the arbiter of his fate. A girl with soiled hands +pointed out the room, for there was nothing to indicate +it upon the dingy panel of the door; and +presently Roseleaf stood in the presence of the individual +he believed at that moment his worst enemy.</p> + +<p>There were two men in the room. One of them +indicated with a motion of his hand that the other +was the one wanted, and with a second motion that +the caller might be seated. Mr. Gouger was partly +hidden behind a desk, engaged in turning over a +heap of manuscript, and it appeared from the manner +of his companion that he did not wish to be +disturbed.</p> + +<p>Somewhat cooled down by this state of affairs, +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span>the young novelist took the chair indicated and +waited several minutes.</p> + +<p>"What d—d nonsense they are sending me these +days!" exclaimed Mr. Gouger at last, thrusting the +sheets he had been scanning back into the wrapper +in which they had come, without, however, raising +his eyes from his desk. "Out of a hundred stories +I read, not three are fit to build a fire with! This +thing is written by a girl who ought to take a term +in a grammar school. She has no more idea of +syntax than a lapdog. Her father writes that he is +willing to pay a reasonable sum to have it brought +out. Why, Cutt & Slashem couldn't afford to put +their imprint on that rot for fifty thousand dollars!"</p> + +<p>He had finished saying this before he learned that +a third person was in the room. Upon making this +discovery he lowered his voice, as if regretting having +exhibited too great warmth before a stranger. +The novelist rose and handed him a card, and as +Mr. Gouger glanced at the name a gleam of recognition +lit up his face.</p> + +<p>"I am glad to see you, Mr. Roseleaf," he said. +"I had half a notion to ask you to call, when I felt +obliged to send you that note yesterday. There are +several things I would like to say to you. Archie, +perhaps you would let us have the room for a few +minutes."</p> + +<p>The last remark was addressed familiarly to the +man who occupied the third chair, and who looked +so disheartened at the prospect of having to rise +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span>therefrom that Roseleaf hastened to express a hope +that he would not do so on his account.</p> + +<p>"Very well," said Mr. Gouger, abruptly. "You +heard what I said about this copy I have just read, +though it was not my intention that you should. I +supposed I was talking only to Mr. Weil, who is not +in the profession and does not expect to be. Now, +let me say at once, Mr. Roseleaf, that your contribution +is not open to any of the objections I have +cited. You have evidently been well educated. Your +English is pure and forcible. It is a real delight +to read your pages. Every line shows the greatest +care in construction. I did with your story what +I have not done with another for a long time—I read +it through. Why then did I reject it?"</p> + +<p>The question was too great for the one most interested +to answer, but in the glow of pleasure that the +compliment brought he forgot for the moment his +bitter feelings.</p> + +<p>"Possibly," he suggested, "Cutt & Slashem have +more novels on hand than they feel like producing at +present."</p> + +<p>"No," responded Mr. Gouger, disposing of that +theory in one breath. "A house like ours would +never reject a really desirable manuscript. If you +will reflect that only one or two of this description +are produced each year you will the more readily +understand me. Your story has a cardinal fault for +which no excellence of style or finish can compensate. +Shall I tell you what it is, and before this gentleman?"</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span></p> + +<p>He indicated Mr. Weil as he spoke. Roseleaf's +heart sank. For the first time he felt a deadly fear.</p> + +<p>"Tell me, by all means," he responded, faintly.</p> + +<p>Mr. Gouger's face bore its gentlest expression at +that moment. He was taking valuable time, time +that belonged to his employers, to say something +that must temporarily disappoint, though in the end +it might benefit his hearer.</p> + +<p>"Let me repeat," he said, "that your work is well +written, and that I have read it with the greatest +interest. Its fault—an insuperable one—is that it +lacks fidelity to nature. Mr. Roseleaf, I think I could +gauge your past life with tolerable accuracy merely +from what that manuscript reveals."</p> + +<p>The novelist shook his head. There was not a line +of autobiography in those pages, and he told his +critic so.</p> + +<p>"Oh, I understand," replied Mr. Gouger. "But +this I have learned: Your life has been marvelously +colorless. Yet, in spite of that, you have undertaken +to write of things of which you know nothing, and +about which, I may add, you have made very poor +guesses."</p> + +<p>Mr. Weil, leaning back in his chair, began to show +a decided interest. Mr. Roseleaf, sitting upright, in +an attitude of strained attention, inquired what Mr. +Gouger meant.</p> + +<p>"Well, for instance, this," responded the critic: +"You attempt to depict the sensations of love, +though you have never had a passion. Can you +expect to know how it feels to hold a beautiful girl in +your arms, when you never had one there? You put +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span>words of temptation into the mouth of your villain +which no real scamp would think of using, for their +only effect would be to alarm your heroine. You +talk of a planned seduction as if it were part of an +oratorio. And you make your hero so superlatively +pure and sweet that no woman formed of flesh and +blood could endure him for an hour."</p> + +<p>The color mounted to Roseleaf's face. He felt +that this criticism was not without foundation. But +presently he rallied, and asked if it were necessary +for a man to experience every sensation before he +dared write about them.</p> + +<p>"Do you suppose," he asked, desperately, "that +Jules Verne ever traveled sixty thousand leagues +under the sea or made a journey to the moon?"</p> + +<p>Mr. Weil could not help uttering a little laugh. +Mr. Gouger struck his hands together and clinched +them.</p> + +<p>"No," said he. "But he could have written +neither of those wonderful tales without a knowledge +of the sciences of which they treat."</p> + +<p>"He has read, and I have read," responded Roseleaf. +"What is the difference?"</p> + +<p>"He has studied, and you have not," retorted the +critic. "That makes all the difference in the world. +He has a correct idea of the structure of the moon +and what should be found in the unexplored caverns +of the ocean; while you, in total ignorance, have +attempted to deal in a science to which these are the +merest bagatelles! You know as little of the tides +that control the heart of a girl as you do of the personal +history of the inhabitants of Jupiter! Your +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span>powers of description are good; those of invention +feeble. Either throw yourself into a love affair, till +you have learned it root and branch, or never again +try to depict one."</p> + +<p>Mr. Archie Weil smiled and nodded, as if he entirely +agreed with the speaker.</p> + +<p>"What a novel <i>I</i> could make, my dear fellow!" +he exclaimed, "if I only had the talent. I have had +experiences enough, but I could no more write them +out than I could fly."</p> + +<p>"It is quite as well," was the response, "your +women would all be Messalinas and fiction has too +many now."</p> + +<p>"Not <i>all</i> of them, Lawrence," was the quick and +meaning reply.</p> + +<p>"In that case," said Gouger, "I wish heartily you +could write. The world is famishing for a real +love story, based on modern lines, brought up to +date. I tell you, there has been nothing satisfactory +in that line since Goethe's day."</p> + +<p>Mr. Weil suggested Balzac and Sand.</p> + +<p>"Why don't you include George William Reynolds?" +inquired Gouger, with a sneer. "Neither +of them wrote until they were depraved by contract +with humanity. If we could get a young man of +true literary talent to see life and write of it as he +went along, what might we not secure? But I have +no more time to spare, Mr. Roseleaf. I was sorry +to be obliged to reject your story. Some day, when +you have seen just a little of the world, begin again +on the lines I have outlined, and come here with the +result."</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span></p> + +<p>Quite dispirited, now that the last plank had +slipped from under him, the novelist walked slowly +down the stairs. He did not even ask for his manuscript. +After what he had heard, it did not seem +worth carrying to his lodgings. His plans were +shipwrecked. Instead of the fame and fortune he +had hoped for, he felt the most bitter disappointment. +All his bright dreams had vanished.</p> + +<p>A step behind him quicker than his own, made +him aware that some one was following him, and +presently a voice called his name. It was Mr. +Archie Weil, who had put himself to unusual exertion, +and required some seconds to recover his +breath before he could speak further.</p> + +<p>"I want you to come over to my hotel and have a +little talk with me," he said. "Gouger has interested +me in you immensely. I believe, as he says, +that you have the making of a distinguished author, +and I want to arrange a plan by which you can carry +out his scheme."</p> + +<p>Mr. Roseleaf stared doubtfully at his companion.</p> + +<p>"What scheme?" he said, briefly.</p> + +<p>"Why, of imparting to you that knowledge of the +world which will enable you to draw truthful portraits. +You have the art, he says, the talent, the +capacity—whatever you choose to call it. All you +lack is experience. Given that, you would make +a reputation second to none. What can be plainer +than that you should acquire the thing you need +without delay?"</p> + +<p>"The 'thing I need'?" repeated Roseleaf, dolefully.</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span></p> + +<p>Mr. Weil laughed, delightfully.</p> + +<p>"Yes!" he explained. "What you need is a friend +able to interest you, to begin with. Pardon me if I +say I may be described by that phrase. Come to +my hotel a little while and let us talk it over."</p> + +<p>It was not an opportunity to be refused, in Roseleaf's +depressed condition, and the two men walked +together to the Hoffman House, where Mr. Weil at +that time made his home.</p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_II" id="CHAPTER_II"></a>CHAPTER II.</h2> + +<h3>"WAS MY STORY TOO BOLD?"</h3> + + +<p>"Well, Millie, your letter has come," said Mr. Wilton +Fern, as he entered the parlor of his pleasant +residence, situated about twenty miles from the +limits of New York City. "Open it as quick as you +can, and learn your fate."</p> + +<p>His daughter started nervously from her seat near +the window, where she had been spending the previous +hour in speculations regarding the very missive +that was now placed in her hands. She was a handsome +girl, neither blonde nor brunette, with eyes of +hazel gray and hair of that color that moderns call +Titian red. She took the envelope that her father +gave her, and though she wanted intensely to know +the contents she hesitated to open it.</p> + +<p>"Read it, Millie," smiled Mr. Fern. "Let us learn +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span>whether we have an authoress in our house who is +destined to become famous."</p> + +<p>But this remark made Miss Millicent less willing +than before to open the letter in her father's presence. +She slowly left the room without answering +and did not break the seal of her communication till +she was in the seclusion of her chamber.</p> + +<p>And it was quite a while, even then, before she +summoned the necessary courage. Some days previous +she had sent a MSS. to the great publishing +house of Cutt & Slashem. The writing had taken +up the best of her time for a year. She had high +hopes that it was destined to lay the foundation +of an artistic success. Her plot was novel, not +to say startling. It was entirely out of the conventional +order. It would be certain to arouse +talk and provoke comment, if it got into print; +and to make sure that it <i>would</i> get into print she +had persuaded her father to write a little note, +which she enclosed with the MSS., saying that +he would pay a cash bonus, if the firm demanded it, +to guarantee them against possible loss.</p> + +<p>With this note in her mind, Miss Millicent had +felt little doubt that her story would be accepted +and printed. She only wondered how warmly they +would praise her work. It was not enough to have +them print it; she wanted something to justify her +in saying to her father, "There, you see I was not +wrong after all in thinking I could have a literary +career!"</p> + +<p>At last the envelope was removed, and the girl's +astonished eyes lit upon this cold, dry statement:</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span></p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>"Messrs. Cutt & Slashem regret to be obliged to decline +with thanks the MSS. of Miss M. Fern, and request to be +informed what disposition she desires made of the +same."</p></div> + +<p>Millicent felt a ringing in her ears. Her hands +grew clammy. A dull pain pressed on her forehead. +She felt a faintness, a sinking at the heart. Was it +possible she had read aright? Rejected, in this +cruel way, without even a reference to her father's +offer! It was atrocious, and, girl-like, she burst into +a spasm of weeping.</p> + +<p>How could she ever face her father? The sacrifices +she had made came back to her, sacrifices of +which she had thought little at the time, but which +now seemed gigantic. There had been nights when +she had not gone to bed till three, other nights when +she had been too full of her subject to sleep and had +risen in the small hours to finish some particularly +interesting chapter. Twelve hundred pages there +were in all, note size, in her large, round, almost +masculine hand. And this time was all lost! She +had mistaken her vocation. The greatest publishing +house in the country had decided against her.</p> + +<p>Gradually she dried her eyes. It would do no +good to weep. She read the curt answer that had +come in the mail, a dozen times. Why could not +the firm have sent her a reason, an excuse that +meant something? She wanted to know wherein +her fault lay. It might be possible to correct it. +Perhaps the state of business was to blame. The +more she thought, the more determined she grew to +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span>investigate this strange affair, and within an hour +she had donned her street clothes and started, without +saying anything to the rest of the household of +her intention, for the office of Cutt & Slashem in the +city.</p> + +<p>She knew that each large concern had one or more +"readers," on whose judgment they relied in such +matters. She, therefore, paused only long enough +at the counting-room to get directed to Mr. Gouger. +Her knock on the critic's door brought forth a loud +"Come in," and as she entered she saw two men +standing with hats in their hand, as if about to take +their departure.</p> + +<p>"I beg your pardon," she said, "but I wish to see +Mr. Gouger."</p> + +<p>"That is my name," responded one of the men, +stepping forward.</p> + +<p>"I am Miss Fern."</p> + +<p>Mr. Gouger did not seem very glad to hear it. +The hour of one had just struck, and he was about +to go to his lunch. He recognized the girl's name, +as that of the author of the MSS. he had criticized +so severely to his friend, Weil, who was, by-the-way, +the third person in the room at this moment. Had +she sent up her card, as is usual with women, he +would have avoided seeing her at any hazard.</p> + +<p>Mr. Weil took a long survey of the young lady, +and then retired to the vicinity of the front windows. +He pretended to interest himself in the rush of +traffic that was going on in the street below, but he +missed nothing of what was said, and stole from +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span>time to time a glance at his two companions, particularly +the younger one.</p> + +<p>"A mighty pretty girl," was his mental comment. +"I hope Lawrence isn't going to be nasty with her."</p> + +<p>Mr. Gouger motioned Miss Fern rather stiffly to a +seat.</p> + +<p>"I do not wish to detain you," she said, with +feminine inconsistency, as she accepted it. "I only +want to know, if you will be so kind as to tell me, +what is the trouble with my story."</p> + +<p>The critic was pleased at one thing. Miss Fern's +voice was reasonably clear. She had finished her +weeping at home. There was to be no scene, something +he dreaded, and in the course of his connection +with this house he had experienced scores of them. +He inspected his caller critically in the few seconds +that elapsed while she was asking this question, and +when she paused he decided to answer her with as +much of the truth as he dared use.</p> + +<p>"The fact is," he began, "a firm like ours is unable +to use more than one novel out of fifty that is +submitted to it. Of our friends who send us manuscripts, +the vast majority must, therefore, be disappointed. +Now, your story—shall I be frank?"</p> + +<p>"By all means," answered Miss Fern.</p> + +<p>"Your story, though written with spirit and +power, needs a great deal of revision from a—from +a rhetorical standpoint. It is, in fact, carelessly put +together. That is a cardinal fault in a literary production, +and one for which no amount of talent, or +even of genius, can compensate."</p> + +<p>The girl listened with deep interest. She tried to +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span>think where the blemishes alluded to could be, for +she had read the story twenty times. To say nothing +of several girl friends, who had listened with +evident wonder and delight, to various parts of the +tale, as it progressed.</p> + +<p>"If that is true," answered Miss Fern, slowly—, +"could not the trouble be remedied by sending the +MSS. to some very competent person and having the +errors made right?"</p> + +<p>Mr. Gouger smiled.</p> + +<p>"Hardly," he said. "A novel is like a painting. +The <i>ensemble</i>—do you understand?—is the thing. +Can you conceive a painting being 'done over'? +Your book would lose its quality if subjected to +that process."</p> + +<p>A look of discouragement crossed the features of +the young woman.</p> + +<p>"Of course, you know best," she stammered. +"What would you advise me—try again?"</p> + +<p>Mr. Gouger raised both his hands.</p> + +<p>"It is difficult to say, in such a case," he replied. +"But—if you want my best opinion—"</p> + +<p>"That is just what I want," said the girl, with ill-concealed +impatience.</p> + +<p>"You are not dependent upon your exertions, I +suppose, for a living?"</p> + +<p>Millicent shook her head, almost sorry at the +moment that she could not reply in the affirmative.</p> + +<p>"Then—I should give up the idea of being an +authoress."</p> + +<p>This was very unpalatable medicine, and the critic +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span>realized it as he looked at the sombre face before +him.</p> + +<p>"Is your rejection of my story based at all," asked +Miss Fern, after a pause, "on the—boldness of its +subject?"</p> + +<p>Mr. Gouger smiled again.</p> + +<p>"We publish the works of Hall Caine and George +Moore," he said. "I should not consider your story +overbold, if there was nothing else against it. It is +a wonder to me, and always will be, why such young +girls as you choose <i>risqué</i> themes, but if the work is +well done the public will pay for it."</p> + +<p>There was a slight blush on Miss Fern's face, partly +at the insinuation and partly at the adverse criticism +that had crept thoughtlessly into the sentence.</p> + +<p>"For my part," she explained, "I wanted to write +something that would attract attention—that would +put my name prominently before the public and +keep it there. The girls I read it to thought the +scenes just lovely, though some said perhaps their +mothers would not feel that way. And I told +them that the mothers of to-day were very old-fashioned, +and that the public taste was changing +rapidly. If the story is too bold, there are things I +could cut out of it, but if you say that would make +no difference, I would rather let them stand. I +intend to try some other concern before I give +up."</p> + +<p>Mr. Archie Weil had abandoned all pretence of +looking out the window. He stood with his eyes +fastened on the pretty girl, as she made these statements +in such a matter-of-fact way. He wondered +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span>what the dickens the story was about, and made up +his mind that he would try to get possession of it.</p> + +<p>"All the same," responded Mr. Gouger, who had +apparently forgotten his lunch in his growing +interest in the conversation, "I don't see where girls +like you obtain such an intimate knowledge of things. +You are not over twenty—excuse me, I am old +enough to tell you this without offence. It is not you +alone, but a hundred others who have made me +ask myself this question. As soon as the modern +girl gets a bottle of ink and a pen and begins +to let her thoughts flow over paper, it transpires +that she knows everything—more than everything, +almost. Why, I was twenty-five before I was as +wise as the heroine of sixteen, in this story of +yours!"</p> + +<p>Miss Fern reddened again, all the more because +she had glanced up and encountered the bright eyes +of Mr. Weil fixed upon her.</p> + +<p>"Why, Archie," pursued the literary man—he +turned toward Mr. Weil—"you remember Lelia +Danté, you have seen her here. Five or six years +ago I got a letter from that young girl's mother +asking me to come to their residence and hear a +story she had written. It was her first one, and the +child was not a day over seventeen. I couldn't +believe it when she came into the room, with her +hair tumbled about her shoulders, and began to read +to me the first chapter of 'Zaros.' 'Did <i>she</i> write +that?' I asked her mother, incredulously. 'Certainly,' +she replied. 'Without aid from any one?' +'Absolutely alone.' My hair stood on end. I could +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span>not keep it down for the next week with a brush. +You know the story. We printed it, and it sold +well, and that is all that C. & S. cared about it; but +I never understood how that infant could conceive +it. No more than I can understand your ability to +write this story of yours, Miss Fern," he added, +pointedly.</p> + +<p>The young woman bridled a little.</p> + +<p>"It does not matter much, if you are not going to +print it," she said, raising her eyes to his.</p> + +<p>He bowed low to express whatever apology might +be necessary.</p> + +<p>"I would have accepted it if I could," he said. +"My entire life is spent in reading manuscripts in +the hope of discovering one that will make a hit with +the public to whom we cater. When successful I +am as pleased as a South African who fishes a diamond +of the first water out of the mine. Your story, +Miss Fern, shows decided talent. You have a +greater knowledge of some of the important things +of life, I will wager, than your grandmother had +at eighty, if she lived so long. As I am obliged to +go now, let me add, without mincing matters, that +you are very deficient in English grammar, and that +nothing you can write will be acceptable to any +first-class house until that fault is remedied. Are +you ready, Archie?"</p> + +<p>Mr. Weil felt indignant. He could not have +spoken to any girl as pretty as this one in such +language, and he thought it quite inexcusable on +the part of his friend to do so. Mr. Gouger, though +feeling that it was best to use little circumlocution, +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span>had not meant to wound his caller. But her countenance +showed that he <i>had</i> wounded her, and the +natural gallantry of his younger companion came to +the rescue.</p> + +<p>"I am not ready yet," said Mr. Weil, telegraphing +at the same time a series of signals with his eyes. "I +want a few minutes' talk with Miss Fern, if you will +introduce me. I think I can say something she will +like to hear."</p> + +<p>Mr. Gouger, who now stood in such a position +that Miss Fern could not see him, shook his head to +imply that he did not fancy this arrangement; but +he ended by saying, "Very well." He then abruptly +made the presentation, put on his hat, said good-by, +and vanished.</p> + +<p>Miss Millicent, who had risen, turned with an air +of puzzled inquiry toward Mr. Weil.</p> + +<p>"Be seated again, for a moment," he said, politely. +"I want your permission to read your story."</p> + +<p>"Why, I don't know," she answered. "Are you +one of the employes of Cutt & Slashem?"</p> + +<p>He smilingly denied the imputation.</p> + +<p>"I have not that felicity," he added, "but I am +much interested in things literary, and have a rather +wide acquaintance in this line of business. If I +could be allowed to read your MSS. perhaps I should +form a milder opinion of its faults than my unbending +friend. And in that case a word from me, to +another house, would certainly do you no harm."</p> + +<p>A brighter light came into Miss Millicent's eyes.</p> + +<p>"I shall be only too glad to have you read it," she +answered. "It is hard to believe that I have wasted +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span>almost a year in something entirely worthless. You +may take it with pleasure."</p> + +<p>Mr. Weil went to Mr. Gouger's desk, from which +he soon came with the parcel in question. He untied +the string and for a moment his gaze rested on +the handwriting.</p> + +<p>"Do you live far from here?" he began; and then +added, as he noticed the address on an enclosed +card, "Ah, I see! At Midlands."</p> + +<p>She explained herself rather more to him, giving +the full address of her father, and some particulars +about the manner in which she had been drawn into +attempting literary work. He listened intently, all +the time engaged in rapid thought.</p> + +<p>"The best way for me to get a thoroughly correct +impression of this novel," he said, when she came to +a pause, "is to hear you read it aloud. In that manner," +he added, as he saw that she was about to interrupt, +"a hundred meanings would come to the +surface that a mere inspection of the pages might fail +to show. Beside, there would be an opportunity +for discussion. If convenient to you I would gladly +come to your residence for this purpose."</p> + +<p>The eyes of the young girl brightened. She was +greatly pleased at the idea and said so without delay.</p> + +<p>"Very well," said Mr. Weil, more than delighted +with the success of his experiment. "To-day is +Tuesday; shall I come for the first time, say, Thursday +evening?"</p> + +<p>"That would suit me perfectly; or to-morrow, if +you wish. I shall put aside everything and have my +time free for you."</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span></p> + +<p>Mr. Weil nodded.</p> + +<p>"Let it be Thursday then. And the hour—shall +we call it eight?"</p> + +<p>The time was promptly agreed to.</p> + +<p>"In the meantime, I will take the MSS. and look +it over, to form a general idea of the plot. Here is +my card. By-the-way, you will of course arrange it +so that we shall not be interrupted during our conference. +It disturbs anything of that kind to have +people coming in and out. We want to be entirely +alone so as to give our full attention to the work in +hand."</p> + +<p>Miss Fern smilingly acquiesced, saying that it was +exactly what she would wish.</p> + +<p>"And do you think there may be hope for it yet—that +poor little manuscript?" she asked, as she stood +by the door ready to take her departure.</p> + +<p>"That is a question I can hardly answer," he replied. +"I shall be better able to tell you in a week +or two, I trust."</p> + +<p>She lingered, with her hand on the door knob.</p> + +<p>"My father is willing to take all the financial +risks," she said. "That ought to make a difference, +don't you think so?"</p> + +<p>"It would, with many houses," he admitted. "I +am glad to know these things. Thursday, then, +Miss—Miss Fern."</p> + +<p>He wanted to call her "Millicent," for he had +read the name on the package he still held in his +hand; but on the whole he concluded that this would +be a little premature.</p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_III" id="CHAPTER_III"></a>CHAPTER III.</h2> + +<h3>"HER FEET WERE PINK."</h3> + + +<p>When Miss Millicent Fern entered the office of +Lawrence Gouger, as detailed in the preceding +chapter, it will be remembered that she found that +gentleman and his friend, Archie Weil, with their +hats in their hands. The fact was that Mr. Weil had +but just entered the room, and that Mr. Gouger +had accepted an invitation to take lunch with him, +an arrangement that was by no means an infrequent +one between them. The entrance of Miss Fern, and +the subsequent proceedings, compelled the literary +critic to go out alone, as has been seen. When he +returned he found Mr. Weil still there.</p> + +<p>"Haven't you been to lunch yet!" exclaimed Mr. +Gouger.</p> + +<p>"I have not been out of this office," was the reply, +"and all appetite for anything to eat has left me. +Lawrence, that is one of the most interesting girls I +ever met."</p> + +<p>Mr. Gouger pursed up his lips, and uttered an +impatient, "Pah!" He then remarked that Mr. +Weil had a habit of finding such a quality in the +latest women of his acquaintance.</p> + +<p>"What does she amount to?" he asked. "An +overgrown schoolgirl, who did not half learn her +lessons. Read that MSS. she left here, and get +disillusionized in short order. Why, she doesn't +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span>even know how to spell, and her periods and commas +are in a hopeless tangle."</p> + +<p>His companion eyed him quizzically.</p> + +<p>"Are periods and commas, even a correct spelling +of the English language, the only things you can see +in a bright, handsome girl?" he demanded. "For +shame, Lawrence! You are a dried-up old mummy. +Your senses are numb. A lively wind will come in +at the keyhole some day and blow you out of that +chimney."</p> + +<p>Mr. Gouger heaved a sigh, as if to say that discussion +with such a nonsensical fellow was useless, +and took his seat at his desk, where an unfinished +pile of MSS. awaited his reading.</p> + +<p>"She's given me leave to take her story home," +said Mr. Weil, with a mischievous expression.</p> + +<p>The critic stared at his friend.</p> + +<p>"Given it to you?" he repeated. "How did that +happen?"</p> + +<p>"I asked her for it, naturally. You were so +severe on the poor child, that I couldn't help putting +in a cheering word. We talked of the whole business, +and she was willing I should see if my opinion +agreed with yours."</p> + +<p>"<i>Your</i> opinion!" echoed Gouger, testily. "What +is that worth? But take the stuff, if you want it, +and when you are done, send it to her; it will make +less rubbish in this confounded hole. One thing I'll +tell you, though, in advance. You'll never be able +to make sense of it, unless you get some one to +straighten it out."</p> + +<p>"That's all right," replied the other. "After I +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span>have read it through, I am going to Miss Fern's +house, where she will read it to me."</p> + +<p>Mr. Gouger started from his chair.</p> + +<p>"You don't mean that!" he exclaimed.</p> + +<p>"But I do. She asked me, and I'm going. I +understand that it's a rather bold tale, and I can +conceive nothing more entertaining than to hear +that kind of thing from the red lips of such a pretty +piece of flesh and blood as has just left here."</p> + +<p>There was an uneasy expression on the face of the +critic as he heard these words. He liked Weil, +although they were as different in their natures as +two men could well be. He wanted to please him, +but the aspect of this affair was not agreeable.</p> + +<p>"Look here, Archie," he said, earnestly, "there +are some things that I can't permit, you know. My +office must not be made a starting-place for one of +your lawless adventures. You met Miss Fern here. +Now, I protest against your going to her house, +pretending that you are interested in that novel, +when your real purpose is of a much more questionable +kind."</p> + +<p>Mr. Weil put on the air of one whose feelings are +lacerated by an unjust suspicion.</p> + +<p>"My dear Lawrence—" he began.</p> + +<p>"That's all right," growled the critic. "I may or +may not be your 'dear Lawrence,' but I know you +like—like a book," he added, hitting by accident on +a very excusable simile. "You are an old dog that +is not likely to learn new tricks. I shall send this +MSS. back to Miss Fern, myself, enclosing a letter +warning her to have nothing to do with you."</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span></p> + +<p>A laugh escaped the lips of Archie Weil at this +proposition.</p> + +<p>"If you knew the feminine mind half as well as +you do modern literature," he answered, "you would +see how little that would avail. I have met Miss +Fern and made a distinctly favorable impression. +Her address is in my pocket, and I have received a +pressing invitation to call. If you choose to send +the MSS. by another messenger you will relieve me +of the task of carrying a bundle, but you will accomplish +nothing more."</p> + +<p>Mr. Gouger's mouth opened in astonishment at +the evident advantage which his friend had gained +in so short a time.</p> + +<p>"You must have convinced her that your literary +opinions are of value," he said, presently. "If I +write that you are a charletan and entirely unworthy +of attention, what will happen then?"</p> + +<p>The smiling gentleman opposite crossed his hands +over his left knee, and did not delay his answer.</p> + +<p>"I will tell you," he said. "In the same mail she +will receive a letter from me, warning her that a certain +party, who has given an adverse judgment on her +writings, may attempt to influence her against others +more likely to decide in her favor. She will be told +that, having rejected a book, this certain party does +not wish any one else to print it. Send the severest +note you can construct, Lawrence. I have few +talents, but I know how to write letters."</p> + +<p>The critic could hardly believe that fate had +thrown so many cords around his neck in the brief +space of one hour, but the more he thought the more +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span>he became convinced that his best course was to shut +his eyes.</p> + +<p>"Well, gang your gait," he said, after a long +pause, during which the look of triumph deepened +on his companion's face. "You will have to answer +for your own sins. But I'll tell you one thing, that +may save your time. Women who write racy novels +are almost without exception remarkably correct in +their own lives."</p> + +<p>Mr. Weil inquired if his friend was certain of this, +and there was a suspicion of disappointment in his +tone.</p> + +<p>"Absolutely," said Mr. Gouger, refreshing his +memory. "I can think of a dozen instances to prove +the point. There is Lelia Danté, for instance, who +writes like a—like a—well, you know how she writes. +She sticks to her mother's apron strings like a four-year-old +child. They never are seen apart, I am +told. Then there is Mrs. Helen Walker Wilbur, the +poetess. We have a volume of her verse that is positively +combustible from its own heat. The sheets +had to be run off the press soaked in water to keep +them from igniting. The room was full of steam all +the time the work was going on. Warm! I should +say so! Now, that woman is vain, and she dresses +foolishly, and she does odd things for the sake of +being talked about—but nobody questions her loyalty +to her husband. You would think by some of +her poems that an East Indian regiment would not +suffice for her, and yet she is the straightest wife on +Manhattan Island. Oh, I know so many cases. You +remember that girl who wrote, 'Love's Extremities,'<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span> +a work as passionate as Sappho. She is a little +Quaker-like maiden,<a name="FNanchor_A_1" id="FNanchor_A_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_A_1" class="fnanchor">[A]</a> who dresses and talks like a +sister of one of the Episcopal guilds. These women +are on fire at the brain only. They would repel a +physical advance with more indignation than those +endowed with less esthetic perceptions. So, see Miss +Fern as much as you like. Should you attempt anything +improper you will prove the truth of my assertions."</p> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_A_1" id="Footnote_A_1"></a>[Note <a href="#FNanchor_A_1">A</a>: Now dead, alas!—A. R.]</p></div> + +<p>Mr. Weil changed the knee he had been nursing, +but the quiet smile did not leave his countenance.</p> + +<p>"What an inconsistent fellow you are, Lawrence," +he said. "I could convict you of a hundred errors +of logic. Do you remember telling Mr. Roseleaf +that a man should have a passion before he attempts +to depict one."</p> + +<p>"And I say so still," retorted Gouger. "<i>You</i> +don't call the ravings of these poetesses and female +novelists real life, do you? <i>You</i> know the actual +lover isn't content with kissing the hair and the feet +of his divinity! There is more about women's <i>feet</i> +in these poems and novels than all the rest of their +anatomy put together. And what is a woman's foot? +Did you ever see one that was pretty—that you +wanted to put to your lips?"</p> + +<p>"Yes," interrupted Archie, dreamily, "once. At +Capri. She was fifteen. Her feet were pink, like a +shell. She was walking along the shore in the early +evening."</p> + +<p>"With the dirt of the soil on them!" exclaimed Mr. +Gouger, in disgust.</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span></p> + +<p>"No, she had just emerged from her bath. The +sand there was clean as a carpet, cleaner, in fact. +Gods! They were exquisite!"</p> + +<p>The critic uttered an exclamation.</p> + +<p>"I waste time talking to you," he said, sharply. +"You are like the rest of the imaginative crowd. It +is a pity you were not gifted with the divine afflatus, +that you could have added your volumes to the nonsense +they print."</p> + +<p>"And which you are always glad to get," interpolated +Mr. Weil.</p> + +<p>"Because it will sell. Cutt & Slashem are in this +business to make money, and my thoughts must be +directed to the saleable quality of the manuscripts +submitted. If <i>I</i> was running the concern, though, I +<a name="Page_41t" id="Page_41t"></a><a href="#Page_41tn">would</a> touch the mooney, maundering mess. It makes +my flesh creep, sometimes, to read it."</p> + +<p>Archie Weil uttered another of his winsome laughs.</p> + +<p>"How would you like to be a serpent," he asked, +"and have your flesh creep all the time? But before +we dismiss this matter of Miss Fern, I want you +to clear your mind, if you can, of the haunting suspicions +you always have when a woman is concerned. +You know there are concerns in the city who +would print her book, with a proper amount paid +down, if it had neither sense, syntax nor orthography. +If she wants it fixed up, I can find tailors to help her +out; and if her papa wants it on the market, why +shouldn't he be able to get it there? Now, let us +talk a little about Roseleaf."</p> + +<p>Mr. Gouger brightened at the change of subject. +His interest in Mr. Roseleaf was genuine, and he had +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span>already learned that Archie had formed a sort of +copartnership with the novelist, in the hope of making +his future work a success. While the critic could +not be said to have any real faith in the arrangement, +it certainly interested him.</p> + +<p>"What strange freak will you take to next?" he +asked. "And do you really expect to make a novelist +out of that young man?"</p> + +<p>Mr. Weil's eyes had a twinkle in them.</p> + +<p>"Didn't you say, yourself, that it could be done?" +he inquired. "If I have made any mistake in my +investment, I shall charge the loss to you."</p> + +<p>The critic reflected a minute.</p> + +<p>"I'm not so certain it <i>can't</i> be done," he said. +"But that's quite different from investing money in +it, as you are doing. A man wants pretty near a certainty +before he puts up the stuff."</p> + +<p>"You greedy fellow!" exclaimed Weil. "Will you +never think of anything but gain? I have to spend +about so much money every year, in a continual +attempt to amuse myself, and it might as well be +this way as another. I have a document, signed and +solemnly sealed, by which I am to back him against +the field in the interest of romantic and realistic +literature, and in return he is to give me a third of +the net profits of his writings. I don't know that I +have done so badly. Perhaps you may live to see +Cutt & Slashem pay us a handsome sum in royalties."</p> + +<p>Mr. Gouger looked oddly at his friend, whose face +was perfectly serious.</p> + +<p>"What are you going to begin with?" he asked.</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span></p> + +<p>"Love, of course. It is the A B C, as well as the +X Y Z of the whole business."</p> + +<p>"What kind of love?"</p> + +<p>"The best that can be got," replied Weil, now +laughing in spite of himself. "The very finest quality +in the market. Oh, we shall do this up brown, I +tell you."</p> + +<p>"What have you done so far?" asked Gouger.</p> + +<p>"You want to know it all, eh?" responded Mr. +Weil. "I don't think I am justified in letting you +too deeply into our secrets. However, you are too +honorable to betray us, and so here goes: I have +instructed my protegé that he must fall violently +under the tender passion before next Saturday +night."</p> + +<p>"With a lady whom you have selected, of course?"</p> + +<p>"By no means. He must catch his own sweethearts."</p> + +<p>Mr. Gouger played with his watchchain.</p> + +<p>"And this is Tuesday," he commented. "Do you +think he will succeed?"</p> + +<p>"He must," laughed Weil. "It's like the case of +the boy who was digging out the woodchuck. 'The +minister's coming to dinner.'"</p> + +<p>"You might at least have got an introduction for +him," said Gouger, reflectively.</p> + +<p>"Not I. There's nothing in our agreement that +puts such a task on me. Besides, there's no romance +in an introduction. He would write a story as prosy +as one of Henry James' if he started off like that."</p> + +<p>Mr. Gouger nodded his head slowly.</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span></p> + +<p>"That would be something to avoid at all hazards," +he assented.</p> + +<p>And at this juncture, to the surprise of both the +parties to this conversation, the young man of whom +they were speaking entered the room.</p> + +<p>"I was telling Mr. Gouger of our agreement," said +Mr. Weil, as soon as the greetings were over. "How +do you get along? Have you discovered your +heroine yet?"</p> + +<p>Mr. Roseleaf answered, with an air of timidity, in +the negative.</p> + +<p>"I don't quite know where to find one," he said.</p> + +<p>Mr. Weil spread out his arms to their fullest +capacity.</p> + +<p>"There are thirty millions of them in the United +States alone," he exclaimed. "Out of that number +you ought to find a few whom you can study. What +a pity that <i>I</i> cannot write! I would go out of that +door and in ten minutes I would have a subject ready +for vivisection."</p> + +<p>The younger man raised his eyebrows slightly.</p> + +<p>"But, that kind of a woman—would be what you +would want—the kind that would let you talk to her +on a mere street acquaintance!"</p> + +<p>Mr. Weil leaned back in his chair and stretched +his legs.</p> + +<p>"Oh, yes," he said. "She would do for a beginning. +Don't imagine that none of these easy going +girls are worth the attention of a novelist. Sometimes +they are vastly more interesting than the +bread and butter product of the drawing rooms. It +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span>won't do, in your profession, to ignore any sort of +human being."</p> + +<p>Roseleaf breathed a sigh as soft as his name.</p> + +<p>"You were right, Mr. Gouger," he said, turning +to that gentleman. "I do not know anything. I +have judged by appearances, and I now see that +truth cannot be learned in that way."</p> + +<p>"All the better!" broke in Archie. "The surest +progress is made by the man who has learned his +deficiencies. You remember the hare and the tortoise. +I have read somewhere that the race is not +always to the swift. You must treat your fellow +men and women as if you had just arrived on this +earth from the planet Mars. You must dig through +the strata of conventionality to the virgin soil +beneath. The great human passions are lust and +avarice, though they take a thousand forms, in many +of which they have more polite names. For instance, +the former, when kept within polite boundaries, is +usually known as Love. As Avarice makes but a sorry +theme for the romantic writer, Love is the subject +that must principally claim your attention. All the +world loves a lover, while the miser is despised even +by those who cringe beneath the power of his gold. +Study the women, my lad, and when you know them +thoroughly begin your great novel in earnest."</p> + +<p>Roseleaf listened with rapt attention.</p> + +<p>"And the men?" he asked.</p> + +<p>"The men," was the quick reply, "are too transparent +to require study. It is the women, with their +ten million tricks to cajole and wheedle us, that +afford the best field for your efforts."</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span></p> + +<p>Mr. Gouger, who had never been known to take +so much time from his work during business hours, +tried to begin his reading, but without success. +When at his usual occupation he would not have +been disturbed by the conversation of a room full of +people, so preoccupied was he with what he had to +do; but on this occasion he was too much entertained +with his companions to do anything but hear +them through.</p> + +<p>"Is there no such thing as unselfish love—in a +woman—love that sacrifices itself for its object?" +asked Roseleaf, with a trace of anxiety in his tone.</p> + +<p>"M——m, possibly," drawled Mr. Weil. "A female +animal with young sometimes evinces the possession +of that sort of thing, and women may have touches +of it on occasions. That will be a good point for +you to remember when you are deeper in your investigations. +However, I ought not to fill your head +with ideas of my own. I think what we most desire +in our friend," he added, turning to the critic, "is +complete originality."</p> + +<p>The young man shifted his feet nervously.</p> + +<p>"Pardon me," he said, "would it not be well to +talk with people and learn their impressions? Then +I can compare these with my own experiences, when +they come. You would not send a blind man out on +the street unled."</p> + +<p>Archie Weil laughed deliciously.</p> + +<p>"You are ingenious, when you should only be +ingenuous," he replied. "You do not act at all like +the young man from Mars that I have in mind. Perhaps, +nevertheless, you are not wholly wrong, for even +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span>my traveler from that planet might have to ask his +way to the nearest town. Supposing you had just +reached the earth, and had met me with a thousand +questions. What could I answer that would be of +any use?"</p> + +<p>Mr. Roseleaf reflected a moment.</p> + +<p>"You could tell me your idea of a perfect woman," +he suggested.</p> + +<p>"Well, I will," said Weil, glancing meaningly at +Mr. Gouger. "The perfect woman is about nineteen +years of age. She is neither very light nor very +dark. Her eyes are hazel, with a touch of gray in +them. She measures, say, five feet, four inches in +height, and—about—twenty-two inches around the +waist. She has a plump arm, not too fleshy, a well-made +leg, a head set on her shoulders with enough +neck to give it freedom and grace of movement, +but not sufficient to warrant comparison with a +swan, or even a goose. Her hands match her feet, +being not too slender nor too dainty. Her hips are +medium, but not bulging. She weighs in the vicinity +of a hundred and twenty-five pounds. And her +hair—there is but one color for a woman's hair—is +Titian red."</p> + +<p>The young man had taken out his note-book and +rapidly sketched this list of attractions.</p> + +<p>"Every woman cannot have Titian hair," remarked +Mr. Gouger. "Would you condemn one +with all the other attributes on account of missing +that?"</p> + +<p>"I would, decidedly," was the reply, "when it is +obtained so easily. I think it only costs two dollars +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span>a bottle, for the finest shade. Have you written it +all down, Mr. Roseleaf?"</p> + +<p>The young man ran over his notes.</p> + +<p>"I have it—all but the hair," he said. "Of course +I could not forget that."</p> + +<p>"Very well. And this hair must be long enough, +but not too long, remember, for everything unduly +accentuated spoils a woman. It should hang about +five inches below the waist, when unfastened, and be +thick enough to make a noticeable coil. There +should be sufficient to hide her face and her lover's +when he takes her in his arms."</p> + +<p>Mr. Roseleaf started slightly.</p> + +<p>"Then she should have a lover?" he remarked, +curiously.</p> + +<p>"Undoubtedly. Else why the hair and the arms, +and the five feet four! It is a woman's business to +be loved and to make herself lovable. When you +have found this woman, if she has no lover, you will +be expected to officiate in that capacity. If she has +one, you must supplant him as soon as possible. +And when you have fallen desperately, ravingly in +love with such a creature, you will not have to come +to me for further advice."</p> + +<p>The young man surveyed the speaker with the +utmost gravity.</p> + +<p>"Have <i>you</i> ever been in love?" he inquired.</p> + +<p>"Never."</p> + +<p>"Why?"</p> + +<p>"It was not necessary; <i>I</i> did not intend to write +novels," said Archie, with a laugh. "But, come, we +have bothered Lawrence enough. Let us go."</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span></p> + +<p>He took the package containing Miss Fern's story, +and sauntered out, paying no attention to the peculiar +glances that his friend, the critic, threw at him +as he was leaving.</p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IV" id="CHAPTER_IV"></a>CHAPTER IV.</h2> + +<h3>WITH TITIAN TRESSES.</h3> + + +<p>Mr. Weil deciphered the MSS. of Miss Fern with +some difficulty. Not that the handwriting was particularly +illegible, though it did not in the least +resemble copperplate engraving; but, as Mr. Gouger +had intimated, the sentences were so badly constructed, +and the punctuation so different from that +prescribed by the usual authorities, that he was continually +obliged to go back over his tracks and hunt +for meanings. Nevertheless, within an hour from +the time when he sat down in his room at the Hoffman +House and opened the package he had +brought, he had to confess himself deeply interested.</p> + +<p>Miss Fern had conceived some entertaining characters, +and some very unconventional situations. +Her people were virile; her hero was strong if not +always grammatical; her heroine did and said things +not common in real life, and yet that were quite +reasonable when her peculiar nature and environment +were considered.</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a></span></p> + +<p>Archie paused once in awhile to wonder how +much of all this record was within the direct knowledge +of the young authoress; which expressions conveyed +her own ideas and which sentiments she +would personally endorse. Gouger might be right +as to the exceeding purity of most of the ladies who +dealt in eroticism, but in this especial case Mr. Weil +meant to make an investigation on his own account +before he accepted as a universal rule the one his +friend had laid down.</p> + +<p>He did not go to sleep that night until he had +finished his story. Had it been arranged by a +competent hand he could have read it in four hours, +but as it was he consumed eight in the work. With +all its faults, he liked it. There was something +breezy about it, and it had a theme that he did +not remember had been treated exactly in the same +way before. Though, as he himself had said, without +much talent for composition, Archie had read a +great many books. It is no proof because a person +cannot write that he would make a poor critic. Mr. +Weil might almost have filled Lawrence Gouger's +place at Cutt & Slashem's. He had written fugitive +pieces in his time for the papers, in reference to his +travels, which had been extensive, and had even contributed +occasional book reviews to the magazines. +His connection with Gouger enabled him to keep in +touch with what was going on in the literary world, +and the dozens of new volumes which passed +through that office were always at his disposal.</p> + +<p>"She's not a fool, by any means," he remarked to +himself, when he put down the last sheet of Miss<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</a></span> +Fern's work. "A fellow who understood his business +might put that into such shape that it would be +worth using. I mean to find some one who can do +it, and suggest the idea to her, when I get to that +stage in this affair. Let me see, who do I know that +could undertake it?"</p> + +<p>He had begun to undress, and was in the act of +taking off his collar as he spoke. His mind ran +over a list of struggling literary men. Something +seemed the matter with most of them. There was +Hamlin, but he would be too exacting, and would +want to suggest alterations in the story itself, which +would never do. There was Insley, whose last three +books had been flat failures, and for whom Cutt & +Slashem had positively refused to print anything +more; but Insley had gone into the country for the +summer and nobody knew his address. Then there +was—</p> + +<p>"<i>Roseleaf!</i>"</p> + +<p>Archie received this thought like an inspiration. +He threw his cravat on the bureau and began tugging +at his shoestrings to the imminent danger of +getting them into hard knots that no one could +unravel. Roseleaf! Why not? The boy would do +almost anything he suggested, so great was his confidence +that a road to literary preferment could be +staked out over that path. Roseleaf would not +undertake the work for the sake of pecuniary compensation, +but the thing could be presented to him +in quite another light. In Miss Fern's story there +were living, breathing men and women. In his +own there were beautifully drawn marionettes. He +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</a></span>could be made to see that the study of the young +lady's method was worth his while. And then!</p> + +<p>Mr. Weil's shoes lay on the floor, in the disorder of +a bachelor who had never in his life taken pains to +put anything in the place where it really belonged. +He took out the studs of his shirt, pulled that garment +over his head, and then sat for some minutes +wrapped in active thought.</p> + +<p>"They must be introduced to each other!" he +exclaimed, at last. "Between them they have every +qualification for success; apart they are like the +separated wheels of a watch. There is Shirley, with +a style so sweetly subtle, a grace so perfect, every +line a gem; and with it all not a sign of human +emotion. There is Millicent, full of plot and daring +and breathing characters, and bold conceptions, and +no more able to write good English than an Esquimaux +squaw. I have both these interesting persons +on my hands, and I must combine them, for their +mutual good.</p> + +<p>"I wonder what Gouger will say when I unfold my +plan. Perhaps I had best not tell him. He actually +came near threatening, to-day, to send a line to Miss +Fern, warning her against me. He wouldn't have +done it, though. Lawrence has a bark that is worse +than his bite by a great deal. Yes, I'll bring these +young folks together. I'll take them as Hermann does +the rabbits, and press them gently but firmly into +one. And then sha'n't we get a combination! And +won't Mr. Lawrence Gouger hug himself when the +product of their joint endeavor comes to him for a +reading!"</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span></p> + +<p>The muser finished disrobing and donned his night +robes, but it was a long time before he felt like +slumber. He could think of nothing but his scheme. +As he revolved it over in his mind, it took many new +forms. At first Roseleaf was to be asked to rewrite +the story that Miss Fern had offered Cutt & Slashem. +And afterwards there must be an entirely new novel, +conceived together and worked out slowly, using the +best of what was brightest in both of them.</p> + +<p>The last idea Mr. Weil had before he relapsed into +unconsciousness contained two novels, worked out +at the same time. Roseleaf was all right, if he could +only get a glimpse of realism into his work. Miss +Fern would have no trouble if her ideas could find a +garb that suited them.</p> + +<p>There would be a way to make them of service to +each other, and the time to cross a bridge is always +when you come to it. So thought Archie Weil, as he +fell asleep.</p> + +<p>In the morning he laughed to think of the description +he had given to Shirley, in his offhand way, +of "the perfect woman." It was a faithful list of +Miss Millicent's charms, so far as they were apparent +to him. Shirley had noted them down with great +carefulness, and would be sure to notice how fully +the authoress met the ideal he now had in mind. It +only remained for the schemer to say something to +Miss Fern that would suggest Roseleaf to her, whenever +they were made acquainted.</p> + +<p>It must be plain to the reader that Mr. Weil's principal +intention in this whole matter was to dispose +of the <i>ennui</i> which idleness brings even to its most +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span>adoring devotees. He had a fair fortune, accumulated +by a father who had denied himself every luxury +to amass it. Drifting to New York, he had +found the vicinity of the Hoffman House very agreeable, +and his companions, with the exception of Mr. +Gouger, were of about as light views of life as himself. +The critic was one of those strange exceptions +with which most of us come in contact, where persons +of entirely opposite tastes and inclinations +become attached friends.</p> + +<p>Breakfast was served so late to Mr. Weil that he +had not finished that repast when the young novelist +made his appearance. Seating himself on the side +of the table that faced his friend, Mr. Roseleaf +responded to the latter's inquiries in regard to his +health by saying that he was quite well. Indeed, he +looked it. His eye was bright, his cheek rosy. His +attire showed just enough of a negligent quality to +be attractive. There was an air about him such as +is often associated with an artist of the pencil and +brush.</p> + +<p>"Never better in health," he said, "but very anxious +to begin something definite in the way of +work."</p> + +<p>Mr. Weil smiled his most affable smile.</p> + +<p>"What did I tell you to do, first?" he asked, playfully.</p> + +<p>"To fall in love."</p> + +<p>"Which you have not yet done!"</p> + +<p>The young man shook his head.</p> + +<p>"Good Heavens! And you have lost more than a +week!"</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span></p> + +<p>Roseleaf colored more than ever.</p> + +<p>"Isn't there something else—that I could—begin +on?" he asked, humbly.</p> + +<p>"I don't know of anything. Love is the alphabet +of the novelist. You'd best go straight. Aren't +there any eligible young women at your lodging +house?"</p> + +<p>The younger man thought a moment.</p> + +<p>"No; only the chambermaid."</p> + +<p>Mr. Weil sipped his coffee with a wise expression.</p> + +<p>"It may come to that," he said, putting down the +cup, "but we'll hope not. We will hope not. What's +the matter with Central Park? There are five hundred +nice girls there every afternoon."</p> + +<p>"But I don't know them," said Roseleaf, desperately. +"And—I have been there. Yesterday +one of them looked at me and smiled. I walked +toward her, and she slackened her speed. When I +came within a few feet she almost stopped. Then—I +could think of nothing to say to her, and I walked +on, looking in the other direction."</p> + +<p>Several breakfasters in the vicinity turned their +heads to note the couple at the table, from which a +laugh that could be heard all over the room came +musically.</p> + +<p>"Why didn't you say 'Good-morning?'"</p> + +<p>"Yes! And she might have said 'Good-morning.' +And then it would be my turn, and what could I +have done?"</p> + +<p>Mr. Weil folded up his napkin and laid it by his +plate.</p> + +<p>"You coward," he replied, affably, "you could +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span>have done a thousand things. You could have +remarked that the day was fair, or that you wondered +if it would rain. And you could have asked +her to stroll over to a restaurant and take a little +refreshment. Once opposite to her, the rest would +have come fast enough."</p> + +<p>The novelist took out a handkerchief and wiped +the perspiration from his forehead. It all seemed +very easy the way Archie described it, but he was +sure it would be very different in practice. How +could he know, he demanded, that the young lady +would go to the restaurant with him? She might +have declined, and then he would have been in a +worse position than ever.</p> + +<p>"Declined!" echoed Archie. "Declined a lunch? +Declined ice cream? Declined champagne frappé! +Well, you <i>are</i> ignorant of the sex. My dear boy, it +is evident that I shall have to introduce you to the +leading lady of your company, and if you will be +patient for a very few days, I hope to be able to +do so."</p> + +<p>Rousing himself with a show of genuine interest, +Roseleaf inquired for further particulars.</p> + +<p>"Listen," replied the other. "I expect, to-morrow +evening, to spend a few hours in the company of +one of the most charming members of her sex. She, +like you, has an ambition to become a successful +writer. Like you, also, she lacks some of the prime +qualities that are needed for that end. It happens, +however, that the things wanting are entirely different +in each of your cases—that you will, if you +choose, be able to supplement and perfect each other.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span> +I shall tell her that I know a young man of literary +taste who will give her advice on the points in which +she is deficient. With such an opening you will be +at once on Easy street, and if you cannot fall in love +within forty-eight hours, I shall regard you as a case +too hopeless to merit further attention at my hands."</p> + +<p>The young man's cheek glowed with pleasure.</p> + +<p>"That is more like it," he said. "When do you +think I shall be able to meet this young lady?"</p> + +<p>"Within a week or two, at the latest. I must +sound her before I trust you with her, for she is +nearly as much a stranger to me, so far, as to you. +Of course there is no objection—quite the contrary—to +your falling in love elsewhere in the meantime, if +opportunity serves."</p> + +<p>At this moment Mr. Weil called his companion's +attention to a rather corpulent gentleman who had +just entered the breakfast room and was stopping +near the door to hold a brief conversation with some +one he had met there.</p> + +<p>"You see that fellow?" he remarked. "Wait a +minute, and I will get him over here. If you ever +want to put a real character into one of your stories +you will only need to take his photograph. In +actual life he is as dull as a rusty meat axe, but for +literary purposes he would be a godsend."</p> + +<p>Catching the eye of the person of whom he was +speaking, Mr. Weil motioned to him to come to his +part of the room, and as he approached arranged a +chair for him invitingly.</p> + +<p>"Mr. Boggs, I want to present a young friend of +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span>mine to you," said Archie, rising. "Mr. Walker +Boggs—Mr. Shirley Roseleaf."</p> + +<p>Mr. Boggs went through the usual ceremony, +announcing that he was most happy, etc., in the +perfunctory style that a million other men follow +every day. Then he took the chair that was offered +him, and gave an order for his breakfast to a waiter.</p> + +<p>"Are you a New Yorker, Mr. Roseleaf?" he asked, +when this important matter was disposed of.</p> + +<p>"Mr. Roseleaf is staying here for the present," +explained Mr. Weil. "He is a novelist by profession, +and I tell him there is no better place to study +the sensational than this vicinity."</p> + +<p>The young man's color deepened. He doubted if +it was right to introduce the subject in exactly these +terms. Mr. Boggs' next question did not detract +from his uneasiness.</p> + +<p>"Excuse me—I am not altogether up in current +literature, and I must ask what Mr. Roseleaf has +written."</p> + +<p>Mr. Weil helped his young friend out of this +dilemma as well as he could.</p> + +<p>"He has written nothing, as yet; at least nothing +that has been printed," he said. "He is wise, I +think, in laying a deep foundation for his romances, +instead of rushing into print with the first thoughts +that enter his head, as so many do, to their own subsequent +regret and the distress of their readers. I +want him to meet men and women who have known +what life is by their own experiences. You ought +to be worth something to a bright writer, Walker. +You have had many an adventure in your day."</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span></p> + +<p>Mr. Walker Boggs shrugged his shoulders.</p> + +<p>"In my 'day,' yes," he assented. "Enough to fill +the Astor and Lenox libraries and leave enough for +Charlie Dillingham and The American News Company. +But that is nothing but history now. My +'day' is over and it will never return."</p> + +<p>He paused and ran his right hand dejectedly +across his vest in the vicinity of the waist band. +Though he knew perfectly what Mr. Boggs referred +to, Archie Weil wanted him to express it in his own +words to Shirley.</p> + +<p>"You wouldn't think," continued Mr. Boggs, after +a pause which seemed filled with strange emotions, +"that my figure was once the admiration of every +lady who saw it, that they used to stop and gaze at +me with eyes of positive envy. And now—look +at this!"</p> + +<p>He indicated his embonpoint again, and shook his +head wrathfully.</p> + +<p>"It is simply damnable," he continued, as neither +of the others thought best to interrupt him. "When +I was twenty-four I had a reputation that was as +wide as the continent. When I walked down Broadway +you would have supposed a procession was +passing, the crowds gathered in such numbers. If it +was mentioned that I would spend a week at Saratoga +or Newport, the hotels had not a room to spare +while I remained. The next year I married, and as +one of the fashion journals put it, two thousand +women went into mourning. For a decade I devoted +myself entirely to my wife and to business. I +made some money, and kept out of the public eye.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</a></span> +Then my wife died, and I retired from the firm with +which I had been connected. The next twelve +months dragged terribly. I did not know what to +do. Finally I decided that there was but one course +open to me. I must resume again the position I had +vacated as a leader of fashion."</p> + +<p>Mr. Weil bowed, as if to say that this was a very +natural and praiseworthy conclusion; precisely as if +he had not heard the story told in substantially the +same way a dozen times before. He was watching +Roseleaf's interested expression and had difficulty +in repressing an inclination to laugh aloud.</p> + +<p>"I sought out the best tailor in the city," continued +Mr. Boggs. "I went to the most fashionable +hair dresser. I spent considerable time in selecting +hats, cravats and gloves. When all was ready I +took a stroll, as I had done in the old days, from +Fiftieth street, down Fifth Avenue and Broadway to +Union Square. I met a few acquaintances who +stared at me slightly, but did not act in the least +impressed. The women merely glanced up and +glanced away again. What was the matter? I +went home and took a long survey of myself in the +mirror, a cheval glass that showed me from crown +to toe. My costume was perfect. There was not a +wrinkle in my face—this was several years ago, remember. +There was not a gray hair in my head +then—there are a few now, I admit. 'What is it?' +I asked myself a hundred times as I stood there, +studying out the cursed problem. My tie was all +right, my shirt front of the latest cut, my watch chain +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span>straight from Tiffany's, my—ah! I saw it all in a +moment!"</p> + +<p>Roseleaf, who did not see it even yet, wore such an +astonished expression that Mr. Weil had to stuff his +napkin into his mouth to prevent an explosion.</p> + +<p>"It was this devilish abdomen!" said Mr. Boggs, +slapping that portion of his frame as if he had a special +grudge against it and would be glad if he could +hit it hard enough to bring it to a realizing sense of +its turpitude. "My figure had gone to the devil! It +was not as large as it is now, but it was large enough +to cook my gruel. My waist had increased so gradually +that I had never noticed it. I got a tape and +took its measure. Forty-two inches, sir! The jig +was up. With a heart as young as ever, with a face +as good and a purse able to supply all reasonable +demands, I was knocked out of the race on the first +round by this adipose tissue that no ingenuity could +hope to conceal!"</p> + +<p>Mr. Weil could wait no longer. His musical laugh +rang out over the room.</p> + +<p>"Let this be a warning to you, Shirley," he said, +"to wear corsets."</p> + +<p>"It is no joke," was the indignant comment of Mr. +Walker Boggs, as he proceeded to add to his rotundity +by devouring the hearty breakfast that the waiter +had just brought him. "I am left like a marooned +sailor on the sea of life. The only occupation that +could have entertained me is gone. It is no time to +enter business again, I couldn't have selected a wiser +one to leave it. I don't want to marry, once was +enough of that. The only women I can attract are +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span>those commercially inclined females that any other +man could have as well as I. What is the result? +My life is ruined. I take no pleasure in anything. +I eat, walk about, go to a play, sleep. A <i>pig</i> could +do as much; and a pig would not have these memories +to haunt him, these recollections of a time so +different that I am almost driven wild."</p> + +<p>Roseleaf felt a sincere pity for the unfortunate +gentleman, and did not see the slightest element of +humor in his melancholy recital. But Archie Weil +could not be restrained.</p> + +<p>"You're right about that pig business," he remarked. +"You recall the incident in Mother Goose, +where—</p> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">'A little pig found a fifty dollar note,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">And purchased a hat and a very fine coat.'<br /></span> +</div></div> + +<p>"There are strange parallels in history."</p> + +<p>Mr. Boggs would have replied to this remark in the +terms it deserved had he not been too much engaged +at the moment in masticating a particularly fine +chop. As it was he growled over the meat like a +mastiff in bad humor.</p> + +<p>"Are there no remedies for excessive accumulation +of fat in the abdominal region?" asked Weil, +taking his advantage. "It seems to me I have read +advertisements of them in the newspapers."</p> + +<p>"Remedies!" retorted the other, having swallowed +the food and supplemented it with a glass of ale. +"There are a thousand, and I have tried them all. I +have taken things by the gross. I have paid money +to every quack I could find. For awhile I starved +myself so nearly to death that I went to making my +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span>will. And every day I grew stouter. I don't know +what I measure now, and I don't care. A few +fathoms more or less, doesn't count, when one falls +from a steamer in midocean."</p> + +<p>Mr. Weil took occasion to say that there was no +need for this extreme discouragement. A little coin +in the hand, or a new diamond ring, would still bring +youth and beauty to his disconsolate friend.</p> + +<p>"That's just it," retorted Boggs. "It's the contrast +that's killing me. The only women who would +look at me to-day are mercenary ones that wouldn't +care if I was black as Othello or big as George IV. +Why, I could show you a trunkful of letters, written +me by the finest women in this country, when I was +at my best. They breathe but one thing—love, love, +love! I lived on it! It was the air that kept my +lungs in motion. And I thought to go back to it so +easily! <i>Ah!</i>"</p> + +<p>Mr. Boggs commenced upon his fourth chop and +emptied the last of the quart bottle into his glass.</p> + +<p>"Well, I'm sorry for you," said Weil. "I think +the times must have changed, as well as yourself, +though. Now, here's a young fellow, with all the +qualifications of face, figure and address that you +once had, and he claims to be unable to make the +acquaintance of a single interesting woman between +Brooklyn Bridge and Spuyten Duyvil."</p> + +<p>The heavy eyes of Mr. Walker Boggs rested upon +the youthful face opposite to him. Under the scrutiny +to which he was subjected Roseleaf reddened, in +the way he had. He had never looked more handsome.</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a></span></p> + +<p>"This is evidently a jest of yours," said Boggs, +turning to Mr. Weil.</p> + +<p>"Not in the least, I assure you."</p> + +<p>"Then I say he can do what he likes, and I know +it," replied the stout man. "If I had his form I'd +have to ask the police to clear the way for me. I +have seen circulation impeded in front of this very +hotel because I was coming out to take my carriage. +If he won't look at them, why, of course, the women +can't do it all, but it lies with him."</p> + +<p>Roseleaf's eyes glistened with a strange mixture +of hope and fear. He did not think he would care +to be in such great demand as that, but he dearly +wished to break through the iron bars that enclosed +him. He glanced in a glass that paneled the wall +near by. He was good-looking enough, it was no +vanity to say so. What he lacked was confidence.</p> + +<p>"He is afraid of them, that's his trouble," smiled +Weil. "We will cure him of that, and when he gets +to know women as they are he will give us a novel +that will set all creation by the ears. Gouger—you +know Gouger—says he writes the purest English. +All he needs is a taste of life."</p> + +<p>To this Mr. Boggs gave his unqualified assent. +And he added that if he could be of any service in +the matter he would only be too glad.</p> + +<p>"We thank you for the offer, and may be able +later to make use of it," said Mr. Weil. "And now +good-morning, for we have important business to +attend to."</p> + +<p>Roseleaf looked long and earnestly at the person +they were leaving. He seemed to him a very +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span>ordinary individual. If such a man had won the +love of scores of beautiful women, surely he himself +could gain the affections of one. When he stood +with Weil in front of the hotel, by which an unrivaled +procession of ladies and gentleman was +already beginning to pass, though it was only eleven +o'clock, he felt much encouraged.</p> + +<p>"They are looking at you," whispered Archie, +"plenty of them. Did you see those two girls in +pink in that landau? Why, they nearly broke their +necks to get the last glimpse of you. There is +another lady who would stop if you asked her, pretty +as any of them, though she must be nearly thirty. +Your eyes are not open. Ah, here is something +better! In that carriage, with the Titian tresses!"</p> + +<p>It was Miss Millicent Fern, and she bowed to Mr. +Weil. Then her bright eyes lit up with a new lustre +as they fell upon his companion.</p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_V" id="CHAPTER_V"></a>CHAPTER V.</h2> + +<h3>STUDYING MISS MILLICENT.</h3> + + +<p>When Mr. Weil made his appearance at the residence +of Mr. Wilton Fern, the door was opened for him +by a young negro of such superb proportions that the +caller could not help observing him with admiration. +He thought he had never seen a man more perfectly +formed. The face, though too dark to suggest +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span>the least admixture of Caucasian blood, was well +featured. The lips were not thick nor was the nose +flat, as is the case with so many of the African race. +The voice, as the visitor heard it, was by no means +unpleasant. Mr. Weil could not imagine a better +model for an ebony statue than this butler, or footman, +or whatever position, perhaps both, he might +be engaged to fill.</p> + +<p>"Yes, sir, Miss Millicent is in, and she is expecting +you," said the negro, in his pleasant and strong +tones. "Let me take your hat and stick. Now, sir, +this way."</p> + +<p>Miss Fern came in a few moments to the parlor, +where Archie was left, and greeted him most cordially.</p> + +<p>"There is a sitting-room on the next floor," she +said, "where we shall not be disturbed. I have +given Hannibal orders to admit no one, saying that +we shall want the evening entirely to ourselves."</p> + +<p>"Hannibal?" repeated the visitor. "Is that the +name of the remarkable individual who received me +just now?"</p> + +<p>"Yes," said Miss Fern, rather coldly. "Though I +do not know why you call him 'remarkable.'"</p> + +<p>"He is so tall, so grand, so entirely overpowering," +explained Mr. Weil. "One would think he +might be the son of an African king. I never +saw a black man that gave me such an impression of +force and power."</p> + +<p>Millicent elevated her eyebrows a little, as if +annoyed at these expressions. She answered, still +frigidly, that she had noticed nothing unusual about<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span> +Hannibal. She did not believe she had looked +closely enough at his face to be able to identify him +in a court.</p> + +<p>"He would make a fine character for a novel," +said Mr. Weil, as they walked together up the broad +staircase. "I could almost write one myself, around +such a personality."</p> + +<p>The young lady looked disgusted.</p> + +<p>"A negro servant!" she exclaimed. "What kind +of a novel could you write with such a central +figure?"</p> + +<p>"Perhaps I should not put him in the centre," +laughed Archie, determined to win her good nature. +"Every story needs lights and shades. You can't +deny that he would cast a magnificent shadow."</p> + +<p>The humor of this observation struck Miss Fern +and she joined mildly in her companion's mirth. +Then she remarked that the central figure of a novel—the +main thing in it—to her mind, should be a +being who could be given the attributes of beauty +and grace. The minor characters were of less +account, and would come into existence almost of +their own accord.</p> + +<p>"And now, before we do anything more," she +said, "I want you to tell me about that excessively +handsome young man that I saw with you yesterday +in Madison Square."</p> + +<p>Weil was delighted at this introduction of his +young friend. He began a most flattering account +of Shirley Roseleaf, describing him as a genuine +paragon among men, both in talent and goodness. +He drew heavily on his imagination as he proceeded, +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</a></span>feeling that he was "in for it," and might as well do +his best at once. And he could see the cheek of the +young listener taking on a new and more enticing +color as he went farther and farther into his subject.</p> + +<p>"If I have to rearrange my novel—the one Mr. +Gouger rejected—I shall draw my hero after that +model," she cried, when he paused for breath. "I +never saw a man who came so near my ideal."</p> + +<p>"But—you would have to alter your hero's character, +in that case?" he said. "I have read your +MSS., and your description does not tally with my +young friend at all."</p> + +<p>Miss Fern reddened.</p> + +<p>"You don't mean to claim, do you," she replied, +"that physical beauty and moral goodness always +go hand in hand?"</p> + +<p>"They should," he answered, in a tone that was +meant to be impressive.</p> + +<p>"Ah, that is another question! <i>Do</i> they? that is +all the novelist needs to know. Did you ever read +Ouida's 'Sigma?' There are the two sisters, one as +pure as can be, the other quite the opposite, and the +beauty belongs to the depraved one. I know Oscar +Wilde takes a different view in 'Dorian Grey,' but +he is wrong. I am sure that the worst man or woman +in the world—reckoning by what are called the +'amiable vices'—might be the most lovely to look +upon, the most delightful to associate with. Eve +found the serpent attractive, remember."</p> + +<p>Where did she learn all these things? Weil looked +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span>at her with increasing astonishment. "Amiable +vices." He liked the appellation.</p> + +<p>"Perhaps you are right," he assented, as if slowly +convinced. "If you wish to be acquainted with +Mr. Roseleaf, I will bring him here with pleasure. +My only fear is that he will not interest you. He +seems almost too perfect for earth. Think of a +young man who knows nothing of women, who says +he has no idea what it is to be in love, who does not +understand why the ladies who pass down Fifth +Avenue turn their heads to look at him! He, like +yourself, is a novelist, but his characters are beautiful +images that lack life. He carves marble figures +and attempts to palm them off as flesh and blood. +He really thinks they <i>are</i>, because he has never +known the difference. If you could take him, Miss +Fern, and teach him what love really is—"</p> + +<p>The young lady blushed more than before.</p> + +<p>"<i>I</i>—" she stammered.</p> + +<p>"In a strictly literary way," he explained. "But," +he added, thinking he was getting upon the edge of +a quicksand, "we must not forget the object of my +visit."</p> + +<p>He took the parcel containing her MSS. that he +had obtained from Mr. Gouger, and began to untie +the string. Manlike he soon had it in a hard knot, +and Miss Millicent, coming to his rescue, her young +hands touched his and made his heart beat faster.</p> + +<p>"There," she said, when the knot had given way +to their joint endeavors. "It is all right, now. But, +before we begin on this, tell me a little more about +Mr. Roseleaf. What has he written? Where was it +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span>published? I will send to-morrow morning and buy +a copy."</p> + +<p>Her enthusiasm was agreeable under the circumstances, +but the truth had to be explained to her.</p> + +<p>"What he has written I will let you see, one of +these days," he replied. "As for publishing, he ran +upon the same rock that you did—that of Mr. +Lawrence Gouger."</p> + +<p>The beautiful eyes opened wider.</p> + +<p>"So he rejected his work, too! And yet you say +that it was well done?"</p> + +<p>"Exquisitely. Shirley's lines are as symmetrical as +his face and figure. His people are dead, that is all +the trouble. Gouger scented the difficulty under +which he labors, in a moment. 'Go and fall in love!' +he said to him, 'and you will write a story at which +the world will marvel!'"</p> + +<p>Miss Fern arranged one of her locks of Titian red +that had fallen down.</p> + +<p>"And hasn't he taken the advice?" she inquired, +in a low voice.</p> + +<p>"Not yet," smiled the other. "He says, like a +very child, that 'he cannot find any one to love.' I +walked up the avenue with him to-day, and afterwards +rode in the Park. There were hundreds of +the prettiest creatures, all looking their eyes out at +him. And he hadn't the courage to return one +glance, not one. Ah, Miss Fern, it will be genuine +love with Shirley Roseleaf, if any. The imitations +one finds in the fashionable world will never answer +for him."</p> + +<p>The young lady breathed a gentle sigh, as her +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span>thoughts dwelt on the handsome figure she had seen +in front of the Hoffman House.</p> + +<p>"You may bring him here—yes, I should be glad +to have you," she said, slowly. "But I must ask +one favor; do not tell him what I said so thoughtlessly +about his being my ideal. Let me talk with +him on fair terms. It may be, as you suggest, that +we shall be of advantage to each other. When can +you arrange it?"</p> + +<p>"Almost any day," smiled Weil. "I will let you +know, by mail or otherwise. And now, this story +of yours," he added, thinking it a shrewd plan to +divert her attention from the other matter while it +was still warm in her mind. "Though I have read +it through, and think I understand it fairly well, I +am all the more anxious to hear it from your lips. +You will put into the text new meanings, I have no +doubt, that have escaped my observation."</p> + +<p>Miss Fern flushed pleasantly and inquired with a +show of anxiety whether Mr. Weil had found its +construction as bad as his friend, Mr. Gouger, had +intimated.</p> + +<p>"To be perfectly honest, it might be improved," +he replied. "But the germ is there, Miss Fern—that +necessary thing for a good novel—an interest +that will hold the reader in spite of himself. I +disagree with Lawrence in his essential point. I am +sure that a good writer of English with a taste for +fiction could make all the necessary alterations without +in the least detracting from the value of the +story. For instance, I believe if Mr. Roseleaf would +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</a></span>take hold of it I could guarantee to get you a publisher +this winter."</p> + +<p>"And do you think he would?" she cried.</p> + +<p>"I think so."</p> + +<p>The authoress was so delighted with this announcement +that she conquered the slight wound to her +pride. It would be herself still who had drawn the +picture, who had put the coloring into it; all that +the other would have to do might be described as +varnishing. She took up the first sheet of her writing, +and turned up an oil lamp that stood upon the +table at her elbow, the better to see the lines.</p> + +<p>"Are you ready?" she asked.</p> + +<p>"Quite ready," smiled Mr. Weil.</p> + +<p>In a voice that trembled a little, and yet not unpleasantly +to the listener, Miss Fern began to read +her manuscript. The opening chapter introduced +the heroine and two gentlemen, either one of whom +might be the hero. As the book is now so well known +it is needless to transfer its features to these pages.</p> + +<p>Presently the authoress paused and seemed to +wait for her guest's criticism.</p> + +<p>"That is one chapter," she said.</p> + +<p>"Yes. I remember. And the second one is where +Algernon begins to disclose a very little of his true +nature. Shall we not have that now?"</p> + +<p>"As you like. I thought perhaps you would give +me advice as we proceeded, some fault-finding here +and there, a suggestion of alterations."</p> + +<p>He shook his head affably.</p> + +<p>"Not yet," he answered. "Up to this point I see +nothing that requires condemnation."</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span></p> + +<p>"Nor praise, perhaps?" she said, in a low tone.</p> + +<p>"That might be true, also," he replied. "The +first chapter of a novel is only the laying of the cloth +and the placing of a few dishes. The viands that +form the meal are still in the kitchen."</p> + +<p>She smiled at the simile.</p> + +<p>"But even the laying of the cloth is important," +she said.</p> + +<p>"Your cloth is laid most admirably," he answered. +"And now we will have the castor, which in this +case, I believe, contains a certain quantity of mustard +and red pepper."</p> + +<p>At this she laughed the more, and glanced through +a few of the sheets in her hands before she spoke +again.</p> + +<p>"Did you form any opinion about—about <i>me</i>—from +this story?" she asked, constrainedly. "Did +you, in brief, think it had taken a bold girl to write +it?"</p> + +<p>He hesitated a moment.</p> + +<p>"Yes," he said, at last. "A bold girl, a daring +girl, a brave girl. Not one, however, whose own conduct +would necessarily be like that of the woman +she has delineated."</p> + +<p>She was so pleased that she put down the MSS. +and leaned toward him with both hands clasped together.</p> + +<p>"You are very, very kind," she said, impressively.</p> + +<p>"No, merely truthful," he replied. "With your +permission I want to retain that last quality in all +my conversations with you. When you ask me a +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span>question I wish to be perfectly free to answer according +to my honest convictions."</p> + +<p>"It is what I especially desire," she said, brightening. +"No one able to judge has heard anything +of this story except your friend, Mr. Gouger. I +know it is bold, sometimes I think it is brazen. I +can conceive that there are excellent people who +would say it never should have been written. To my +mind, the moral I have drawn more than justifies +the plainness of my speech. You can tell better +than I where I have overstepped the proper bounds, +if there be such places. You are, of course, a man +of the world—"</p> + +<p>The protesting expression on the face of her companion +arrested her at this point.</p> + +<p>"That depends on what you mean by 'a man of +the world?'"</p> + +<p>"It is a common expression."</p> + +<p>"And has many definitions. Before I plead guilty +to it, I want to know just how much you intend by +it."</p> + +<p>Miss Fern put down the page she had taken up +and a puzzled look crossed her pretty face.</p> + +<p>"You make it hard for me to explain myself," she +said. "I suppose I meant—"</p> + +<p>"Now, be as honest as you asked me to be," he +interrupted.</p> + +<p>"Well, then, I suppose you are a man like—like +other men."</p> + +<p>"But there are many kinds of other men."</p> + +<p>The young lady tried several times to make herself +clearer, and then asked, with a very pathetic +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</a></span>pout, that she might be permitted to proceed with +her reading, as the hour was growing later. It was +not a very important point, any way, she said.</p> + +<p>"I cannot entirely agree with you," replied Archie. +"If you are to be a writer of fiction, you should not +consider any time wasted which informs you in reference +to your fellow creatures. It is from them +that you must draw your inspiration; it is their +figures you must put, correctly or incorrectly, on +your canvas. Don't understand me as dictating to +you, my dear Miss Fern. I only wish, as long as you +have referred to me, to know of what I am accused."</p> + +<p>To this Miss Fern answered, with many pauses, +that she had not intended to accuse her visitor of +anything. And once more—with evident distress—she +begged to be permitted to drop the matter and +return to her reading.</p> + +<p>"Very well," he assented, thinking he had annoyed +her as much as was advisable for the present. "As +they say in parliamentary bodies, we will lay the +question on the table, from which it can be taken at +some more fitting time. I am as anxious as you can +be to get into Chapter II."</p> + +<p>She read this chapter to the end, and paused a +few seconds to see if he had any comments to make, +but he shook his head without breaking silence, and +she went on with the story. He pursued the same +plan till the end of the fifth chapter.</p> + +<p>"It is interesting, exciting and true," he remarked, +referring to the closing scene. "And I cannot help +feeling arise in my brain the question that Mr. +Gouger put when he read it: How could a young, +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</a></span>innocent girl like you depict that situation with such +absolute fidelity."</p> + +<p>He had come to the point with a vengeance. But +to Miss Fern his manner was far more agreeable +than if he had approached it by stealth, or in an +insinuating way. She had anticipated something of +the sort and had tried to prepare herself to meet it.</p> + +<p>"Does not nature teach us some things?" she +asked, speaking straightforwardly, though her color +heightened in spite of her efforts. "Given a certain +condition, an intelligent mind can prophesy results."</p> + +<p>He shook his head in mild disagreement with +her.</p> + +<p>"Gouger is an expert, and he denies this, as a regular +rule, at least. You should have heard him +argue it with Roseleaf. 'Either throw yourself into +a love affair,' he said, 'or never try to depict one.' +Excuse me, Miss Fern, you bade me be frank—"</p> + +<p>She assented, with a grave nod of her shapely +head.</p> + +<p>"You may have been in love—I do not ask you +whether you have or not—but you cannot have +known personally of the sort of love that you have +depicted in these pages. I call it little less than +miraculous that you should draw the scene so accurately."</p> + +<p>She colored again, this time partly with pleasure, +for she was very susceptible to compliments.</p> + +<p>"Perhaps your statement may explain to you," +she said, pointedly, "what I meant a few minutes +ago by calling you 'a man of the world.' You +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span>recognize at a glance what I had to construct from +my imagination."</p> + +<p>Archie Weil's face changed as he realized how +deftly he had been caught. He had meant to pretend +to this girl that he was more than usually ignorant +of the nether side of life.</p> + +<p>"Don't think too badly of me because I happen to +know what is clear to every man," he said, impressively.</p> + +<p>"To every one?" she answered. "To your friend, +Mr. Roseleaf?"</p> + +<p>"Ah! He is an exception to all rules. And yet, +Gouger says he can never write a successful book +till he is more conversant with life than he is at +present."</p> + +<p>She looked troubled.</p> + +<p>"With life?" she echoed. "With sin, do you +mean?"</p> + +<p>"With the ordinary things that men know, and +that most of them at some time experience."</p> + +<p>Her bright eyes were temporarily clouded.</p> + +<p>"What a pity!" she exclaimed.</p> + +<p>"Yes," he said, for it was his humor to agree with +her. "It is a pity."</p> + +<p>There was a pause of a minute, and then she asked +if she had read enough for one evening. He answered +that as it was now past ten o'clock it would +not be easy to get much farther and that he would +come again whenever she chose to set the time.</p> + +<p>"You do not say much about my work," she said, +anxiously, as he prepared to go.</p> + +<p>"Silence is approval," he responded. "I can talk +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span>it over with you better when you have reached the +end. I have things to say, and I shall not hesitate to +say them then."</p> + +<p>"When is it most convenient to you to come?" +she inquired.</p> + +<p>"Any time," he answered. "I don't do much that +is really useful. But wait till you see Shirley. He +will atone for the shortcomings you find in me."</p> + +<p>She repeated the word "Shirley," as if to test its +sound.</p> + +<p>"You are your father's only child, are you not?" +he asked, thoughtfully.</p> + +<p>"No. I have a sister, Daisy, a little younger than +I."</p> + +<p>"And has she a literary turn, also?"</p> + +<p>"Not in the least."</p> + +<p>Archie arose, and Miss Millicent accompanied him +to the front door. The tall negro came to open the +portal, but Miss Fern told him, with the same quality +of dislike in her tone which Weil had noticed before, +that he need not wait.</p> + +<p>"He is really a magnificent piece of humanity," +said Archie, when the man had disappeared. "I +never saw anything quite like him."</p> + +<p>"You admire negroes, then?" said the young lady, +almost impolitely.</p> + +<p>"I like representatives of every race," he answered, +as if not noticing her. "There are interesting specimens +in all. I number among my acquaintances +several Chinamen, a Moor, a Mexican, Jews, Portuguese +and Russians innumerable. If that fellow +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</a></span>was not in your employ I would engage him to-morrow, +merely as a study."</p> + +<p>Miss Fern took the hand he held out to her and +set the next meeting for Saturday evening. Then +she said:</p> + +<p>"If you want Hannibal, perhaps papa would +oblige you. I certainly would do all I could to persuade +him."</p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VI" id="CHAPTER_VI"></a>CHAPTER VI.</h2> + +<h3>"HOW THE WOMEN STARE!"</h3> + + +<p>The next day Archie Weil lunched with Lawrence +Gouger. He wanted to talk with his friend about +the young author and authoress. Gouger listened +with interest to the story he had to relate, and nodded +approval when it appeared that Archie had behaved +admirably thus far in relation to Miss Millicent.</p> + +<p>"Do you know anything about Mr. Fern?" he +asked, when the other had reached a period.</p> + +<p>"Nothing."</p> + +<p>"Well, neither did I, a week ago, but I have taken +pains to inform myself. He is a highly respectable +elderly party, who deals in wool. He married a very +beautiful lady, who has now been dead eight or ten +years and he lives altogether in the society of his +two daughters. If you succeed in getting Millicent's +book on the counters you will earn his everlasting +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</a></span>gratitude. They say he is not literary enough himself +to be a judge of its merits, and if she has fifty +copies to present to the family friends it will probably +be all he will ask."</p> + +<p>Mr. Weil uttered a low whistle.</p> + +<p>"I don't know what the family friends will say of +it," he replied, "but I call it pretty warm stuff. If +the list includes many prudes they will hardly thank +the girl for sending such a firebrand into their +houses."</p> + +<p>"Pshaw!" said Gouger. "The world is getting +used to that sort of thing, and they won't mind it a +bit. Besides, they will be so lost in admiration of +their cousin's name on the cover that they will think +of nothing else. What did you make out of her? +Is she as innocent as I predicted?"</p> + +<p>Archie poured out a glass of Bass' ale and sipped +it slowly.</p> + +<p>"Quite," he said, as he put it down on the table. +"And she's no dunce, either." He went on to tell of +the trap he had fallen into. "I'm dying with impatience +to get her and Roseleaf together. They'd +make an idealic couple."</p> + +<p>Mr. Gouger inquired what he was waiting for.</p> + +<p>"Oh, I want to do the thing right," said Weil. "I +want to learn her as thoroughly as I can, before I +bring him upon the stage. It will take three or four +evenings more to hear the rest of her novel, and +another to discuss it. I shall get around to him in +about a fortnight, at the rate things are going. He +will keep. What do you suppose he is doing now?<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</a></span> +Writing poetry! He sent a piece a few days ago to +the <i>Century</i>, and they accepted it."</p> + +<p>"He will be gray when it appears," said the critic. +"It takes a long time for anything to see the light +in that publication."</p> + +<p>"But in this case an exception will be made," said +Weil. "They have assured him that it will come +out in their very next issue. He will be so proud to +see his name in print that I expect to find difficulty +in holding him back. A poet who appears in the +Century has certainly stepped a little higher on the +ladder."</p> + +<p>The critic agreed to this, and remarked that such +a man as Roseleaf should give his whole attention +to poetry.</p> + +<p>"Wait!" cried Archie. "Give him time. See +him after he has fallen head over ears in love with +charming Millicent Fern. There is something in +him, I feel sure, and between that dear girl and +myself we will bring it out. By-the-way, there is a +character I want you to meet," he added, as Mr. +Walker Boggs came into the room. "You have +never had the pleasure, I think, though you have +heard me speak of him."</p> + +<p>Mr. Boggs had his attention attracted by a waiter +who was sent for the purpose and came with great +willingness to occupy a seat with Mr. Weil and his +friend.</p> + +<p>"We were talking of a New York merchant just +now," said Archie, when the introductions were +over, "and it occurs to me that you, who know +almost everybody, may have some knowledge of +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span>him. He is in the wool business, I hear, and I think +you once told me you had done something in that +way. His name is Wilton Fern, and he lives at +Midlands."</p> + +<p>"Do I know anything about him?" echoed Mr. +Boggs. "I should say so. He was my partner for +seven years, and I still have a little stake left in the +concern, on which I am drawing interest."</p> + +<p>Mr. Weil showed his astonishment at this statement. +What a very small world it was, after all! +Then, after pledging his friend not to mention that +he had ever discussed the matter with him, he went +guardedly into the particulars of Miss Millicent's +book, and of his having called at the house for the +purpose of passing judgment upon it.</p> + +<p>"I didn't know that was in your line," replied +Boggs.</p> + +<p>"Well, it was this way," answered Archie. "Mr. +Gouger's decision didn't exactly suit the young lady, +as it was not very favorable. Mine will be quite to +her taste, as I view her abilities in a more favorable +light. Now tell us all about the family, as the only +one of them I have met is Miss Millicent. Why, this +is a regular find, old man! You should have told +me a week ago that you possessed all this information +that I have been aching to get hold of."</p> + +<p>Thus adjured, Mr. Boggs entered upon his story. +From which it appeared that he knew the Ferns, +root and branch, and had dined with them dozens +of times.</p> + +<p>"What sort of a chap is the pater?" asked Weil.</p> + +<p>"A very well-kept man of nearly seventy, with a +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</a></span>great deal of what is called 'breeding' in his manner, +and a face like the portrait of a French marquis +cut out of a seventeenth century frame. He doesn't +look like a business man at all, and between ourselves +he's not much of a one. All the money he +ever made—saving my apparent egotism—was when +I was in the concern. I've heard he's got a big +mortgage on his residence and is going down hill +generally. Too bad; nice fellow; sorry for him; +such is life."</p> + +<p>Archie asked if Boggs would do him a personal +and particular favor, if it would not cause him much +trouble; and on being answered in the affirmative, +said he would esteem it a great honor if he could be +introduced to Mr. Fern by that gentleman's former +business associate.</p> + +<p>"I suppose I shall run across him at Midlands, +some evening," he said, "and get one of those presentations +that are the most aggravating things in +the world. I don't want that to happen, and the +best way, to use an elegant phrase, is to take the +bull by the horns, or in this case, the sheep by the +tail. Will you make an accidental call on him +to-morrow afternoon and let me be of the party?"</p> + +<p>Mr. Boggs responded that he would be delighted. +And this matter being settled, all parties could give +more direct attention to their lunch than they had +been doing for the preceding ten minutes.</p> + +<p>"You must have heard of my friend Boggs, in the +days when he was a figure on the streets of this +town," said Weil, presently, returning to what he +knew was the favorite subject of that personage.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</a></span> +"You've lived here for twenty years, and of course +the name of Walker Boggs is familiar to you."</p> + +<p>Mr. Gouger looked a good counterfeit of complete +mystification for some seconds, and then a +gleam as of sudden recollection shot across his face.</p> + +<p>"Certainly, certainly!" he said. "Mr. Boggs was +what is popularly known as a lady killer, if I am not +mistaken. You got married, did you not, Mr. Boggs, +some ten or eleven years ago?"</p> + +<p>The party addressed acknowledged the practical +correctness of the date.</p> + +<p>"Why, it comes back as plain as day," said the +critic. "The <i>Herald</i> had a page about you, including +your portrait and some verses by a well known +poet. It said your marriage had cast a gloom over +Manhattan Island and some of the up-river counties."</p> + +<p>Mr. Boggs gloomily nodded, to show that the +statement was true. Then he touched his most +rotund portion with a significant look.</p> + +<p>"I'm a widower now," he said, "and nothing but +this—<i>this</i>—stands in my way. As Shakespeare says, +'’Tis not as deep as a well, nor as wide as a church +door, but—' The ladies never look at me now, and +all on account of this d—d flesh, which hangs like +a millstone around my neck."</p> + +<p>Cutt & Slashem's critic, ignoring the peculiar +character of the metaphor used, remarked politely +that he thought no lady of sense would put great +stress on such an insignificant matter.</p> + +<p>"Insignificant!" echoed Boggs. "I'll bet it's +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a></span>fifty inches around, come! And it's not the 'ladies +of sense' I'm after. Quite the contrary."</p> + +<p>One of Archie Weil's explosive laughs followed +this statement, which caused an expression of mild +injury to settle over the countenance of Mr. Boggs.</p> + +<p>"You're getting on toward forty, and you ought +to quit," said Weil. "Confound the women! Let +them go."</p> + +<p>"That's well enough to talk about," replied Boggs, +gruffly. "How would you like to follow your own +advice?"</p> + +<p>Weil uttered an exclamation.</p> + +<p>"I? I have precious little to do with them, I +assure you. For a man of my correct habits I have +the worst name of any one I know. Everybody insinuates +things about me, and they can prove nothing."</p> + +<p>"We'll ask Isaac Leveson about that," sneered +Boggs. "By-the-way, that wouldn't be a bad place +to take young Roseleaf to, when you get to instructing +him in earnest. I met the young fellow on the +avenue last night and walked around with him for a +couple of hours. He's a darling!"</p> + +<p>"Roseleaf?" cried both the other gentlemen, in +one breath.</p> + +<p>"To be sure. How the women stared at him! +I couldn't blame them; his waist isn't over thirty, +and he's as handsome as—as I was at his age. I +told him he could have all the loveliness in New +York at his feet, if he liked."</p> + +<p>Weil smiled significantly at Gouger.</p> + +<p>"What did he reply to that?" he asked.</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a></span></p> + +<p>"Oh, he had an ideal in his head, and none of +those we saw quite came up to it; for I did get him +to raise his eyes and look at the prettiest ones. I +drew out of him slowly that he would have nothing +to do with a girl unless she had red hair; that—"</p> + +<p>Mr. Weil uttered a laugh so hearty that it attracted +the attention of everybody in the room. Mr. +Boggs paused to inquire the cause of this outbreak, +but Archie assured him that something entirely out +of the present discussion had just occurred to him, +which was to blame for his impoliteness.</p> + +<p>"A girl must have <i>Titian</i> hair," repeated Mr. +Boggs, accepting the explanation, "or he would not +consider her. He ruled out all the striking blondes +and brunettes, saying that he liked only those of a +medium shade. We came across one that answered +these descriptions, an exquisite little creature who +looked as if she would swallow him could she get +the chance. And then there came out another idea. +He would not think of this fairy because she was so +short. 'I want a woman five feet, four inches tall,' +he said, as if the article could be made to order, in +case the size did not happen to be in stock. Then, +would you believe it, he found a girl embracing +every attribute he had mentioned. Her hair was +just the right shade, her height must have hit the +mark exactly, her complexion was medium. But no. +She was too heavy. She would weigh a hundred +and forty-five, he said, quite twenty pounds too +much. If we had found a girl that filled all his +description he would have invented something new +to bar her out of the race."</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</a></span></p> + +<p>Mr. Weil remarked that he was not so sure of +Roseleaf's insincerity. He believed the right woman +would yet be discovered, and that a case of the +most intense affection would then spontaneously +develop.</p> + +<p>"In fact," he added, "I have the identical creature +in mind. It is clear to us—to myself and Mr. +Gouger here—that Shirley will never write a thrilling +romance till he has fallen wildly, passionately in +love."</p> + +<p>Mr. Boggs smiled slightly, and then sobered again.</p> + +<p>"Shall you have him marry, also?" he inquired, +pointedly.</p> + +<p>"Why not?"</p> + +<p>"Because it will finish him; that's why. The +romance in a modern marriage lasts six weeks. At +the end of that time he will be useless for literary +purposes, or anything else."</p> + +<p>Mr. Weil shook his head in opposition to this rash +statement.</p> + +<p>"My theory is," said he, "that a novelist should +know everything. To write of love he should have +been in love; to tell of marriage he should have had +a wife—a real one, no mere imitation; to talk of +fatherhood intelligently he should become a father. +How can he know his subjects otherwise?"</p> + +<p>The stout man smiled significantly.</p> + +<p>"And if he wishes to write of murder, he must kill +some one. And if he wants to depict the sensations +of a robber he must take a pistol and ask people to +stand, on the highway."</p> + +<p>"Now you are becoming absurd," said Archie.</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</a></span></p> + +<p>"No more than you," said Boggs. "You go too +far, and you will find it out. Let your novelist fall +in love. That will do him good. But don't let him +marry, or you will lose him, mark my word. Let +him contemplate matrimony at a distance. Let him +reflect on the glory of seeing his children about his +knees. So far, so good. But when you have shelved +him with a wife of the present era, when you have +kept him up nights for a month with a baby that +screams—his literary capacity will be gone. Make +no mistake!"</p> + +<p>Mr. Weil, half convinced, and much surprised to +hear such wisdom from this unexpected source, made +an effort to maintain his ground.</p> + +<p>"Nearly all the modern novelists <i>are</i> married," he +remarked.</p> + +<p>"Yes, and nice stuff they write, don't they? +Namby-pamby, silly-billy stories, misleading in +every line! They are the most unsafe pilots on the +shores of human life. They start, without exception, +from false premises. Their chart is wrong, +their compass unreliable, their reckoning ridiculous +from beginning to end. Where did you ever see a +bit of real life that resembled these abortions? Do +lovers usually fall on their knees when they propose? +Is the modern girl an idiot, knowing less of the facts +of nature than an oyster? Is the conversation between +men and women filled exclusively with twaddle? +You would think so, from reading these books; +and why? They are written by married people, +most of them, people who don't dare step over the +line of the commonplace any more than a woman +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</a></span>would dare order her dressmaker to put pockets in +her gown!"</p> + +<p>Archie looked at Mr. Gouger, who nodded a partial +approval of these statements. Mr. Boggs betook +himself with more interest to his chops. And +the other two gentlemen, remarking that time pressed, +bade him good-by for the day.</p> + +<p>"I see you agree with him that I shouldn't marry +Roseleaf?" said Archie, with a rising inflection.</p> + +<p>"There is certainly point in what he says," replied +Mr. Gouger.</p> + +<p>"But—confound it! With the boy's disposition, +it will be a delicate business," retorted Weil. "I +don't know as I can carry him to the point of passionate +love for pretty Miss Fern, and then shut off +the steam when it suits me."</p> + +<p>This matter was discussed for the next ten minutes, +as the friends walked along toward the office +of Cutt & Slashem.</p> + +<p>"I think you are foolish to delay so long introducing +him to her," said Gouger, finally. "I don't +see that you are making any progress whatever."</p> + +<p>"Ah, but I am," replied Weil. "I am making +both of them more and more anxious for the meeting. +Shirley walks the street feverishly impatient, +and I have no doubt mutters her name in his dreams. +Millicent talks about her ideal of manly beauty. +When they get together failure will be impossible."</p> + +<p>Mr. Gouger laughed at the idea that Roseleaf was +"feverishly impatient" to meet any girl, and ventured +to predict that the young man would have to +be put in irons to get him to the residence of the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</a></span> +Ferns when the time came; or at least to keep him +there.</p> + +<p>"Just the point I am working on," replied Weil. +"Under ordinary circumstances I would have to +handcuff his wrists to mine, but I am making such a +strong impression on his imagination that he is +crazy to go. And once she gets him under her +influence—I tell you, Lawrence, she is no ordinary +girl."</p> + +<p>"She certainly does not write like one," smiled +the critic, "either in her subject or her English. +You may make something of him—I rather think +you will—but not of her. Her ideas are wild, and +her realism a little too pronounced even for the +present age."</p> + +<p>"She has truth on her side, you admit," said +Archie.</p> + +<p>"Yes, to a remarkable degree."</p> + +<p>"Well, that ought to be something, if Boggs' +estimate of the modern liar is correct. Shirley will +help her to style, give her his own, if necessary. I +am going to land both of these fish, if only to spite +you, Lawrence. You tossed them away with that +fine contempt of yours, and you will weep hot tears +for it before you die."</p> + +<p>At the door of Cutt & Slashem's they met the two +members of that firm, who paused to say a word to +Mr. Gouger. They were anxious for a new book to +bring out as soon as possible, and were regretting +with him that nothing worth publishing seemed to +present itself.</p> + +<p>"You may strain matters, it necessary," said Mr.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</a></span> +Cutt. "We can't keep up on reprints forever. I +hope you made no mistake in rejecting that book of +Mrs. Hotbox. I hear it is selling well."</p> + +<p>Mr. Gouger's face was, as ever, immovable before +his employers.</p> + +<p>"What 'Fire and Brimstone?'" he inquired. "The +authorities seized the entire edition this morning."</p> + +<p>Mr. Cutt looked at Mr. Slashem, with a startled +expression.</p> + +<p>"In that case, I am glad we escaped it," he said. +"We shouldn't like that sort of an affair, of course."</p> + +<p>Mr. Weil, who knew both the gentlemen well, inquired +what they thought of Mrs. Hotbox's production.</p> + +<p>"I have never seen it," said Mr. Slashem.</p> + +<p>"Nor I," said Mr. Cutt.</p> + +<p>The partners disappeared into the counting-room, +where they had an interview with a binder who had +offered to do their work at one-tenth of a cent a hundred +copies less than the concern with which they +were then dealing. Archie said good-by to Gouger, +and went off to find Roseleaf, with whom he had +engaged to take, later in the day, a ride through the +Park.</p> + +<p>"How soon am I to see your paragon?" sighed +the young man, as they were making the grand round +of that famous drive.</p> + +<p>"Within a week, I hope. Are you getting uneasy?"</p> + +<p>"I am getting lonesome," was the gloomy reply. +"And I want to begin work."</p> + +<p>"Well, it will soon pass now. To-morrow evening<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</a></span> +I am to hear another installment of her novel. Two +more sittings after that will finish it, I should say. +And the next thing will be—you. But have you seen +no one else in all this time that you care for?"</p> + +<p>The young man looked aimlessly at the fleecy +clouds that hung low on the horizon.</p> + +<p>"No," he answered.</p> + +<p>"And you think you are ready for a passionate +affection, if the right person is found?"</p> + +<p>"I will try," he said, simply.</p> + +<p>Mr. Weil roused himself and touched his horse with +the whip.</p> + +<p>"Try!" he echoed. "You will not have to try. +She will carry you off your feet, at the first go. +Shirley, I have found you a superb woman, that you +<i>must</i> love. All I want to feel sure of is, that you can +control yourself enough to behave in a reasonable +manner."</p> + +<p>Roseleaf looked up inquiringly.</p> + +<p>"She belongs to an eminently respectable family," +explained Archie. "Her father is a gentleman of +the most honorable type. She has a young sister, +who—"</p> + +<p>Roseleaf, slow at all times, had at last begun to +comprehend.</p> + +<p>"You surely don't think—" he began.</p> + +<p>"Ah, that is the question! A novelist must learn +so very much—a novelist who is to depict the truth, +as you are to do. Where should he stop? What +experience should he refuse, provided it may be +utilized in his work? A responsibility that is no +light one will rest on me, my dear boy, when I have +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</a></span>introduced you to this family, and left you to your +own devices."</p> + +<p>Roseleaf's eyes opened wider at these mysterious +suggestions, but he did not like to make any more +inquiries. Weil changed the conversation, calling +attention to the women they met, who turned their +handsome heads to look at the young man, as their +equipages almost touched his.</p> + +<p>"What an awfully wide swath you are cutting!" +was Archie's exclamation, as the throng increased.</p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VII" id="CHAPTER_VII"></a>CHAPTER VII.</h2> + +<h3>A DINNER AT MIDLANDS.</h3> + + +<p>True to his appointment Walker Boggs met Mr. +Weil on the following afternoon, and set out with +him for Wilton Fern's office. Though engaged, as +has been already stated, in the wool trade, Mr. Fern +did not have on the premises to which these worthies +repaired a very large assortment of that product. +His warehouses were in another part of the city, and +all the wool that was visible to his customers was +arranged in sample lots that would easily have gone +into a barrel. Mr. Weil, notwithstanding the description +that Boggs had given of his ex-partner, +was not prepared to see such an exceedingly fine +specimen of humanity as the one introduced to him.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</a></span> +The word "gentleman" was written in large characters +on his broad forehead and in every word he +spoke. It certainly was not often, said Archie to himself, +that one encountered that sort of man in business.</p> + +<p>"I have already heard something of you, sir," said +Mr. Fern, affably, but with the dignity that was a +part of his nature, no more to be discarded than his +eyes. "That is, if you are the same gentleman that +has kindly offered to assist my daughter in arranging +a story she has written."</p> + +<p>Mr. Weil admitted the correctness of the supposition, +but disclaimed any special credit for what he +had done. He explained briefly how he was drawn +into the case. The visit lasted upwards of an hour, +during which the conversation wandered from literature +to business and politics, and all sorts of things.</p> + +<p>Mr. Weil could not tell from Mr. Fern's manner +of alluding to his daughter's work whether he had a +very high idea of its value or not. Indeed, there +was very little to be learned from this grave gentleman +that was not expressed in the language he used. +He was inclined, Archie thought, to reticence, for +when there was a lull in the conversation it was +always one of the others who had to start it going. +The thing that might be counted a substantial gain, +out of the whole affair, was an invitation to dinner +for the following Wednesday, in which Mr. Roseleaf +was included, and Mr. Boggs also.</p> + +<p>Before the Wednesday set for the formal dinner at +the Ferns', Mr. Weil had heard the whole of Miss +Millicent's novel read by the lips of that charming +young woman. There was certainly something very +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</a></span>strong in it, in spite of its grammatical faults. It +would be a very good story when "Dr." Roseleaf +had put it into a little better English.</p> + +<p>The meeting between Roseleaf and Millicent was +most interesting to the one who had been the means +of bringing them together. The girl put out her +hand with a straightforward motion of welcome, and +it was accepted with something resembling timidity +by the young man, who did not even raise his eyes +to hers. The talk that followed was nearly all her +own, Shirley's part in it being largely monosyllabic +replies to her statements and suggestions.</p> + +<p>When Miss Daisy was presented to both the gentlemen, +for the first time—Mr. Boggs she remembered +very well—she drew their attention for a few +moments from her sister, but soon relapsed into the +more insignificant place which she seemed to prefer. +She was not as large in any way, as Millicent, and +did not seem likely to become so. Her hair was of +a soft shade of light brown, and her eyes a decided +blue. In the presence of her sister she did not expect +to shine, and was evidently relieved when she +could go into a corner and talk over times long +past with Walker Boggs.</p> + +<p>Mr. Fern came in rather late, but still before the +hour announced for dinner. He had his habitual +look of quiet elegance, but withal an expression of +care about his face, that Weil attributed to the business +troubles of which Boggs had spoken. The +manner of the daughters toward him was marked by +the watchful eyes of the chief conspirator. Millicent +merely looked up and said, "Papa, this is Mr. Rose<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</a></span>leaf, +of whom we have spoken," and then when the +greetings that followed were exchanged, went on +talking with those about her as if there had been no +interruption. Daisy, on the other hand, crept softly +to her father's side, and putting an arm around his +neck, kissed him when she thought no one observed +her.</p> + +<p>"You are tired, papa," she whispered.</p> + +<p>"No, no!" he said, brightening. "I am very +well."</p> + +<p>It was at the table that Mr. Fern had his first conversation +with Roseleaf, and the two men got along +nicely together. Shirley acquitted himself creditably. +Weil, who saw everything, noticed that the negro, +Hannibal, in superintending the service in the +dining-room, lingered more about Miss Daisy's chair +than any other, and took extra pains to see that her +wants were anticipated. In spite of this, however, +Mr. Fern frequently asked his younger daughter to +have more of certain dishes, as if his mind was constantly +turned in that direction.</p> + +<p>"How long do you think it will require to do the +work you have so generously undertaken?" asked +Mr. Fern of Roseleaf, when the dessert was reached.</p> + +<p>"It is impossible to say," stammered the young +man. "Some weeks, at least."</p> + +<p>"So I supposed," said Mr. Fern. "That being +the case I wish to tender you the hospitality of my +home. It would be a great deal of trouble for you +to come every day from the city, and I know we +could make you comfortable here."</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</a></span></p> + +<p>Roseleaf was about to decline the offer with +thanks, when Mr. Weil spoke to him in a low tone.</p> + +<p>"Take it, by all means," he said. "It's a chance +in a lifetime. You know nothing of family life. +Don't dream of refusing."</p> + +<p>The delay allowed Miss Millicent to add her +request to that of her father, and fearing to let his +protegé answer, Mr. Weil boldly spoke for him.</p> + +<p>"It is a good idea," he said. "He will have his +baggage brought up to-morrow. There's nothing +like being on the ground, when there's work to be +done. And, with the general permission, I am going +to run out pretty often myself, to see how things +progress."</p> + +<p>The bright, off-hand way of the last speaker seemed +to please Mr. Fern, for he heartily seconded this +suggestion. When the table was vacated, Mr. Fern +asked if he might be excused for a few minutes, +while he wrote a couple of important letters, and +requested Walker Boggs to show the guests through +the grounds, where they could smoke their cigars till +he returned.</p> + +<p>Accordingly Weil and Roseleaf accompanied their +new guide out of doors and across an extensive lawn +to an arbor at the further end, where a handsome +prospect of the Hudson unfolded itself. As Archie +was wishing for some feasible way of getting rid of +Boggs, temporarily, that gentleman espied an +acquaintance in the adjacent road and went off to +speak to him.</p> + +<p>"Are you in love yet, you dog?" asked Archie, as +soon as he and his young friend were alone. "What!<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span> +You're not! Don't let an hour pass, then, before +you are. The best of all proverbs is, 'Never put off +till to-morrow what you can do to-day.'"</p> + +<p>"How can I do this to-day?" was the doleful +response.</p> + +<p>"How can you help it, you mean? There she +was at the table—Titian hair, hazel-grey eyes, lovely +waist—everything. Love! <i>I</i> could fall in love with +that girl, marry her, get a divorce and commit +suicide, within forty-eight hours."</p> + +<p>Even Roseleaf had to smile at this extravagant +statement.</p> + +<p>"Do you want me to do all of those things?" he +asked.</p> + +<p>"Only the first one, at present. If you can't do +that, give up all ideas of being a novelist and secure +a place in some factory or counting-room. Everything +is ready for you. You are <i>persona grata</i> here. +Nothing can come in your way. Oh, don't exasperate +me!"</p> + +<p>Roseleaf haltingly said he would do his best; and +the next day he came to Midlands, prepared to +spend a month or longer.</p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VIII" id="CHAPTER_VIII"></a>CHAPTER VIII.</h2> + +<h3>HOLDING HER HAND.</h3> + + +<p>For the first three days Roseleaf gave most of his +time to reading the MSS. that Miss Fern had written. +He could not say that he liked it, exactly, but that +was not necessary. To fill in the time, he consented +to let the girl read his own story that Gouger had +rejected, though he did this with trepidation, having +a dread that she would think it insipid. When she +had finished it, however, her delight was unbounded.</p> + +<p>"It is lovely!" she exclaimed, in response to his +inquiring eyes. "I cannot see why they refused it. +I haven't been so interested in a story in years."</p> + +<p>When he had read <i>her</i> story through he began to +rewrite it, departing as little as possible from the +original. As soon as he had a chapter finished he +would give it to her, for comparison, and criticism, if +she chose to make any. She proved, however, a +most charming critic, her shafts falling mainly upon +herself, for she declared that her novel seemed unworthy +of its elegant new dress. She conceived a +shyness toward this quiet youth, and blushed when +the striking situations and bold language of her tale +came into the conversation. It was so different from +his own work!</p> + +<p>"It is too bold. I am sure it is," she said, repeatedly. +"I ought to begin again. My plot has too +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</a></span>much freedom, too little conventionality. People +will say a very strange girl must have written it."</p> + +<p>And he would tell her that he did not think so; that +the strength of her ideas was very great, and that the +public would find excuses enough for anything that +interested and entertained it. He even added that +he wished he possessed her knowledge, her insight +into life, her fearlessness to tread on any ground that +her subject made desirable.</p> + +<p>Between them they were doing very good work, +without doubt. Mr. Weil took some of the completed +chapters to Lawrence Gouger, who returned them +with a smile that spoke volumes. Cutt & Slashem +would take the story when it was ready, if the subsequent +pages kept up to the mark of the first ones.</p> + +<p>"Don't forget your own book," said Gouger, in a +note he enclosed for Roseleaf.</p> + +<p>Mr. Weil was not backward in accepting the cordial +invitation he had had to join the Ferns at dinner +whenever he could make it convenient. Besides this +he called frequently at the wool office, and ingratiated +himself into Mr. Fern's good graces in many ways. +Within a fortnight he knew all there was to be known +about wool, in which he seemed to have conceived a +great interest. In his talks with Roseleaf he spoke +learnedly on this subject, referring to the foreign and +domestic staples, like one who had made the matter +a life study.</p> + +<p>"What a queer thing trade is!" he exclaimed, on +one of these occasions. "Here we find a man who +ought to adorn an atelier, or a seat in Congress, and +yet is obliged to guide his entire existence by the +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</a></span>price of such a confoundedly dull thing as the hair +on a sheep's back. He votes a certain political ticket +on account of the attitude of the party on Wool; he +dines off mutton and lambs' tongues; he casts his +lot with the Sheep at church. I don't know but +he would feel a genuine pleasure in having Wool +pulled over his eyes. And still I am convinced that +he never ought to have been in the Wool business at +all, and that Boggs—what a drop—is right in his +impression that it will eventually swamp him."</p> + +<p>Roseleaf asked how Mr. Fern got into the trade in +the first place.</p> + +<p>"Well, as I understand it, Boggs was looking for a +partner. Mrs. Fern had some cash and her husband +wanted to put it into a good thing, from a financial +standpoint. They did well while they were together. +When Boggs pulled out they had a clear $200,000 +apiece. Boggs—confound him!—has his yet; Fern +hasn't. He's proud as the devil, and didn't tell me +this, by any means. It would break him up completely +to have to go into bankruptcy. Really, I +wish I could do something for him."</p> + +<p>Roseleaf looked up inquiringly.</p> + +<p>"Why, I've got a fair amount of money," explained +Archie, "and perhaps a lift over these hard times +might be the making of him. I'm not particularly a +philanthropist, but I like this fellow wonderfully +well for such a new acquaintance. I shall give him +a delicate hint in a day or two, and if I can fix things +without too much risk—we have to protect ourselves, +you know—I am willing to do so."</p> + +<p>This struck Shirley Roseleaf as rather odd. He +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</a></span>had never thought about Mr. Weil in that way. +Whether he was rich or poor had never entered his +head. He began to wonder if he was very wealthy. +He certainly lived well, and had no visible occupation +of the sort the census takers call "gainful."</p> + +<p>"It is an interesting family, though," pursued +Archie, in his rambling way. "I wish I could get +into it as you did, you rascal, and observe it at +shorter range. Even the servants are worth studying. +Look at that Hannibal; who can say that the +African race is inferior when it produces such +marvels! I can hardly take my eyes off the black +paragon when he is present. How he passes the +soup—as if it were some heavenly decoction, made +by the gods themselves and sent to earth by +their favorite messenger! With what grace he +opens the carriage door! with what majesty he +mounts to his seat by the driver! I wonder if he +has a sister. She would be worth a journey to see. +I have met such women on their native soil, statuesque, +slender, full-breasted, square-shouldered, with +jars of water on their heads and clinking silver +anklets. What a cursed thing is our American prejudice +against color! No other people carries it to +such an extent. In the Latin Quarter the West +India blacks are prime favorites with the pretty +grisettes."</p> + +<p>The young man could not help a slight shiver at +this information. He did not in the least agree +with the sentiments his friend was advancing, but +neither did he think it wise to contradict him.</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</a></span></p> + +<p>"Then there is the little one—Miss Daisy"—continued +Weil, branching suddenly into that topic. +"So quiet, so self-abased, as if she would not for the +world attract one glance that might be claimed by +her elder sister, who is perfectly willing to be a +monopolist of attention. A nice girl, sweet as a +fresh-plucked lily. There must be treasures hidden +under all that reticence. Still waters run deep, the +silent swine devour the milk. I think I ought to investigate +the child. If you are to have that aggregation +of beauty known as Millicent, what prevents +me from securing a slight hold in the affections of +the junior?"</p> + +<p>Roseleaf shook his head in a way that might have +meant almost anything. He never could tell how +much in earnest his friend was when he took up a +vein like this. Neither could he imagine little Daisy +in the role of an entertainer for such a very wise man +as Archie, not only much her senior but a thousand +times her superior in knowledge and acquaintance +with things that people talk about.</p> + +<p>"Keep your eye on her—she will be worth watching," +said Weil, with one of his laughs at the sober +face before him. "She is worth almost as much to +a rising author as the negro—not quite, but nearly. +Then there is the pater-familias; is there anything in +him? No, he will be of no service to you. And +that brings us back to our superb Millicent, with +whom you must now be wildly infatuated."</p> + +<p>Roseleaf shook his head again.</p> + +<p>"No—not yet," he said.</p> + +<p>"But, what do you do all the time? How can you +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</a></span>sit by the side of a pretty girl, and kiss her cheeks, +and put your arm around her, and yet keep from +falling in love?"</p> + +<p>The younger man gasped at each of these suggestions, +like one who has stepped into icy water and +feels it gradually creeping upward.</p> + +<p>"I have done none of those things," he faltered.</p> + +<p>"None of them! Then I shall not let you stay +here!" cried Archie. "What does the girl expect? +That we are going to make her reputation in the +literary world and get nothing for ourselves? I +never heard such effrontery! She refuses to give +you the least opportunity, does she—the jade!"</p> + +<p>More and more confused grew the other at these +expressions.</p> + +<p>"You don't understand—you are quite in error," +he articulated. "She—she has refused me nothing, +because—because I have asked nothing."</p> + +<p>Mr. Weil uttered a disheartened groan.</p> + +<p>"But this will not do, my dear fellow!" he said. +"How can you accomplish anything unless you make +a beginning? Rewriting the story that she has +written will not advance you one step on the path +you profess such anxiety to tread. That is only an +excuse—a make-believe—a pretence under which +you have been given quarters in this house and +allowed every chance in creation to learn your lesson. +Are you afraid of her, or what is the matter? +Does she overpower you with her beauty? Tell me +where your difficulty lies."</p> + +<p>But Shirley could hardly answer these apparently +simple questions. He said he feared the trouble +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span>might be in the formality of the situation. How +could Mr. Weil expect, he asked, that a spontaneous +case of love-making would develop from such a condition +of things.</p> + +<p>"Stuff!" cried Archie, with a grimace. "If you +and she were members of a theatrical company, and +were cast as a pair of lovers, you wouldn't find so +many pitfalls. You would go ahead and repeat the +lines of your part, wouldn't you? All you want is +to do the same now."</p> + +<p>"But what <i>are</i> the 'lines of my part?'" inquired +the other, dolefully.</p> + +<p>"Take her hand once in yours and they will come +to you," retorted Weil.</p> + +<p>Roseleaf reddened so much that Archie regretted +the severity of his tone, and hastened to turn the +conversation to something more agreeable. He +made up his mind, however, to have a talk with Miss +Fern, and at the first opportunity he did so. It was +on an afternoon when he knew Roseleaf was in the +city, and he came to the point at once, after his own +fashion.</p> + +<p>"How are you and my young friend getting +along?" he asked her.</p> + +<p>"Oh, as well as possible," she responded. "I am +learning to like him more and more. I really shall +be sorry when his task is done."</p> + +<p>Mr. Weil shrugged his shoulders.</p> + +<p>"There's a bit of selfishness in your words, Miss +Fern," he said. "Have you forgotten that he is not +here to be useful to <i>you</i> alone; that you agreed to +do what you could for <i>him</i>, as well?"</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span></p> + +<p>The girl cast down her pretty eyes in confusion.</p> + +<p>"I am sure I have tried to be agreeable," she +replied, gently.</p> + +<p>"That is not enough," replied Archie, gravely. +"What he needs is something—some one—to stir +his blood, to awaken his fancy. I told you in the +first place that you ought to make him fall in love +with you—for literary reasons. He must feel a sensation +stronger than mere friendship for a woman +before he can write such a story as will bring him +fame."</p> + +<p>Miss Millicent did not grow more comfortable +under this suggestion. She remarked, after a long +wait, that she did not see how the end sought was +to be accomplished. Love, she said, was not a mere +expression, it was a deep, actual entity. Two people, +playing at love with each other, might afterwards +find <a name="Page_106t" id="Page_106t"></a><a href="#Page_106tn">that</a> they were experimenting with fire.</p> + +<p>"I have heard," she continued, her fair cheeks +growing crimson, "that there are women—"</p> + +<p>Then she paused and could go no further. But +he understood.</p> + +<p>"There are women—thousands of them," he +admitted, "who would willingly do what I ask. If +it is necessary, he must go to them."</p> + +<p>She wanted to say that she hoped it would not +come to that—she wanted to convey to her companion +the horror she felt for what she supposed his +words implied—but she could not. It was so much +easier to write of things than to talk of them to a +man like him.</p> + +<p>"Do you call it quite fair," he asked, "to claim +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span>all and give nothing? He does not require much. +Could you not let him take your hand, and—"</p> + +<p>"And—"</p> + +<p>"Possibly, touch your lips with his?"</p> + +<p>Miss Fern rose to her feet with a fierce gesture.</p> + +<p>"Sir!" she exclaimed.</p> + +<p>"Very well," replied Mr. Weil, shortly, turning +away.</p> + +<p>The girl resumed her seat, with rapidly rising and +falling bosom. She was in a quandary. The suggestion +she had heard would have sounded from any +other lips like a premeditated insult. Coming from +this man the venom seemed to have vanished.</p> + +<p>Roseleaf felt somewhat discouraged after his latest +talk with Weil. He wanted to make a start, to do +something, no matter how little, toward the object +he fully believed was to be attained. That evening +while walking with Miss Fern (for it was their frequent +habit to go out of doors unchaperoned) he +found himself unconsciously taking her hand—that +hand for which he had until now felt a genuine +fright. And she, after all her resolutions never to +permit anything of the sort, gave it to him, as they +strolled together along an unfrequented byway.</p> + +<p>"I want so much to make a Name," he was saying +fervently. "I have tried and tried to begin such a +book as Mr. Gouger wants, but I cannot. Won't +you help me, dear Miss Fern? Won't you show me +what I lack? I know you can, if you will. They +tell me I have had no experiences, and that I must +have—not a real affair, you know, but an inkling of +what it is like. I have tried to say things to you and +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span>have been in fear that you would not like them, and +have held my peace. But now, I can wait no +longer."</p> + +<p>In his exuberance Roseleaf spoke at last with +ardor, and even went so far as to attempt to put one +of his arms around the waist of the fair creature by +his side. On her part Miss Fern was nearly overcome +by surprise.</p> + +<p>In one instant the timid young gentleman had +changed into the similitude of a most ardent swain; +but in the next he became again his natural self, with +the added confusion resulting from his excited and +mortified state.</p> + +<p>"Let me take you home," he said, when he saw +that she could find no words even to chide him. +"Let me take you home; and to-morrow I will go +away."</p> + +<p>Go away! She did not like that idea! Her book +was not yet finished, for one thing; and besides he +was a nice young fellow, and had meant no offense.</p> + +<p>"There is no reason why you should go," she +stammered. "I forgive you, I am sure."</p> + +<p>"Do you!" cried Roseleaf, grasping her hand +again in his joy. "You are kindness itself to say so. +I must appear very stupid" (here he half put his +arm around her again, checking himself with difficulty +from <a name="Page_108t" id="Page_108t"></a><a href="#Page_108tn">completeing</a> the movement) "and dull, +and wanting in manners, but you are the only young +lady I have ever known on terms of the least intimacy."</p> + +<p>Miss Fern replied that she did not mind what had +occurred, and hoped he would forget it. She added +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</a></span>that she would do anything she could for him, and +had the most earnest wish that they should be +friends.</p> + +<p>At the gate they paused, and in some way their +eyes were looking into each other. The girl laughed, +a relief to feelings that had been for the past ten minutes +somewhat overcharged.</p> + +<p>"Well, you have made a beginning," she said, mischievously, +for she wanted to drive the sober expression +from his clouded face.</p> + +<p>"A beginning?" he echoed.</p> + +<p>"Yes," she said. "You have held my hand."</p> + +<p>He crimsoned.</p> + +<p>"You said you would forgive me," he murmured.</p> + +<p>"With all my heart," she responded, putting the +hand in his again.</p> + +<p>He felt a thrill go through him, but it was a pleasant +sensation.</p> + +<p>"I came very near putting my arm around you," +said he, looking away from her. "Do you forgive +that, too?"</p> + +<p>She took the hand away and struck him playfully +on the cheek with the palm of it.</p> + +<p>Then, before he surmised what she intended, she +ran brightly up the steps of the house and vanished.</p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IX" id="CHAPTER_IX"></a>CHAPTER IX.</h2> + +<h3>"DAISY, MY DARLING!"</h3> + + +<p>It was Roseleaf's full intention to say something +about this adventure to his instructor in the art of +love, Mr. Archie Weil, but somehow he was not able +to summon the requisite courage. He had a delicate +sense that such a thing ought not to be repeated, +where it might by any possibility bring a laugh. +And about this time the novelist's attention began to +be attracted toward the younger sister, who had till +then almost entirely escaped his observation.</p> + +<p>He noticed particularly the ceaseless devotion that +the black servant of the family exhibited toward her. +She might have been a goddess and he a devotee; a +queen and he her slave. Hannibal moved about the +girl like her very shadow, ready to anticipate her +slightest wants, while Daisy seemed to take this +excess of attention as a matter of course.</p> + +<p>Millicent constantly showed her dislike for the +servant.</p> + +<p>"I don't see how you can endure to have him +touch you," she said to Daisy. "He knows better +than to lay his hands on me. I have told papa often +that I want him discharged, and he ought to consider +my wishes a little."</p> + +<p>To this Daisy answered that the boy, as she persisted +in calling the giant, meant well and was certainly +intelligent. Her father did not like to change +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span>servants, for it took him a long time to get used to +new ones. So Millicent tossed her head, returned to +her collaboration with Mr. Roseleaf, and things went +on as usual.</p> + +<p>Imperceptibly Shirley began to take an interest in +Daisy. She did not run away from him, and he discovered, +much to his surprise, that she was worth +talking to. She was not exactly the child he had +supposed, and she had the full value of her eighteen +years in her pretty head. He got into the habit of +taking short strolls with her, on evenings when +Millicent was occupied with Archie, and when, as +often happened, Mr. Fern was away with Hannibal +in the city. There was a sequestered nook at the +far end of the lawn, in which the pair found retreat. +Before he realized it, Roseleaf had developed a +genuine liking for these rambles, and was pleased +when the evenings came that brought Mr. Weil to +dinner.</p> + +<p>Daisy was ingenuous, to a degree, if surface indications +counted for anything. The words that flowed +from her red lips were as unstudied as the pretty +attitudes she assumed, or the exceedingly plain but +very becoming dresses that she wore. After she +once got "used" to Roseleaf she treated him quite +as if she had been five years his senior.</p> + +<p>"Are you a rich man?" she asked him, on one of +those early autumn evenings that they passed +together.</p> + +<p>Her manner was as simple as if she had said that +it looked like rain, and his answer was hardly less +so.</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</a></span></p> + +<p>"No, Daisy. I have not much property, but I +intend to earn more, by-and-by. Did you think, +because I seem so idle, that I was a millionaire?"</p> + +<p>"No," she answered, a shade of disappointment in +her face. "I only wanted, in case you had plenty of +money, to get you to lend me some."</p> + +<p>He stared at her through the half-light. Her +features were turned in a direction that did not +reveal them very well. What did she want of +money!</p> + +<p>"How much do you need?" he inquired, wondering +if it was within his power to oblige her.</p> + +<p>"Oh, too much, I am afraid. And I cannot +answer any questions, because the object I have is +a secret. I don't think my plan very feasible, for +it might be years and years before I could pay it +back. You won't mind my speaking of it, will you?"</p> + +<p>Curiosity grew stronger, and as politely as possible +he renewed his question as to how much the girl +needed to carry out her plan.</p> + +<p>"I don't know, exactly," she said, thoughtfully. +"Perhaps a thousand dollars a year for five or six +years; it might take less."</p> + +<p>"It is a great deal," he admitted. "Does your +father know what you contemplate?"</p> + +<p>The girl changed color at once.</p> + +<p>"Oh, no. I should not like to have him, either. +He would say it was very foolish. And yet I am sure +it would not be. The money would do much good—yes, +ever so much."</p> + +<p>The young man thought hard for a few moments. +A desire to see a brighter light flash into those +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</a></span>young eyes possessed him. He debated seriously +the idea of handing her his patrimony, as he would +have given her a pound of candy if she had wanted +it.</p> + +<p>"I might give you part," he said, after a pause. +"Perhaps your thousand for the first year or two."</p> + +<p>She looked him full in the face, and put both her +hands in his impulsively.</p> + +<p>"You are too good," she exclaimed, with fervor. +"But you cannot afford so large a gift. No, I would +only take it if you had a very large sum, and could +not possibly miss it. I asked carelessly. I should +not have done so—I was selfish to think of such a +thing."</p> + +<p>"I want to speak to you about something, also," +said Roseleaf, after a strained pause. "I have +noticed of late that your father has some trouble on +his mind."</p> + +<p>She started suddenly.</p> + +<p>"Ah!" was all she said.</p> + +<p>"And I have wondered if there was anything I +could do to—to aid <i>him</i>—to relieve him. Because, +I would like it very much if I could, on account of—of—"</p> + +<p>She looked up inquiringly.</p> + +<p>"I have been so much a member of your family, in +a certain way, that a grief like this appeals strongly +to me," he said, haltingly.</p> + +<p>She paled slightly as she repeated his words.</p> + +<p>"A grief?"</p> + +<p>"Well, distress, annoyance, whatever it may be +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</a></span>called. If there is anything I can do, I shall be more +than happy."</p> + +<p>The girl sat for some moments with her eyes on +the ground.</p> + +<p>"He <i>is</i> troubled," she said, finally. "I am glad to +talk with you, for I cannot get him to tell me anything. +He is greatly troubled, and I am worried +beyond expression. I can't understand it. He has +always confided in me so thoroughly, but now he +shakes his head and says it is nothing, trying to look +brighter even when the tears are almost ready to +fall. What can it be, Mr. Roseleaf? He has no +companions outside of his office and this house? +He sits by himself, and isn't a bit like he used to be +and every day I think he grows worse."</p> + +<p>Roseleaf asked if Daisy had talked much with her +sister about it.</p> + +<p>"No," she said, with a headshake. "I don't +believe Millie has noticed anything. She is so +occupied with her literary matters"—there was a +sarcastic touch upon the word, that did not escape +the listener—"she has no time for such things. I +hope you won't think I mean to criticise her," added +the young girl, with a blush. "I know you care a +great deal for my sister, and—"</p> + +<p>She stopped in the midst of the sentence, leaving +it unfinished. And Roseleaf thought how interesting +this girl had become.</p> + +<p>"Let me confide in you, Daisy," he said, in his +softest tone. "I do not care 'a great deal,' nor even +a very little for your sister. You see," he went on, +in response to the startled look that greeted him, "I +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</a></span>am to be a novelist. To be successful in writing +fiction, I have been told that I ought to be in love—just +once—myself. And I came here and tried very +hard to fall in love with Miss Millicent; and I simply +cannot."</p> + +<p>Daisy's fresh young laugh rang out on the air of +the evening.</p> + +<p>"Poor man!" she cried, with mock pity. "And +hasn't she tried to help you?"</p> + +<p>"No. She hasn't. And as soon as I get the +work done I have commenced for her, I am going +away."</p> + +<p>The child—she was scarcely more than that—grew +whiter, but the shadows of the evening hid the fact +from her companion.</p> + +<p>"You ought not to go," she said, slowly, and +rather faintly, "until you have made another trial."</p> + +<p>"Oh! It is useless!" he replied.</p> + +<p>"Is it that you cannot love—Millie—or that you +cannot love—any one?"</p> + +<p>He hesitated, puzzled, himself, at the question.</p> + +<p>"I never did love any one—any woman," he confessed, +"and perhaps I never shall. But your sister +seems peculiarly hard to love. Yet she is a very +handsome girl and equipped with a mind of unusual +calibre."</p> + +<p>Daisy acknowledged this description of her sister's +charms. She remarked that it was strange that +such a combination did not suffice to accomplish the +desired result.</p> + +<p>"There are people who do find her entertaining," +she added. "Mr. Weil is one of them."</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</a></span></p> + +<p>"Oh, Archie!" said Roseleaf. "He finds everything +entertaining. It is nothing worth remarking. +She is the exact description of his ideal in feminine +face and form. He once gave me the list of the +excellencies of a 'perfect woman,' and your sister has +them all."</p> + +<p>The younger Miss Fern had her own opinions +about this matter. She <a name="Page_116t1" id="Page_116t1"></a><a href="#Page_116tn">thought</a> the innocent man at +her side had not quite <a name="Page_116t2" id="Page_116t2"></a><a href="#Page_116tn">gauged</a> the interest that Mr. +Weil took in her family.</p> + +<p>"I will make a proposition," she said, with a light +laugh, when they had talked longer upon the subject. +"I am afraid it won't seem worth much to +you, and perhaps you can do better; but why can't +you stay here, and—if Millie won't do—make love +to <i>me</i>?"</p> + +<p>Darkness is responsible for many things. In the +light, Daisy could not have uttered those words, +even in jest. There, when the sun had set and the +stars were not yet on duty, she found the courage to +make that suggestion.</p> + +<p>"You are very kind," he stammered, when he +grasped her meaning. "But I do not think it will +answer. I am afraid love cannot be pushed to any +point without its own initiative."</p> + +<p>"That is probably the case with <i>real</i> love," replied +the girl, "but an imitation that would serve +your purpose might be evolved in the way I have +indicated. For instance, you could take my hand in +yours—like this—and I could lean toward you in—this +way. And then, if you had sufficient courage—"</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</a></span></p> + +<p>Before he dreamed of doing it, it was done! He +had kissed her on her tempting lips, placed within +an inch of his own.</p> + +<p>"You are too good a scholar," she pouted, rising +to her feet in some confusion. "I did not give you +leave to do that."</p> + +<p>"I beg your pardon most humbly," he answered, +with intense contrition. "May I assure you that +the act was wholly involuntary and that I am very +sorry for it?"</p> + +<p>She turned and surveyed him in the shadow.</p> + +<p>"Are—you—<i>very</i>—sorry?" she repeated.</p> + +<p>"Yes."</p> + +<p>"Why?"</p> + +<p>"Because I have made you angry."</p> + +<p>"Do I seem angry?"</p> + +<p>"At least, I have injured your feelings."</p> + +<p>Her face was close to his again.</p> + +<p>"Well, I forgive you. There, let us make up."</p> + +<p>She raised herself on the tips of her toes and +kissed him twice.</p> + +<p>All the blood in this young man's body seemed to +rush to his head and then back with violence to his +heart.</p> + +<p>"<i>Daisy!</i>" he stammered. "<i>Daisy!</i>"</p> + +<p>But she sprang away as he tried to embrace her, +and standing two yards off, tauntingly cried that he +did not know what love was, and that no one could +ever teach him. Taking up the challenge he started +toward her. She ran away, he in pursuit. She had +gone but a few steps when she tripped over an +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</a></span>object in the path and went down. In trying to +stop himself Roseleaf fell by her side.</p> + +<p>"Daisy!" he cried. "Are you injured?"</p> + +<p>She did not answer. In the darkness he saw +her lying there so still that he was frightened. He +caught her passionately in his arms, and knew no +better way to bring her to <a name="Page_118t" id="Page_118t"></a><a href="#Page_118tn">consciousness</a> than to rain +kisses on her cheeks. As might be expected this +only served to prolong her swoon, which was not a +very genuine one, if the truth must be told, and it +was some seconds before she opened her eyes and +caught him, as one might say, in the act.</p> + +<p>"How dare you!" she demanded, shrinking away +from him.</p> + +<p>"Daisy, my darling!" he answered, his voice +tremulous. "I thought you were dead, and I knew +for the first time how dearly, how truly I loved +you!"</p> + +<p>She laughed, not very heartily. She had hurt herself +truly in her fall, and her feminine nerves were +jarred.</p> + +<p>"You are doing nicely," she said. "For a +beginner, one could ask nothing better. And now, +if you will help to rise, I think it would be more +proper."</p> + +<p>"No." He spoke with force and passion. "You +must not think I am trifling. <i>I love you!</i> Yes, I +love you! <i>I worship you!</i>"</p> + +<p>"I do not see," she remarked, insisting in spite of +him that she must assume a standing position, +"how you differ in your expressions from the lovers +I have read of in novels. It is quite time that we re<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</a></span>turned +to the house. To-morrow, if you like, I will +give you another lesson."</p> + +<p>Shirley was a picture of utter despair. His new +sensations almost overwhelmed him. In one second +the dead arteries in his body had leaped into the +fullest life. The touch of that young maiden's lips +had galvanized him. He could not bear to leave +her with those mocking words. But at that moment +a voice was heard in the direction of the residence.</p> + +<p>"Miss—Dai-sy! Miss—Dai-sy!"</p> + +<p>It was Hannibal, who had returned from a drive +with Mr. Fern. They could see him dimly coming +across the lawn with the girl's cloak in his hand. +Daisy, with one quick grasp of the fingers that hung +close to hers, said good-night to her companion, and +started in the direction of the servant. If she intended—as +seemed probable—to pretend she was +out alone, Roseleaf did not mean to share in that +deception, and he followed close behind her.</p> + +<p>"Here I am, Hannibal," called Daisy. "Ah, you +have my coat. It was very kind of you. Has papa +come home? I am coming in. I did not think how +late it was."</p> + +<p>The negro stopped as he saw the strollers, and +knew that they had undoubtedly been together. +What more he suspected no one can say with certainty. +But he threw the cloak upon the grass that +bordered the pathway and turned on his heel without +a word.</p> + +<p>"Confound his impudence!" exclaimed Roseleaf, +when he had recovered sufficiently from his surprise +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</a></span>to speak. "I have a good notion to follow him and +box his ears."</p> + +<p>The soft hand of the girl was on his sleeve in a +moment.</p> + +<p>"Say nothing to him—<i>please!</i>" she answered. "He—he +is very thoughtful for me—of my health—and I +was careless. Papa must have sent him."</p> + +<p>The touch on his arm mollified the young man at +once. He tried to make out the lines of the pretty +face that was so near him and yet so far away.</p> + +<p>"We are to study again to-morrow, then," he said, +taking up her statement with an assumed air of gayety. +"At what hour?"</p> + +<p>But she broke away from him abruptly, and ran +into the house without a word. Hannibal stood in +the doorway and Roseleaf thought he distinguished +harsh sounds from the negro's lips; but this seemed +so incredible that he conceived his senses at fault.</p> + +<p>Looking at his watch the novelist saw that it was +still early enough to take a stroll by himself and ponder +over his new happiness—or misery, which was +it?—under the open sky. It was two hours later +that his latchkey turned in the door, and in that time +he had resolved either to make Daisy Fern his wife +or commit suicide in the most expeditious fashion.</p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_X" id="CHAPTER_X"></a>CHAPTER X</h2> + +<h3>"OH, SO MANY, MANY MAIDS!"</h3> + + +<p>The only disagreeable thing about falling in love +with Daisy was that Roseleaf felt compelled to reveal +the truth to Archie Weil. He believed he was +bound to do this by a solemn contract which he had +no moral right to ignore. Perhaps Weil might claim +that he had no business to fall in love with one sister +when his "manager" had picked out the other for +this operation. Be that as it may, there was no use +in evading the question. It must be talked over, be +the result what it might.</p> + +<p>"Well, I know what love is now," was the abrupt +way in which the young man opened the subject on +the following afternoon.</p> + +<p>He had ridden to the city, as Weil was not expected +at the residence of Mr. Fern that day. The hope he +had formed the previous evening of getting another +interview with Daisy had not materialized, she having +gone on some short journey before he could intercept +her.</p> + +<p>"You do!" was the equally abrupt reply, uttered +in a tone that betrayed undoubted astonishment. +"What do you mean?"</p> + +<p>Roseleaf reddened.</p> + +<p>"It came to me all at once, last evening," he said, +avoiding the gaze of his companion. "We were +down at the end of the lawn, you know—"</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</a></span></p> + +<p>Archie interrupted him with a sudden shout.</p> + +<p>"Not <i>Daisy</i>!"</p> + +<p>"Yes."</p> + +<p>"You are in love with <i>Daisy</i>!"</p> + +<p>Roseleaf bowed.</p> + +<p>"Upon my word!"</p> + +<p>There was nothing in any of these expressions that +conveyed the information which the younger man +craved, namely, whether his friend approved what +he had announced, but he stole a look at him and +saw that he appeared more astounded than angry.</p> + +<p>"You dear boy," he said, "I don't know what to +say to you. You blush like a maiden over the +acknowledgment. I am half inclined to believe +you are the girl in the case, and your partner in love +some great, strapping fellow on whose bosom you +intend to pillow your coy head. So it is Daisy, eh? +And last night it came to you? Tell me how it +happened."</p> + +<p>Comforted in a measure by the good nature of his +friend, Roseleaf proceeded to give the outlines of +what had occurred, suppressing the more intimate +facts with which the luckier reader is acquainted. +He admitted the touch of hands, but did not mention +the pressure of lips to lips. He told of the +girl's swoon, but said nothing of the extraordinary +measures adopted to bring her to her senses. But, +while he made no insinuations, nor pretended to see +through the meshes in this net, the experience of +Mr. Weil served him in good stead. He could fill in +the vacant places in the story with substantial correctness.</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span></p> + +<p>"I don't know what Miss Millicent will say to all +this," he remarked, when the recital came to a pause.</p> + +<p>"I think she was just beginning to like you a +little herself. Most of our talk last evening was +about you, and when I mentioned, as I took my +leave, that you were probably out walking with +Daisy, I could see distinct traces of jealousy. I +want to be fair with my client. I told her that you +came there to learn love from her, not from her +little sister. If all this should result in breaking her +heart, I don't see how I could excuse myself. And +the other one, she seems such a child, I never +thought of her in that connection. Why, how old is +she—not over eighteen, I think."</p> + +<p>Roseleaf answered that Daisy would be nineteen +on her next birthday, an ingenious way of stating +age that was not original with him.</p> + +<p>"All right," said Archie, digesting this statement +slowly. "And now, what is your programme?"</p> + +<p>Roseleaf looked surprised at the business-like +nature of the question.</p> + +<p>"I mean to secure her consent to marry me, as +soon as possible," he said.</p> + +<p>"And then?"</p> + +<p>"Why, see her father, I suppose. Isn't that the +most important thing to do?"</p> + +<p>Mr. Weil shook his head decidedly.</p> + +<p>"Not by any means. You must not act with +undue haste. Mr. Fern would say she was too young +to think of matrimony, a proposition you could not +successfully dispute. Besides, should he happen to +give his consent and appoint a week from Wednesday<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span> +for the happy occasion, see what a mess it would +put you in."</p> + +<p>The suggestion caused the brightest of smiles to +illumine the countenance of the listener.</p> + +<p>"It would make me the happiest of mortals!" he +cried. "There is nothing that could prevent my +summoning the clergyman and securing the prize I +desire."</p> + +<p>Mr. Weil grunted.</p> + +<p>"H—m! And in the meanwhile what would +become of your great novel?"</p> + +<p>This question brought a sober pause to the young +novelist.</p> + +<p>"I could write it after my wedding," he answered, +finally.</p> + +<p>"Could you? You could write nothing at all then—nothing +that any one would pay a cent to read. I +have told you from the start that what you want is a +<i>grande passion</i>, something to stir your soul to its +depths. You are on the verge of that experience. +Already you have had a glimpse of what it will be +like. For the first time the touch of a woman's +fingers has driven sleep from your eyelids. No, you +didn't tell me you laid awake all night, but I saw it +by looking at you. You can shut yourself up in +your room now, and rhapsodize over the dear face, +the lovely mouth, the soft voice of your beloved. In +another week, if this keeps on, you can write like a +combination of George Eliot (after she met Lewes) +and Amelie Rives (before her marriage). A month +later, Gouger might rave over your productions, for +you will be on the Matterhorn of bliss unsatisfied."</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</a></span></p> + +<p>A slight laugh, at his own excess of description, +issued from the lips of Mr. Weil, but the countenance +of his companion was as firm as a rock.</p> + +<p>"You are right," said Roseleaf, gravely. "Already +I see the vast difference between this sensation of +love and the thing I imagined it to be when I wrote +those silly pages that Cutt & Slashem did so well to +reject. But I am torn between two desires. I want +to write my novel—until yesterday I thought no +wish could be so great. And I also want my wife." +He breathed the word with a simple reverence that +affected even the flinty heart of his hearer. "I shall +never rest easy until I find her wholly mine, to love, +honor and cherish while God gives me breath!"</p> + +<p>The hand of the elder man dropped heavily on +the table by his side.</p> + +<p>"<i>Good!</i>" he exclaimed. "<i>Very</i> good! You could +not have said it better. There is an opportunity before +you to accomplish both of these things. I only +wish to impress upon you the fact that they must +come in the order I have indicated, or one of them +will never come at all. Write your story while the +fever of passion is on you. The dead calm of married +life would only bring the sort of novel that the +shelves are already piled with, nauseating to the +public and a drug in the hands of the publishers."</p> + +<p>Roseleaf doubted the full correctness of these conclusions. +He thought, with that dear girl by his +side, he could write with all the fervor of a sweetheart, +for his affection was to have no boundary, no +limit, no end. But he had a high opinion of the +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</a></span>abilities of Mr. Weil, and he had no idea of <a name="Page_126t" id="Page_126t"></a><a href="#Page_126tn">disputing</a> +the conclusions of that wise guide.</p> + +<p>"Do you think she will accept me?" he asked, +wistfully, returning to the main question. "It came +so sudden, and there was very little said, and it was +late; and then Hannibal came after her, and she +went into the house. Everything was left in a state +of uncertainty."</p> + +<p>"Did nothing show whether you were indifferent +to her?" was the wily interrogation that followed. +"Usually I believe something conveys the sweet +word 'hope' to the waiting one. And what do you +say about Hannibal? That he came to call your +charmer and took her away from you?"</p> + +<p>Without reserve the young man repeated what had +happened. Archie seemed deeply interested, but +whatever his thoughts he did not express them at +the time.</p> + +<p>"And that reminds me of another thing," said +Roseleaf. "Have you noticed anything strange +about Mr. Fern?"</p> + +<p>"Yes," said Mr. Weil, "I have noticed. I wondered +if you had done the same. Have you discovered +what the trouble is?"</p> + +<p>"No, and Daisy doesn't know, either. Indeed, +she is much distressed about it. Remember, this is +a secret between us, for perhaps I had no right to +talk of their affairs. He is in a state of great depression, +and as he is so regular in his habits I can't +imagine what to lay it to. You are so shrewd, +couldn't you find out?"</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span></p> + +<p>Mr. Weil rose and took a few paces up and down +the room.</p> + +<p>"You are the fellow to do that, not I," he said, presently. +"Yes, hear me out. You are in a sense a +member of his family, and would have a natural +right to allude to the state of his health. Then, if +you were to put in a word about Miss Daisy—why, +you might kill several birds with one stone."</p> + +<p>Roseleaf looked much puzzled.</p> + +<p>"I thought," he said, "that you wanted me to postpone +the matter of my marriage as long as possible."</p> + +<p>"Your marriage, yes. But not the preliminaries. +They may require a dozen bouts with the old gentleman. +The first time he will probably laugh you out +of the room as a silly young noodle; the second he +will say that he has nothing against you personally, +but that his 'baby' is too infantile to think of such +things for ten years yet; the third he will begin to +see the situation in its right light, and after that it +will be only a matter of detail. All these things +will be of the greatest value to you in the novel you +are going to write, and you must not on your life +miss a single one of them.</p> + +<p>"Drop into the wool shop, catch his royal highness +there, and for the first thing express solicitude +for his health. Unless he is on his guard more than +is likely you ought to catch some slight straw to show +what ails him. Then follow it up with a word or two +about Miss Daisy, and you will have spent a good +afternoon, even if he doesn't smile on your suit at +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</a></span>first hand, and take you to his manly breast as his +long-lost son-in-law."</p> + +<p>The reasonings set forth in these propositions +were so evidently correct that Roseleaf resolved to +adopt them just as soon as he could bring himself +into the proper mood. In the meantime, however, +he wanted to have a little further talk with Daisy, +for he could hardly ask her father for her hand +without the semblance of permission on her part. +He tried to remember all she had said to him at +the foot of the lawn, and was compelled to admit +that it was very little indeed. The only things he +was certain of were the kisses, but his experiences +were so slight that he could not tell how much +weight to give even these.</p> + +<p>That evening he tried his best to get a word with +her alone, but she eluded him, and he was obliged to +go to the boudoir of her sister and read over that +young lady's MSS. as it stood revised by his careful +hands.</p> + +<p>"Well, another chapter will finish it," said Miss +Fern, when he put down the pages. "And then Mr. +Gouger will decide whether Cult & Slashem consider +it worth printing."</p> + +<p>"Yes," he answered, gravely. "They will print +<i>your</i> story now, without doubt. But <i>I</i> am as far as +ever from satisfying their requirements."</p> + +<p>Millicent thought how supremely selfish she must +seem, talking always of her own hopes and doing +nothing to help the one who had made her success +possible. She saw that he wore a dejected look, and +she began to sincerely pity him. When our own +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</a></span>ships are safely in sight of the harbor we have +more time to dwell on the derelicts in which the +property of our friends is embarked.</p> + +<p>"Perhaps, when we get this disposed of, I can +help you," she suggested.</p> + +<p>It was nearly a week before Roseleaf could get +another talk with Daisy, a week that tried him to +the utmost, for he could think of nothing but her, +and could not understand her reasons for treating +him so strangely. At last he wrote her a letter, +giving it to Hannibal to deliver, in which he said +that he was about to return to his city lodging and +wanted to know if she meant him to leave without a +kind word at parting. He thought the negro looked +peculiar as he took the note, half as if he did not +intend to accept the commission to deliver it; but +he concluded that this must be imagination. He +wondered why Archie Weil took such a fancy to +Hannibal. If Roseleaf was lucky enough to claim +Daisy as his wife, he would never have that figure +darken his door.</p> + +<p>The letter must have been taken to its destination +without delay, for an answer was brought in the +course of an hour, stating in the briefest language +that Miss Daisy would await him in the parlor, after +lunch.</p> + +<p>At the table Miss Fern was present, as usual, but +not her father, his business in the city keeping him +away at that hour. At meals it was Daisy's habit to +say little, leaving the conversation to her sister and +whoever else happened to be there. At the end of +this particular lunch Millicent went up stairs to her +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</a></span>chamber and Daisy betook herself to the parlor, followed +a few minutes later by the young man.</p> + +<p>"Why have you treated me so coldly?" were his +first words, when he found himself alone with her.</p> + +<p>"Oh, dear, that is a very bad beginning!" she +said, smiling. "I shall have to instruct you in some +of the simplest things, I see already. When you +wish to make friends with a woman, don't begin by +scolding her. I am here because you wrote that you +wished a kind word. Don't give me too many cross +ones, please."</p> + +<p>He sighed impatiently.</p> + +<p>"Daisy," he exclaimed. "I hope you are not going +to make fun of me! I have passed a most miserable +week. After the glimpse of heaven you gave +me, that evening—"</p> + +<p>She put on an air of mock surprise.</p> + +<p>"Did I do that! It was much more than I intended, +then. I fear you are inclined to use extravagant +metaphors, Mr. Roseleaf. But, never mind. +You are going away, and I am very, very sorry. +However, as you came here on Millie's account, and +not on mine, I suppose I have no right to say so."</p> + +<p>The fair brow of the young man was a mass of +wrinkles.</p> + +<p>"I can't understand why you speak so lightly," +he answered. "You know—I told you—that I love +you—that there is nothing in all the world so dear +to me—that I want your promise to be my wife. I +can't go from here without that consolation. Daisy, +I ask you, in all sincerity, to say that as soon as your +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</a></span>father's consent is obtained, you will name a day +when you will marry me."</p> + +<p>The smile faded from the girl's lips. Something +brought to her mind a very sad reflection.</p> + +<p>"You ask a great deal," she said. "Much more, +I think, than you realize. Until a week ago I was +nothing to you. We lived under the same roof, we +took our evening strolls together, we talked like the +commonest acquaintances, and that was all. Then, +in a moment, you discovered that your heart was on +fire. I have not ascertained what made the marvellous +change. I am sure you cannot tell yet if it be +a genuine and lasting one. Were I inclined to believe +I ever should be willing to go to the lengths +of which you speak, I should assuredly want time +for the maturest reflection. In the first place, I +know almost nothing about you. One would not +engage a—a coachman—without more inquiry. +How can a girl promise to trust her entire future to +a man with whom she has but a casual acquaintance? +Such things need consideration. I know my +father would say so. And if he heard only the +nicest things about you, I doubt if he would like to +have you take me from him—especially now, when +his heart is heavy and he leans so much on my love +and care. No, you are in too great haste."</p> + +<p>His impatience grew to boiling heat as he listened. +How could she find so many reasons, and (he was +obliged to confess) such sensible ones, to bring +against him?</p> + +<p>"There is one thing you <i>can</i> do," he said, with an +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</a></span>attitude of deep dejection. "You can tell me if you +love me."</p> + +<p>She tossed her head with a feminine movement +that was wholly charming.</p> + +<p>"Yes, I could tell you that, but it would be a very +improper thing, under the circumstances, provided I +was able to give you the answer you seem to wish. +If I did care for you, would I like to say so in definite +words when anything further might turn out to +be impossible? A girl would not wish to have a +man that she was never to marry going about with +the recollection that she said, 'I love you.'"</p> + +<p>"Then you can say nothing at all?" he asked +sadly. "Shall I be uncertain whether at the end of +my term in purgatory I am to be raised to a state of +bliss or dashed into the Inferno?"</p> + +<p>She laughed; a delicious little laugh.</p> + +<p>"You are getting hyperbolical," she answered. +"There are ten thousand better women than I."</p> + +<p>"But I don't want them," pleaded the young man. +"Did you ever read the lines of Jean Ingelow:</p> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">"'Oh so many, many, many<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Maids and yet my heart undone.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">What to me are all or any?<br /></span> +<span class="i0">I have lost—my—one.'"<br /></span> +</div></div> + +<p>Daisy replied that the sentiment was very sweet, +and added that when a lover could quote such +admirable poetry with accuracy, there was hope +for him. Do what he would, Roseleaf could not +make her see that everything in his future life depended +on "one little word" from her. She persisted +that he was misled by the violence of his first +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</a></span>affection, and that if he would only let a month or two +pass he would discover that his pulse would fall off +a number of beats to the minute.</p> + +<p>"And is that what you want?" he asked, reproachfully. +"Would you like to have me come back two +months later, and tell you my love had ceased?"</p> + +<p>"Yes, if it was the truth. How much better than +to learn it after my vows had been pledged and I +was bound to you for the rest of my days!"</p> + +<p>He rose and went with quick steps to her side, +catching up her hand and covering it with kisses. +She did her best to stop him, whispering, with a +glance toward the door, that they might be interrupted +at any minute.</p> + +<p>"By whom!" he retorted, stung at her coldness. +"Your sister has gone up stairs, and there is no one +else in the house."</p> + +<p>"Hannibal might come in," she said, in a low +tone. "He has no way of knowing that I do not +wish to be interrupted."</p> + +<p>He grew angry at the mention of that name. But +the warning had its effect and he sat down, nearer to +her than before, his heart beating rapidly.</p> + +<p>"I hate the fellow!" he exclaimed bitterly. "It +is a good thing I am going away, or I should strike +him some day for his insolence!"</p> + +<p>Daisy paled at the vehemence of her companion.</p> + +<p>"Has he been insolent to you?" she murmured.</p> + +<p>"To me? He would not <a name="Page_133t" id="Page_133t"></a><a href="#Page_133tn">dare!</a> What angers +me is the way he speaks to the rest of you. He +came with your cloak that night, acting as if he was +your master, instead of your servant. I have heard +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</a></span>him speak to Mr. Fern in a way that made me want +to kick him! Why does your father bear it? Why +do you? Has Hannibal some mysterious hold on +his situation?"</p> + +<p>The girl heard him patiently, though the roses did +not come at once to her white cheek.</p> + +<p>"I am afraid," she said, when he had finished his +tirade, "that you despise him for his color. It is a +prejudice that seems to me—and to my father—unchristian +and uncharitable. Perhaps, in the +anxiety to make Hannibal forget that God gave him +a darker skin than ours, we may have gone to the +other extreme, and treated him with too great consideration. +But I think you overstate the case."</p> + +<p>Her gentle words smote upon the ears that heard +them, and in a moment Roseleaf was affected by the +most lively contrition. Without attempting to +excuse himself he begged her pardon, which she +readily granted.</p> + +<p>"When do you leave us?" she asked.</p> + +<p>"To-morrow morning."</p> + +<p>"But you will call—occasionally?"</p> + +<p>"If I may."</p> + +<p>His tone was so sad that Daisy assured him he +ought to have no doubt of that.</p> + +<p>"I understand," she added, "that you have probably +helped Millie to a reputation that she craves +above everything, and she ought not to prove entirely +ungrateful. We have enjoyed your stay here, and +shall be most sorry to have you go. I should be glad +to think you would honor us with your company to +dinner not less often than once each week."</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</a></span></p> + +<p>For the first time a ray of light came into his +face.</p> + +<p>"Oh, may I?" he cried. "Then I shall not be +shut off entirely from seeing you?"</p> + +<p>"No, indeed," she answered. "Father likes you +and Mr. Weil too well—you will bring him, of course. +Once a week, at least—if it were twice it wouldn't do +any harm; and if it were three times—"</p> + +<p>His face was now one bright beam of light.</p> + +<p>"Daisy," he cried. "I believe you do not hate me +after all!"</p> + +<p>"I hope you never thought I did," she responded. +"Why is it that a man can see no middle ground between +positive dislike and marriage? I expect to +like a good many men in the course of my life, but +I can only marry a very few of them."</p> + +<p>He was obliged to laugh at this, and to say that +she would only marry <i>one</i>, if he had <i>his</i> way. Before +they had finished with this subject Roseleaf was in a +state of high good nature, though he had little +apparently upon which to base the rise in his spirits.</p> + +<p>"Can't I say something—just a hint, if no more, +to your father?" he asked, getting down again to +business.</p> + +<p>"Pretty risky!" she answered, sententiously. "He +wouldn't give you much encouragement I fear."</p> + +<p>The young man caught eagerly at the word.</p> + +<p>"You <i>fear</i>!" he echoed. "God bless you, +Daisy!"</p> + +<p>Bearing in mind what she had previously said +about the unlocked doors, he did not attempt to suit +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</a></span>the action to the phrase. But his happy face spoke +volumes.</p> + +<p>"You had best say very little to father at present," +said Daisy, soberly. "He is most unhappy."</p> + +<p>"I wish I knew what troubled him!" he exclaimed.</p> + +<p>"I wish so, too, if you could aid him," she +answered, earnestly.</p> + +<p>"Who knows but I may?" he asked, with a smile +that she hoped would prove prophetic.</p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XI" id="CHAPTER_XI"></a>CHAPTER XI.</h2> + +<h3>ARCHIE PAYS ATTENTION.</h3> + + +<p>Roseleaf took rooms at his old lodgings in the +city, and set in earnest about the work of beginning +his great novel. He had interviews with Mr. Gouger, +at which he detailed the slight thread of plot +which he already had in mind, profiting by the +critic's shrewd suggestions. It was decided that he +should portray, at the beginning, a youth much like +himself, who was to fall in love with an angelically +pure maiden. The outline of their respective characters +were to be sketched with care, and sundry +obstacles to their union were to be developed as the +story progressed. Gouger warned his young friend +not to write too fast, and to content himself for the +present with delineating the phase of love with +which he had become familiar.</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</a></span></p> + +<p>"Later on," he said, "when your hero finds that +this girl is not all his bright fancy painted her—when +it is proved beyond a doubt that she has played +him false, that she has another lover—"</p> + +<p>Roseleaf turned pale.</p> + +<p>"But that will never be!" he interrupted.</p> + +<p>"It will, of course—in the story," corrected +Gouger. "She will lead him a race that will make +him an enemy to the entire sex, if she is used for all +the dramatic effect possible. People expect to find +immaculate purity in the earlier chapters of a story, +as they do in small children. With the progress of +the action they look for something more exciting. +To sketch a seraph who remains one would only be +to repeat the failure you made in your other effort—the +one you brought to me the day I met you first. +It is not the glory of heaven that attracts audiences +to our churches, but the dramatic quality of hell. A +sermon without a large spice of the devil in it would +be much worse than a rendition of Hamlet minus +the Prince. Put your heroine in the clouds, if you +will, at the beginning. The higher she goes, the +greater will be her fall, and the greater, consequently, +your triumph."</p> + +<p>The young novelist shivered as he listened to these +expressions. How could he build a heroine on the +model of Daisy Fern, and conceive the possibility +that she would ever allow her white robes to touch +the earth? He might have constructed such a plot +with Millicent as the central figure, though that +would be by no means easy; but Daisy! Impossible! +He asked the critic if it would not do to send +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</a></span>the hero of the tale to perdition, while leaving his +sweetheart immaculate to the close.</p> + +<p>"No," said Gouger, decidedly. "A man's fall is +not much of a fall, any way you put it. The public +is not interested in such matters. It demands a +female sacrifice, like some of the ancient gods, and it +will not be appeased with less. I expect you to be +new and original in your treatment of the theme, +but the subject itself is as old as fiction. You have +too little imagination, as I have told you before. +You must cultivate that talent. Having conceived +your paragon, imagine her placed under temptations +she cannot resist; surround her with an environment +from which she cannot break; place her in situations +that leave her no escape."</p> + +<p>Roseleaf shook his head.</p> + +<p>"I am afraid I never shall be able to do it," he +said.</p> + +<p>"Pshaw! Don't talk of failure at this stage of the +game. All you have to do is to introduce upon the +scene a thoroughly unprincipled man of good address, +who is fertile in expedients. You will find +your model for that among a dozen of your acquaintances. +Why, take Archie Weil, and hold him in +your mind till you are saturated with him."</p> + +<p>What did Mr. Gouger mean? That Mr. Weil +would actually do these dreadful things, would in +his own person perpetrate the outrage of winning a +pure girl to shame. It seemed childish to ask such +a question, and yet such a meaning could easily be +taken from what the critic had said. No, no! All +he could have meant was that Mr. Weil might serve +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</a></span>as a figure on which to lay these sins—that he could +be carried in the writer's mind, as a costumer uses a +stuffed frame to hang garments on while in the process +of manufacture.</p> + +<p>"Then there is Boggs," added Gouger, with a +laugh. "You ought to find some place for a fellow +like him, if only for the comic parts of your novel, and +there must be a little humor in a book that is to suit +the mass. A writer for a magazine said recently with +much truth, 'He who would hit the popular taste +must aim low.' I think Boggs could furnish the +cheap fun for an ordinary novel, without too great a +wear on the writer. Go ahead, my boy. Write a +half dozen chapters in your own idyllic way, and +then get Archie to take you to a few places where +your mind will be turned to opposite scenes. It +takes all sorts of edibles to suit the modern palate."</p> + +<p>So Roseleaf wrote, slowly, patiently, with devotion +to his art, until he had completed five chapters of his +story. And Gouger read it and went into ecstacies, +declaring it the best foundation he had ever seen for +a most entrancing romance.</p> + +<p>"He has wrought his people up to such a superlative +height," said the critic to Mr. Weil, "that the +<i>chute</i> will be simply tremendous! How simply, how +elegantly his sentences flow! If he can handle the +necessary wickedness that must follow, the sale of +'Uncle Tom's Cabin,' or 'Thou Shalt Not,' will be +eclipsed without the least doubt. But, the question +still is, <i>can</i> he?"</p> + +<p>"There's no such question," was the response. +"He must, that's the way to put it. Confound it, he +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</a></span>shall! And the next thing for him to do is to take +a few visits with me to the underground regions, +where he can get such slight shocks to his literary +system as will enable him to take up the vein he +must work."</p> + +<p>During this time Roseleaf did not forget the invitation +he had received to dine with the Ferns. It +did him good to see Daisy, although he could not +now get her for a moment to himself. He sighed to +her over the table, and across the parlor, after the +party had retired to that part of the house, and she +answered him with little bright smiles that acted like +an emollient on his hurt spirit. He had never found +the courage to beard her father in his den—of wool—and +was not even sure that the affair had reached +a stage where anything could be gained by taking +such a step. What he wanted was a word of assurance +from Daisy that she would wait for him till he +had made a Name in literature, or proved his ability +in some definite manner. There was no indication +that any one else was in the way; everything pointed +to a contrary probability. But there is nothing so +desolate as the heart of a lover whose fair one is just +beyond his reach.</p> + +<p>Mr. Weil accompanied Shirley on most of these +visits, and knew very well what was going on. +None of the glances exchanged between the young +people were so much their exclusive property as they +believed. Had Archie possessed eyes in the back +and sides of his head, he could have seen little more +than he did. While appearing to devote his entire +attention to Mr. Fern and Millicent—principally the +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</a></span>former, he found time to watch Roseleaf and Daisy, +and even the negro Hannibal.</p> + +<p>He noticed that the servant was no less devoted +than formerly to the youngest member of the household. +He saw him hover around her at the table +like a protecting spirit, letting her want for nothing +that thoughtfulness could procure. And he noticed +that Daisy seemed as oblivious of this as she had +always been. She accepted these extraordinary +attentions quite as if Hannibal were some automaton, +acting with a set of concealed springs—a mechanism +in which there was nothing of human life or intelligence.</p> + +<p>Mr. Fern was the same gentlemanly host as of +yore, with the same dark cloud hanging over him, +whatever might be its cause. Courteous by nature +to an exceptional degree he could not assume a +gayety he did not feel. There was some terrible +weight bearing him down, some awful incubus of +which he was unable to rid himself. The only +person who did not notice it was Millicent, and the +one it troubled most was Daisy, on whose sweet +young face the share she had in her parent's griefs +had already begun to leave its impressions.</p> + +<p>Millicent's novel was soon placed in Mr. Gouger's +hands, completed. The original theme was unaltered, +but in its new garb of perfect English no one +would have recognized the rejected work. The combination +of the girl's strength of mind and the man's +elegance of diction was successful. The critic recommended +its acceptance without a word of dissent, +and Cutt & Slashem even consented, on his +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</a></span>suggestion, to forego the guarantee against loss +which they had of late demanded from all authors +whose names were unknown to the reading public.</p> + +<p>"I have fixed it for you, Archie," he said, when +that gentleman next made his appearance at the +sanctum. "No deposit or guarantee, and ten per +cent. of the retail price for royalty. So take a train +to your inamorata's house and tell her the news."</p> + +<p>Mr. Weil did not seem to wholly relish the announcement.</p> + +<p>"In the first place," he remarked, "you have no +business to speak of Miss Fern as my inamorata; +and in the second you will pay her more than ten per +cent. or you won't get the book to print."</p> + +<p>At this, Mr. Gouger, after the manner of all publishers +and their agents, proceeded to show to Mr. +Weil that it was perfectly impossible to pay another +cent more than the figure he had named; and before +he had finished he agreed to see the firm and +get the amount raised considerably, provided the +sales should exceed five thousand copies. In short, +Mr. Weil secured a very respectable contract for a +new author, and one that was sure to please Miss +Fern, if she was in the least degree reasonable.</p> + +<p>"I wish you would hurry up Roseleaf," remarked +Gouger, when this matter was disposed of. "When +will you take him down into the depths and let him +see that side of life?"</p> + +<p>"I have arranged a journey for to-morrow night," +said Weil. "We shall go to Isaac Leveson's and +make an evening of it. Unless things are different +there from usual, he will lay the foundation +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</a></span>for all the wickedness he needs to put into his +story."</p> + +<p>The critic nodded approval.</p> + +<p>"He will probably have a Jew in it, then—a modernized +Fagan."</p> + +<p>"Yes," said Weil. "And a negro. A tall, well-built +negro, who has a white man for his slave!"</p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XII" id="CHAPTER_XII"></a>CHAPTER XII.</h2> + +<h3>DINING AT ISAAC'S.</h3> + + +<p>On the following day, when Shirley Roseleaf presented +himself at the Hoffman House, he found Mr. +Weil awaiting him in a state of great good nature.</p> + +<p>"Go home and make yourself ready for a dive +into the infernal regions," he said, merrily. "I am +going to take you to a place where the devil spends +his vacation, and show you a set of women as +different from those you have lately met as chalk is +from indigo. Be here at nine o'clock this evening, +prepared for the descent."</p> + +<p>A vision of subterranean passages crossed the +mind of the listener, and he thought of tall boots +and a tarpaulin.</p> + +<p>"How shall I dress—roughly, I suppose?" he +inquired.</p> + +<p>"Certainly not. Put on your swallow tail, and +white tie. Vice in these days wears its best +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</a></span>garments. You cannot tell a gambler from a clergyman +by his attire. Dress exactly as if you were +going to the swellest party on Fifth Avenue. The +only addition to your toilet will be a revolver, if you +happen to have one handy. If you do not, I have +several and will lend you one."</p> + +<p>If he expected to startle the young man he was in +error. Roseleaf merely nodded and said he would +take one of the weapons owned by Mr. Weil.</p> + +<p>"We shall not use them—there are a thousand +chances to one," said Archie. "New York is like +Montana. You remember what the resident said to +the tenderfoot, 'You may be a long time without +wantin' a we'p'n in these parts, but when you do +you'll want it d—d sudden.'"</p> + +<p>When Roseleaf returned, the hands of his watch +indicated the time at which he had been asked to +make his appearance, but Mr. Weil did not take him +immediately to the point of destination. Instead he +walked over to a variety theatre that was then in +operation on Twenty-third street, and after spending +a short time in the auditorium guided the young +man into the "wineroom." Here the ladies of the +ballet were in the habit of going when off the stage, +for the sake of entertaining the patrons with their +light and frivolous conversation, and inducing them if +possible, to invest in champagne at five dollars the +bottle.</p> + +<p>Archie was, it appeared, not unknown to the throng +that filled this place, for his name was spoken by +several of both sexes as soon as he entered. He +nodded coolly to those who addressed him, and took +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</a></span>a seat at a table with his companion. With a shake +of his head he declined the offers of two or three +fairies of the ballet to share the table, and ordered a +bottle of Mumm with the evident intention of drinking +it alone with his friend.</p> + +<p>Roseleaf slowly sipped the sparkling beverage. +He was cautioned in a whisper to drink but one glass, +as it was necessary that he should keep a perfectly +clear head. Weil remarked in an undertone that he +had only ordered the wine as an excuse for remaining +a few minutes.</p> + +<p>"I call this 'the slaughter house,'" he added, in +a voice still lower. "Girls are brought here to be +murdered. Not to have their throats cut," he explained, +"but to be killed just as surely, if more +slowly. I have seen them come here for the first +time, with good health shining out of their rosy +cheeks, delighted at the unwonted excitement and +the amount of attention the frequenters of the place +bestowed. I have watched them growing steadily +paler, having recourse to rouge, the eyes getting +dimmer, the voice growing harsher, the temper becoming +more variable. And then—other fresh faces +came in their stead. There are killed, on an average, +twenty girls a year here, I should say; killed to +satisfy the appetites of men, as beeves are killed in +Chicago, but not so mercifully."</p> + +<p>The novelist looked into the faces that were nearest +to him and thought he could discern the various +grades of which his friend spoke—the new, the +older, the ones whose turn to give way to others +would soon come. All of them were drinking.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</a></span> +Most had on the stage dresses they had just worn or +were about to wear in the performance. Some had +finished their parts and were enveloped in street +clothes, ready to take their departure with the first +male who asked them. And they were drinking, +drinking, either in little sips or in feverish gulps, as +they would at a later day, when the five-dollar wine +would be replaced by five cent beer or perhaps the +drainings of a keg on the sidewalk.</p> + +<p>Mr. Walker Boggs soon came into the wine-room +and joined the pair at Mr. Weil's table. He called +for a whiskey straight, pushing the champagne aside +with an impatient movement.</p> + +<p>"I won't punish my stomach with such stuff, even +if it <i>has</i> gone back on me," he exclaimed. "That +will knock out any man who drinks it between +meals."</p> + +<p>Mr. Weil assented to this proposition, and to show +his full belief in it filled his own glass again and +tossed its contents down his throat.</p> + +<p>"What brings you here?" he asked, quizzically.</p> + +<p>"Those creatures," replied Boggs, with a motion +of his hand toward the members of the ballet. +"They're all that's left me now. <i>They</i> don't mind +the size of my waist. My hold on <i>them</i> is as strong +as ever. But <i>you</i> ought not to be here," he broke in, +turning to Roseleaf. "It will be years before you +get to this stage, I hope."</p> + +<p>Mr. Weil hastened to explain.</p> + +<p>"Shirley is merely observing," said he. "He +came at my request. We are going next to Isaac +Leveson's."</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</a></span></p> + +<p>Mr. Boggs grew interested.</p> + +<p>"So, so! You intend to show him Isaac's to-night?"</p> + +<p>"Yes. Isn't it a good idea?"</p> + +<p>The stout man shrugged his shoulders as if he had +nothing to say on that point. The movement was +essentially a Frenchy one and might have meant +anything.</p> + +<p>"Perhaps you would like to go with us," said +Archie.</p> + +<p>"What do you intend to do there?"</p> + +<p>"Tell Mr. Roseleaf all the secrets."</p> + +<p>Mr. Boggs stared at the speaker.</p> + +<p>"Isaac won't let you," he answered, grimly.</p> + +<p>"Won't he? He'll have to. Why, what's the odds? +The boy won't give him away. And if he should—" +His voice sank to a whisper.</p> + +<p>Mr. Weil then proceeded to explain to his young +friend that "Isaac's" was a peculiar affair, even for +Gotham. It had entrances on two streets. Into one +door went the most respectable of people, intent on +getting an exceptionably good dinner, which was +always to be had there, cooked in the French style +and elegantly served. At that end of the house +there were several dining-rooms that would hold forty +or fifty guests, and several others made to accommodate +family parties of six to twelve. If a couple +happened to stray in and inquire for a room to themselves +the head waiter informed them that it was +against the rule of the house to serve a private dinner +to less than four people.</p> + +<p>It was evident that the establishment was con<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</a></span>ducted +on the most moral principles, and in a way +to prevent the possibility of scandal. For though a +great many couples undoubtedly take dinners in +private rooms with the utmost propriety, it must be +admitted that such a course is open to suspicion and +might be used as a basis for unpleasant rumors. +Mr. Leveson, who kept this hotel, took great pride in +saying that nothing in all New York bore a better +name, and no amount of bribery would have induced +one of his employes—on <i>that</i> side of the house—to +vary the rules laid down.</p> + +<p>But on the <i>other</i> side of the building—at the +entrance on the other street—ah, that was different!</p> + +<p>If only the most respectable customers entered the +first door it was almost equally true that none but +those who lacked that quality used the second. Mr. +Leveson sometimes remarked with glee, at twelve +o'clock at night, that he would give a hundred dollar +bill for an honest man or woman in any of the +rooms up-stairs. The waiters had instructions to +"size up" all comers with care, and to admit no +accidental parties who might apply for entrance +under a misapprehension as to the character of the +place.</p> + +<p>"We are all full, sorry to say," was the established +formula. "There is a very good restaurant just +around the corner, on ——th street." And in this +manner the shrewd restaurateur got all the custom +he wanted, while preserving the natural atmosphere +in each part of his dominions.</p> + +<p>The meals served in these two places were prepared +by one chef, and served from one kitchen.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</a></span> +Thus the virtuous and vicious patrons were supplied +with exactly the same dishes. But on what may be +called the Good side nothing stronger <a name="Page_149t1" id="Page_149t1"></a><a href="#Page_149tn">than</a> wines +were found on the bill of fare. On the Wicked side +every decoction <a name="Page_149t2" id="Page_149t2"></a><a href="#Page_149tn">known</a> to the modern drinker was to +be had for the asking. Then, again, the doors of +the Good side were closed at eleven o'clock, while it +was often daylight before the last patron of the Sinful +side reeled into his carriage.</p> + +<p>After a little more talk Mr. Boggs seemed satisfied +and consented to join the party.</p> + +<p>Mr. Leveson was notified of the presence of the +newcomers and met them at the door. Isaac was of +a decidedly Jewish cast of countenance, slightly gray, +not very tall, and quite round shouldered. He put +out a lank hand toward Roseleaf, when that young +gentleman was named as a matter of introduction, +but put it down again when Mr. Weil curtly said +handshaking was out of date. Archie had seen a disinclination +in the eye of his friend to touch the fingers +of the Hebrew, and with his usual quickness had +solved the difficulty. The party entered a private +office at the left of the entrance, where Mr. Leveson +inquired what he should order for them to drink.</p> + +<p>"You will order nothing, at present," said Weil, in +a contemptuous way that excited the astonishment +of Mr. Roseleaf. "When I wish for anything I will +ring. Who is there in the house?"</p> + +<p>The manager of the establishment bowed humbly, +and proceeded to run over the list of his customers.</p> + +<p>"There is Major Waters and his wife—"</p> + +<p>"Together!" exclaimed the questioner.</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</a></span></p> + +<p>"Oh, no! The Major has the little blonde that he +has brought for the last month; his wife has Mr. +Nikles of the Planet. Then—"</p> + +<p>But Mr. Weil interrupted him again.</p> + +<p>"You'll let them run into each other some day and +there'll be a nice time."</p> + +<p>"Never fear that. The boys understand thoroughly. +He comes earlier and stays later than she. +Besides, we never let anybody meet on the stairs. +The waiters cry out, 'You must go back; it is bad +luck!' if any of them seem in danger of running into +each other. They are as safe from discovery here as +if they were in places a mile apart."</p> + +<p>Some one descended the stairs at this moment and +Leveson tiptoed to the door and opened it half an +inch to peer at them.</p> + +<p>"You know I have no object in saying these +things," said Weil, "except to save your precious +self from trouble. Who is that going out?"</p> + +<p>"Some new people; it is the third time they have +been here."</p> + +<p>"Well," asked Weil, impatiently, "who are they?"</p> + +<p>Leveson held up both his hands as if to beg a +moment to answer.</p> + +<p>"They come from Brooklyn. I don't know their +names. I think neither is married."</p> + +<p>"I have a curiosity about things," explained Weil +to his friends, "that I cannot account for. You +remember how Silas Wegg used to talk about 'Aunt +Jane' and 'Uncle Parker.' Well, I have the same +way of studying the men that wander in here of an +evening, with other people's wives and daughters.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</a></span> +There is so little really entertaining in this confounded +world that I seize upon anything promising +a change with avidity. Isaac tells me all the secrets +of his queer ranch, and they prove wonderfully interesting, +sometimes. You see," he added, addressing +himself particularly to Roseleaf, "not a couple comes +into this place that would like to have it known."</p> + +<p>Roseleaf bowed constrainedly.</p> + +<p>"And how does Mr. Leveson know them?" he inquired. +"They surely do not register, or if they do +their names must be fictitious."</p> + +<p>Mr. Weil laughed.</p> + +<p>"He has ways of finding out," said he. "There +are little birds that fly in at the window and tell +him."</p> + +<p>"I should not think he would wish to know," commented +Roseleaf. "Especially when it is evident +they would not like to have him."</p> + +<p>Archie laughed again.</p> + +<p>"Let me explain, then," he said. "I need not +mind Boggs here, who is discretion itself. Leveson's +reason—of course, I can rely on your silence?"</p> + +<p>The young face reddened at the insinuation that +he might betray a secret.</p> + +<p>"I was sure of it," said Archie, so quickly that +Roseleaf felt at ease again. "Well, the reason why +Isaac wants to know what is going on is, he is connected +with the police."</p> + +<p>Roseleaf said "Ah!" and opened his eyes wider.</p> + +<p>"People who go to places like this," continued +Mr. Weil, "are of great interest to the guardians of +the peace. And by the police I do not mean the +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</a></span>members of the regular force so much as the special +service. It is to the latter that we go when a confidential +clerk has robbed us or we become suspicious +that our wives are unfaithful. Nine times out of ten +the chief of the private detective office knows in advance +all we wish him to ferret out. When he has +told us that we will set investigations on foot, and +that he hopes to learn something of the matter +within a few days, he bows us out of his bureau with +an air that implies that we have not come to the +wrong party. And as soon as we are gone he turns +to a ledger, and in a few minutes has found an abstract +that tells him everything.</p> + +<p>"Let us suppose," said Mr. Weil, "that a jeweler +misses twenty valuable pieces of <i>bijouterie</i> from his +stock. The circumstances prove that they were +taken by some one in his employ. He thinks of his +clerks, and cannot find the heart to accuse any of +them of such a grave crime. He goes to the detective +office and states his case. When he is gone the +chief turns to the book and finds this:</p> + +<p>"'L. M. Jenkins, clerk at Abram Cohen's, Sixth +Avenue; about twenty-three, medium height, dark, +dresses well. Rooms at No. — Twenty-Ninth street. +Has been giving expensive suppers as well as valuable +jewelry to Mamie Sanders, No. so-and-so, Such-a-street. +They dined together at Isaac Leveson's on +such-and-such dates.' Etc., etc., etc.</p> + +<p>"Now, he can recover the jewelry and get that +clerk into quod in three hours, if he likes. Naturally +he won't expedite things in that way, because he +wants some excuse for running up a large bill, unless +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</a></span>it be a bank case, where he prefers to make a great +impression and get himself solid with the directors. +But he will collar the fellow and recover the stuff, +and all because he knew about it long before any one +in the store had a suspicion."</p> + +<p>Mr. Leveson returned. Mr. Weil asked that one of +the private rooms on the second floor be put in +order at once, for himself and friends. He then inquired +what ladies were in the house unoccupied by +escorts.</p> + +<p>"Miss Pelham has been waiting an hour for the +Judge," replied Isaac, "but I don't think he'll come. +He disappoints her half the time now. And Mrs. +Delavan, who has just come in, found a note from +Col. Lamorest, asking her to excuse him to-night."</p> + +<p>Archie looked pleased.</p> + +<p>"They'll do," he said. "Tell them to come and +dine with us. But," he paused, and looked at Roseleaf, +"we need still another."</p> + +<p>The color mounted to the cheeks of the young +novelist, as he understood the thought that prompted +this statement.</p> + +<p>"Not on my account—I would much rather not," +he stammered.</p> + +<p>"You will kindly leave that to my judgment," replied +Archie, impressively. "Remember, you are +not the instructor here, but the pupil. There must +be some one else, Isaac."</p> + +<p>Mr. Leveson hesitated. He was mentally going +over the rooms upstairs and taking stock of what +was in them.</p> + +<p>"There are two girls," he said, at last, "who used +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</a></span>to work in one of the dry goods stores, but you +wouldn't want them. They are very strict, and they +dress plainly,—and I am afraid the other ladies +wouldn't like to associate with them."</p> + +<p>Mr. Weil grew vastly irritated by this statement. +He brought his hand down on the table with a bang.</p> + +<p>"The other ladies!" he echoed, angrily. "When +you tell Mrs. Delavan and Jenny Pelham that you +want them to dine with us, you know that ends it! +As to these shop girls, what do you mean by calling +them <i>strict</i>? What would a <i>strict</i> girl be doing in +<i>this</i> house?"</p> + +<p>Mr. Leveson cringed before his interrogator and +made the old, imploring movement with his hands.</p> + +<p>"Let me explain," he said. "These girls came +here a few weeks ago with some traveling men. +They took dinner, but Adolf says neither drank a +drop of wine. A few days later they came again, +with other escorts, and the same thing occurred."</p> + +<p>"Why did you let them in?" demanded Weil.</p> + +<p>"Because I knew the gentlemen."</p> + +<p>Archie started to say something, but checked himself.</p> + +<p>"And after that they came alone and asked to see +me," pursued Isaac, humbly. "They said they had +been thrown out of work, and thought there might +be an opportunity to do something here, like waiting +on the guests. And while we were talking, two old +customers of the house called to dine, alone, and +asked me if they could get some one to share the +meal with them. And, it seemed quite providential—"</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</a></span></p> + +<p>Archie stopped the voluble speech by striking his +hands sharply together.</p> + +<p>"Enough!" he said. "When the dinner is ready +send one of them in. That will make the three we +need."</p> + +<p>In half an hour the dinner was ready to be served. +Then Isaac came with the information that the girls +refused to be separated.</p> + +<p>"What a nuisance!" exclaimed Weil. "Well, send +both of them, then. We'll take care of them, somehow."</p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIII" id="CHAPTER_XIII"></a>CHAPTER XIII.</h2> + +<h3>A QUESTION OF COLOR.</h3> + + +<p>The next morning, when Roseleaf awoke, he was +for some time in a sort of stupor. Through the bright +sunlight that filled his room he seemed to scent the +fumes of tobacco and of liquor. The place was +filled, he imagined, with that indefinable aroma that +proceeds from a convivial company made up of both +sexes. He half believed that Jennie Pelham and +Mrs. <a name="Page_155t" id="Page_155t"></a><a href="#Page_155tn">Delavan</a> were sitting by his bed, more brazen +than the bell which, from a neighboring steeple, told +him the hour was ten. And surely, by those curtains +there, hiding the flame that filled their cheeks, were +the two "shop-girls," their pinched faces denoting +slow starvation. Boggs, and Isaac Leveson, and +Archie Weil were there, all of them; and the young +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</a></span>man tossed uneasily on his pillow, struggling with +the remnant of nightmare that remained to cloud his +brain.</p> + +<p>When he was able to think and see clearly he sat +up and rang for a pitcher of ice water. He was consumed +by thirst, and his forehead ached blindly. +When he had bathed his head and throat he turned, +by a sudden impulse, to his table, and took out the +MSS. of the story he had begun. Slowly he read +over the pages, to the last one. Then, seizing his +pen, he devoted himself to the next chapter, without +dressing, without breakfasting.</p> + +<p>It was four o'clock when he ceased work. He +realized all at once that he was feeling ill. The fact +dawned upon him that he needed food, and donning +his garments, he took his way listlessly to a restaurant +and ordered something to eat. As he swallowed +the morsels, he fell to wondering how much temptation +<i>he</i> would be able to bear, with hunger as a background.</p> + +<p>He passed a good part of the evening in walking +the streets, selecting, instinctively, sections where he +was least likely to meet any one he knew. When he +returned to his room he read over the MSS. he had +written that day, and into his troubled brain there +came a sense of pleasure. Gouger was right. To +tell of such matters in a novel, one should know +them himself. Roseleaf could never have written +of vice before he saw Leveson's. Now, it was as +plain to him as print, almost as easy to use in fiction +as virtue. What was to follow? He pondered over +the plot he had mapped out, and it grew clearer.</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</a></span></p> + +<p>Daisy had given him no further encouragement—at +least in words—since that day she had said it was +"risky" to ask her father, but he felt certain that +she regarded him with favor, and that if Mr. Fern +put no obstacles in the way she would not refuse +to wed him when the right time came. He thought +it would be wise to obtain one more brief interview +with her, before proceeding to extremities, and determined +to do his best to draw her aside, when he +made his next visit to her house. This settled, he +went to bed again and slept soundly.</p> + +<p>When the day to go to Midlands arrived Shirley's +courage began to ooze a little. So much depended +upon the attitude of his dear one's mind, which, for +all he knew, had changed since he talked with her, +that he fairly trembled with apprehension. He +avoided Mr. Weil, with whom he usually took the +train, and went out early. Alighting at a station a +mile or two away from the right one, he walked +through the woods, trying to think how to act in +case matters did not turn out as he hoped. Under +the branches he strolled along, until he came within +sight of the roofs of Midlands; and then he threw +himself at the foot of a tree close to Mr. Fern's +grounds, and gave himself up to reverie.</p> + +<p>When he laid down here it was only five o'clock, +and he was not expected at the house for a full hour. +It pleased him to be so near the one he loved, and to +lie where he could dream of her sweet face and see +the outlines of the house that sheltered her, while +she had no knowledge of his presence. Just over +there was the arbor, where he had first had the +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</a></span>supreme bliss of touching her lips with his own. If +he could get her to come there with him again—to-night—when +the others were occupied with their talk +of earthly things, and if she would only tell him +frankly that he might go to her father, and that her +prayers would go with him! A soft languor came +over his body at the deliciousness of these reflections, +but it was dissipated by the sound of voices which +presently came to him from the other side of the +hedge.</p> + +<p>"I can't exactly understand, Miss Daisy," said one +of the voices, which he had no difficulty in recognizing +as that of Hannibal, "why you wish me to go +away?"</p> + +<p>There was an assurance in the tone that Roseleaf +did not like. He had noticed it before in the intercourse +of this negro with his employers. There was +something which intimated that he was on the most +complete level with them.</p> + +<p>"I want you to go," said Daisy, in her quiet way, +"because education is the only thing that will make +you what you ought to be. There are a hundred +chances open to you, in the professions, if you can +take a college course. Unless you do, you can hope +for nothing better than such employment as you +have now."</p> + +<p>It made the listener's blood boil to think that these +people should be consulting in that way, like friends. +Daisy ought to have a better sense of her position.</p> + +<p>"I will not refuse your offer, at least not yet," +replied Hannibal, after a slight pause. "It may be +as you say—if I graduate as a doctor or a lawyer.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</a></span> +But I know that I live in a country where my color +is despised—and all that could possibly come to me +here as a professional man is work among my own +race. I should be a black lawyer with black clients; +or a black physician, with black patients. To really +succeed I should go across the ocean to some land +where the shade of my skin would not be counted a +crime."</p> + +<p>Daisy's face could not be seen by the listener, but +he was sure it was a kindly one, and this made him +fume. The situation was atrocious.</p> + +<p>"It should not be considered so anywhere," said +the girl, gently.</p> + +<p>"It is an outrage!" responded the black. "Having +stolen our ancestors and brought them here from +their native country, the Americans hate us for the +injury they have done. In France, they tell me, it is +not so. Oh, if I <i>could</i> gain an education, and +become what God meant to make me—a man!" He +paused as if the thought was too great to be conceived +in its fullness, and then said, abruptly: +"Where can you get this money?"</p> + +<p>Roseleaf's suspicions were now keenly aroused and +he dreaded lest she should bring his name into the +conversation.</p> + +<p>"Your father would not give it to you—without an +explanation," pursued the negro. "And you have +no fortune of your own."</p> + +<p>"I will get it—let that suffice," interrupted the +girl. "I can give you $1000 a year for two years, at +least, and I hope for two or three more, if you will go +to Paris and put yourself under instruction. Can +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</a></span>you hesitate to accept a proposal of that kind? I +thought you would seize it with avidity."</p> + +<p>As Daisy said this she arose, and started slowly +toward the house. Hannibal walked by her side +talking in a tone so low that nothing more was intelligible +to the eavesdropper she little suspected was +so near. But suddenly the girl stopped, and Roseleaf +heard her cry with startling distinctness:</p> + +<p>"<i>How dare you!</i>"</p> + +<p>The voice that uttered these words was filled with +rage, and the girl's attitude, as Roseleaf could see—for +he had risen hastily to his feet—was one of +intense excitement. Then she added:</p> + +<p>"If you ever speak of that again, they will be the +last words I will ever exchange with you. My offer +is still open—you can have the money if you wish it—but +never another syllable like this! Understand +me, Hannibal, never!"</p> + +<p>Miss Daisy passed on toward the house, alone. +The negro stood where she had left him, his head +bowed on his breast, as if completely cowed by the +rebuke. Roseleaf's heart beat rapidly. What gave +this fellow such power over these people? How +could he say things to call out such an exclamation +as that of Daisy's, and yet hold her promise to pay +him a large sum of money, instead of getting the +prompt discharge he merited?</p> + +<p>And this was what the girl wanted to do with the +$1,000, she had asked him to lend her! Should he +still give it to her? Yes, if it would rid the country +of that insolent knave who, from whatever cause, +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</a></span>occupied a position that must be growing unendurable +to those who had to bear with him.</p> + +<p>What had Hannibal said, that made her turn as if +grossly insulted, and speak with a vehemence so +foreign to her nature? Roseleaf would have enjoyed +following the negro and giving him a severe trouncing. +Though Hannibal was twenty pounds heavier +and considerably taller than he, the novelist had not +the least doubt of his ability to master him. He +believed the courage of an African would give way +when confronted by one of the superior race; and +at any rate, righteous indignation would count for +something in so just a contest.</p> + +<p>There were no traces of excitement on Daisy's +pretty face as she welcomed the guests of the family. +Weil arrived at about the same time as Roseleaf, +coming directly from the station, and Mr. Fern arrived +a little later. Millicent looked her best, which +is saying no less than that she was a beauty, and +Archie told her politely that she ought to sit for a +painting. When the dinner was served, Hannibal +took charge as usual. Shirley watched him with an +interest he had never felt before, and nodded assent +when Weil whispered behind his napkin, "Good +material for a novel in that fellow, eh?"</p> + +<p>The opportunity for a word alone with Daisy came +earlier than Roseleaf expected. In fact she herself +proposed it, while passing out of the dining room. +She said she had something particular to tell him.</p> + +<p>"It is about that money you were so kind as to +say I could have," she explained, when they were far +down the lawn, and out of hearing of the others.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</a></span> +"I want it very much and very soon. It—it will be +all right, I hope, and—and not cause you any inconvenience."</p> + +<p>"I will bring it, or send it to-morrow," he replied, +instantly. "But I still wonder what you intend to +do with it."</p> + +<p>She smiled archly.</p> + +<p>"A good act, I assure you," she replied. "Something +of which you would certainly approve, if you +knew all the circumstances. You are very kind, and +if it was darker here I should be—almost—tempted +to kiss you."</p> + +<p>He replied that it was growing darker rapidly, and +that the requisite shadow could be obtained if they +stayed out long enough; but she said she could remain +but a few moments, and turned in the direction +of the house.</p> + +<p>"But, Daisy!" he cried, and then paused. "You—you +know there is something of very great importance +that I want to talk about. I get so little chance, +and I want so much to tell you things. I have been +trying to go to your father's office, and I can't find +courage."</p> + +<p>"I didn't know you were thinking of buying +wool," she said, mischievously.</p> + +<p>"I want one little lamb, to be my own," he +answered, "to love and cherish all my life long. +Am I never to have it?"</p> + +<p>She sobered before the earnestness of his sad face.</p> + +<p>"You are a dear boy," she said, "and I love you. +There! Don't say anything more to me to-night. +I have made a foolish confession, for which I may +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</a></span>yet repent. We must go in. They will be looking +for us."</p> + +<p>She looked at his countenance and saw that it was +radiant.</p> + +<p>"I can endure anything now," he said. "You +love me, Daisy—can it be true? I will go in with +you—and I will wait. But not too long, my sweetheart; +do not make me wait too long. Repent your +confession, indeed! If you do, it will be from no +fault of mine. <i>Daisy!</i>"</p> + +<p>As he said these things they were gradually nearing +the piazza, where the negro was taking in the chairs.</p> + +<p>"I have something pleasant to tell you," whispered +Daisy. "You don't like Hannibal. Well, he is +going away soon."</p> + +<p>Roseleaf assumed surprise.</p> + +<p>"Has your father discharged him?" he asked.</p> + +<p>"No, he intends to leave of his own accord. He +believes himself fitted for better work. Hush! He +may hear you."</p> + +<p>As they passed the servant, Daisy said, "Good-evening, +Hannibal." It was her invariable custom, +and she spoke with the greatest courtesy. But in +this case the negro did not raise his eyes, nor turn +his head toward her, nor make the slightest sign to +show that he heard.</p> + +<p>It was too much for Roseleaf, and he stopped.</p> + +<p>"Did you hear Miss Daisy address you?" he demanded, +sharply.</p> + +<p>Hannibal looked up, with a curious mixture of +amusement, contempt and hate in his dark face.</p> + +<p>"I did," he answered.</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</a></span></p> + +<p>"Why did you not answer?"</p> + +<p>"Because I did not choose."</p> + +<p>Daisy threw herself in front of Roseleaf, just in +time to prevent Hannibal's receiving a blow.</p> + +<p>"Oh, stop!" she exclaimed, "I beg you!"</p> + +<p>The noise and the sound of raised voices brought +Mr. Fern and his other daughter, with Archie Weil, +to the door. Mr. Fern took in the situation at a +glance, and his troubled face grew more distressed.</p> + +<p>"Mr. Roseleaf," he said, speaking as if the words +choked him, "I am surprised—that you should—hold +an altercation like this—in my daughter's +presence."</p> + +<p>Roseleaf did not know what to do or say. Daisy's +pleading eyes decided him, much against his judgment, +to drop the matter where it was, galling to his +pride though it might be. He escorted his sweetheart +into the parlor, where the entire party followed, +in a most uncomfortable state of mind.</p> + +<p>"How can you permit that negro to insult your +guests?" demanded Millicent, as soon as the door +was closed. "It is beyond belief. If he is master of +this house it is time the rest of us left it. I am certain +Mr. Roseleaf did not act without great provocation."</p> + +<p>Before Mr. Fern could answer, Daisy had spoken.</p> + +<p>"It is over now, and there is nothing to be said. +Hannibal is going away in a few days, and that will +end your trouble."</p> + +<p>The father turned such an incredulous look toward +his daughter that it was evident he had heard nothing +of this.</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</a></span></p> + +<p>"Going?" he echoed, faintly. "Going?"</p> + +<p>"Yes," said Daisy. "He told me to-day. He is +going to some country where his color will not be +counted a misdemeanor."</p> + +<p>Roseleaf had difficulty in maintaining the silence +with which he had determined to encase himself. +But Daisy did not wish him to speak, and her will +was law.</p> + +<p>"Well, I am glad of that!" exclaimed Millicent. +"In a country where they consider such people their +equals, he will not meet the pity and consideration +he has so abused here. Still, I do think, father, +that you ought to apologize to Mr. Roseleaf for the +way in which you have addressed him."</p> + +<p>This freed the young man's tongue.</p> + +<p>"By no means," he said. "Very likely I was +wrong to say anything."</p> + +<p>"You were not wrong!" retorted Millicent. "You +were entirely right. You would have been justified +in punishing the fellow as he deserved. It is others +who are wrong. If he were not going, I would +never stay to see repeated what I have witnessed in +the last six months."</p> + +<p>Mr. Fern seemed to have lost all ambition for controversy. +His elder daughter's cutting words evidently +hurt, but he would not reply.</p> + +<p>Mr. Weil came to the rescue by introducing a new +topic of conversation, that of a European tenor that +was soon expected to startle New York. Daisy went +to the piano, and played softly, talking in whispers +to Roseleaf, who leaned feverishly over her shoulder.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</a></span> +But she made no allusion to Hannibal, and he did +his best to forget him.</p> + +<p>"What do you make of that?" asked Mr. Weil, +when he was in a railway car, on the way back to the +city with his young friend. "A glorious chance for +a novelist to find the reason that black Adonis is +allowed such latitude."</p> + +<p>But Roseleaf was not listening. He was thinking +of a sweet voice that had said: "You are a dear +boy and I love you!"</p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIV" id="CHAPTER_XIV"></a>CHAPTER XIV.</h2> + +<h3>"LET US HAVE A BETRAYAL."</h3> + + +<p>Mr. Archie Weil had become quite intimate with +Mr. Wilton Fern; so much so that he called at his +office every few days, took walks with him on business +errands, went with him to lunch (to the annoyance +of Lawrence Gouger, who did not like to eat +alone) and sometimes took the train home with him +at night, on evenings when Shirley Roseleaf was not +of the party. Everybody in the Fern family liked +Archie. Even Hannibal, who had conceived a veritable +hatred for Roseleaf, brightened at the entrance +of Mr. Weil either at the house or office, the +negro seeming to alternate between the two places +very much as he pleased. Millicent liked him because +he was so "facile," as she expressed it; a man with +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</a></span>whom one could talk without feeling it necessary +to pick each step. Daisy liked him because her +father did, and because Roseleaf did, and because +he treated her with marked politeness that had +apparently no double meaning.</p> + +<p>And they all got confidential with him, which was +exactly what he wanted them to do; only the one he +most wanted to give him confidence gave him the +least. This was Mr. Fern, himself.</p> + +<p>Try as he might, Archie could not discover what +clouded the brow of the wool merchant, what made +him act like a person who fears each knock at the +door, each sound of a human voice in the hallway of +his office. He could find no reason for Mr. Fern's +attitude toward Hannibal, whose manners were as far +removed as possible from those supposed to belong +to a personal servant. There must be a cause of no +ordinary character when this polished gentleman +permitted a negro to insult him and his daughter, in +a way to excite comment. What it was Mr. Weil +was bent on discovering, but as yet he had made +little progress.</p> + +<p>It was on account of this plan that Mr. Weil +affected to like Hannibal so well. He used to spend +hours in devising ways for securing the truth from +that source. Hannibal, however, gave no signs of +intending to reveal his secret, and if he was going +abroad to study, it seemed unlikely that the investigator +would get at many facts in that quarter.</p> + +<p>One day, Mr. Weil happened to call at the office of +the merchant at an hour when the latter was out, +and found Hannibal in possession. As this was an +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[168]</a></span>opportunity seldom available, Archie entered into +a lively conversation with the fellow.</p> + +<p>"They tell me you are soon going to leave us," he +said, as a beginning. "I hear that you are going to +Europe."</p> + +<p>"Yes," said Hannibal, with a certain wariness.</p> + +<p>"If I can tell you anything about the country I +shall be glad," said Weil, affably. "I have spent +considerable time there. You don't understand the +language, I believe?"</p> + +<p>The negro simply shook his head.</p> + +<p>"It's easy enough to acquire. Get right into a +hotel with a lot of students, and pitch in. Though +they <i>do</i> say," added the speaker, archly, "that the +best method is to engage a pretty grisette. The +poet was right:</p> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">"'Tis pleasing to be schooled in a strange tongue<br /></span> +<span class="i0">By female eyes and lips; that is, I mean,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">When both the teacher and the taught are young—<br /></span> +</div></div> + +<p>"You know the rest."</p> + +<p>The answering smile that he expected, did not +come into the negro's face. If possible, it grew still +more reserved and earnest.</p> + +<p>"There's one good thing, if you'll excuse my +mentioning it," pursued Archie, "and that is, +the French have no prejudice whatever against color. +Indeed, a colored student gets a little better attention +in Paris than a white one."</p> + +<p>Then the silent lips were unlocked.</p> + +<p>"Could a black man—<i>marry</i>—a white woman, of +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</a></span>the upper or middle classes?" asked Hannibal, +slowly.</p> + +<p>"To be sure. There was the elder Dumas, and a +dozen others. I tell you there's absolutely no color +line there. They judge a man by what he is, not by +the accident of race or skin. You'll see such a difference +you'll be sorry you didn't go years before."</p> + +<p>Hannibal sat as if lost in thought.</p> + +<p>"Mr. Fern will miss you, though," continued +Archie. "Yes, and the family. You seem almost +indispensable."</p> + +<p>A suspicious glance was shot at the speaker, but +his face bore such an ingenuous look that the suggestion +was dismissed. What could he know?</p> + +<p>"They will get some one else," said the negro, +quietly.</p> + +<p>"Yes, but in these days it is not easy to get people +one can trust. Mr. Fern will not find any one to +take your place in a moment. And just now, when +he evidently has a great deal of trouble on his mind, +it will be unpleasant to make a change."</p> + +<p>Hannibal was completely deceived by the apparently +honest character of these observations. He +could not resist the temptation to boast a little, that +peculiar trait of a menial.</p> + +<p>"I know all about Mr. Fern's affairs," he agreed. +"Both here and at the house. He would not trust +the next man as he has me."</p> + +<p>Mr. Weil nodded wisely.</p> + +<p>"I see, I see," he answered. "You know then +what has annoyed him of late—that which has +puzzled all the rest of us so much. You know, but +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[170]</a></span>having the knowledge in a sort of confidential capacity, +you would, of course, have no right to reveal +it."</p> + +<p>Hannibal straightened himself up in an exasperating +way.</p> + +<p>"You will not find what troubles Mr. Fern," he +said, loftily. "And now, may I ask <i>you</i> something. +Do you expect to marry his eldest daughter?"</p> + +<p>An inclination to kick the fellow for his impudence +came so strong upon Mr. Weil that it required all of +his powers to suppress the sentiment. But through +his indignation there struggled his old admiration +for this elegant physical specimen. He wished he +could get a statue modeled from him, before the +original left the country.</p> + +<p>"That is a delicate question," he managed to say.</p> + +<p>"I know it," replied Hannibal. "But I have observed +some things which may have escaped you. +Shall I tell you what I mean?"</p> + +<p>Not at all easy under this strain, the curiosity of +Mr. Weil was so great that he could only reply in +the affirmative.</p> + +<p>"Miss Millicent," explained Hannibal, slowly, "is +in love—very much in love—with another person."</p> + +<p>A stare that could not be concealed answered +him.</p> + +<p>"You have not seen anything to indicate it?" +asked the negro. "I thought as much. She has +done her best to cover it, and yet I can swear it is +true. She <i>likes</i> you, as a friend. But she <i>loves</i> him, +passionately."</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</a></span></p> + +<p>He was in for it now and might as well follow this +strange matter to the end.</p> + +<p>"Do I know this individual?" asked Archie.</p> + +<p>"Yes. You brought him to the house and introduced +him to her."</p> + +<p>The man gave a slight cry, in spite of himself.</p> + +<p>"Not Roseleaf!"</p> + +<p>Hannibal bowed impressively; and at the moment +Mr. Fern's footsteps were heard in the entry.</p> + +<p>Mr. Weil did not know, when he tried to think +about it afterwards, whether the wool merchant +noticed particularly that he and Hannibal had been +talking together, or suspected that they might have +confidences. His head was too full of the startling +statement he had heard, and when he was again +upon the street he wandered aimlessly for an hour +trying to reconcile this view with the facts as they +had presented themselves to his mind previously.</p> + +<p>Millicent in love with Roseleaf! She had said +very little to the young man, so far as he had observed. +Her younger sister—sweet little Daisy—had +monopolized his attention. If it were true, +what an instance it was of the odd qualities in the +feminine mind, that leave men to wonder more and +more of what material it is constructed. But <i>was</i> it +true? Was Hannibal a better judge, a closer student, +than the rest of them? He did not like Millicent, +any better than she liked him. Was he trying +a game of mischief, with some ulterior purpose that +was not apparent on the surface?</p> + +<p>Out of it all, Archie Weil emerged, sure of but one +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</a></span>thing. He must use his eyes. If Millicent loved +Roseleaf, she could not hide it successfully from +him, now that he had this clue.</p> + +<p>The girl's novel was selling fairly well. Weil had +made a bargain with Cutt & Slashem that was very +favorable. It gave him an excuse to talk with the +authoress as much as he pleased, and he used his +advantage. He brought her the comments of the +press—not that they amounted to anything, for it +was evident that most of the critics had merely +skimmed through the pages. He came to tell her +the latest things that Gouger had said, what proportion +of cloth and paper covers were being ordered, +and the other gossip of the printing house. And +now he talked about the work that Shirley was engaged +on, and grew enthusiastic, declaring that the +young man would yet make a place for himself beside +the Stevensons and Weymans.</p> + +<p>Millicent struck him as caring much more for +news of her own production than that of the young +man who had been represented as the object of her +adoration. If she was half as fond of Roseleaf as +Hannibal intimated, she was certainly successful in +concealing her sentiments from the shrewd observer. +The result of a fortnight's investigation convinced +Weil that the negro had made a complete mistake, +and all the hypotheses that had arisen were allowed +to dissipate into thin air and fly away.</p> + +<p>Another two weeks passed and Hannibal still remained +with the Ferns. An inquiry of Daisy produced +the answer that he thought of remaining in +America till spring. The girl tried to act as if it +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</a></span>made not the slightest consequence to her whether +he went or stayed, but she did not succeed. Mr. +Weil knew that she wished most heartily for the +time when the negro would take his departure. She +was bound up in her father, and Hannibal was worrying +him to death—from whatever cause. She +wanted the tie between him and this black man +broken, and hated every day that stood between +them and his hour of sailing.</p> + +<p>Roseleaf was almost as uneasy as Daisy over the +delay. He had given her the money she asked for, +though no allusion to its purpose had been made.</p> + +<p>She still had it, somewhere, unless she had given +it to the one for whom it was intended. When she +took the package from his hand she rose on her tiptoes +and kissed him with the most affectionate of +gestures. It was the second occasion on which he +had been permitted to touch her lips, and he +appreciated it fully. He realized from her action +how deeply she felt his kindness in providing her +with the funds that were to relieve her father of an +incubus that was sapping his very life.</p> + +<p>"You don't find much use for our black Adonis +yet, I see," said Weil, as he laid down the latest +page of the slowly building novel. "I had hoped +you would penetrate the secret of his power over +your heroine's father, by this time."</p> + +<p>"No, I cannot understand it at all," replied +Roseleaf. "And if you, with your superior quickness +of perception, have found nothing, I don't see +how you could expect me to."</p> + +<p>"You have greater opportunities," said Weil, with +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[174]</a></span>a smile that was not quite natural. "You have the +ear of the fair Miss Daisy, remember," he explained, +in reply to the inquiring look that was raised to +him.</p> + +<p>"Ah, but she knows nothing, either," exclaimed +Roseleaf. "I am sure of that."</p> + +<p>Mr. Weil was silent for some moments.</p> + +<p>"Well, if you cannot find the true cause," he said, +"you will have to invent a hypothetical one. Your +novel cannot stand still forever. Imagine something—a +crime, for instance, of which this black +fellow is cognizant. A murder—that he peeped in +at a keyhole and saw. How would that do?"</p> + +<p>Roseleaf turned pale.</p> + +<p>"You know," he said, "that you are talking of +impossibilities."</p> + +<p>"On the contrary, nothing is impossible," responded +the other, impatiently. "College professors, +delicate ladies, children not yet in their teens, +have committed homicide, why not this handsome +gentleman in the wool business? Or if you <i>won't</i> +have murder—and I agree that blood is rather tiresome, +it has been overdone so much—bring a woman +into the case. Let us have a betrayal, a wronged +virgin, and that sort of thing."</p> + +<p>The color did not return to the young man's +cheek.</p> + +<p>"Which is still more incredible in the present +case," he said. "Do you think Wilton Fern could +do evil to a woman? Look in his face once and +dismiss that libel within the second."</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</a></span></p> + +<p>A desperate expression crossed the countenance of +the elder man.</p> + +<p>"You must agree that he has done something!" +he cried. "He wouldn't allow a darkey to annoy +him like this for fun, would he? He wouldn't wear +that deathly look, and let his child grow thin with +worriment, just as a matter of amusement!"</p> + +<p>To this Roseleaf could not formulate a suitable +answer. He felt the force of the suggestions, but +he would not associate crime with the sedate gentleman +who was the object of these suspicions. He +simply could not think of anything disreputable in +connection with Daisy's father, and it seemed almost +as bad to invent an offense for the character in his +novel whose photograph he had thus far taken from +Mr. Fern.</p> + +<p>Daisy was surprised, a month after this, to have +Mr. Weil stop her in the hallway, and speak with a +new abruptness.</p> + +<p>"Why don't that cursed nigger start for Europe?" +he asked.</p> + +<p>She glanced around her with a frightened look. +She feared ears that should not might hear them. +But she rallied as she reflected that Hannibal was +miles away, in fact in the city with her father.</p> + +<p>"He is going soon," she replied. "But why do +you allude to him by that harsh term? I thought +you rather liked him."</p> + +<p>"I do," he answered. "I like him so well that if +he continues to talk to—to your father—as I heard +him the other day, I will throw him into the Hudson:<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[176]</a></span> +I can't stand by and see him insult an—an old man—much +longer."</p> + +<p>The girl looked at him with sad eyes.</p> + +<p>"I thought I had succeeded in silencing that kind +of talk," she said. "Mr. Roseleaf used to speak very +violently of Hannibal, but he has listened to reason +of late. Let me beg you to see nothing and hear +nothing, if you are the friend of this family you have +given us reason to believe."</p> + +<p>She extended her hand, as if to ask a promise of +him, but he affected not to see it.</p> + +<p>"When does he intend to go?" he demanded.</p> + +<p>"Before the 1st of April."</p> + +<p>"I will give him till that date," he answered, "but +not an hour beyond. He will sail out of this country +for some port or other, or there will be a collision. +You must not, you shall not defend him!" he added, +as she was about to speak. "I know the harm he is +doing, and it must have an end!"</p> + +<p>Turning from her suddenly he went out of doors. +Far down the road he stopped to look around, pressing +his hand to his forehead, like one who would +make sure he is awake, and not the victim of some +fearful dream.</p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XV" id="CHAPTER_XV"></a>CHAPTER XV.</h2> + +<h3>THE GREEN-EYED MONSTER.</h3> + + +<p>Before the first of April came, Hannibal sailed. +During the winter he had taken lessons in French of +a city teacher, until he believed he could get along +after a fashion with that language. He announced +to Daisy that he would go on the third of March, +then he changed it to the tenth, and again to the +seventeenth. Each time, when the date approached, +he seemed to have a weakening of purpose, a dread +of actually plunging into the tide that set toward +foreign shores. The girl had interviews with him on +each of these occasions, at which what passed was +known only to themselves. And each time, when she +had reached her own room, she threw herself on her +bed and wept bitterly.</p> + +<p>But, at last, on the twenty-fourth, he went. With +his overcoat on his arm, his satchel and umbrella in +his hands, he said "Good-by" to the little party that +gathered at the door. He had been treated with +great consideration in that home. Perhaps he realized +this to some extent as he was about to turn his +back upon it. Certain it is that he could not hide +the choking in his throat, as he said the words of +farewell. Archie Weil, who stood there with the rest, +thought he saw a strange look in those black orbs as +they dwelt a moment on the younger daughter; but +it passed so quickly he could not be sure.</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</a></span></p> + +<p>Mr. Fern was there, and Roseleaf. Millicent had +responded, when a servant went to inform her that +Hannibal was going, that she was very glad. Did +she wish to go down? By no means. She hoped she +was not such a fool.</p> + +<p>Weil, who watched everybody, saw an unmistakable +relief in the careworn countenance of Mr. Fern, +when the tall form of his late servant disappeared at +the gate.</p> + +<p>"I hope you will do well," had been the last words +of the merchant, and Daisy had added, "So do we +all, I am sure." Roseleaf had not spoken. He had +stood a little apart from the others, his mind filled +with varying emotions. It was he who had furnished +the money to carry out this plan, and if it made one +hour of Daisy's life happier he would be content.</p> + +<p>Within an hour it was evident that a cloud had +been lifted from the entire household. Everybody +felt brighter and better. Roseleaf eyed Mr. Fern +with surprise, and had half a mind to go to his office +the next day and tell him how dearly he loved his +daughter. It was the first time anything like a +smile had been upon that face since he had known +its lineaments.</p> + +<p>Archie Weil devoted his attention, as usual, to +Millicent. He did not talk to her about Hannibal, +knowing how distasteful was the subject. He discussed +her novel, of which she never seemed to tire, +and asked her about another, which she had begun +to map out. She told him she was sure she could do +better the next time, and spoke of the assistance Mr. +Roseleaf would furnish if needed, quite as if that was +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</a></span>a matter already arranged between her and the +young novelist.</p> + +<p>Archie wondered if Millicent knew the extent of +the attachment that had grown up between Shirley +and her sister. She seemed to feel sure that he +would be at hand when wanted. Could it be that +she believed he would ultimately become her brother-in-law? +The negro's guess had almost been +blotted out of his mind. There had been absolutely +nothing in his observation to confirm it.</p> + +<p>A day or two after the departure of Hannibal, +Mr. Fern had a conversation with Daisy, in which +he dwelt with more stress than she could account +for on a special theme. He was talking of Walter +Boggs and Archie Weil, and he cautioned her earnestly +to treat both gentlemen with the greatest consideration. +The girl detected something strange in +his voice, and she stole apprehensive glances at him, +hoping to read the cause in his eyes.</p> + +<p>"Why, papa, I never see Mr. Boggs," she said. +"It is weeks and weeks since he came here. As for +Mr. Weil, we all treat him nicely, I am sure, and are +glad to have him come."</p> + +<p>"Yes," he admitted. "You use him quite right, +my child. I am not complaining; only, if you could +show him <i>particular</i> attention, something more than +the ordinary—" He paused, trying to finish what he +wished to say. "There may be a time when he will +be of great value to me—and—I want him to feel—you +observe things so cleverly—do you think Millicent +cares for him?"</p> + +<p>Daisy looked up astonished.</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[180]</a></span></p> + +<p>"Cares—for—Mr. Weil?"</p> + +<p>Her father nodded.</p> + +<p>"He has been here several times a week for months, +and most of his time here has been spent with her. +I thought—I hoped that she cared for him."</p> + +<p>He thought! He hoped! Daisy had never had such +an idea in her head until that moment. She had a +dim idea that her father would give up either of his +daughters with great regret, although she could not +help knowing that the relations between him and +Millicent were not as cordial as those between him +and herself. And he "hoped" that Millie would +marry, and that she would marry Mr. Weil! Her +mind dwelt upon this strange thought. She tried to +find a reason for it. Was there any stronger incentive +in her father's mind than a desire to see Millie +well settled in life, with a good husband?</p> + +<p>Had he a fear that the time might soon come +when he could not provide for her?</p> + +<p>Or was there a worse fear—the kind of fear that +had haunted him in relation to Hannibal?</p> + +<p>Every time Mr. Weil came to the house after that +the young girl watched him as closely as he had ever +watched her. He did not exchange a word with her +father that did not engage her attention. And the +conclusion she came to was that, whatever the +object of Mr. Fern in this matter, Mr. Weil was +honor itself.</p> + +<p>Daisy had never made much of a confidant of +Millicent, and the latter had the habit of keeping her +affairs pretty closely to herself. It was no easy task, +then, that the young sister had in view when she +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[181]</a></span>came to a decision to talk with Millie about Mr. +Weil.</p> + +<p>Her father had expressed a hope that Millie and +Weil would marry. Mr. Fern had some strong +reason for his wish. Whatever it was, Daisy, with +her strong filial love, wanted it gratified.</p> + +<p>"Millie, what do you think of marriage?" she +asked, one day, when the opportunity presented +itself.</p> + +<p>"I suppose it's the manifest destiny of a woman," +replied her sister, quietly.</p> + +<p>Much encouraged, Daisy proceeded to allude to +Mr. Weil, praising him in the highest terms, and +saying that any girl might be proud to be honored +with his addresses. Millie answered with confirmatory +nods of the head, as if she fully agreed with all +she uttered. But when her sister spoke, the words +struck Daisy like a blow.</p> + +<p>"I am glad to hear this," she said, in a voice more +tender than usual. "I think Mr. Weil would have +proposed to you long ago, but that he feared the +result."</p> + +<p>Daisy gasped for breath.</p> + +<p>"Millie!" she cried. "Do you mean that Mr. +Weil—that—why, I do not understand! He has +hardly spoken to me, while he has spent nearly every +minute he has been here, with you!"</p> + +<p>"Of course he has," responded the other. "What +could be more like a case of true love? If ever a +man lost his head over a woman he has lost his over +you, Daisy. And, at any rate, you must know that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[182]</a></span> +<i>I</i> care nothing for him. You certainly could see +where <i>my</i> affections were engaged."</p> + +<p>Daisy pressed her hand dreamily to her forehead. +She had never known her sister to show the least +partiality to any other man.</p> + +<p>"I understand you less than ever," she faltered.</p> + +<p>"Are you so blind?" exclaimed Millicent, with +superior wisdom. "Did you think Mr. Roseleaf had +been so closely engaged all this time in my literary +work without learning to care for me? I presume +you will think I ought to blush, but that is not my +way. The strangest thing is that I should have to +explain what I thought every one knew."</p> + +<p>Poor little Daisy! She was so crushed by these +statements that she did not know what reply to +make, which way to turn for consolation.</p> + +<p>"He has told you that he loves you?" she managed +to articulate.</p> + +<p>"He has shown it, at least," was the answer. "He +had not been here a week before he tried to put his +arms around me. I had to let him hold my hand to +avoid an absolute quarrel. He is not an ordinary +man, Daisy, and does not act like others, but we +understand each other. He is waiting for something +better in his business prospects, and as I am +so busy on my new book I am glad to be left to +myself for the present."</p> + +<p>It was the old story. Daisy could not doubt her +sister's version of her relations with Mr. Roseleaf. +When he called the next time there was a red spot +in both her cheeks. He told her with happy eyes +that he had at last secured something which made it +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[183]</a></span>possible to speak to her father. He had been offered +a position on the Pacific Quarterly, at a good salary, +and another periodical had engaged him to write a +series of articles.</p> + +<p>"They tell me I have no imagination," he explained, +"but that I do very good work on anything +that contains matters of fact. I have some money +of my own, but I did not want to tell your father I +was an idle fellow, without brains enough to make +myself useful in the world. The novel on which I +base such great hopes might not seem to him worth +considering seriously, you know. So I can go with a +better account of myself, and I am going this very +week."</p> + +<p>The bright light that shone from the face at which +she looked made her waver for a moment, but she +found strength to answer that he must not speak to +Mr. Fern about her—now, or at any other time. She +did not want to marry, or to be engaged. She +wanted to live with her father, and take care of him, +and she wanted nothing else.</p> + +<p>"Millie will marry," she added, as a parting +thrust, meant to be very direct and bitter. "One of +us ought to stay with papa."</p> + +<p>For a while he was too overwhelmed by her +changed attitude to make a sensible reply. When +it dawned on him that she meant what she said, he +appealed to her to take it back. He could not bear +the thought of giving her up, or even of waiting +much longer for the fulfillment of his hopes. He +spoke in the most passionate tone, and his whole being +seemed wrought up by his earnestness. The +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[184]</a></span>girl was constantly thinking, however, that this was +the same way he had addressed Millicent, and that +there was no trust to be placed in him.</p> + +<p>"Calm yourself," she said, when he grew violent. +"I have tried to be honest with you. I have thought +of this matter a great deal. You will admit that it +is of some importance to me."</p> + +<p>"To you!" he echoed. "Yes, and to me! I do +not care whether I live or die, if I am to lose you!"</p> + +<p>She wanted to ask him if he had told Millie the +same thing, but she could not without making an explanation +she did not like to give.</p> + +<p>"There are others," was all she said. "Others, +who will make you happier, and be better fitted for +you—in your career as a writer."</p> + +<p>He never thought her allusion had reference to +any particular person, and he answered that there +was no one, there never could be any one, for him, +but her. He had never loved before, he never should +love again. And she listened, thinking what a capacity +for falsehood and tragic acting he had developed.</p> + +<p>After two hours of this most disagreeable scene, +Roseleaf left the house, moody and despondent. It +would have taken little at that moment to make +him throw himself into the bosom of the Hudson, or +send a bullet through his brain.</p> + +<p>On the way to the station he met Mr. Weil, who +could not help asking what was the matter.</p> + +<p>"Oh, it's all up!" he answered. "She has refused +me, and I am going to the devil as quick as I can."</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[185]</a></span></p> + +<p>"What are you talking about?" exclaimed the +other, staring at him. "You don't mean—Daisy!"</p> + +<p>"That's just what I mean. I went there to tell +her of my good luck, and to say I was going to ask +her father's consent; and she met me as cold as an +iceberg, and said she had decided not to marry. So +I'm going back to town without a single reason left +for living."</p> + +<p>Mr. Weil stood silent and nonplussed for a few +seconds. Then a bright idea came into his head.</p> + +<p>"Look here, Mr. Impetuousness," said he. "I +know this can be arranged, and I'm going to see +that it's done. My God, the same thing happens +in half the love affairs the universe over! Give me +a few days to straighten it out. Go home and go +to work, and I'll fix this, I promise you."</p> + +<p>It took some time to persuade Roseleaf to follow +this advice, but he yielded at last. Weil pleaded +his warm friendship, begged the young man to do +what he asked if only to please him, and finally succeeded. +A few minutes later Archie had secured an +audience with Daisy.</p> + +<p>Too shrewd to risk the danger of plunging directly +into the subject he had in mind, Mr. Weil talked on +almost everything else. It happened that Millicent +was away, which enabled him to devote his attention +to the younger sister without appearing unduly to +seek her. But Daisy, only half listening to what he +said, was pondering the strange revelation her sister +had made, and thinking at each moment that a declaration +of love might be forthcoming.</p> + +<p>She remembered her father's injunction to treat +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[186]</a></span>this man with particular courtesy, and was in a +quandary what to do in case he came to the crucial +point. But to her surprise, instead of pressing his +own suit, Mr. Weil began to support in a mild manner +the cause of Mr. Roseleaf.</p> + +<p>"I met Shirley leaving here," he said, in a sober +tone, "and he was in a dreadful state. You didn't +say anything cross to him, I hope."</p> + +<p>With these words there seemed to come to Daisy +a new revelation of the true character of this man. +Loving her himself, he was yet loyal to his friend, +who he believed had a prior claim. As this thought +took root it raised and glorified its object, until +admiration became paramount to all other feelings.</p> + +<p>"Why should I be cross to him?" she asked, +evading the point. "There are no relations between +us that would justify me in acting as his +monitor or mentor."</p> + +<p>Mr. Weil shook his head.</p> + +<p>"He loves you," he said. "You cannot afford, +my child, to trifle with a heart as noble as his."</p> + +<p>The expression, "my child," touched the girl +deeply. It had a protective sound, mingled with a +tinge of personal affection.</p> + +<p>"I hope you do not think I would trifle with the +feelings of any person," she said. "Still, I cannot +marry every man who may happen to ask me. You +know so much about this matter that I feel justified +in saying this; and I earnestly beg that you will ask +no more."</p> + +<p>But this Mr. Weil said gently he could not promise. +He said further that Roseleaf was one of his +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[187]</a></span>dearest friends, and that he could not without emotion +see him in such distress as he had recently +witnessed.</p> + +<p>"You don't know how fond I am of that boy," he +added. "I would do anything in my power to +make him happy. He loves you. He will make +you a good husband. You must give me some message +that will console him."</p> + +<p>He could not get it, try as he might; and he said, +with a forced smile, that he should renew the attack +at an early date, for the cause was a righteous one, +that he could not give over unsatisfied. He took her +arm and strolled up and down the veranda, in such +a way that any visitor might have taken them to be +lovers, if not already married. She liked him better +and better. The touch of his sleeve was pleasant. +His low tones soothed the ache in her bosom, severe +enough, God knows! When her father came from +the city he smiled brightly to see them together, and +after hearing that Millicent was away, came to the +dinner table with the gayest air he had worn for +months.</p> + +<p>Another week passed, during which Mr. Weil +went nearly every day to Midlands, and communicated +to Roseleaf on each return the result of his +labors, coloring them with the roseate hues of hope, +though there was little that could legitimately be +drawn from the words or actions of Miss Daisy. +The critic for Cutt & Slashem had also been given +more than an inkling of the state of affairs, and had +perused with delight the chapters last written on the +famous romance. He saw that the next experience +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[188]</a></span>needed by the author was a severe attack of jealousy, +and as there was no one else to play the part +of Iago he himself undertook the rôle.</p> + +<p>"Archie Weil is pretty popular with the Fern +family, isn't he?" was the way he began, when he +called on Roseleaf. "I met the old gentleman the +other day and he seemed absolutely 'gone on' him, +as the saying is. They tell me he's out at Midlands +every day. Got his eye on the younger daughter, +too, they intimate."</p> + +<p>It takes but little to unnerve a mind already +driven to the verge of distraction. The next time that +Weil saw Roseleaf, the latter received him with a +coolness that could not be ignored. When he +pressed for a reason, the young man broke out into +invective.</p> + +<p>"Don't pretend!" he cried. "You've heard of +the case of John Alden. What's been worked once +may go again. I'm not entirely blind."</p> + +<p>Mr. Weil, with pained eyes, begged his friend to +explain.</p> + +<p>"Tell me this," shouted Roseleaf. "Do you love +that girl, yourself?"</p> + +<p>Unprepared for the question, Archie shrank as +from a flash of lightning, and could not reply.</p> + +<p>"I know you <i>do</i>!" came the next sentence, sharply. +"And I know that it is owing to the inroads you +have made—not only with her but with her father—that +I have been pushed out. Well, go ahead. I've no +objection. Only don't come here every day, with +your cock and bull stories of pleading <i>my</i> cause, for +I've had enough of them!"</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[189]</a></span></p> + +<p>The novelist turned aside, and Mr. Weil, too hurt +to say a word, arose and silently left the room. His +brain whirled so that he was actually giddy. Not +knowing where else to turn he went to see Mr. Gouger, +to whom he unbosomed the result of his call.</p> + +<p>"Don't be too serious about it," said Gouger, +soothingly. "It's a good thing for the lad to get +his sluggish blood stirred a little. In a day or two +he'll be all right. That novel of his is coming on +grandly!"</p> + +<p>Weil was in no mood to talk about novels, and +finding that he could get no consolation of the kind +he craved, he soon left the office. The critic laughed +silently to himself at the idea of the biter having at +last been bitten, and then took his way to Roseleaf's +rooms.</p> + +<p>No answer being returned to his knock, he opened +the door and entered. At first he thought the place +was vacant, but presently he espied a still form on +the bed. The novelist was stretched out in an +attitude which at first suggested death rather than +sleep, and alarmed the visitor not a little. Investigation, +however, showed that he was simply in a +tired sleep, worn out with worry and restless nights.</p> + +<p>"What a beauty!" whispered Gouger. "A very +dramatic scene could be worked up if that sweetheart +of his were brought here and made to stand +beside the couch when he awakes. Yes, it would be +grand, but it would need his own pen to trace the +words!"</p> + +<p>The hardly dry pages of the great manuscript that +lay on an adjacent desk caught the eyes of the critic,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</a></span> +and he sat down to scan them closer. As he turned +the leaves he grew so delighted as to become almost +uncontrollable.</p> + +<p>"He's a genius, nothing less!" he said, rapturously, +and then tiptoed softly from the chamber.</p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XVI" id="CHAPTER_XVI"></a>CHAPTER XVI.</h2> + +<h3>"I'VE HAD SUCH LUCK!"</h3> + + +<p>One day Mr. Fern came home in a state of great +excitement. He had not acted naturally for a long +time and Daisy, who met him at the door, wondered +what could be the cause of his strange manner. He +caught his daughter in his arms and kissed her like +a lover. Tears came to his eyes, but they were tears +of joy. He laughed hysterically as he wiped them +away and told her not to mind him, for he was the +happiest man in New York.</p> + +<p>"I've had such luck!" he exclaimed, when she +stared at him. "Oh, Daisy, I've had such grand +luck!"</p> + +<p>She led him to a seat on a sofa and waited for him +to tell her more.</p> + +<p>"You can't imagine the relief I feel," he continued, +when he had caught sufficient breath. "I've had +an awful time in business for years, but to-day everything +is all cleared up. The house over our heads +was mortgaged; the notes I owed Boggs were al<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</a></span>most +due; I had given out paper that I could see no +way of meeting. And now it is all provided for, I +am out of financial danger, and I have enough to +quit business and live in ease and comfort with my +family the rest of my days!"</p> + +<p>Daisy could only look her surprise. She could +not understand such a transformation. But she +loved her father dearly, and seeing that he was +happy made her happy, too; though she had had +her own sorrows of late.</p> + +<p>"Tell me about it, father," she said, putting an +arm around his neck.</p> + +<p>"You couldn't understand, no matter how much I +tried to make it clear," he answered, excitedly. +"There was a combination that meant ruin or success, +depending on the cast of a die, as one might +say. Wool has been in a bad way. Congress had +the tariff bill before it. If higher protection was +put on, the stocks in the American market would +rise. If the tariff rate was lowered they would fall. +I took the right side. I bought an immense quantity +of options. The bill passed to-day and the +President signed it. Wool went up, and I am richer +by two hundred and fifty thousand dollars than I +was yesterday!"</p> + +<p>For answer the girl kissed him affectionately, and +for a few moments neither of them spoke.</p> + +<p>"I don't wonder you say I can't understand business," +said Daisy, presently. "It would puzzle +most feminine brains, I think, to know how a man +could purchase quantities of wool when he had nothing +to buy with."</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</a></span></p> + +<p>The father drew himself suddenly away from her, +and gazed in a sort of alarm into her wide-opened +eyes.</p> + +<p>"That is a secret," he said, hoarsely. "It is one +of the things business men do not talk about. When +stocks are rising it is easy to buy a great deal, if one +only has something to give him a start."</p> + +<p>"And you <i>had</i> something?" asked Daisy, trying to +utter the words that she thought would please him +best.</p> + +<p>"Yes, yes!" he answered, hurriedly. "I—had—something! +And to-morrow I shall free myself of +Boggs, and of—of all my troubles. I shall pay the +mortgage on the house, and we can have anything +we want. Ah! What a relief it is! What a +relief!"</p> + +<p>He panted like a man who had run a race with +wolves and had just time to close the door before +they caught him.</p> + +<p>"May I tell Millie?" asked the girl. "She has +worried about the house, fearing it would be sold."</p> + +<p>He shook his head as if the subject was disagreeable.</p> + +<p>"She will find it out," he said. "There is no +need of haste. And at any rate I don't want you to +give her any particulars. I don't want her to know +how successful I have been. You can say that I +have made money—enough to free the home. Don't +tell any more than that to any one. It—it is not a +public matter. I was so full of happiness that I had +to tell you, but no one else is to know."</p> + +<p>Daisy promised, though she asked almost imme<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</a></span>diately +if the prohibition extended to Mr. Weil. He +was such a friend of the family, she said, he would +be very much gratified.</p> + +<p>She had reached thus far in her innocent suggestion, +when she happened to glance at her father's +face. He was deathly pale. His body was limp and +his chin sunken to his breast.</p> + +<p>"Father!" she exclaimed. And then, seized with +a nameless fear, was about to summon other help, +when he opened his eyes slowly and touched her +hand with his.</p> + +<p>"You are ill! Shall I call the servants?" she +asked, anxiously.</p> + +<p>He intimated that she should not, and presently +rallied enough to say he was better, and required +nothing.</p> + +<p>"What were we speaking of?" he asked, in a +strained voice.</p> + +<p>"We were talking of your grand fortune, and I +asked if I might not tell Mr.—"</p> + +<p>He stopped her with a movement, and another +spasm crossed his face.</p> + +<p>"You will make no exception," he whispered. +"None whatever. My affairs will interest no one +else. If you are interrogated, you must know nothing. +Nothing," he added, impressively, "nothing +whatever!"</p> + +<p>Mr. Fern's recovery was almost as quick as his +attack, although he did not resume the gaiety of manner +with which he had opened the subject. After +dinner he talked with Daisy, declaring over and over +that she had been on short allowance long enough, +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</a></span>and asserting that she must be positively in a state +of want. She answered laughingly that she needed +very little, and then suddenly bethought herself of +something and grew sober.</p> + +<p>"Do you feel rich enough to let me exercise a +little generosity for others?" she inquired.</p> + +<p>He replied with alacrity that she could do exactly +as she pleased with whatever sum he gave her, and +that the amount should be for her to name.</p> + +<p>"You don't know how big it will be," she replied, +timidly.</p> + +<p>"I'll risk that. Out with it," he said, smiling.</p> + +<p>"Supposing," she said, slowly, "that I should ask +for a thousand dollars?"</p> + +<p>"You would get it," he laughed. "In fact I was +going to propose that you accept several thousand, +and have it put in the bank in your name, so you +would be quite an independent young woman. You +must have your own checkbook and get used to +keeping accounts. I will bring you a certificate of +deposit for three thousand dollars, and each six +months afterwards I will put a thousand more to +your credit, out of which you can take your pin +money."</p> + +<p>It seemed too good to be true, and the girl's face +brightened until it shone with a light that the father +thought the most beautiful on earth. Now she could +return the thousand dollars she had borrowed of +Mr. Roseleaf, a sum that had given her much uneasiness +since she broke off her intimate relations with the +young novelist. More than this, she would have <a name="Page_194t" id="Page_194t"></a><a href="#Page_194tn">sufficient</a> +on hand to send the future amounts that Han<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</a></span>nibal +would need to keep him abroad. It was such +a strange and delightful thing to see smiles on her +father's face that she did not want anything to disturb +them. She was quite as happy as Mr. Fern, now +that this cloud had been lifted from her mind.</p> + +<p>The next day was a bright one for the wool merchant. +By noon he had sent for Walker Boggs and +astonished that gentleman by handing him a check +in full for the entire amount of his indebtedness. In +answer to a question he merely said he had been on +the right side of the market. Mr. Fern also settled +with his mortgage creditor, and went home at night +happy that his head would again lie under a roof +actually as well as in name his own. Notes which he +had given came back to him soon after, and he +burned them with a glee that was almost saturnine. +Burned them, after looking at their faces and backs, +after scanning the endorsements; burned them with +his office door locked, using the flame of a gas-jet for +the purpose.</p> + +<p>The ashes lay on the floor, when a knock was +heard and Archie Weil's voice answered to the +resultant question. Mr. Fern lost color at the +familiar sound, but he mustered courage.</p> + +<p>"I've come to congratulate you," said Archie, +warmly. "They say you have made a mint of +money out of the rise in wool."</p> + +<p>"Who says so?" asked Mr. Fern, warily.</p> + +<p>"Everybody. Don't tell me it's not true."</p> + +<p>"I've done pretty well," was the evasive reply. +"And I'm going out of business, too. It seems a +good time to quit."</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</a></span></p> + +<p>Mr. Weil made a suitable answer to this statement +and the two men talked together for some time. +After awhile the conversation took a wider turn.</p> + +<p>"Where's your young friend, Roseleaf?" asked +Mr. Fern, to whom the matter did not seem to have +occurred before. "I don't believe I have seen him +at Midlands for a month."</p> + +<p>"No, he doesn't come," replied Archie, growing +darker. "If you wish a particular reason, you will +have to ask it of your daughter."</p> + +<p>Mr. Fern looked as if he did not understand.</p> + +<p>"He became very fond of her," explained Archie, +"and for some reason, he does not know what, she +has evinced a sudden dislike to him."</p> + +<p>Mr. Fern looked still more astonished.</p> + +<p>"Millie is a strange girl," he ventured to remark. +"But I supposed—I was almost sure, her affections +were engaged elsewhere; and, really, I thought he +knew it."</p> + +<p>Mr. Weil stared now, for it was evident his companion +was far from the right road. He was also +interested to hear that Miss Fern had anything like +a love affair in mind, for he had supposed such a +thing quite impossible.</p> + +<p>"I was not speaking of Miss Millicent, but of Miss +Daisy," he said.</p> + +<p>The wool merchant rose from his chair in the extremity +of his astonishment.</p> + +<p>"You meant that—that Mr. Roseleaf—was in love +with Daisy!" he said. "And that she seemed to +reciprocate his attachment?"</p> + +<p>"I did. And also that a few weeks ago she asked +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[197]</a></span>him to cease his visits, giving no explanation of the +cause of her altered demeanor. He is a most excellent +young gentleman," continued Weil, "and +one for whom I entertain a sincere affection. Her +conduct is a great blow to him, especially as he does +not know what he has done to deserve it. I trust +the estrangement will not be permanent, as they are +eminently suited to each other."</p> + +<p>The face of Mr. Fern was a study as he heard this +explanation.</p> + +<p>"If he was an honorable man, why did he not +come to <i>me</i>?" he asked, pointedly.</p> + +<p>"He was constantly seeking Miss Daisy's permission +to do so," replied Archie. "Which she +never seemed quite willing to give him."</p> + +<p>"She is too young to think of marriage," mused +Mr. Fern, after a long pause.</p> + +<p>"He is willing to wait; but her present attitude, +giving him no hope whatever, has thrown him into +the deepest dejection."</p> + +<p>From this Mr. Weil proceeded to tell Mr. Fern all +he knew about Roseleaf. He said the young man +was at present engaged on literary work that +promised to yield him good returns. He had a +small fortune of his own beside. Everything that +could be thought of in his favor was dilated upon to +the fullest extent.</p> + +<p>"I don't believe I can spare my 'baby,'" said Mr. +Fern, kindly, "for any man. You plead with much +force, Mr. Weil, for your friend. How is it that <i>you</i> +have never married. Are you blind to the charms +of the sex?"</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[198]</a></span></p> + +<p>For an instant Archie was at loss how to reply.</p> + +<p>"On the contrary," he said, at last, "I appreciate +them fully. I have had my heart's affair, too; but," +he paused a long time, "she loved another, and there +was but one woman for me. Perhaps this leads me +to sympathize all the more with my unfortunate +young friend."</p> + +<p>Mr. Fern said he would have a talk with Daisy, and +learn what he could without bringing in the name of +his informant.</p> + +<p>"We fathers are always the last to see these +things," he added. "It would be terrible to give her +up, but I want her to be happy."</p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XVII" id="CHAPTER_XVII"></a>CHAPTER XVII.</h2> + +<h3>A BURGLAR IN THE HOUSE.</h3> + + +<p>Millicent Fern lay wide awake a few nights later, +at Midlands, when the clock struck two. She was +thinking of her second novel, now nearly ready for +Mr. Roseleaf's hand. There was a hitch in the plot +that she could best unravel in the silence. As she +lay there she heard a slight noise, as of some one +moving about. At first she paid little attention to +it, but later she grew curious, for she had never known +the least motion in that house after its occupants +were once abed. She thought of each of them in +succession, and decided that the matter ought to be +investigated.</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</a></span></p> + +<p>Millicent had no fear. If there was a burglar +present, she wanted to know. She arose, therefore, +and slipped on a dress and slippers. Guided only +by the uncertain light that came in at the windows, +she tiptoed across the hall, and in the direction in +which she had heard the noise. She soon located +it as being on the lower floor where there were no +bedrooms, and a thrill of excitement passed over her. +She crept as silently as possible down the back +stairs, and toward the sound, which she was now +sure was in the library.</p> + +<p>What was the sound? It was the rustling of +papers. It might be made by a mouse, but Millicent +was not even afraid of mice. She was afraid of +nothing, so far as she knew. If there was a robber +there, he would certainly run when discovered. At +the worst she could give a loud outcry, and the servants +would come.</p> + +<p>She tiptoed along the lower hall. A man sat at +her father's desk, examining his private papers so +carefully, that he seemed wholly lost in the occupation.</p> + +<p>The room was quite light. In fact, the gas was +lit, and the intruder was taking his utmost ease. +His face was half turned toward the girl, and she +recognized him without difficulty.</p> + +<p>It was Hannibal!</p> + +<p>Hannibal, whom she supposed at that moment in +France!</p> + +<p>Without pausing to form any plan, Millicent +stepped into the presence of the negro.</p> + +<p>"Thief," she said, sharply, "what do you want?"</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</a></span></p> + +<p>They had hated each other cordially for a long +time, and neither had changed their opinion in the +slightest degree. Hannibal looked up quietly at the +figure in the doorway.</p> + +<p>"I have a good mind to tell you," he said, smiling.</p> + +<p>"You will <i>have</i> to tell me, and give a pretty good +reason, too, if you mean to keep out of the hands of +the police," she retorted. "Come!"</p> + +<p>He laughed silently, resting his head on his hands, +his elbows on the desk. Millicent's hair hung in a +loose coil, her shoulders were but imperfectly covered +by her half buttoned gown, the feet that filled +her slippers had no hosiery on them. She was as +fair a sight as one might find in a year.</p> + +<p>"Do you remember the time I saw you in this guise +before?" he asked, in a low voice.</p> + +<p>A convulsion seized the girl's countenance. She +looked as if she would willingly have killed him, had +she a weapon in her hand. But she could not speak +at first.</p> + +<p>"It was you who sought me then," said the +negro. "And because I bade you go back to your +chamber, you never forgave me. Have you forgotten?"</p> + +<p>Gasping for breath, like one severely wounded, +Millicent roused herself.</p> + +<p>"Will you go," she demanded, hotly, "or shall I +summon help?"</p> + +<p>"Neither," replied Hannibal. "If you inform +any person that I am here, I will tell the story I +hinted at just now. Besides, I would only have to +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</a></span>wait until your father came down, when he would +order them to release me, and say I came here by his +request."</p> + +<p>Millicent chafed horribly at his coolness.</p> + +<p>"Came here by my father's request!" she echoed. +"In the middle of the night! A likely story. Do +you think any one would believe it?"</p> + +<p>"I do not think they would. It would not even +be true. But he would say it was, if I told him to, +and that would answer. Don't you know by this +time that I have Wilton Fern in a vise?"</p> + +<p>Yes, she did know it. Everything had pointed in +that direction. Millicent could not dispute the +insinuation.</p> + +<p>"What has he done, in God's name, that makes +him the slave of such a thing as you?" she cried.</p> + +<p>"I will answer that question by asking another," +said the negro, after a pause. "Do you know that +Shirley Roseleaf hopes to wed your sister?"</p> + +<p>The shot struck home. With pale lips Millicent +found herself trembling before this fellow.</p> + +<p>"You love him," pursued the man, relentlessly. +"You do not need to affirm or deny this, for I know. +He loves Daisy, and unless prevented, will marry +her. I hold a secret over your father's head which +can send him to the State prison for twenty years. +If I confide it to you, will you swear to let no one but +him know until I give you leave?"</p> + +<p>The girl bowed quickly. She could hardly bear +the strain of delay.</p> + +<p>"Then listen," said the negro. "To save himself +in business he has committed numerous forgeries +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</a></span>upon the names of two men. One of them is Walker +Boggs and the other Archie Weil. Very recently he +has been successful in his speculations, and has called +in many notes with these forged endorsements. But +the proofs of his crimes are ample, and I possess +them. If he ever proposes to let Roseleaf marry +Daisy, hint to him of what you know, and he will +obey your will. I shall be in the city. Here is my +address. If you need me I am at your service. +Understand, I shall not harm your father unless he +makes it necessary. I only mean to use the fear of +what might await him, and you can do the same. It +is time I was going. I have found all I want here, +though I had enough before."</p> + +<p>He handed Millicent a card on which was the +address he had mentioned, and she allowed herself to +take it from his hand. Then he started to pick up a +package of papers that lay where he had put them on +the table, when a third figure, to the consternation of +both, brushed Millicent aside, and stepped into the +room. It was the younger sister.</p> + +<p>"Give that to me!" she demanded, imperiously, +reaching out her hand for the package.</p> + +<p>The apparition was so unexpected that the previous +occupants of the library stood for a few seconds +staring at it without moving a step. Daisy was +dressed in much the same manner as Millicent, but +she thought only of the danger that threatened one +she loved better than life—her father.</p> + +<p>"Give that to me!" she repeated, approaching +Hannibal closer.</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</a></span></p> + +<p>Without a word the negro, his head bowed, handed +it to her.</p> + +<p>"And now," she said, in the same quick, sharp +tone, "the others!"</p> + +<p>"They are not here," he answered, huskily.</p> + +<p>"Where are they?"</p> + +<p>"At my lodgings in the city."</p> + +<p>Instantly Daisy snatched the card from her sister's +hand.</p> + +<p>"At this place?" she asked, hastily scanning the +writing.</p> + +<p>"Yes," said Hannibal, in a voice that was scarcely +audible.</p> + +<p>"I will be there this morning at ten o'clock. See +that they are ready."</p> + +<p>The negro bowed, while his chest heaved rapidly.</p> + +<p>"And now," said the girl, pointing to the door, +"go!"</p> + +<p>He hesitated, as if he wanted to say more to her, +but recollecting that she would meet him so soon, he +turned and obeyed her. At the threshold he only +paused to say, "You must come alone; otherwise it +will be of no use." And she answered that she understood.</p> + +<p>She followed some paces behind and closed the +door after him, pushing a bolt that she did not +remember had ever been used before.</p> + +<p>Then she turned to encounter her sister; but Millicent +had disappeared.</p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XVIII" id="CHAPTER_XVIII"></a>CHAPTER XVIII.</h2> + +<h3>BLACK AND WHITE.</h3> + + +<p>When Daisy reached her own room again, she felt assured +that no one but herself and Millicent knew what +had occurred. This was something. Had her father +awakened, she did not know what might have followed. +She had seen him too often, pale and distraught, +in the presence of his relentless enemy, not +to entertain the greatest thankfulness that he had +slept through this terrible experience. At any cost +it must be kept from him. She would beg, pray, entreat +Millicent to seal her lips. And in the morning +she would go to the address Hannibal had given her +and obtain his proofs of her father's guilt, removing +the frightful nightmare that had so long hung +over that dear head.</p> + +<p>Would Hannibal surrender his documents? He +had made a tacit promise to do so, and she had faith +that she could make him keep his word. She knew +the negro had a liking for her that was very strong.</p> + +<p>She had made it possible for him to become a +man—by giving him the money that took him to +France. Why had he returned so suddenly? What +new fancy had caused him to give up his studies and +recross the sea to enter her doors at night, to +plunder still further secrets from her father's private +desk? There were a thousand reasons for fear, but +the devoted daughter only thought of saving the one +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</a></span>she loved at all risks. She would dare anything in +his behalf.</p> + +<p>And this father of hers—that she had revered from +babyhood—was a forger! He had made himself +liable to a term of imprisonment in the common +jail! He was a criminal, for whom the law would +stretch out its hand as soon as his guilt was revealed! +His previous high standing in the community +could not save him; nor the love of his +children; nor his new fortune—won by such means +as this. Nothing could make his liberty secure but +the silencing of the witness to his fault, the negro +who had carefully possessed himself of certain facts +with which to ruin his benefactor.</p> + +<p>What did Hannibal want? Surely he had no revenge +to gratify, as against her or her father! They +had treated him with the greatest consideration. +Only once—that day on the lawn—had Daisy spoken +to him in a sharp tone, and then the provocation +was very great. Since then she had raised the money +that was to make a man of him. What did he +require now? An increased bribe to keep him away? +Well, she would get it for him. She would spend +one, two, three thousand dollars if necessary to +purchase his silence; if it needed more she could +borrow of—of Mr. Weil.</p> + +<p>Yes, Mr. Weil was the friend to whom she would +turn in this emergency. He had lost nothing, +apparently, by the unwarranted use of his name. +The notes on which his endorsement had been forged +were all paid. When she met Hannibal she would +ascertain his price and then the rest would be easy.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</a></span> +Her father need not even know the danger to which +he had been exposed.</p> + +<p>In the morning she went to Millicent's room early, +in order to have a conversation with her undisturbed. +Millicent was sleeping soundly and was awakened +with some difficulty.</p> + +<p>"I've only been unconscious a little while," she +said, in explanation. "I thought I never should +sleep again. Oh, what a disgrace! My father a +forger! Liable to go to prison with common +criminals, to wear the stripes of a convict! It seems +as if my degradation could go no lower."</p> + +<p>Reddening with surprise at the attitude of her +sister, Daisy answered that the thing to be thought +of now was how to save Mr. Fern from the consequences +of his errors.</p> + +<p>"You're a strange girl," was Millicent's reply. +"You don't think of me at all! Won't it be nice to +have people point after me in the street and say, +'There goes one of the Fern girls, whose father is in +Sing Sing!' I never thought I should come to +this. There's no knowing how far it will follow me. +I doubt if any reputable man will marry me, when +the facts are known."</p> + +<p>Thoroughly disgusted with her sister's selfishness, +Daisy cried out that the facts must <i>not</i> be known—that +they must be covered up and kept from the +world, and that she was going to bring this about. +She reminded Millicent of the evident suffering their +father had undergone for the past two years, changed +from a light-hearted man into the easily alarmed +mood they had known so well.</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[207]</a></span></p> + +<p>"If he deserved punishment, God knows he has +had enough!" she added. "And there is another +thing you and I ought not to forget, Millie. Whatever +he did was in the hope of saving this home and +enough to live on, for us! During the last week he +has had an improvement in business. He has paid +all of those people whose claims distressed him. +You have seen how much brighter it has made him. +Now, when he had a fair prospect of a few happy +days, comes this terrible danger. Surely you and I +will use our utmost endeavors to shield him from +harm. Even if he were the worst of sinners he is +still our father!"</p> + +<p>But Millicent did not seem at all convinced. She +could only see that her reputation had been put in +jeopardy, and that a dreadful fear would constantly +hang over her on account of it.</p> + +<p>"It is your fault, as much as his, too!" she exclaimed, +angrily. "You both made as much of that +negro as if he were a prince in disguise. I've told +you a hundred times that he ought to be discharged. +I hope you'll admit I was right, at last."</p> + +<p>There was little use in reminding her sister that +Hannibal had shown himself the possessor of some +information that endangered Mr. Fern before either +he or Daisy began to cultivate his good will; for she +knew it well enough. What Daisy did say was +more to the point.</p> + +<p>"Have you <i>always</i> hated him?" she asked, +meaningly. "What did he mean last night by his +reference to a time when you <i>sought</i> him, <i>en dishabille</i>?"</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[208]</a></span></p> + +<p>Millicent sprang up in bed, with flashing eyes.</p> + +<p>"He is a lying scoundrel!" she cried, vehemently. +"I never did anything of the kind, and I do not see +how you can stand there and repeat such a calumny!"</p> + +<p>"The strange thing about it," replied Daisy, quietly, +"is that you did not dispute him. But then, you did +not know a third person was present. When I meet +him this morning I shall ask for further particulars."</p> + +<p>Millicent sprang from the bed and threw herself +at her sister's feet.</p> + +<p>"Would you drive me mad!" she exclaimed. "I +am distracted already with the troubles of this house, +and now you wish to hear the lying inventions of one +you know to be a blackmailer and a robber! Don't +mention my name to him, I entreat you. He is capable +of any slander. You can't intend to listen to +tales about your sister from such a low, base thing!"</p> + +<p>Having Millicent at her feet, Daisy was pleased to +relent a little.</p> + +<p>"Very well," she said. "I will not let him tell +me anything about you. But I want you to promise +in return that you will do all you can to protect +father from the slightest knowledge of what happened +last night. I am afraid it would kill him. So +far he believes us ignorant of his troubles. If I can +make an arrangement to send Hannibal back to +France he will remain so. Be sure you do not +arouse his suspicions in any way, and we may come +out all right yet."</p> + +<p>The promise was made, and, as nothing could be +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[209]</a></span>gained by prolonging the conversation, Daisy withdrew. +In the lower hall she met her father, and his +bright smile proved to her that he was still in blissful +ignorance that any new cloud had crossed his +sky. Millicent did not appear at breakfast, for +which neither of the others were sorry. It enabled +Mr. Fern to talk over some of his plans with his +younger daughter. Among them was a possible +trip abroad, for he said he felt the need of a long +rest after his troubled business career.</p> + +<p>The last suggestion opened a new hope for Daisy. +If worse came to worst, and there was no other way +to escape the jail, flight in a European steamer +could be resorted to. It would mean expatriation +for life, as far as he was concerned, but that would +be a thousand times better than a lingering death +inside of stone walls. He could raise a large sum +of ready money, and they would want for nothing. +Millie would not wish to go with them, probably. +She would stay and marry—how the thought +choked Daisy—marry Mr. Roseleaf; unless indeed, +the young novelist did what she had foreshadowed, +repudiated the thought of allying himself with a +tainted name.</p> + +<p>Roseleaf! The bright, happy love she had given +him came back to the child like a wave of agony.</p> + +<p>Making an excuse that she had shopping to do, +Daisy took the train to the city with her father, and +parted from him at a point where the downtown and +uptown street cars separated. Then she took a cab +and drove to the address given her.</p> + +<p>It was not the finest quarter in the city, and she +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[210]</a></span>would have hesitated at any other time before taking +such a risk as going there alone. At present she +thought of nothing but the object of her visit. Inquiry +at the door brought the information that the +lady was expected and that she was to go upstairs +and wait. The woman who let her in was a pleasant +faced mullatress, and several young children of +varying shades were playing on the stairs she had +to ascend. Daisy mounted to the room designated, +which proved to be a small parlor, with an alcove, +behind the curtains of which was presumably a +bed.</p> + +<p>As the weather was quite warm, the girl went to +the front windows and opened them, in order to +admit the fresh air. Then she sat down and waited +impatiently. There was a scent in the room which +she associated with the Ethiopian race, a subtle +aroma that she found decidedly unpleasant. It +gave her an indefinable uneasiness, and she mentally +remarked that she would be glad when the +ordeal was over. Her nerves were already beginning +to suffer.</p> + +<p>After the lapse of fifteen minutes, Hannibal entered. +He had the look of one who had passed a +sleepless night, and despite the blackness of his +complexion, his cheeks seemed pale.</p> + +<p>"Good-morning," said Daisy, rising.</p> + +<p>"Good-morning," he replied.</p> + +<p>And then there was a brief space of silence, each +waiting for the other.</p> + +<p>"I am here, you see," said the girl, finally, with an +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[211]</a></span>attempt at a smile. "And now will you give me the +things I came for, as I cannot stay long?"</p> + +<p>The negro tried to look at her, tried many times, +but failed. His eyes shifted uneasily to all the other +objects in the room, resting on none of them more +than a second at a time.</p> + +<p>"You wonder," he said, after another pause, "why +I returned to America, why I came to your house +last night. I thought I could tell you—this morning—and +I have been trying to prepare myself to do +so—but I cannot. You blame me a great deal, that +is evident in every line of your face, but you do not +know what I have suffered. Were your father to go +to jail for the term the law prescribes, he would not +endure the agony that has been mine."</p> + +<p>He looked every word he spoke and more.</p> + +<p>"I am sorry, truly sorry for you," she replied. +"But why could you not leave all your troubles, +when you went to France, and begin an entirely new +life? You found it true what I told you, I am sure, +about the lack of prejudice—on account of your—race."</p> + +<p>He nodded and cleared his throat before he spoke +again.</p> + +<p>"Oh, yes; but it is not the prejudice <i>there</i> that +worries me. It is the prejudice <i>here</i>. It is the +barrier my color brings between me and the only +being whose regard I crave!"</p> + +<p>The girl's cheeks grew rosier than ever, but she +affected not to understand, and once more reverted +to the errand that had brought her thither.</p> + +<p>"You promised me the documents with which my +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[212]</a></span>poor father has been tortured," she said, reproachfully; +"let us not talk of other things until you +have given them to me."</p> + +<p>The negro drew from a pocket of his coat a fair-sized +package tied with a ribbon.</p> + +<p>"They are all there," he said. "Every scrap, +every particle of proof, everything that could bring +the breath of suspicion upon your father's honesty. +All there, in that little envelope."</p> + +<p>She reached for it, but instead of giving it to her, +Hannibal caught her hand, and before she dreamed +what he intended, pressed a kiss upon it. The next +moment the girl, with a look of outraged womanhood, +was rubbing the spot with her handkerchief, as +if he had covered it with poison.</p> + +<p>"You brute!" she exclaimed. "You—you—"</p> + +<p>She could not find the word she wanted; nothing +in the language she spoke seemed detestable enough +to fill the measure of her wrong.</p> + +<p>"You see!" he answered, bitterly. "Because I +am black I cannot touch the hand of a woman that is +white. You have claimed to be without the hatred +of the African so ingrained among Americans; you +have talked about the Almighty making of one +blood all the nations of the earth; and yet you are +like the rest! A viper's bite could not have aroused +deeper disgust in you than my lips. And all because +the sun shone more vertically on my ancestors than +it did on yours!"</p> + +<p>Daisy was divided between her horror of the act +he had committed and her anxiety to do something +to free her father from his danger. She suppressed +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[213]</a></span>the hateful epithets that rose to her tongue and once +more entreated the negro to give her the packet he +held in his possession.</p> + +<p>"You can do nothing with it but injure a man +who has been kind to you," she pleaded. "And if +you use the information you have, and afterwards +repent, it will be too late to remedy your error. Give +it to me, and return to France with the proud consciousness +that you are worthy the position you +wish to occupy."</p> + +<p>Hannibal shook his head with decision.</p> + +<p>"That would be very well if I ever could be considered +a man by the one for whose opinion I care +most. But while I am to her a creature something +below the ape, a mere crawling viper whose touch +is pollution, I will act like the thing she thinks me. +To-day I possess the power to make a high-born +gentleman dance whenever I pull the string. You +ask me to give up this power, and in return you +offer—nothing."</p> + +<p>"One would suppose," remarked Daisy, struggling +with herself in this dilemma, "that the ability +to inflict pain was one a true nature would delight +to surrender. My father has done no harm to +you."</p> + +<p>The negro bent toward her and spoke with vehemence.</p> + +<p>"But his daughter has! She has made my life +wretched. Whatever position I may attain will +be worthless to me, without the love I had hoped +might be mine."</p> + +<p>"<i>Love!</i>" cried the girl, recoiling. "<i>Love!</i>"</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[214]</a></span></p> + +<p>"Love and marriage," he replied. "In France we +could live without the hateful prejudices that prevail +in America. I have natural ability enough, you have +told me so a thousand times, and I could make myself +worthy of you. As my wife—"</p> + +<p>Daisy rose and interrupted him fiercely.</p> + +<p>"Cease!" she exclaimed. "There is a limit to +what I can endure. If you mean to make any promise +of that kind a prelude to my father's freedom +from persecution, we may as well end this conversation +now as later. He would rather rot in prison +than have his child sacrifice herself in such a manner!"</p> + +<p>She started toward the door, and he did not interrupt +her passage, as she half expected he would do; +but he spoke again.</p> + +<p>"All this because I am black," he said.</p> + +<p>"Because you are a cruel, heartless wretch!" she +answered, her eyes flashing. "Because you have +abused the goodwill of a generous family; because +you have tortured a kind old man and a loving daughter. +If you were as white as any person on earth, I +would not marry you. Worse than all outward +semblance is a dark and vile mind. Do what you +like! I defy you!"</p> + +<p>The door opened and closed behind her. Hannibal +heard her retreating footsteps grow fainter on +the stairs, and then there was silence.</p> + +<p>"I might have known it," he said, aloud. "I did +know it, but I kept hoping against hope. She would +wed a Newfoundland dog sooner than me. Nothing +is left but to make her repent her action. I will +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[215]</a></span>bring that father of hers to the dust, if only to +revenge the long list of injuries his race has inflicted +on mine!"</p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIX" id="CHAPTER_XIX"></a>CHAPTER XIX.</h2> + +<h3>"PLAY OUT YOUR FARCE."</h3> + + +<p>When Daisy left the house where she had the +interview with Hannibal, she walked for some +minutes aimlessly along the street. Her mind was +in a state of great excitement. She realized that she +had defied a man who could inflict the deepest injury +on the father she dearly loved. How she could have +done otherwise was not at all clear, but the terror +which hung over her was none the less keen. The +proposal of the negro—to marry her—filled her with a +nameless dread that made her teeth chatter, though +it was a warm day. Rather would she have cast her +body into the tides that wash the shores of Manhattan +Island. Even to save her father from prison—if +it came to that—she could not make this sacrifice. +She now felt for Hannibal a horrible detestation, +a feeling akin to that she might entertain for a +rattlesnake. Whatever good she had seen in him in +other days had vanished under the revelations of his +true character.</p> + +<p>What to do next was the absorbing question. A +great danger hung over her father. A dim idea of +seeking the mayor—or the chief of police—and im<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[216]</a></span>ploring +their mercy, entered her brain. Then she +thought of Roseleaf, whose aid she might have +secured, if he had not proved himself a double-dealer, +capable of making love to herself and Millicent +at the same time. And then came the resolve +to seek out Mr. Weil, the one person in all this +trouble that seemed clear of wrong. Her sister had +told her that he loved her. Well, if necessary she +would marry him. At least he was a man of honor, +and white. Yes, she would go to him and throw +herself upon his mercy.</p> + +<p>Daisy knew that Archie made his headquarters at +the Hoffman House, and summoning a cab she asked +to be taken to that hotel. Ensconced in the ladies' +parlor she awaited the coming of the man she wanted +and yet dreaded so much to see. Luckily he was in +the house, and in a few moments responded in person +to her card.</p> + +<p>"Why, Miss Daisy," he stammered. "What is +the matter? Nothing wrong, I trust. You look +quite pale. Is it anything—about—your father?"</p> + +<p>The girl was pale indeed. Now that Mr. Weil +was so close, the danger that he might not be willing +to help her rose like a mountain in her path. She +did not know exactly how grave a matter forgery +was—whether it was something that the injured +party would be able or likely to forgive. If she +should tell him everything, and he should refuse to +be placated—what could she do then?</p> + +<p>There was no one else in the parlor, but seeing +that she wanted as much seclusion as possible, Mr. +Weil motioned the girl to follow him to a remote +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[217]</a></span>corner, where the curtains of a recessed window +partially concealed them. He felt that she had +come on a momentous errand. His suspicions concerning +Mr. Fern were apparently about to be verified, +and if so, he did not mean that other ears should +hear the tale.</p> + +<p>"Mr. Weil," began Daisy, tremblingly, "I don't +know what to say to you. I am in great distress. +Would you—will you—help me?"</p> + +<p>He responded gently that he would do anything +in his power. He bade her calm herself, and promised +to be the most attentive of listeners.</p> + +<p>Reassured by his kind words and manner, the girl +began again; but she could not tell her story connectedly, +and after making several attempts to do +so, she broke out in a new direction.</p> + +<p>"I want so very much of you, dear Mr. Weil. And +I am nervous and afraid to ask what I would like. I +will give you anything you please in return. Yes, +yes, anything."</p> + +<p>He smiled down upon her face, on which the tears +were making stains in spite of her.</p> + +<p>"You are promising a great deal, little girl," he +said.</p> + +<p>"I know it; I realize it fully," she responded +quickly. "But I mean all I say. I did not think I +could, once, but I am quite resolved now. Millie +told me you were in love with me, and feared I would +refuse you. But I won't. No, no, I will marry you—indeed +I will—if you will only save my darling +father!"</p> + +<p>The concluding words were spoken in the midst of +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[218]</a></span>a torrent of sobs that shook the girlish frame and +affected powerfully the strong man that witnessed +them.</p> + +<p>"Daisy, dear child, don't speak like this," he answered. +"If I can do anything for your father I will +most gladly, and the price of your sweet little heart +shall not be demanded in payment, either. Leave +that matter entirely out of the question, and tell me +at once what you desire."</p> + +<p>She heard him with infinite delight, and wiping her +eyes she began, in broken tones, to relate the history +of Hannibal's revelations. As she proceeded his +brow darkened, and when she had finished he muttered +something that sounded very much like a +curse.</p> + +<p>"And what do you wish of me?" he asked, when +she had ended.</p> + +<p>"To keep him from having my father put in prison; +to give us time to escape, if there is no other way; +and to forgive the harm to yourself. I know," she +added earnestly, "it is a great deal to ask, but I have +no one else to go to. He has paid every cent, and +you will lose nothing. Tell me, dear Mr. Weil, is +there anything you can do?"</p> + +<p>He had the greatest struggle of his life to keep +from bending over that trembling mouth and pressing +upon it the kiss he knew she would not refuse; +that mouth he had coveted so long and which must +never be touched by his lips!</p> + +<p>"Can I do anything?" he repeated. "Certainly. +I can stop that fellow so quickly he won't know what +ails him. Have no fear Miss Daisy. Go home and +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[219]</a></span>rest in peace. Before the sun sets I will remove the +last particle of danger from your father's path."</p> + +<p>The girl sprang to her feet and would have thrown +her arms around his neck had he not prevented her.</p> + +<p>"You are certain you can do this?" she cried, +beaming with happy eyes upon him.</p> + +<p>"There is not the least question of it. But—I +must demand payment for my trouble. I shall not +do this work for nothing."</p> + +<p>With a hot blush Daisy lowered her eyes to the +carpet.</p> + +<p>"I have already told you what I will do," she said, +trembling. "If you accomplish what you say, have +no fear but I shall keep my word."</p> + +<p>There was an element of pride and truth in the way +she spoke that struck the hearer strongly. The reverent +smile on his face grew yet deeper.</p> + +<p>"I am placed in a peculiar situation," he said, +after a slight pause. "Your sister has, unintentionally, +no doubt, misrepresented matters in a way that +may be embarrassing for us both. When I have removed +the troubles that stand in your way, I will +talk this over with you."</p> + +<p>Daisy looked up quickly. What could he mean?</p> + +<p>"I beg you to explain," she stammered. "If +there has been any mistake no time can be better to +set it right than now."</p> + +<p>The man toyed with the lace of the window curtain. +He had no intention of evading his duty, and +yet he did not find it agreeable as he proceeded.</p> + +<p>"Your sister told me," he said, finally, "that—you +loved me. She was wrong. I knew all the time she +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[220]</a></span>was wrong. You have just offered to give yourself +to me in marriage in exchange for the efforts that I +am to make on your father's behalf. But I would +not marry a woman who did not love me—who only +became mine from gratitude. No, I could not +accept you under such circumstances."</p> + +<p>The young girl glanced at him timidly.</p> + +<p>"I wish you knew how much I liked you," she +said. "I never knew a man I respected more."</p> + +<p>"That is most gratifying," he answered, "for I +hold your good opinion very highly. You must +think I speak in riddles, for I have said that I +demand payment for my services, and yet that I +would not accept the greatest gift it is in your +power to bestow upon me. Let me wait no longer +in my explanation. When I have put your father +out of all danger from this blackmailer—and I can +easily do it, never fear—you must do justice to +Shirley Roseleaf."</p> + +<p>She shivered at the name, as if the east wind blew +upon her.</p> + +<p>"He is not a true man," she replied, in a whisper. +"He has forfeited all claim to my consideration."</p> + +<p>"Why do you say that? I am afraid there is +another misunderstanding here, my child."</p> + +<p>Then he drew out of her, slowly at first, the revelations +that Millicent had made. And he disposed of +the charges, one by one, until there was nothing +left of them.</p> + +<p>"Could you—would you—only go with me to his +rooms," he added, "and see him lying there, wan +and pale, disheartened at the present, hopeless for +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[221]</a></span>the future, you would change your mind. He has +never in his life loved but one woman, and that one +is yourself. I will not undertake to say why you +have been told differently, though I could guess. +Shirley Roseleaf loves you, Miss Daisy, and you love +him. When I have made good my promise, I shall +ask you to come to my friend's side and bring him +back to health with the sunshine of your presence."</p> + +<p>Daisy was more than half convinced, for the +strong affection she had had for the young man +plead for him in every drop of her blood.</p> + +<p>"Is he so very ill?" she asked, dreamily.</p> + +<p>"He has not left his room for a week," was the +answer. "Nothing his friends can say will move +him. He is in such a state of mind that he even refuses +to have me with him; me, until very lately, +his closest friend. But if I tell him you have relented, +there is no medicine on earth will have such +an instant effect."</p> + +<p>The girl thought for some moments without speaking.</p> + +<p>"It is my father first, of course," she said at last. +"But while you are arranging matters concerning +him, I do not see any reason to keep me from helping +a sick boy. I—yes, I will go with you now."</p> + +<p>He looked the gratitude he could not speak, and +fearful that in her mercurial mood she might change +her mind, he accompanied her without delay to the +street, and procured a cab, in which they were +driven rapidly to Roseleaf's lodgings. On the way, +with that loved form so near him, Archie Weil had +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[222]</a></span>a constant struggle. She might be his, if he would +forget duty.</p> + +<p>And he loved her! God, how he loved her! He +could marry her, and perhaps after a fashion make +her happy. The perspiration stood on his forehead +as he dwelt on the bliss that he had resolutely cast +aside.</p> + +<p>Roseleaf's landlady came to the door in person +and informed the callers that her guest was in about +the same condition as he had been for some days. +He was not ill in bed, but he did not leave his +room. When she sent up his meals he received them +mechanically, and they were often untouched when +the domestic went for the dishes. He wrote several +hours a day, though he was undoubtedly feeble. +Did he have any visitors? Only one, Mr. Gouger, +who was with him at the present moment. Should +she go up and announce them? Very well, if it was +not necessary. Mr. Weil could show the lady into +the adjoining room, which was empty, until he had +announced her presence in the house to his friend.</p> + +<p>Archie whispered to Daisy when he left her at +Roseleaf's door, that he would come for her as soon +as possible. He did not enter the sick boy's chamber +at once, for something in the conversation that +came to his ears arrested his steps at the threshold. +Mr. Gouger's voice was heard, and Archie's ears +caught the sound of his own name.</p> + +<p>"You should let me send to Mr. Weil," said Gouger. +"I am sure he can explain everything. You +have written all you ought for the present. He +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[223]</a></span>would take you to ride and bring the color to those +white cheeks of yours."</p> + +<p>"But he cannot bring me the girl I love," responded +Roseleaf, with a profound sigh. "Even if +I have done him injustice, she is lost to me now. +You know appearances were against him. Why, +you agreed with me about it. I don't want to see +any one. I want to go away from here, and forget +my sorrows as best I can in some far distant place."</p> + +<p>There was a sadness in the tone that went to the +listener's heart. The door was slightly ajar and +Archie took the liberty of looking into the room. +Roseleaf lay stretched out in a great chair, and Gouger +leaned over him, appearing for all the world +like some sinister bird of prey. Mr. Weil felt for +the first time in his life that there was something uncanny +in the aspect of the book reviewer. He did +not think he could ever be close friends with him +again. And what did Shirley mean by saying that +Lawrence had "agreed" with him when he heard +such base opinions?</p> + +<p>The critic was fingering with apparent satisfaction +a pile of MSS. that lay on the table. It had grown +vastly since Archie saw it the last time, and must be +fifteen or twenty chapters in extent now.</p> + +<p>"You must not go away until you have finished +this wonderful work," replied Gouger, with concern. +"A few more months—a little further experience in +life—and your reputation will be made! Ah, it is +wonderful! It is magnificent! The world will ring +with your praises before the year is ended. Such +fidelity to nature! Such perfection of detail! In +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[224]</a></span>all my career I have never seen anything to approach +it!"</p> + +<p>Shirley moved uneasily in his chair.</p> + +<p>"Do you ever think at what cost I have done this?" +he asked. "I know the pain of a burn because I +have held my hands in the fire. I know the agony +of asphyxiation, because I have dangled at the end +of a rope. I can write of the miner buried beneath +a hundred feet of clay, because I have had the load +fall on my own head. To love and find myself beloved; +then to see happiness snatched without explanation +from my grasp; to feel that my best friend +has been the one to betray me! That is what I +have passed through, and from the drops of misery +thus distilled, I have penned those lines you so much +admire. I have written all I can of these horrors. +I will not begin again till I have caught somewhere +in the great sky a glimpse of sunlight!"</p> + +<p>Mr. Weil could wait no longer. He pushed open +the door and went to the speaker's side.</p> + +<p>"The sunlight is awaiting you," he said, gazing +down upon the figure in the armchair. "You have +only to raise your curtain."</p> + +<p>Mr. Gouger sprang up in astonishment at the sudden +arrival, and perhaps a little in alarm also; for +he could not tell how long the visitor had been +eavesdropping at the portal. But Roseleaf turned +his languid eyes toward his old friend, and was +silent.</p> + +<p>"Shirley, my boy," pursued Weil, with the utmost +earnestness, "I can prove to you now that Daisy +Fern loves you and you alone."</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[225]</a></span></p> + +<p>Roseleaf did not move. His lips opened and the +words came stiffly.</p> + +<p>"You can promise many things," he said, "but can +you fulfill any of them?"</p> + +<p>So cold, so unlike himself!</p> + +<p>"What will convince you?" demanded Weil. +"Shall I bring a letter from her? Or would you +rather she came in person, to tell you I speak the +truth?"</p> + +<p>The shadow of a smile, a smile that was not agreeable, +hovered around the corners of the pale mouth.</p> + +<p>"I shall write no more," said the lips, when they +opened, "until I have seen her and heard the reason +for my rejection. I will discover who my enemy is. +I will unmask the man or the woman that has done +me this injury. Till then, I shall write no more. +No, not one line."</p> + +<p>Mr. Gouger was nonplussed by the new turn in +affairs. He knew that Weil had some basis for what +he said, that he was not the man to come with pretence +on his tongue. Neither of the other persons +in the room paid the least attention to him, any more +than if he had not been present. It was like a play, +at which Gouger was the only spectator.</p> + +<p>"Could you bear it if I brought her to you to-day, if +I brought her here now?" asked Archie, beseechingly. +"If I go and get her, and she comes with me, will +the shock harm you?"</p> + +<p>The ironical smile deepened on the face of the +younger man.</p> + +<p>"Play out your farce," he said.</p> + +<p>Casting one look of apprehension at Roseleaf, Mr.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[226]</a></span> +Weil turned toward the door that entered the hallway. +Before he could reach it, a female form came +into the room and caught his arm. Together they +faced the recumbent figure in the chair. This lasted +but a moment. Then Daisy broke from her escort +and threw herself at her lover's feet.</p> + +<p>"Come," whispered Archie, to the critic. "Let +us leave them alone."</p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XX" id="CHAPTER_XX"></a>CHAPTER XX.</h2> + +<h3>LIKE A STUCK PIG.</h3> + + +<p>Hannibal was neither better nor worse, morally, +because his color was black. There are men with +white complexions who would have done exactly as +he did. There are others as dark as Erebus who +would have done nothing of the sort.</p> + +<p>He was no ordinary negro. His intelligence was +above the average. When he first entered the employ +of Mr. Fern, that gentleman took every pains to encourage +the aptitude for learning that he found in +him. Hannibal accompanied his employer to his +office, where he was entrusted with important commissions, +which he seemed for a long time to execute +with faithfulness and discrimination. At home he +performed his duties in a way that gave great satisfaction. +At the end of the first six months Mr. Fern +would have hated to part with a servant that he +believed difficult to replace.</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[227]</a></span></p> + +<p>But the great source of trouble arose gradually. +Hannibal began to entertain a sentiment for his master's +younger daughter that was impossible of fruition. +Daisy treated him in the most considerate +manner, never dreaming what was going on behind +his serious brow. Millicent, ungovernable in all +things, began early to show the bitterest enmity +toward the negro, while her sister, seeing that her +father liked and appreciated him, tried by her own +kindness to compensate for the other's rudeness. +What caused Millicent's feelings Daisy had no means +of knowing, and she had not the least suspicion until +she heard the conversation in the library the night +the house was entered. Even then she did not take +the subject much to heart, for she did not comprehend +all that Hannibal had meant to convey in the +brief and sarcastic expression he used. Daisy had a +mind too pure to believe anything so heinous of her +own sister as Hannibal had intimated.</p> + +<p>The passion of love is a thing that grows in curious +ways. What made it seem to Hannibal that +there was hope for him was the discovery that Mr. +Fern was committing forgeries and that the proofs +might be his for the taking. If he could hold such +a power as that over this gentleman, who could say +that even so great a mésalliance as his daughter's +marriage to an African might not be arranged?</p> + +<p>The negro proceeded cautiously. He secured the +proofs he wished, and let Mr. Fern know tacitly that +he had them. The terror, the undisguised fear that +followed, the admittance of the menial to a totally +different position in the household and the office, +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[228]</a></span>showed that the servant had not underrated the importance +of his acquisition.</p> + +<p>Not one word bearing directly on the subject +passed between them. The condition of the merchant +was more horrible than it would have been +had his employé said outright, "I have the proof +that you are a forger—I can send you to prison for +twenty years, and I will do so unless you do so-and-so +for me." He did not know how Hannibal meant +to use his information. He was afraid to broach the +matter to him. He could only wait and suffer; and +suffer he did, as a proud-spirited, high-minded man +who has made an error must suffer, when such a +sword hangs over his head, ready at any moment to +fall.</p> + +<p>As Walker Boggs had said, Mr. Fern was not by +nature a business man. After the former's retirement +from active participation in the concern there +was a series of losses. When Mr. Fern took his pen +and began to imitate the signature of his late partner +on a sheet of paper, nothing but some such +course stood between him and bankruptcy. He felt +certain that if he could tide over twenty-four hours +he would be saved. Before he left his office he had +made a note, written Mr. Boggs name across the +back of it, and raised money thereon.</p> + +<p>He did this many times afterwards, but finally, +when he again wanted a name to save himself with, he +dared not use this one. Boggs had called in to remark +that he should withdraw the capital he had lent as +soon as the term arranged for had expired. The +sum was already infringed upon, had the investor +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[229]</a></span>known it. The next name used was that of Archie +Weil. Archie had been to the house a good deal to +see Millicent. Mr. Fern believed there was a love +affair between them, and he caught at the straw of +possible protection in case of discovery. The forgeries +became numerous, and the total amount on +that day when the passage of a new tariff saved the +venturesome speculator, was very large. Hannibal +was at this time in foreign parts, or at least so the +merchant supposed. He soothed his conscience with +the reflection that this additional wrong act would +enable him to right the others that preceded it. And +things might have gone well had not the negro returned, +consumed with the love he bore the younger +daughter, and had not his love turned to vinegar by +her contemptuous rejection of his advances.</p> + +<p>An hour after Daisy left him, Hannibal had made +up his mind to be revenged. He had faltered a little +in the meantime, asking himself what good it would +do to bring disgrace on the head of this poor old +man, but his injuries were too strong for mercy. +He was despised by them all; he would show them +that, black as he was, his ability to hurt was no less +strong than theirs. Roseleaf had made the first impression +on that young heart he himself had craved. +It remained to be seen whether he would wed the +daughter of a convict. There would be something +pleasant, too, in disgracing Millicent, who had once +placed herself in a position where he could have +blasted her reputation forever, and had afterwards +dared to treat him as if he were the dirt beneath her +shoes. Yes, Hannibal decided, he would go to Mr.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[230]</a></span> +Weil and Mr. Boggs, and show them the way this +man had used their names, hawking them in the +public market without their knowledge.</p> + +<p>When Hannibal reached the Hoffman House and +inquired for Mr. Weil, he was told that he was +absent. An hour later he received the same answer. +A visit to the residence of Mr. Boggs elicited a +reply precisely similar. In fact, the day wore away +and evening arrived before he found them.</p> + +<p>In the meantime, Mr. Weil had not been idle. +While Daisy and Shirley Roseleaf were tearfully exchanging +their explanations, he sent a messenger to +Mr. Boggs, asking that gentleman to come to him +without delay. An hour later the messenger arrived +with the gentleman, and having engaged a room for +temporary use, and seen to it that Roseleaf wanted +nothing at present but his fair nurse, Archie pulled +Boggs in and locked the door securely.</p> + +<p>"What's all this?" exclaimed Boggs. "You look +and act as if there was the devil to pay."</p> + +<p>"There is," was the short answer. "I want you +to do one of the most creditable acts of your life. I +want it as a personal favor, and I'm going to have it, +too."</p> + +<p>Mr. Boggs crossed his hands over his paunch and +waited for further information.</p> + +<p>"Are you a first-class liar?" was Mr. Weil's next +question. "Could you, in an emergency, do yourself +justice as an eminent prevaricator? Are you +able, for a certain time, to banish truth from your +vicinity?"</p> + +<p>Mr. Boggs remarked, in response to these astonish<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[231]</a></span>ing +suggestions, that he could tell much better what +his friend was about if he would drop metaphor.</p> + +<p>Mr. Weil hesitated. He saw no way but to trust +this man with the facts, and yet he dreaded the possibility +that he might prove obstinate.</p> + +<p>"By-the-way," he said, as if to change the subject +temporarily, "have you been out to see Fern +lately?"</p> + +<p>Mr. Boggs shook his head.</p> + +<p>"You ought to," said Weil. "He's improved a +thousand per cent. in the last few weeks. His financial +luck has made a new man of him."</p> + +<p>"I'm glad of that," responded the other. "And +I'm glad too that I've got my money out of his firm, +for I had a strong suspicion at one time that he was +running pretty close to the wall."</p> + +<p>Mr. Weil nodded to show that he believed this +statement, and then grew sober.</p> + +<p>"Sometimes, when men get into a tight place +financially," he said, "they do queer things. Supposing +I should tell you that Mr. Fern had endorsed +checks and notes in a way he was not authorized +to do?"</p> + +<p>The stout man opened his eyes wider.</p> + +<p>"That would be a piece of news," he answered. +"But, if he did, he's made it all right by this time, of +course, and nobody is the loser."</p> + +<p>Mr. Weil drew himself up in his chair, as if righteously +indignant.</p> + +<p>"Do you think that is enough?" he demanded, +raising his voice. "By Gad, supposing I tell you my +name was one of those he monkeyed with!"</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[232]</a></span></p> + +<p>The other did not seem much perturbed.</p> + +<p>"If the paper is all in, I wouldn't make a fuss +about it, if I were you," he replied. "Fern is a good +fellow. He has gone out of business, and I hope +he'll never go in again. Take my advice, if you have +learned anything to his discredit, and keep it to yourself."</p> + +<p>Weil could hardly control himself.</p> + +<p>"Do you think I intend to let him forge my name +on his notes and checks and not put him under +arrest!" he cried; "when the proofs are beyond +question?"</p> + +<p>Mr. Boggs bowed and said he meant that, exactly. +He further remarked that he was astonished that his +friend had any other idea in his mind. The Fern +family was one in which he had been favorably +received and he ought to do everything possible to +prevent harm to any of its members. As he proceeded +in this vein, Mr. Boggs grew so earnest that +he did not notice the broad smile of happiness that +was creeping over the face of his companion, and was +not prepared to find a pair of manly arms clasped +around his neck.</p> + +<p>"You—you!" Archie Weil was trying to say. +"You dear, kind, sensible fellow. You've made me +the happiest man on earth! Of course <i>I</i> wouldn't +trouble Fern, but I was afraid <i>you</i> would. He used +your name as well as mine, the rascal! Everything +is paid up, and all the trouble now is that a miserable +scamp has got hold of some of the paper and +wants to blackmail him. And what I called you here +to-day for is to get you to agree—with me—to +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[233]</a></span>acknowledge every scrap of that paper as being our +own!"</p> + +<p>The sudden change was more than Mr. Boggs +could bear for a moment. He sat, to use a common +expression, "like a stuck pig," staring at Archie.</p> + +<p>"You remember the nigger that worked for Fern," +explained Mr. Weil. "He got hold of some of +these notes and checks, in Fern's office, and is +coming to look us up to-day, for the purpose of having +his employer arrested. A nice game, eh? But +we will foil him, won't we? We'll show him a trick +worth several of his! He's probably gone to the +Hoffman House and he'll hang round till he finds +me. I'll send word that I am to be home this afternoon +at five. You will be there with me. We'll +tackle him together. When he tells us that he has +some forged paper in his possession we'll act astonished +and enraged; we'll ask him to show it to us; +and when we've got it all in our hands we'll say the +signatures are our own, and kick him down stairs. +Are you with me, Walker? Is it a go, old boy?"</p> + +<p>The agreement was made without more ado. Mr. +Boggs began to see the humorous element in the +affair, and actually came nearer laughing than he +had done since the day he discovered that the size +of his waist placed him out of the list of eligible +"mashers."</p> + +<p>When everything was settled, Mr. Weil excused +himself for a few moments, while he tiptoed to Roseleaf's +door and knocked. Daisy came to open it, +and when she saw who the visitor was she blushed +charmingly.</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[234]</a></span></p> + +<p>"Come in," she said. "I am sure both of us are +glad to see you."</p> + +<p>Shirley's eyes met those of his friend with a +strange expression. He knew now that all his suspicions +were unfounded, that Weil had proved himself +noble and true. But the apologies that he owed +could not be suitably made in the presence of a third +person, and he made no reference to them. His +changed appearance was enough, however, for +Archie. The reconciliation with the girl of his +heart was perfect, and the happiness that shone from +their faces repaid their good friend for his sacrifice.</p> + +<p>"I think I ought to take Miss Daisy to her train +now," said Archie, after the exchange of a few ordinary +remarks. "She can come to see you to-morrow +again, and before many days we will have matters +arranged with pater familias, so that Shirley +can go out to Midlands in his proper capacity. Oh, +you need not redden, little woman! The love you +two have for each other does both of you credit."</p> + +<p>Returning to Mr. Boggs, for the sake of allowing +the young couple a few minutes for their good-bys, +Archie dismissed that gentleman with the understanding +that not later than half-past four he would +join him in his room at the Hoffman House. Soon +after he escorted Miss Fern to her station, and before +he left the building Archie sent a dispatch to +her father, asking him to come to the city and meet +him at his hotel at four that afternoon.</p> + +<p>Everything worked to a charm. Mr. Fern arrived +at the time designated and went promptly to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[235]</a></span> +Mr. Weil's apartments. A brief explanation of +what was about to occur threw the wool merchant +into a state of extreme agitation, but he was assured +that the last particle of danger to himself would be +removed before he left the Hoffman House. He was +asked to step into an inner room of the suite, the +door of which was to be left ajar, and to make no +move unless he was called.</p> + +<p>Mr. Boggs came at his appointed hour, and Hannibal +soon after. Delighted to find both gentlemen—accidentally, +as he supposed—the negro began +without delay to explain the cause of his visit. He +stated the manner in which he had discovered the +forgeries, and said he thought it only his duty to let +the facts be known.</p> + +<p>Messrs. Weil and Boggs exchanged glances of well-simulated +surprise as the discoverer proceeded.</p> + +<p>"How long is it since you first knew of this matter?" +asked Mr. Weil, when Hannibal came to a +pause.</p> + +<p>"Something like eighteen months."</p> + +<p>"And you allowed this swindle to go on all that +time without saying a word!" said the questioner. +"I am surprised, when I remember that for a long +time you saw me almost daily."</p> + +<p>"That is true," was the quiet response. "I could +not easily bring myself to disgrace one whose bread +I was eating. But that does not matter now. I +have here a number of notes on which Mr. Fern has +forged both of your names. The law will hold him +just as strongly as if I had exposed him at the time."</p> + +<p>He exhibited a package of papers, and unsuspici<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[236]</a></span>ously +passed them to the two gentlemen. Undoing +the band Archie Weil spread the documents on the +centre table and went over them carefully with Mr. +Boggs, separating those which bore their several +names. A close perusal of all the notes followed, +and finally Mr. Weil looked up and asked if there +were any more.</p> + +<p>"No, those are all," said Hannibal. "I believe +there are thirty-six of them."</p> + +<p>Mr. Weil consulted in a low tone with Mr. Boggs. +They seemed puzzled over something.</p> + +<p>"If these are really all the notes you have," said +Archie, "there has been a great mistake on your +part. These endorsements are genuine in every +case. Where are the forged papers of which you +spoke?"</p> + +<p>The negro stared with all his might at the speaker.</p> + +<p>"Genuine!" he repeated.</p> + +<p>"Undoubtedly, as far as my name is concerned. I +have lent my credit to Mr. Fern for a long time."</p> + +<p>"That is equally true of myself," spoke up Boggs, +slowly. "I wrote every one of these signatures and +I am willing to swear to them."</p> + +<p>Hannibal's eyes flashed with baffled rage. He +had been trapped. These men had conspired to +save his late employer from his clutches. They had +lied, deliberately, and he was powerless against their +combined assertions, although he knew the falsity of +all they said.</p> + +<p>"You will be as glad as we to learn the truth," +said Archie, in a softly modulated voice. "It would +have grieved you to know that your kind employer +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[237]</a></span>had made himself amenable to the criminal law. +Your only object in this matter was to ease your conscience, +and do justice. There is nothing, now, to +prevent your returning at your earliest convenience +to France."</p> + +<p>The negro rose and took up his hat.</p> + +<p>"This is very nice," he growled, "but I want to +tell you that you are not through with me yet."</p> + +<p>Mr. Weil rose also.</p> + +<p>"I trust," he said, "that you are not going to be +impolite. I certainly would not be guilty of discourtesy +to you. But let me assure you of one thing: +If you ever, hereafter, annoy in the slightest degree +my friend, Mr. Fern, or any member of his family, +you will wish heartily that you had never been born. +We can spare you now, Mr. Hannibal."</p> + +<p>With the last words, Archie waved his hand toward +the door, and without further reply than a +glare from his now blood-shot eyes, the African +strode from the apartment.</p> + +<p>"I want you to take a ride in the Park with me, +for an hour or so, and then we will return here for +dinner," said Mr. Weil to Mr. Boggs.</p> + +<p>He did this to allow Mr. Fern to leave the house +without Boggs' knowing he was there, and also to +avoid a meeting that he felt would be too full of +gratitude to suit his temperament just then.</p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[238]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXI" id="CHAPTER_XXI"></a>CHAPTER XXI.</h2> + +<h3>"WE WANT MILLIE TO UNDERSTAND."</h3> + + +<p>Millicent Fern had been so busy on her second +novel that she had hardly noticed the prolonged +absence of Shirley Roseleaf from her father's house. +Her first story was selling fairly well and she had +received a goodly number of reviews in which it was +alluded to with more or less favor. Not the least +welcome of the things her mail brought was a check +bearing the autograph of Cutt & Slashem, that +tangible evidence which all authors admire that +her efforts had not been wholly in vain. She had +put a great deal of hard work into her new novel, +and felt that, when Mr. Roseleaf added his polish to +the plot she had woven, it would make a success far +greater than the other.</p> + +<p>Millicent thought she understood the young man +perfectly. To her mind he was merely awaiting the +moment when she was ready to name the day for +their marriage. To be sure he had not asked her to +wed him, but his actions were not to be misunderstood. +She would accept him, for business reasons, +and the romance could come later. Together they +would constitute a strong partnership in fiction. +While she was wrapped up in her writing it was +quite as well that he remained at a respectful distance. +Between her second and her third story she +would have time to arrange the ceremony.</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[239]</a></span></p> + +<p>When Roseleaf made his next appearance at dinner, +in the house at Midlands, Miss Fern smiled on +him pleasantly. She remarked that he lacked color, +and he replied that he had been suffering from a +slight illness. Then she spoke of her new story, revealing +the plot to a limited extent, and said it would +be ready for him in about two weeks. The astonished +young man saw that she considered his services +entirely at her disposal, without question, +whenever she saw fit to call upon them. He talked +it over with Daisy.</p> + +<p>"You know," stammered the girl, "that Millie +thought you were in love with her. That would account +for everything, wouldn't it?"</p> + +<p>"But where did she ever get that idea!" he exclaimed, +desperately.</p> + +<p>"She says you tried to put your arm around +her."</p> + +<p>"Just to practice. Just to learn what love was +like. I told you how ignorant I was, the same as I +did her. Archie said she would show me, but it +didn't amount to anything. It was only when I +asked you, Daisy, that I began to understand. Do +you remember how you stood on your toes and kissed +me?"</p> + +<p>The girl bade him be quiet and not get too reminiscent, +but he would not.</p> + +<p>"It taught me all I needed to know, in one instant," +he persisted. "Ah, sweetheart, how much +happiness and suffering I have had on your account!"</p> + +<p>He stooped and kissed her tenderly as he spoke.</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[240]</a></span></p> + +<p>"And after this it will be happiness only," she +whispered.</p> + +<p>Another kiss answered this prediction.</p> + +<p>"What can I do if she asks me to rewrite the whole +of another novel?" asked Roseleaf, with a groan.</p> + +<p>"I think you might find time to oblige her," said +Daisy. "But you ought to explain things—you +ought not to let her misunderstand your position +any longer."</p> + +<p>He said that this was true, and that he would act +upon the suggestion. He had her father's consent, +and nothing could stand in the way of his marriage +to Daisy before the year ended. It was not right, +of course, to go on with the implication of being engaged +to both the sisters.</p> + +<p>"But I wish I could escape doing that writing," +he added. "I hate fiction, any way; I have been at +work on one of my own that I fear I never shall +finish. There is much sadness in novels, and I +like joy so much better. I believe I shall abandon +the whole field."</p> + +<p>This she would not listen to. She said her husband +that was to be must become a famous writer, for +she wanted to be very proud of him. And Mr. Fern +came in to the room, and having the question put to +him, decided it in the same manner, as he was sure +to do when he learned that his younger daughter +held that opinion.</p> + +<p>The retired merchant bore the appearance of a +man from whose shoulders the severe burden of a +great weight had fallen. The tiger that had crouched +so long in his path, ready at any moment to spring, +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[241]</a></span>had been vanquished. Beyond the profound humiliation +of knowing that his sin was exposed to the +gaze of two of his intimate friends, he had no cause +for present grief. Both of them had proved friends +indeed, and nothing was to be feared from any quarter. +Hannibal had disappeared immediately after +the interview at the Hoffman House, and it was supposed +had gone back to France.</p> + +<p>There was to be no haste about the wedding, after +all. Now that the young couple felt perfectly sure +of each other they were more willing than they had +been to wait. The freedom that an understood engagement +brings to Americans was theirs. If Millicent +had only known the true condition of affairs, +and was content with them, they would have been +perfectly satisfied.</p> + +<p>An old story tells how a certain colony of mice +came to the unanimous conclusion that a bell should +be hung around the neck of a cat for which they had +a well-defined fear; and it also relates that none of +the rodents were willing to undertake the task of +placing the warning signal in the desired position. +Both Shirley and Daisy wished heartily that Millicent +could be told the exact condition of their hopes and +expectations, but neither had the courage to inform +her. Many of their long conversations referred to +this matter, and one day, when they had discussed it +as usual, Daisy hit upon a bright idea.</p> + +<p>"You don't suppose, do you, that Mr. Weil would +tell Millie for us? He has done so many nice things, +he might do one more."</p> + +<p>Roseleaf wore a thoughtful expression. He re<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[242]</a></span>alized +how much Archie had already done for him—realized +it more fully than Daisy did; but he said +the matter was worth thinking of. He wanted very +much to have it settled.</p> + +<p>"Would—would you—ask him?" he stammered. +"He would do anything for you."</p> + +<p>"Yes," she responded, softly, "I will ask him. +But we had best be together. I do not want to +broach the matter unless you are there."</p> + +<p>In a few days the opportunity came. Mr. Weil +heard the voice he loved best explaining the situation.</p> + +<p>"We want Millie to understand," said Daisy. "If +she—if she still likes Shirley herself, there may be an +unpleasant scene, and you will see how difficult it is +for either of us to tell her. But you, who have done +so many kindnesses for us, could convey the information +to her without the diffidence we should feel. +Will you, dear Mr. Weil?"</p> + +<p>And Archie said he would, and that it would be a +pleasure to him. And a bright light illumined the +faces of the young people, as another stone was +rolled out of the pathway their feet were to tread.</p> + +<p>Mr. Weil did not know how to approach his subject +except by a more or less direct route. One day +he was talking with Miss Fern about her new novel, +and she spoke of Mr. Roseleaf in connection with its +nearness to the required revision.</p> + +<p>"I don't know as Shirley will find time to help you +out," he replied. "He is so busy just now with Miss +Daisy."</p> + +<p>She did not seem to comprehend him in the least.</p> + +<p>"Oh, he is merely filling in the time, as a matter +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[243]</a></span>of amusement," she answered. "When I am ready +he will be."</p> + +<p>He looked at her earnestly.</p> + +<p>"Is it fair to speak of love-making as a matter of +amusement, Miss Fern?"</p> + +<p>"Love-making? Is he, then, practicing for his +novel with Daisy, also?" she inquired. "I am afraid +he will get erroneous views of love in that quarter. +She is such a child that she can have little knowledge +of the subject."</p> + +<p>She had evidently no suspicion of the truth, and he +determined to become more explicit.</p> + +<p>"Perhaps that is exactly what he wishes," said he. +"The virgin heart of a young girl certainly affords +tempting ground for the explorations of a novelist."</p> + +<p>For the first time she showed a slightly startled +face.</p> + +<p>"I trust you do not mean that Mr. Roseleaf is deceiving +my sister with pretended affection?" she +said. "I did not think him that kind of man. If +he is making love to her, as you call it, surely she +understands that it is only for the purposes of his +forthcoming novel?"</p> + +<p>Mr. Weil drew a long breath.</p> + +<p>"Is it possible," he asked, "that you do not know +him better than even to hint that suspicion? Shirley +Roseleaf is honor personified. He would not lead +any woman to believe him her lover unless he truly +felt the sentiments he expressed."</p> + +<p>Miss Fern looked much relieved.</p> + +<p>"I am glad to hear you say so," she replied.</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[244]</a></span></p> + +<p>Archie was plunged into a new quandary. He +had evidently made no progress whatever thus far.</p> + +<p>"No," he continued, slowly, "he has not deceived +Miss Daisy. His love for her is as true as steel. I +understand their engagement is to be announced in +a few days."</p> + +<p>If he had known the pain that these words would +bring to their hearer—if he had foreseen the anguish +that was portrayed on that brow and in those eyes—friend +as he was of the young couple who had set +him to this errand, he would have shrunk from it. +Millicent made no verbal reply. Spasms chased +each other over her white face. She seemed stricken +dumb. Her hands, lifted to her forehead, trembled +visibly. And Mr. Weil sat there, uncertain what to +do, as silent as herself.</p> + +<p>Gradually the force of the storm passed, and Miss +Fern staggered faintly to her feet. Mr. Weil offered +to support her with his arms, but she refused his aid +with a motion that was unmistakable. She was making +every effort to conceal her agitation, and she +dared not trust herself with words. After taking a +weak step or two, and finding that she could not walk +unassisted, she rested herself upon the arm of a large +chair, and signed to him to leave her. Much mortified, +but knowing no other course, he bowed profoundly +and obeyed the signal.</p> + +<p>The next morning he received the following letter +at his hotel:</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>"<span class="smcap">Mr. A. Weil:—Sir</span>: If you are in any respect a gentleman—which +I may be excused for doubting—you will not +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[245]</a></span>allude in the presence of any one to the exhibition I made +to-day. Had I had the least preparation I could have controlled +myself. You adroitly took me at a complete disadvantage, +and you saw the result.</p> + +<p>"I leave to-morrow for a new home. Never again shall I +live under the roof of those who have betrayed me. Do not +think I shall succumb to grief because of my sister's conduct. +She is welcome to her victory. No answer to this +is expected. Yours, M. A. F."</p></div> + +<p>Luckily Archie had escaped from Midlands without +meeting either Daisy or Roseleaf, and he obeyed +as strictly as possible the injunction he received from +the elder sister. All he would say was that he had +informed her of the engagement and that she had +made no reply. When he was told a day or two +later that Millicent had left the house, he merely remarked +that he was not much surprised, as she was +a girl of strong will and usually did about as she +pleased.</p> + +<p>Mr. Fern, at first much distressed over his +daughter's action, grew reconciled when he thought +of it more at length. He sent a liberal allowance to +her, which she did not return, and made arrangements +by which she could draw the same sum at her +convenience at a bank in the city.</p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[246]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXII" id="CHAPTER_XXII"></a>CHAPTER XXII.</h2> + +<h3>WHERE WAS DAISY?</h3> + + +<p>The wedding was arranged to occur in the month +of October, and the preparations, so dear to the +hearts of all young women, were pushed with dispatch. +There were to be no ceremonials beyond the +ones necessary, and the company to visit the nuptials +was limited to a dozen of the family's most intimate +friends. When the evening came, Walker Boggs +was on hand, wearing an extra large waistcoat, and +a countenance such as would have best befitted a +funeral. Lawrence Gouger came, his keen eye alert, +foreseeing several chapters in the great novel that +Roseleaf was writing, based on the experiences of the +next few weeks. But Archie Weil wrote a note at +the last minute, regretting that a business engagement +that could not be postponed had called him +to a distant point, and sending a magnificent ornament +in large pearls for the bride, to whom he +wished, with her husband, all health and happiness.</p> + +<p>Mr. Gouger had had many arguments with Mr. +Weil, in opposition to the early date set for the wedding. +He had shown that, according to the best +models, the hero of Roseleaf's novel—which was practically +the young man himself, ought to pass through +some very harrowing scenes yet before his wedded +happiness began. He feared an anti-climax, and was +apprehensive that the wonderful romance would lie +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[247]</a></span>untouched for long months while Roseleaf sipped +honey from the lips of his beloved. And he acted as +if these things were entirely at the disposal of Mr. +Weil—as if the young couple were mere marionettes +whose actions he could control.</p> + +<p>"You could put it off if you liked," Gouger said, +complainingly. "You could introduce other elements +that would be the making of the novel, and +you ought to do it. They should not marry before +next spring, at the earliest. You run the risk of +spoiling everything."</p> + +<p>"Good God!" cried Archie. "You talk like a fool. +I would have postponed it forever, if I could, and +you know it. But she loves him, and there is nothing +to be gained by delay. Confound you and your +old novel! With the happiness of two human beings +at stake you talk about a piece of fiction as if it was +worth more than a blissful life!"</p> + +<p>Gouger straightened himself up in his chair.</p> + +<p>"It is worth a hundred times more!" he answered, +boldly. "A novel such as Roseleaf's ought to be +would give pleasure to millions. But I see you are +bound to have your way. The only hope left is that +there will be trouble enough after marriage to spice +the story to the end. A milk and water, nursing-bottle +existence for them would make all the work +already done on this manuscript mere wasted time!"</p> + +<p>Weil turned from his friend in disgust. Could the +man talk nothing, think nothing, but shop?</p> + +<p>But Archie did not come to the wedding. He +knew the final strain would be more than he could +bear. It was one thing to sacrifice the woman he +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[248]</a></span>loved and quite another to see her given into the +arms of the rival he had encouraged. One may do +the noblest things, at a respectful distance, and find +himself physically unable to view them at greater +proximity.</p> + +<p>Of course Shirley Roseleaf was almost too happy +to breathe. But even the happiest of lovers somehow +manage to inhale a sufficiency of oxygen to +keep life in them, though they have no knowledge +of the process by which this is accomplished. He +had seen several of his productions in type, some in +the leading magazines, and he had a permanent position +now on the staff of a great periodical. When +the month he had allowed himself as necessary for a +wedding journey was ended, he would settle down +to work, and he knew no reason why he might not +make a success in his chosen field. And there was +Daisy—always Daisy—he would never again be separated +from Daisy! Who that has loved and been +loved can doubt the perfect content of this young +man?</p> + +<p>The saddest face at Midlands was that of Mr. Fern, +who failed in his best attempts to appear cheerful. +He was not sorry that his daughter was to be married, +he would not have put a single obstacle in her +way; but she was going from him, and the very, very +dear relations they had so long sustained would +never be exactly the same again. It was the destiny +of a woman to cleave to her husband. He found no +fault with the law of nature, but he had clung to +Daisy so devotedly that he could not welcome very +sincerely the hour that was to take her away.</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[249]</a></span></p> + +<p>The marriage was to be early in the evening. +Everything was ready, even to the trunks, filled with +traveling and other dresses. The night was to be +passed at the Imperial Hotel in the city, and the +journey proper to be begun some time on the following +day.</p> + +<p>On the most momentous morning of her life, +Daisy Fern announced that she had an errand to do +in the city and would return shortly after twelve +o'clock. As she was so thoroughly her own mistress +nobody thought of questioning her more particularly. +But twelve o'clock came, and one o'clock, and three, +and five, and she neither was seen at Midlands nor +was any message received from her.</p> + +<p>By the latter hour Mr. Fern was in a state of excitement. +The entire house was in an uproar. The +servants were catechised, one by one, to see if perchance +any of them could guess the young lady's +destination. Word was sent by telephone to various +places in the city, asking information, but none was +received. She had left the house, ostensibly to go +to New York, and nothing could be learned of her +from that moment.</p> + +<p>As Mr. Roseleaf was not expected until some time +later, Mr. Fern went at last to the city and sought +the young man at his rooms. He found him in the +company of Lawrence Gouger, dressed for the ceremony, +and impatient for the arrival of the hour +when he should start for his bride's abode. It may +be conceived that the news Mr. Fern brought was +not the pleasantest for him.</p> + +<p>"You—you have not seen Daisy?" came the stam<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[250]</a></span>mering +question, as the father paused on the threshold +of Roseleaf's room.</p> + +<p>"To-day? Why, certainly not!" was the stupefied +answer. "I was just about to start for your +house."</p> + +<p>Mr. Fern sank upon a sofa just inside the door.</p> + +<p>"Something—has—happened!" he groaned. "Ah, +my boy, something has happened to my child!"</p> + +<p>Roseleaf looked at Mr. Gouger, who in turn looked +at Mr. Fern.</p> + +<p>"She—went away—this morning—on an errand," +enunciated the father, slowly, "saying—she would +return—at noon. And—that is the last we—have +seen—of her. Oh, it seems as if I should go mad!"</p> + +<p>It seemed as if Shirley Roseleaf would go mad, +too. He looked like one bereft of sense, as he stood +there without uttering a word.</p> + +<p>"Perhaps she has returned since you left home," +suggested Mr. Gouger, on the spur of the instant. +"Don't lose heart yet. Let me send to a telephone +office and have them inquire. You have a 'phone in +your house, have you not, Mr. Fern?"</p> + +<p>The father bowed in reply. He was too crushed +to say anything unnecessary. Touching a button, +Mr. Gouger soon had a messenger dispatched for +the information desired, and in the meantime he +tried, by suggesting possibilities, to soothe the two +men.</p> + +<p>"You shouldn't get so excited," he protested. +"There are a hundred slight accidents that might be +responsible for Miss Daisy's delay. Perhaps she +has met with an insignificant accident, and the word +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[251]</a></span>she has sent to her father has gone astray—as happens +very often in these days. That would account +for everything. Or she may have taken the wrong +train—an express—that did not stop this side of +Bridgeport, and hesitated to telegraph for fear of +alarming you. 'Don't cry till you're hurt' is an old +proverb. Why, neither of you act much better than +as if her dead body had been brought home!"</p> + +<p>They heard him, but neither replied. They waited—it +seemed an hour—for an answer to the telephonic +message, and it came, simply this: "Nothing has +been heard as yet of Miss Fern."</p> + +<p>The thoroughly distressed and disheartened +father shrank before the gaze of the lover, when this +news was promulgated by Mr. Gouger.</p> + +<p>"What swindle is this?" were the bitter words he +heard. "Have you decided on another husband for +your daughter, and come to break the news to me +in this fashion?"</p> + +<p>Mr. Gouger interfered, to protect the old man +whose suffering was evidently already too acute.</p> + +<p>"Hush!" he exclaimed. "Can't you see that +you are killing him? Be careful!"</p> + +<p>Roseleaf waved him back with a <a name="Page_251t" id="Page_251t"></a><a href="#Page_251tn">sweep</a> of his +arm.</p> + +<p>"Your advice has not been asked," he replied, +gutturally. "I can see some things, if I <i>am</i> blind. +That girl has gone to the man she loves—the man +he," indicating the father, "wanted her to marry. +He is rich, and I am poor, and he has won! It is +plain enough! And he pretended, day by day, to +my face, that he had given her up for my sake; +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[252]</a></span>and she put her arms around me, and beguiled me +into confidence, in order to strike me the harder at +the end. Well, let him have her! I wouldn't take +her from him. But there's an account between us +that he may not like to settle. When you see your +friend, tell him that!"</p> + +<p>Mr. Fern heard these terrible sentences like a man +in a dream. It could not be Roseleaf that was uttering +them—the man to whom his young daughter had +given the full affection of her innocent heart! He +was mad to talk that way. Mad! mad!</p> + +<p>"You will repent these rash statements," said the +old gentleman, rising faintly from his seat. "You +will repent them, sir, in sackcloth. I wish with all +my heart that Mr. Weil was here, for he would at +least try to help me find my child."</p> + +<p>Mr. Gouger suggested that Mr. Weil would be at +Midlands soon, as he had an invitation to the wedding.</p> + +<p>"No," replied Mr. Fern, chokingly. "I received +word from him to-day that he could not attend. He +is out of the city."</p> + +<p>Roseleaf gave vent to an expression of nausea.</p> + +<p>"Are you yourself deceived?" he exclaimed. +"He will not attend <i>my</i> wedding; certainly not! +He is attending <i>his own</i>. If, indeed, he does not compass +his ends without that preliminary."</p> + +<p>Weak and old as Mr. Fern was he would have +struck the speaker had not the third person in the +room interfered.</p> + +<p>"Do you dare to speak in that manner of my +daughter!" he cried. "Must you attack the char<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[253]</a></span>acter +not only of my best friend but of my child as +well? I thank God at this moment, whatever be her +fate, that she did not join her life to yours!"</p> + +<p>With a majestic step he strode from the presence +of his late prospective son-in-law. Gouger, with a +feeling that some one should accompany him, followed. +But first he turned to speak in a low key to +the novelist.</p> + +<p>"Do not go out to-night, unless you hear from +me," he said, impressively. "This may not be as +bad as you think, after all. I will go to Midlands +and return with what news I can get. Don't act +until you are certain of your premises."</p> + +<p>The young man was removing his wedding suit, +already.</p> + +<p>"I shall not go out," he responded, aimlessly.</p> + +<p>"You might write a few pages—on your novel," +suggested the critic, as he stood in the hallway. +"There will never be a better—"</p> + +<p>A vigorous movement slammed the door in his +face before he could complete his sentence.</p> + +<p>Hastening after Mr. Fern, Gouger accompanied +him home, where the first thing he heard was that +there was still no news of the missing one.</p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[254]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXIII" id="CHAPTER_XXIII"></a>CHAPTER XXIII.</h2> + +<h3>AN AWFUL NIGHT.</h3> + + +<p>It was an awful night for Wilton Fern. The presence +in the house of Mr. Gouger and Mr. Boggs +aided him but little to bear the weight that pressed +upon his heart. It was better than being entirely +alone, but not a great deal. Together they listened +whenever their ears caught an unusual sound. +Twenty times they went together to the street door +and opened it to find nothing animate before them.</p> + +<p>Morning came and still no tidings. The earliest +trains from the city were visited by servants, for the +master of the house was too exhausted to make the +journey. And at nine o'clock the gentlemen who +had passed the night at Midlands took the railway +back to New York, with no solution of the great +problem.</p> + +<p>Mr. Gouger had not been in his office an hour before +the door opened and in walked Archie Weil. +The critic started from his chair at the unexpected +sight, and remarked that he had not expected to see +his visitor so early.</p> + +<p>"I presume you heard the news and came home +at once," he added, meaningly.</p> + +<p>Mr. Weil was pale, and wore the look of one whose +rest has been disturbed.</p> + +<p>"I don't know what you mean," he replied. "I +was called away on business that I could not evade, +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[255]</a></span>and came back as soon as I could. I fear the Ferns +thought it rather rough of me to stay away from the +wedding, but I could not very well help it. You +were there, of course. Everything went off well, I +trust."</p> + +<p>The speaker had the air of a man who tries to appear +at ease when he is not. His voice trembled +slightly and his hands roamed from one portion of +his apparel to another.</p> + +<p>"Then you have heard nothing!" repeated Gouger, +gravely. "Prepare yourself for a shock. There +was no wedding last night at the Ferns'. Miss +Daisy disappeared yesterday morning, and has not +been seen since."</p> + +<p>If Mr. Weil had been pale before, his face was like +a dead man's now. With many expressions of incredulity +he listened to the explanations that followed. +He declared that the occurrence was past belief, +and that he could see no way to account for it. +Clearly something had happened that the girl could +not prevent. She would never have absented herself +of her own accord. She loved the man who was +to be her husband, and if she had wished to postpone +her marriage she could have easily arranged it.</p> + +<p>"I can think of nothing but a fit of temporary insanity," +he added, with a sigh. "And Shirley—poor +fellow—how does he take it? Completely broken +up, I suppose?"</p> + +<p>When he heard the attitude that Mr. Roseleaf had +assumed, Mr. Weil seemed stupefied. Little by +little Mr. Gouger revealed to him the answers that +the young man had made to Mr. Fern, finally refer<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[256]</a></span>ring +to the charge that he (Mr. Weil) had eloped +with the bride. Archie's face grew more and more +rigid as he listened, but the anger that the relator +had anticipated did not show there.</p> + +<p>"He is crazy," was the mild reply. "I will go +and see him, at once, and enlist his assistance in the +thorough search that must be undertaken. Come, +Lawrence, leave your work for an hour and go with +me."</p> + +<p>Remembering his promise to return in the morning +with the latest tidings, Mr. Gouger put on his +hat and coat and entered the cab which his friend +summoned. He felt that he was about to witness +another chapter that would make most dramatic +reading in that great novel!</p> + +<p>"You had best let me go in first," he whispered, +when they stood at Roseleaf's door. "He is in an +excitable frame of mind, I fear."</p> + +<p>For answer, Archie brushed the speaker aside and +preceded him into the chamber, without the formality +of a knock. Roseleaf lay before them in his easy +chair, bearing evidence in his attire that he had not +disrobed during the night. He greeted his visitors +with nothing more than a look of inquiry.</p> + +<p>"I only heard of your terrible disaster a few moments +ago," said Mr. Weil. "I learn that Miss Daisy +had not been heard from up to nine o'clock this +morning. We must bring all our energies to bear +on this matter, Shirley. Her father is unable to +help us much. For all we know she may be in the +most awful danger. Rouse yourself and let us consult +what is best to do."</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[257]</a></span></p> + +<p>Incredulousness was written on the quiet face that +looked up at him from the armchair.</p> + +<p>"Why don't you tell us what you have done with +her?" said the bloodless lips, slowly.</p> + +<p>Mr. Weil trembled with suppressed emotion.</p> + +<p>"This is no time for recriminations," he replied, +"or I might answer that in a different way. We +must find this girl. Before we go to the police +let us consider all the possibilities, for they will +deluge us with questions. Did any one think," he +asked, suddenly, turning to Gouger, "of sending +word to her sister Millicent?"</p> + +<p>Mr. Gouger replied that they had done so. A servant +had been dispatched early in the evening to +Millicent's residence and had returned with the +answer that she had heard nothing of Miss Daisy +and did not wish to. She had previously sent a +sarcastic reply to an invitation to attend the wedding.</p> + +<p>"And she never came to comfort her father in +his distress!" exclaimed Mr. Weil. "What a +daughter!"</p> + +<p>They could get nothing out of Roseleaf. He +answered a dozen times that it would be much easier +for Mr. Weil to send Daisy home or to write to her +father that she was in his keeping, than to attempt +the difficult task of deceiving the police, who would +have enough shrewdness to unmask him.</p> + +<p>"Then you will do nothing to help us?" demanded +Archie, his patience becoming exhausted, though he +kept his temper very well. "In that case we must +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[258]</a></span>lose no more time. Ah, Shirley! I thought you +worthy of that angelic creature, but now—"</p> + +<p>He checked himself before finishing the sentence, +and went out into the hall.</p> + +<p>"I think I had best go to Midlands and consult +with Mr. Fern," he said to Gouger in a low tone. +"There is a possibility that his daughter has +returned since you came away. What an awful list +of horrible thoughts crowd on one! If you can +help me any I will send you word later."</p> + +<p>When Mr. Weil was gone, Mr. Gouger opened the +door and looked again into Roseleaf's room. The +young man had not changed his position in the least.</p> + +<p>"He has started for Midlands," he said. "What +do you think of his explanation in regard to his +absence last night?"</p> + +<p>"I think—I know—it is a lie!" was the quick +reply.</p> + +<p>"You really believe she went away to meet him—and +that he has passed the last twenty-four hours +with her."</p> + +<p>"Undoubtedly."</p> + +<p>The critic waited a minute.</p> + +<p>"Do you think they are married?" he asked.</p> + +<p>Roseleaf closed his eyes, as a terrible pain shot +across them. He wondered dimly why this fellow +should delight in uttering things that must cause suffering. +Gouger deliberated whether to say more, but +thinking that he had left the right idea in the young +man's mind for the purpose he had in view, he softly +withdrew from the chamber and left the house.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[259]</a></span> +When Roseleaf looked up again, some minutes later, +he was alone.</p> + +<hr style='width: 45%;' /> + +<p>Mr. Weil's hand was grasped feebly by the owner +of Midlands, when he came into the presence of the +gentleman. Though completely exhausted Mr. Fern +had not been able to sleep. He listened wearily +while his caller suggested possibilities to account for +his daughter's absence, but could not agree that any +of them were probable. When the idea was broached +of communicating with the police he shrank from +that course, but finally admitted that it must be +adopted, if all else failed. In answer to a hundred +questions he could only say that he had no idea of +anything that could make her absence voluntary.</p> + +<p>"She loved her chosen husband devotedly," said +the old man. "When she hears what I have to tell +her she will hold a different opinion."</p> + +<p>"Then," said Archie, ignoring the latter expression, +"she must either be the victim of an accident, a +fit of aberration, or—"</p> + +<p>He could not bear to finish the sentence, but the +father bowed in acquiescence.</p> + +<p>Lunch was served and Mr. Weil sat down to it, +trying by his example to persuade Mr. Fern to take +a few mouthfuls. Neither of them had any appetite, +and the attempt was a dismal failure.</p> + +<p>"I leave everything to you," said the host, as Mr. +Weil prepared to take his departure. "You are the +truest friend I ever had, and whatever you decide +upon I will endorse. But I have an awful sinking at +the heart, a feeling that I shall never see my child +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[260]</a></span>alive. Do you believe in premonitions? I have felt +for weeks that some misfortune hung over me."</p> + +<p>Before Mr. Weil could reply a servant entered +with a telegraphic message that had just been received. +Tearing it open hastily Mr. Fern uttered a +cry and handed it to his companion:</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>"I am alive and uninjured. Look for me to-morrow.—Daisy."</p></div> + +<p>A gush of tears drowned the exclamations of joy +that the father began to utter.</p> + +<p>"Alive!" he exclaimed. "And will be home to-morrow! +Ah, Mr. Weil, hope is not lost, after all. +But why, <i>why</i> does she leave me in my loneliness +another night? Is there any way in which you can +explain this mystery?"</p> + +<p>Mr. Weil confessed his inability to do so. He +tried, however, to show the father the bright side of +the affair, and bade him rest tranquil in the certainty +that only a few hours separated him from the child +he adored. When Daisy came home she would explain +everything to his satisfaction. In the meantime +he ought to indulge in thankfulness for what +he had learned rather than in regrets.</p> + +<p>"Go to bed and get a good rest," he added. "I +will make a journey to the telegraph office in the city +and see if it is possible to trace this message. If I +learn anything I will ring you up on the telephone at +once. And remember, if you do not hear from me, +there is a proverb that no news is good news. +Daisy has promised to come home to-morrow. This +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[261]</a></span>is something definite. An hour ago we were plunged +in despair. Now we have a certainty that should +buoy us up to the highest hope."</p> + +<p>Catching at this view of the case, Mr. Fern consented +to seek rest and Mr. Weil took the next train +to the city. Engaging a carriage he bade the driver +take him with all speed to Mr. Roseleaf's residence. +Notwithstanding the harsh manner in which he had +been treated by his late friend, he wanted to be the +first to inform him that Daisy had been heard from. +He was smarting, naturally, under the imputation +upon his own honor, and felt that the telegram in +his hand would at least remove that suspicion.</p> + +<p>"I couldn't help coming again, Shirley," he said, +when he was in the presence of the novelist. "I +know, despite the cruel manner you have assumed, +that you still love Daisy Fern and will be glad to +hear that she is safe from harm. Here is a telegram +that her father has just received, stating that she is +well and will be at home to-morrow."</p> + +<p>His face glowed with pleasure as he held out the +missive, but darkened again when Roseleaf declined +to take it in his hand. The young man had not +moved, apparently, from the chair in which he had +been seen three hours before, and his expression of +countenance was unchanged.</p> + +<p>"Does she say where she passed the night—<i>and +with whom</i>?" he inquired.</p> + +<p>"No. But she says she is well and will return. +Is not that a great deal, when we have feared some +accident, perhaps a fatal one?"</p> + +<p>The novelist uttered a sneering laugh.</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[262]</a></span></p> + +<p>"My God, Shirley, why do you treat me like this!" +exclaimed Mr. Weil, excitedly. "I have been your +friend in everything, as true to you as man could +be! If I had done the dastardly thing of which you +accuse me, why should I come to you at all? I +could have taken my bride and gone to the other +end of the earth. We need not have adopted these +contemptible measures. But although I <i>did</i> care for +this girl—more than I ever cared or ever shall care +for another—I knew it was <i>you</i> she loved and I did +all I could to aid you in your suit. Have you forgotten +how I brought her here, as you lay in that +very chair, and removed the misunderstandings that +had grown up between you? As God hears me, I have +no idea what caused her absence last night! I am +going now to the telegraph office to trace, if possible, +the message and find where she is at present, for I +want to relieve her father's mind still more."</p> + +<p>Roseleaf seemed partially convinced by this outburst. +He left his chair, and began slowly to arrange +his attire before the mirror.</p> + +<p>"If you are sincere," he said, "I will accompany +you. I will also do my best to discover the resting-place +of this young woman. You must remain with +me till she is found. If we do not see her before to-morrow +morning, we will walk into her presence at +Midlands together. Do you agree to this?"</p> + +<p>"With all my heart!" was the joyous reply.</p> + +<p>In ten minutes they entered the carriage at the +door, and were driven to the station from which the +telegram had been sent.</p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[263]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXIV" id="CHAPTER_XXIV"></a>CHAPTER XXIV.</h2> + +<h3>"THIS ENDS IT, THEN?"</h3> + + +<p>There was nothing to be learned at the telegraph +office. As near as could be remembered a boy had +brought the message, paid for it and vanished. Only +one discovery amounted to anything. The original +dispatch was produced and proved to be in Daisy's +handwriting. Roseleaf attested to this, and he +knew the characters too well to be mistaken.</p> + +<p>It was not advisable, in Mr. Weil's opinion, to go +to the police, after the receipt of this word from the +missing girl. It would only add to the notoriety of +the family in case the press got hold of the news. +But he did think it wise to go to see Isaac Leveson +and find a man named Hazen, whose reputation as a +detective was great. He could rely on the absolute +silence of both of them. The ride to Isaac's was +consequently made next, and by good fortune Hazen +happened to be in. He listened gravely to the situation +as it was outlined by Mr. Weil, but expressed +his opinion that nothing would be gained by doing +anything before the next day.</p> + +<p>"That telegram is genuine," he said. "It follows +that, unless she is detained forcibly, she will be at +home to-morrow. The writing in this message is +not like that of a person under threats, like one compelled +to send a false statement. Your best way is to +wait till she comes home, providing it is not later +than she indicates, and hear her story. Perhaps it +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[264]</a></span>will explain the mystery. If she declines to do this, +I will undertake to probe it to the bottom, if you +wish."</p> + +<p>Mr. Roseleaf took no part in this discussion. He +was becoming convinced that Archie Weil was innocent +of any complicity in this affair, but he was still +disinclined to talk much.</p> + +<p>"Where shall we go now?" he asked, when they +came out of the restaurant.</p> + +<p>"To the Hoffman House?" said Weil, interrogatively. +"I believe with Hazen that we can do nothing +to-night."</p> + +<p>Very well, to the Hoffman House they would go. +But they had not been in Weil's room five minutes +when a boy came up with a telephonic message from +Mr. Fern, stating that Daisy was safe at Midlands.</p> + +<p>"Let us return without delay," said Weil, enthusiastically. +"We should not lose a moment in removing +this terrible cloud! Come, Shirley, we can +catch the six o'clock train if we hasten."</p> + +<p>Mechanically the younger man followed his companion +through the hall, down the elevator and into +a carriage at the door. Forty minutes later they +alighted from the train at Midlands and were soon in +the familiar parlor at Mr. Fern's. A servant who had +admitted them, stated that Miss Daisy had been +home about two hours but that she was now lying +down. He would inquire whether she would receive +the visitors.</p> + +<p>What seemed an interminable time followed before +the appearance of Mr. Fern and his daughter. +When at last they came in together, leaning on each +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[265]</a></span>other, they were two as forlorn objects as one can +imagine. The sight of his sweetheart's woe-begone +face smote Roseleaf like a blow. He regretted to +the bottom of his heart the cruel things he had +thought and said of her.</p> + +<p>"Daisy!" he exclaimed, stepping forward. +"Daisy—my—"</p> + +<p>He could get no further, for Mr. Fern, with a majestic +motion of his hand, waved him back. The presence +of the intended bridegroom was evidently not +agreeable to the old gentleman.</p> + +<p>"Sit down," said Mr. Fern, in a quavering voice, +addressing himself wholly to Weil. "I telephoned +<i>to you</i> that my daughter had returned, for I knew <i>you</i> +would be anxious." He bore with special stress on +the word "you." "I—I did not know that you intended +to bring—any other person."</p> + +<p>The allusion to Roseleaf was so direct, that he +could not help attempting some kind of a reply.</p> + +<p>"Who could be more anxious than I?" he asked, in +a tone that was very sweet and tender; in vivid contrast, +the old man thought, to his manner of the preceding +evening. "No one has a greater interest to +learn where she has been these long, desolate +hours."</p> + +<p>Mr. Fern abandoned his intention not to recognize +the fact that Roseleaf was present, and turned upon +him with a fierce glare in his sunken eyes.</p> + +<p>"What right have <i>you</i> to ask questions?" he demanded, +pressing the trembling form of his daughter +to his own. "You were the first to doubt her—even +her innocence—this lamb that would have given her +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[266]</a></span>life for you only yesterday! She has returned to <i>me</i>, +and henceforth she is <i>mine</i>! You could not have +her though you came on your knees! You wish to +know where she has been! Well, you never <i>will</i>! +She will not tell you! It is her own affair. I am +speaking for <i>her</i> when I say that we desire no more +of your visits to this house; we are through with +you, thank God!"</p> + +<p>It would be hard to tell which of the two men who +listened to this was the more surprised. Mr. Weil +felt his heart sink as well as did Roseleaf. Daisy +clung to her father, without raising her eyes, and +there was nothing to indicate that she disputed his +assertions.</p> + +<p>All was over between her and Roseleaf! Nothing +could bring them together again! And she did not +mean to divulge the cause of her remaining away a +day and a night—that day and night that had been +expected to precede and succeed her marriage.</p> + +<p>Shirley rose slowly. He bent his eyes earnestly +on the father and daughter, and his voice was +firm.</p> + +<p>"When one is dismissed, there is nothing for him +but to go. I regret sincerely what I said last night, +when the horror of this thing came suddenly upon +me. I love you, Daisy, and I know by what you +have told me so often that you love me. Are the +foolish utterances of a distracted man to separate us +forever? Conceive the agony I was in when at the +very moment I was to start for my wedding I heard +that my bride could not be found! If I had not +adored you passionately would I have been on +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[267]</a></span>the verge of madness, saying and doing things +without reason and excuse? I am ordered to leave +you, my sweetheart, and if you do not bid me stay I +can only obey the mandate. But I love you more at +this moment than ever. All I ask to know is why +you made this flight. If your answer is satisfactory +there will be nothing on my part to prevent our +marriage."</p> + +<p>Archie Weil wished that he could have led this +young man aside for just a moment, to show him +that this was no time to make demands or exact conditions. +He had no doubt that Daisy would explain +everything, a little later. All that was wanted now +was a revocation of the dismissal that Mr. Fern had +pronounced. But he could not control the stormy +ocean upon which they rode.</p> + +<p>"You seem singularly obtuse," came the shaking +voice of the old gentleman. "It is not for <i>you</i> to +dictate terms. We want to see you no more. Is +not that clear enough?"</p> + +<p>It certainly did not seem to be. Roseleaf lingered, +wondering if these were really to be the last phrases +he would hear in that house—in that very room +where he had expected to hear the words that would +make this sweet girl his for life.</p> + +<p>"Daisy," he said, addressing himself once more to +the silent figure, "I cannot believe you have so soon +learned to hate me!"</p> + +<p>She looked up at the solemn face and then dropped +her eyes again.</p> + +<p>"You will tell me where you were?" he pleaded. +"It is my right to know."</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[268]</a></span></p> + +<p>She looked up again, with a wild horror in her +features.</p> + +<p>"Oh, I <i>cannot</i>!" she cried. "I <i>never</i> can tell you. +I never <i>can</i>!"</p> + +<p>This statement shocked more than one person in +that room. Up to this moment Mr. Fern had only +understood, from the disjointed expressions of his +daughter when she entered the house, that she did +not wish to be questioned at that time. She had +also explained to him that she had sent the telegram +to make the coast clear of all except her parent, as +she did not wish to meet others on her first arrival. +When he had urged the duty of informing Mr. Weil +she had acquiesced, not dreaming that Mr. Roseleaf +would be in his company.</p> + +<p>And now the old man felt that there was more in +the answer she had given than he had suspected—something +very like a confession of wrong. Mr. +Weil felt this also, though he could not believe Daisy +meant anything very heinous, and Shirley Roseleaf +had a dagger in his breast as he reflected what interpretation +might be given to her words.</p> + +<p>"You <i>cannot</i>!" he repeated, ignoring the position +in which he stood, and the presence of the others. +"<i>You must!</i>"</p> + +<p>Mr. Weil made haste to allay the storm that he +saw was still rising.</p> + +<p>"Let us be considerate," he said. "Miss Fern is +not well. She is tired and nervous. To-morrow, +when she has rested, she will be only too glad to tell +us the history of her strange disappearance."</p> + +<p>Mr. Fern looked uneasily from his daughter to the +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[269]</a></span>gentlemen and back again. He loved her dearly, +and in this new danger that seemed to threaten her—danger +perhaps even to her reputation—he wanted +more than ever to shield her from all harm. Whatever +had happened she was his child. She should +not be baited and badgered by any one. But Daisy +did not give him time to speak in her defense. She +answered Mr. Weil almost as soon as the question +left his lips.</p> + +<p>"It cannot be. Not to-morrow, nor at any other +time, can I tell you—or any person—anything. You +must never ask me. It would merely give me pain, +and heaven knows I shall suffer enough without it. +Let me say a little more, for this is the last time I +shall ever speak of these things. To you, Mr. Weil, +I want to give my warmest thanks. You have been +a true friend to me and mine. I do not mean to +seem ungrateful, but I can tell you no more. And +as for you, Shirley," she turned with set eyes to the +novelist, "you know what we were to each other. +It is all ended now. Even if you had expressed no +disbelief in me when you heard I had disappeared, +it would be just the same. I hold no hard feelings +against you, whatever my father may say. It is +simply good-by. I shall not remain here much +longer. Do not let this make you unhappy any +longer than you can help. Now, you must excuse +me, for my strength is gone."</p> + +<p>Daisy had been much longer saying these things +than the reader will be in perusing them. They had +come in gasps, as from one in severe pain, and there +were pauses of many seconds. When she had +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[270]</a></span>finished she rose, and leaning heavily on the feeble +old man who escorted her, walked slowly out of the +room.</p> + +<p>"Well, this ends it, then," said Roseleaf, gloomily, +following the fair figure with heavy eyes.</p> + +<p>"No, Shirley, it does not; it <i>shall</i> not!" replied +Weil. "There is some dreadful mistake here, and a +little time will clear it away. Have patience."</p> + +<p>The novelist gazed at the speaker with a strange +look.</p> + +<p>"I have treated you like a brute," he said, slowly. +"And I have treated Mr. Fern just as badly. My +punishment is well deserved. But how can this puzzle +of her absence be accounted for! Of course she +would have had to satisfy me on that point before I +could have married her."</p> + +<p>The listener turned giddily toward a window.</p> + +<p>"And yet you talk of love!" he said, recovering. +"If that girl had done me the honor she did you I +would not have <i>asked</i> her such a question—I would +have refused to <i>listen</i> if it gave her the slightest pain +to tell."</p> + +<p>"I wonder she did not love you instead of me—for +she did love me once," was the sober reply. "You +would be a thousand times better, more suitable, +than I."</p> + +<p>There was no reply to this, but the two men walked +slowly out of the house and to the station, where +they took the next train for the city. On the way +they talked little, and at the Grand Central Depot +they separated.</p> + +<p>Lawrence Gouger, who had in some strange way +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[271]</a></span>learned the news of Miss Fern's return, was awaiting +Roseleaf in his rooms.</p> + +<p>"Well, I hear the missing one is found," he said, as +the novelist came in.</p> + +<p>"Yes. She is with her father. But the peculiar +thing is that she closes her lips absolutely about her +absence. She not only refuses to speak now, but +announces that her refusal is final."</p> + +<p>Mr. Gouger hesitated what card to play.</p> + +<p>"When does the marriage take place?" he asked, +finally.</p> + +<p>"With me? Never. I have been thrown over. +Unless she had explained I could not have married +her, any way; could I?"</p> + +<p>The critic said he did not know. It would certainly +have been awkward.</p> + +<p>"And what is your theory?" he added. "Do you +still lay anything to Weil?"</p> + +<p>"No. I am completely nonplussed. But, never +mind. It is over."</p> + +<p>Roseleaf stretched himself, and yawned.</p> + +<p>"Do you know, Gouger, I almost doubt if I have +really been in love at all. I feel a queer sense of +relief at being out of it, though there is a dull pain, +too, that isn't exactly comfortable. I told Archie +coming in that she should have married <i>him</i>. Upon +my soul I wish she would. She's an awful nice little +thing, and he has a heart that is genuine enough for +her. Well, it's odd, anyway."</p> + +<p>Astonishment was written on the face of the other +gentleman as he heard these statements.</p> + +<p>"You have at least gained one point," he said, im<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[272]</a></span>pressively. +"You have done the best part of the +greatest novel that ever was written. Sit down as soon +as you can and finish it, and we shall see your name +so high up on the temple of fame that no contemporary +of this generation can reach it."</p> + +<p>"So high the letters will be indistinguishable, I +fear," responded Roseleaf, with a laugh. "Where do +you think I can get the heartiest supper in New +York? I am positively starved. I don't believe I've +eaten a thing since yesterday. If you can help me +any to clear the board, let us go together."</p> + +<p>This invitation was accepted, and Roseleaf began +making a more particular toilet, taking great pains +with the set of his cravat and spending at least ten +minutes extra on his hair when he had finished shaving +himself. He never had allowed a barber to +touch his face.</p> + +<p>"You won't lose any time on the novel, will you?" +asked Gouger, anxiously, while these preparations +were in progress. "You must take hold of it while +the events are fresh in your mind."</p> + +<p>"All right. I'll begin again to-morrow morning, +and stick to the work till it's done. Where shall we +go to supper? I'll tell you—Isaac Leveson's."</p> + +<p>The critic could not conceal his surprise at the +overturn that had taken place so suddenly in the +young man's conduct. He stared at him with a look +that approached consternation.</p> + +<p>"You want to go there!" he exclaimed, unable to +control himself. "You wish to dine with some pretty +girl, eh?"</p> + +<p>Roseleaf started violently.</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[273]</a></span></p> + +<p>"No, no! Not—yet!" he answered. "We can +get a supper room without that appendix. I wish to +be among men as mean as myself. I want to dine in +a house full of people who would cut a woman's +throat—or break her heart—and sleep soundly when +they had done it!"</p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXV" id="CHAPTER_XXV"></a>CHAPTER XXV.</h2> + +<h3>AN UNDISCOVERABLE SECRET.</h3> + + +<p>The Ferns did not stay much longer at Midlands. +Crushed by their misfortunes neither cared to remain +near the scenes that had made them so unhappy, nor +where they would be likely to meet faces which kept +alive their grief. The father knew no more than at +first concerning the strange conduct of his daughter. +She had told him nothing, and he had not asked her +a single question. It was enough for him that she +was bowed with a great trouble. His only thought +was to mitigate her distress in every possible way. +He was old—how old he had not realized until that +week when she changed from a happy, laughing girl, +standing at the threshold of a marriage she longed +for, to a sombre shadow that walked silently by his +side. He was the one who under ordinary circumstances +should have received the care and the +thoughtfulness—but everything was altered now. +He guided and directed the younger feet, even +though his own were faltering and slow.</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[274]</a></span></p> + +<p>Where they had gone no one seemed to know. +Archie Weil received one brief note from Mr. Fern +thanking him again in touching phrase for his many +kindnesses, and saying that Daisy wished to add her +most earnest wish for his happiness. The letter said +they were going away for some time; but no more. +He went one day to Midlands, hoping to learn +something from the servants, and found the home +entirely deserted. A neighbor told him a real estate +agent near by had the keys, but that the place was +neither for sale nor to rent. The agent, when found, +could add nothing to his stock of information. Mr. +Fern had merely mentioned that he was going on a +journey and asked to have a man sleep at the house +during his absence, as a precaution against robbery.</p> + +<p>Mr. Weil saw Roseleaf two or three times, but the +interviews were so unsatisfactory that he felt them +not worth repeating. The novelist told him, as he +had told Gouger, that he did not believe he had ever +really loved Daisy, and was actually relieved now +that the strain was ended. No persuasion could +turn him from this statement, which he made rather +in explanation of his present course than as a +defense of it. Gouger had persuaded him that a +love affair was necessary to develop his talents as a +writer. Before he knew what he was about, such an +affair had been precipitated upon him. He had felt +its pleasures and pains to the uttermost, and now it +was ended. All that was left as a result was a pile +of MSS. which the critic pronounced wonderful. It +was as if he had been in a trance, or mesmerized.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[275]</a></span> +Henceforth he would confine his writings to actualities +or to poetic imaginings.</p> + +<p>Talking with a man who held these views was not +inspiring, to put it mildly, and Archie reluctantly +gave up all hopes of making Daisy Fern a happy +woman through this source. He had dreamed of +unraveling the mystery that surrounded her and +placing the young couple again in the position +which, by some horrible mischance, had been so +vitally changed in the short space of one day. +Though he still loved Daisy with all the warmth of his +nature, Archie had no thought of trying to win her +for himself. She had given the fullness of her +innocent heart to Roseleaf and he did not believe +she was one to change her affections to another so +soon as this.</p> + +<p>What had happened! What had happened! He +thought it over day by day, and night by night.</p> + +<p>Among the things he did before leaving New York—for +he felt that a journey was necessary for him—was +to seek out Millicent. He found the elder sister +adamant to every suggestion of love for her family. +She believed herself injured by them, and would +have nothing more to do with either. As to the +strange affair regarding Daisy she declared she had +no theory. She did not think it sufficiently interesting +even to try to formulate one. Her time was +given to writing, and she had found another assistant +that quite filled Roseleaf's place. The firm of +Scratch & Bytum had accepted her latest novel, as +she did not care to have anything more to do with +Mr. Gouger.</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[276]</a></span></p> + +<p>When she mentioned the name of Roseleaf, Mr. +Weil looked at her intently, and saw that she uttered it +with the utmost calmness. She had hardened. Her +fancied grievances had made her a different woman. +She was cynical before, but now she was bitter. He +would not have believed that such an alteration +could have taken place in so short a time.</p> + +<p>"What is your new book about?" he asked, trying +to be polite.</p> + +<p>"Crime!" she answered briefly. "It deals with the +lowest of the low. It suits the mood I am in. I am +writing of things so terrible that they will hardly be +credited. To get at my facts I have to go into the +most depraved quarters, and associate with the +<i>canaille</i>. But I am going to make a hit that has not +been equaled in recent years!"</p> + +<p>He smiled sadly.</p> + +<p>"Roseleaf had the same expectation," he said. +"And yet he tells me that he is doing nothing on +that wonderful tale over which I have heard Gouger +rave so often. He has reached a point where he can +go no farther, and unless he rouses himself, all he has +done is merely wasted time."</p> + +<p>Millicent closed her eyes till they resembled those +of a cat at noonday.</p> + +<p>"Keep watch for mine," she said. "It will be all +I claim for it."</p> + +<p>During the winter Mr. Weil was in California. As +spring approached he returned to the East and +visited a well known resort in North Carolina, +where by one of those curious coincidences that happen +to travelers, he found himself placed at table +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[277]</a></span>exactly opposite to Mr. Walker Boggs. The ordinary +salutations and explanations followed, and then Mr. +Boggs alluded to a more interesting subject.</p> + +<p>"I think I can surprise you," he remarked, "by +something that I learned the other day. Mr. Fern +and Miss Daisy are living within five miles of here."</p> + +<p>It was certainly news, and entirely unexpected at +that. Those people might be in Greenland, for all +Archie had known, and indeed he had supposed they +were on the other side of the ocean. He listened +with interest while Boggs went on to say that they +had hired an old plantation house and grounds +and were living a strictly secluded life. The narrator +had seen them in one of his drives through the +country, and had talked a few minutes with Mr. +Fern; but—and he said it with a touch of pique—he +had not been invited to visit them, nor had any +apology been made for the neglect.</p> + +<p>"By George, I thought it rather tough!" he +added, "considering the way you and I got him out +of that nigger's clutches."</p> + +<p>"But you must remember what he has since endured," +replied Archie, mildly.</p> + +<p>"And there's been no explanation, of any sort?"</p> + +<p>"Not the slightest. I'd give half I'm worth if I +could get a clue. It worries me all the time. A life +like that girl's ruined—simply ruined—in twenty-four +hours, and nobody able to tell why! It's +enough to drive a man frantic!"</p> + +<p>Mr. Weil did not drive immediately to Oakhurst, +which he learned was the name of the estate that Mr. +Fern rented, but he enclosed his card in a hotel en<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[278]</a></span>velope +and sent it there by mail, without a word of +comment. If they thought it best to see him he +would be glad to go, otherwise he would not intrude +on their privacy.</p> + +<p>Several days after—mails were slow in the South—an +answer came. It briefly requested that Mr. +Weil and Mr. Boggs, if the latter were still in town, +would come to lunch on the following Wednesday. +Boggs fumed slightly at the apparent difference +made between him and Weil, but ended by going +with his friend to Oakhurst.</p> + +<p>Mr. Fern did not look any worse than when Archie +had last seen him—indeed, if anything, he had improved +in appearance. Time helps most griefs to put +on a better face, and though the marks of what he +had passed through would not be likely to leave his +countenance, the utter hopelessness had in a measure +<a name="Page_278t" id="Page_278t"></a><a href="#Page_278tn">disappeared</a>. When Daisy came into the parlor, she +also wore a mien not quite so crushed as when she +left the room at Midlands with her words of farewell. +Whatever her trouble was, it had not left her +without something to live for. Her youth was doing +its work, and it seemed to the anxious eyes of the +onlooker that time would restore her nearly, if not +quite, to her former radiance.</p> + +<p>In the presence of Mr. Boggs, neither father nor +daughter cared to discuss the past. They talked of +the plantation on which they resided, of the pleasant +drives in the vicinity, and of matters connected with +the world in general, of which they had learned +through the newspapers. But after the lunch was +finished Archie found himself alone with Daisy, wan<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[279]</a></span>dering +through the extensive oak forest that gave +the place its name.</p> + +<p>"How long shall you stay here?" he asked her, as +a prelude to the other questions he wanted to follow it.</p> + +<p>"I don't know," she replied. "We shall probably +go north during the warm weather, perhaps to the +White Mountains."</p> + +<p>He suggested that it must be rather lonesome at +Oakhurst.</p> + +<p>"Not for us," she said, quickly. "We are all in +all to each other, and require no thickly settled community +to satisfy us."</p> + +<p>"Daisy," he said, after a pause, "there are things +I must say to you, and I hope—with all my heart—you +will find a way to answer them. In the first +place, do you believe me, really, truly, your friend?"</p> + +<p>She placed her hand in his for answer. The action +meant more than any form of words.</p> + +<p>"Then, tell me—tell me as freely as if I were your +brother, your priest—why you stayed from home that +night."</p> + +<p>She withdrew the hand he held, to place it with +the other over her eyes.</p> + +<p>"It is impossible," she responded, with a gasp. +"I told you that I never could explain, and I never +can."</p> + +<p>He looked sorely disappointed.</p> + +<p>"I know no person on earth—not even my father," +she proceeded, giving him back the clasp she had +loosened, "that I would tell it to sooner than you. I +have not given him the least hint. I know it leaves +you to think a thousand things, and I can only throw +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[280]</a></span>myself on your mercy; I can only ask you to remember +all you knew of me before that day, and +decide whether a girl can change her whole mental +and moral attitude in a moment."</p> + +<p>He drew her arm caressingly through his, and +breathed a sigh on her forehead.</p> + +<p>"Not for one second have I doubted your truth!" +he replied. "Believe that, Daisy, through everything. +But I hoped for an explanation, for something +that might assist me to punish the guilty ones, +for such there must have been."</p> + +<p>The face that she turned toward him was full of +terror.</p> + +<p>"Why do you say that?" she exclaimed.</p> + +<p>"Because—"</p> + +<p>"No, no!" she cried, interrupting him. "I do not +want to hear you! We must not talk on the subject! +There is nothing to be told, nothing to be +guessed. This must be alluded to no more between +us. It must end here and now!"</p> + +<p>Thoroughly disappointed, he could do no more than +acquiesce in the decision, and he indicated as much +by a profound bow. Then she changed the conversation +by an abrupt allusion to Roseleaf. When he +told her, as he thought it wisest to do, how well the +young man had borne his loss, she said she was very +thankful. She had feared that he would suffer when +he came to his senses, and it was a mercy that this +reflection had been spared her.</p> + +<p>He spoke of her sister, and of the call he had +made upon her, suppressing, however, the disagreeable +features of her remarks. Daisy said she had +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[281]</a></span>written twice and received no reply. It was evident +that the separation in the family was final.</p> + +<p>Toward evening the visitors drove back to their +hotel, discussing the strange events that had occurred. +Archie Weil did not close his eyes that +night. The love he had tried to suppress broke +forth in all its original fervor. He could not sleep +with the object of his adoration five miles away, so +lonely and so desolate.</p> + +<hr style='width: 45%;' /> + +<p>The next day Mr. Boggs went away, and the next +after this, a new visitor carried from the north. On +coming out upon the veranda to smoke, Mr. Weil +found Shirley Roseleaf there.</p> + +<p>The surprise was mutual. Dying of ennui, Archie +was glad even to meet the novelist. They talked for +hours and afterward went to ride together. It appeared +that Roseleaf had come south to get material +for an article in the interest of the magazine on +which he was employed.</p> + +<p>One night, a week later, Roseleaf came into Weil's +room and asked if he would like to take a moonlight +canter with him. Glad of any means to vary the +awful monotony Archie accepted, and the horses +were soon mounted. Weil noticed that the route +was in the direction of Oakhurst, but as he supposed +Roseleaf knew nothing of the presence of the Ferns +there, and as the family were doubtless abed at this +time, he made no attempt to induce him to take an +opposite course. It was a sad pleasure to pass within +so short a distance of the roof that sheltered the +one he loved best. On they rode, until they were +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[282]</a></span>within a mile of Oakhurst, and then Roseleaf drew +his animal down to a walk. A little further he +turned sharply into a by-path and alighted.</p> + +<p>"What's all this?" asked Archie, stupefied with +astonishment.</p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXVI" id="CHAPTER_XXVI"></a>CHAPTER XXVI.</h2> + +<h3>"I PLAYED AND I LOST."</h3> + + +<p>Roseleaf did not immediately reply. He busied +himself by tying his horse to a tree, taking particular +pains to make the knot good and strong. He apparently +wanted a little time to think what form of +words to use.</p> + +<p>"I want you to see something that will interest +you," he said, finally, in the lowest tone that could +well be heard. "If you will follow my example and +accompany me some distance further I think you +will be paid for your trouble."</p> + +<p>Mr. Weil was pale. He felt certain that this +strange visit had been premeditated, and that some +revelation regarding the Fern family was about to be +made. The dread of an unknown possibility for +which he had no preparation—affecting the girl for +whom he had so deep a love—unmanned him.</p> + +<p>"I have a right to ask you to explain," he responded. +"If your statement is satisfactory I will +accompany you gladly. I do not see the need of any +mystery in the matter."</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[283]</a></span></p> + +<p>The younger man drew a long breath and looked +abstractedly at the ground for some moments. Then +he spoke again:</p> + +<p>"There are subjects," he said, "that one does not +like to discuss. There are names that one hesitates +to pronounce. If you will tie your horse and go +with me, your eyes and ears will make questions +unnecessary."</p> + +<p>A momentary suspicion flashed through the mind +of the other—a suspicion that he was being beguiled +to this lonely spot from a sinister motive that boded +his safety no good. But it was immediately dismissed, +and after another second of delay, Archie +slipped from his saddle and followed the example of +his companion.</p> + +<p>"Lead on," he said, laconically.</p> + +<p>Without waiting for a second invitation, Roseleaf +began to penetrate the wood. He found a footpath, +after going a short distance, and crept along it +slowly, taking evident pains not to make unnecessary +noise. They were going in the direction of Oakhurst, +and in less than ten minutes the chimneys of +that residence could be seen in front of them. A +little further and Roseleaf stopped, placing himself +in the attitude of an attentive listener.</p> + +<p>The silence was profound. A slight chill permeated +the atmosphere, but neither of the prowlers felt +cold. On the contrary, perspiration covered the +bodies of both of them. Roseleaf went, very slowly, +along the path, till he came near a fence, and +then, diverging from it, drew himself quietly into a +thick copse, motioning Weil to follow. Here the +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[284]</a></span>leader sank to the ground, with a motion which indicated +that the journey was temporarily, at least, at +an end, and the second member of the party followed +his example.</p> + +<p>Half an hour passed with nothing to indicate the +reason for these most peculiar actions. Half an +hour that was interminable to Mr. Weil, torn with a +thousand fears as to what it might all portend. At +last, however, a faint sound broke the stillness. +Some one was approaching. Roseleaf touched the +shoulder of his companion to indicate the necessity +of absolute silence.</p> + +<p>Hardly ten feet away there passed a tall, athletic +form, walking with a quick stride, as of one who has +no suspicion that he is watched by unfriendly eyes. +As the man's face became visible in the moonlight it +was well that Roseleaf had a pressure of warning on +his companion's shoulder. It was almost impossible +for the latter to restrain an exclamation that would +have ruined everything.</p> + +<p>It was the face of Hannibal, the negro!</p> + +<p>Horrified, Archie turned his bloodshot eyes toward +Roseleaf. What could this strange visit of Hannibal's +to that vicinity presage? Did he intend to +murder the master of the house and abduct the +daughter? What was he doing there, at an hour +not much short of midnight? The terrors of his +previous imaginings gave way to yet more horrible +ones.</p> + +<p>But the mute appeal that he shot at his companion +produced no answer, except a resolute shake +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[285]</a></span>of the head—an absolute prohibition against the +least sound or movement.</p> + +<p>Hannibal reached the fence and, without any +attempt at concealment, climbed over it into the +enclosure where were situated the house and outbuildings +of the Oakhurst estate. He acted like one +who knows his ground and has no occasion to pick +his way. He went, however, but a little farther in +the direction of the residence. In a place where the +shadow of a smokehouse hid him from the possible +view of any one looking from the windows, he +waited in an attitude of expectation.</p> + +<p>The difficulty of controlling himself grew stronger +and stronger for Archie Weil. He wanted to end +this terrible doubt—to spring over that fence, pinion +this fellow by the throat and demand what business +he had on those premises at that hour. Roseleaf +realized all that was passing in his mind, and kept +his hand still on his shoulder, at the same time warning +him by signs that the least movement would +ruin everything. It seemed to Archie, when he +thought it over afterward, that he had never endured +such pain. He knew beyond reasonable doubt that +Hannibal was awaiting some one by appointment. +Who could it be? That was the stupendous question +that Roseleaf might have answered in a whisper, +but that he preferred for some mysterious reason his +friend should discover in the natural course of events. +And that course was horribly, torturously slow!</p> + +<p>Everything has an end, and the dread of the +watcher changed to another feeling as he saw distinctly +one of the outer doors of the residence open +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[286]</a></span>and Daisy Fern's form come out. Without glancing +to the right or the left she walked in the direction +where the negro was waiting. For an instant, overcome +by his apprehensions, Archie closed both his +eyes in despair. The voice of Roseleaf was at last +heard in his ear, a whisper nearly inaudible, conjuring +him not to betray his presence whatever the +provocation.</p> + +<p>When Archie opened his eyes again he saw that +Hannibal stood in an attitude of respect. When the +girl approached he bowed, without offering any +more intimate courtesy. Daisy had the look of one +who has made up her mind to endure an unpleasant +interview and desires to end it as quickly as possible.</p> + +<p>"Well?" she said, in a low tone.</p> + +<p>"I am going to-morrow," he replied, in a voice +that shook with emotion.</p> + +<p>"Yes."</p> + +<p>"And, as I told you, I want to say good-by once +more."</p> + +<p>Archie breathed a trifle easier. He could not tell +what fears had crowded upon him—they were indistinct +in their horribleness—but some of them had +already flown.</p> + +<p>"You are as cold as ever," continued the rich +voice of the negro, in a cadence that was meant to be +reproachful.</p> + +<p>"Do you think I could be anything else?" was the +quick reply, as if forced from lips that had meant to +remain silent. "Has your conduct been such as to +make me like or respect you?"</p> + +<p>The negro's eyes fell before her indignant gaze.</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[287]</a></span></p> + +<p>"No," he answered, humbly. "I expect nothing; +I ask nothing. I can see my mistakes now. And +yet, it would have been no different had I played the +part of an angel toward you. The entire question +with you was settled in advance by the fact that my +skin was black."</p> + +<p>The pressure on Weil's shoulder grew heavier, +from time to time, as his companion realized his +temptation to break from his covert.</p> + +<p>"If it had been as white as any man's who ever +lived," replied Daisy, boldly, "your conduct would +have earned the contempt of a self-respecting person! +A blackmailer, an abductor, a conspirator +against the peace of mind of an old man and a young +girl who never harmed you! I wonder you can talk +of other reasons when you created so many by your +wicked acts!"</p> + +<p>Hannibal shrugged his shoulders.</p> + +<p>"It is true, nevertheless," he replied. "I am a +negro. In a moment of insanity I dreamed I was a +Man! I dreamed I might gain for my wife a woman +whose ancestors had been born in a more northerly +clime than my own. To gain that end I took the +only course that seemed open. I possessed myself +of an influence that would make her father fear me. +Well, I played and I lost—and then, like other players +and losers, even white ones, I was desperate. +You were to be married to another—a man I hated. +Life had lost its only charm, I could not bear that +you should be his bride. My torture was intense. I +asked but for death."</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[288]</a></span></p> + +<p>These revelations, so novel to at least one of the +listeners, smote him with terrific force.</p> + +<p>"You asked for more!" said the girl, hoarsely. +"You asked for my death as well as your own. And +you wanted me to die in such a situation that all the +world would say I had perished willingly with you. +Could anything more cowardly be conceived! Was +anything more dastardly ever devised! It was the +morning of my wedding day; my father was waiting +for me at home; my promised husband was preparing +for the bridal; my friends were invited to +the ceremony. What were all these to you? With +Mephistophelian cunning you sent me a letter in another +person's handwriting, saying that, if I would +come to a certain address, and pay fifty dollars, several +forged notes given by my father would be returned +to me. You knew I would respond. You +knew I would tell no one where I was going, as I +did not expect to be detained more than an hour, +and there was apparently the strongest reasons for +secrecy. And when I was completely in your clutches +you gave me the alternative of <i>marrying</i> you—ugh!—or +of taking the poison you had so carefully prepared. +Oh, how <i>could</i> you! how <i>could</i> you, when +you professed to <i>like</i> me!"</p> + +<p>There was a low gurgle in Archie Weil's throat, +that he could not suppress. Fearful that it might +be heard in that dead silence, Roseleaf shook his +companion slightly. Mingled with his other emotions +there now came to Weil a stupefied wonder at +the apparent coolness of the novelist.</p> + +<p>"When one is willing to die for his love, it should +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[289]</a></span>not be questioned," said the negro. "I could not +have you in life—I wanted you in death. I wanted +the world, which had despised me, to think a beautiful +woman had preferred to die with me rather than +marry a man she did not wish to wed. But why +should we recall that dreadful day and night? You +won the victory. You, with your superior finesse, +triumphed over the African as your race has always +triumphed over mine. I demanded love or death. +You dissuaded me from both. And the next day I +permitted you to depart, and saw vanish with you +the last hope of happiness I shall ever feel."</p> + +<p>The rich voice of the speaker broke completely at +the close, but the girl who heard him seemed to feel +no sympathy for his distress.</p> + +<p>"Always yourself!" she exclaimed. "Do you +ever think of the life you left to <i>me</i>—a life hardly +more kind than the murder you contemplated. Before +you opened the portals that you had meant +for my tomb you made me swear never to reveal +where I had passed those hours. Never, no matter +what the provocation, was I to utter one word to +implicate you in the tragedy that had ruined two +households. <i>You</i> were the one to be protected—<i>I</i> +the one to suffer! Had it not been for the sacrifice +to my reputation in being found there with you +dead—no explanation being possible from my closed +lips—I would have accepted the alternative and +swallowed the poison rather than live to bear what I +do to-day!"</p> + +<p>Weil closed his eyes again. His brain was swimming.</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[290]</a></span></p> + +<p>"And you are sure," asked the negro, after a +pause, "that you have not violated that promise? +You can still swear that you have never, even by a +hint, given the least cause of suspicion against me?"</p> + +<p>"Never!" said the girl. "I consider my oath +binding, notwithstanding the manner in which it +was obtained. You may live in what peace your +conscience allows you, free at least from that fear."</p> + +<p>The negro evidently believed her, for he heaved a +sigh of relief.</p> + +<p>"Well, good-by," he said.</p> + +<p>"Good-by," she replied. "And—you are not to +come again, remember. There is nothing to be +gained from another meeting between us. If—if +you want money—I can send it to you."</p> + +<p>He lifted his head rather proudly at the last suggestion.</p> + +<p>"I do not want any," he said. "I am not low +enough for that. I took the sum from you to go to +France, because I hoped—in my infatuation—that I +could make myself something that you would not +despise. If I had wanted money I could have got +thousands out of your father, and I could still, notwithstanding +the pretence of those men that they +wrote the signatures I saw him forge. No, I mean +to give you back what I had from you, if ever I can +compose my mind enough to go to work and earn +it. I have no ambition. I stay in my mother's +cabin, day after day, unable to make the least effort. +Perhaps I can do something—in time."</p> + +<p>The negro took a step away, and then turned, as if +unable to go so abruptly.</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[291]</a></span></p> + +<p>"Good-by," he said, again.</p> + +<p>"Good-by," answered Daisy, impassively. "I +want to tell you, now I think of it, where I got that +$1,000 I gave you. It was lent to me by the man +you hated so, Mr. Roseleaf."</p> + +<p>Hannibal did not seem to care for this information.</p> + +<p>"He did not lend it for any good-will to me," he +replied. "I have heard, by-the-way, that he did not +mind losing you—this man for whom you spurned a +heart that worshiped your very footprints. I believe +some day I'll take a shot at him."</p> + +<p>The girl shuddered.</p> + +<p>"It would be like you," she said, "if no one +was looking, and he did not know of your presence. +I don't believe, with all your claims, there is a manly +trait in you."</p> + +<p>The tall form drew itself up and the athletic arms +were folded firmly.</p> + +<p>"Take care!" said the red lips, sharply, and the +ivory white teeth gleamed.</p> + +<p>"Oh, I am not afraid," replied Daisy. "My maid +is watching us from behind the blinds of my room. +I told her my own story about why I was to meet +you, but should harm happen to me the alarm bell +would ring out."</p> + +<p>Startled visibly at this information, Hannibal +glanced in the direction indicated, and then began +to take his departure in earnest.</p> + +<p>"All right," he said, as he mounted the fence. +"Keep your word and I'll keep mine. But if you +play any tricks, remember that's a game for two."</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[292]</a></span></p> + +<p>The men could not arise without startling Daisy, +who would undoubtedly have uttered a loud scream +had they suddenly appeared before her vision. They +saw her stand there for at least ten minutes, before +she went into the house. When she was out of sight, +Weil crawled into a safer place and rose to his feet.</p> + +<p>"I am going to follow that cur!" he muttered, between +his teeth.</p> + +<p>"To-morrow is soon enough," was the calm reply +of his friend. "I know where he lives."</p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXVII" id="CHAPTER_XXVII"></a>CHAPTER XXVII.</h2> + +<h3>ABSOLUTELY BLAMELESS.</h3> + + +<p>Most men who are by nature excitable surprise +their friends on occasions by exhibiting great calmness. +Shirley Roseleaf, who had often been thrown +into the greatest heat by far less important happenings +than the one just narrated, seemed a picture of +repose as he walked through the wood with his +friend in the direction of the horses they had tethered.</p> + +<p>"How did you discover they were going to have this +meeting?" asked Weil, nervously. "I am all at sea."</p> + +<p>"I have been on his track ever since the day I was +to have been married," was the reply. "I didn't intend +to leave a mystery like that unsolved. I discovered +that the Ferns were living here, and that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[293]</a></span> +Hannibal originated a few miles further on. I found +that Miss Daisy was still a little afraid of him, that +he was using an influence over her which was to say +the least strange. Before I got at the truth I had +some queer misgivings, you may believe."</p> + +<p>Mr. Weil stared at his companion.</p> + +<p>"But how did you learn all this?" he demanded.</p> + +<p>"Oh," said Roseleaf, with a slight laugh, "I've +been in this neighborhood for two months. They +haven't met once but I heard every word they said. +Little by little I gained the truth of the matter. +And to-night, as it was perhaps the last time they +would be together, I wanted you to understand it +perfectly."</p> + +<p>Archie frowned at the thoughts that crept in upon +his brain.</p> + +<p>"Excuse me for saying that you don't appear to +mind it much," he muttered. "If you have heard +many conversations like the one to which I just +listened, and could go away without expressing the +thoughts you ought to feel, you are made up differently +from me."</p> + +<p>"That may be so, too," smiled the other, good-humoredly. +"But remember that things are changed. +I once was a man in love—now I am simply a writer +of romance."</p> + +<p>The elder man shivered.</p> + +<p>"Could one be actually in love with a girl like that +and then recover from it?" he asked, half to himself.</p> + +<p>"I don't think I ever was very much in love," was +the quick reply. "But never mind that. Let us +talk of Hannibal. You spoke of going after him.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[294]</a></span> +What would you have done had you carried out that +intention?"</p> + +<p>Weil had not thought of the matter in this concrete +form. He had wanted to punish the negro for +his crimes against the woman he so dearly loved, +against the old man for whom he had such a warm +affection. How he would have accomplished this he +had not decided. The first thing was to follow and +tax the wretch with his offense. Subsequent events +would have depended on the way Hannibal met the +accusation. Certainly the temper of the pursuer +would have been warm, and his conduct might have +been severe.</p> + +<p>"I don't know," he said. "I should have told +him for one thing that he would have to reckon with +something more than a weak girl or a poor old man +if he annoyed that family again. In case he had +been impertinent I cannot say what I might have +been tempted to do."</p> + +<p>"All the more reason for congratulating yourself," +replied Roseleaf, as they reached the horses, "that +you did not follow him. He has promised to keep +away from the Ferns, and I think they have seen the +last of him. What is done can't be undone, ugly as +it is. Now," he continued, vaulting into his saddle, +"your course is reasonably plain. You must visit +Miss Daisy soon, let her know that the extent of her +misfortune is in your possession, and after a reasonable +time, ask her to marry you."</p> + +<p>Archie Weil, who had also mounted his horse, +came near falling from the back of the animal at +this very abrupt suggestion.</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[295]</a></span></p> + +<p>"That is just what you should do," continued +Roseleaf, without allowing him to speak. "You are +desperately in love. Daisy likes you very well, and +it would take but little effort on your part to induce +even a warmer sentiment. Her father thinks you +one of the angels that came down to earth and +forgot to return to heaven. She ought not to go +through life alone. Her only trouble is the suspicion +that rests on her name—a suspicion she considers +herself bound in honor to do nothing to lift. Show +her that you know how innocent she is, and you will +bring a new light to her eyes, a new smile to her +lips."</p> + +<p>"But," asked Archie, catching at the straw, "how +can I tell her—how can I explain the source of my +information?"</p> + +<p>Roseleaf laughed.</p> + +<p>"By the novel method of using the truth, or at +least a part of it," he said. "Tell her you were out +riding and saw Hannibal, and followed him. You +needn't count me into it. Why, you've got to let her +know, or else I have. It's a thing she would almost +give her life to have revealed without her aid. Go +like a man and take that heavy weight off her young +soul."</p> + +<p>Finally Weil consented. He would not discuss +the question of whether he would afterwards speak +of the hope that lay nearest his heart. But he would +go to her, as Roseleaf suggested, and relieve her of +the strain that had worn so deeply. He would go +the very next day. The sooner it was accomplished +the better. The more he thought of it the more de<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[296]</a></span>lighted +he grew that he could carry such tidings. +He could make Daisy happier. That was enough +for him—at present. If he could make himself +happy at a future date—but there was time enough +for that.</p> + +<p>He sat upright in his saddle and exulted as his +horse bounded nimbly over the ground. Why was +it not already day, that he might turn the beast in +the opposite direction! The hours would be very +long before the sun rose and he could start on his +joyful errand. The sombre hue of his countenance +disappeared before the contentment that began to +fill his breast.</p> + +<p>He slept well, notwithstanding the fact that he +expected to lie awake all night when he retired. In +the morning, on going down to breakfast, he found +that Shirley had left still earlier, leaving word that +he had started on a quest for game. Weil did not +mind. He had enough before him for one day. He +was going to see Daisy, and he had that to tell which +would lighten the load she had so long felt compelled +to carry.</p> + +<p>He waited until after nine o'clock, feeling that +some regard must be paid to <i>les convenances</i>, even on +such an important occasion as this. When he was in +the saddle he rode as slowly as he could bring himself +to do, to make his arrival still later. At last he +reached the gate of Oakhurst, and when he had summoned +the porter he sent him for Mr. Fern, stating +that he had happened to ride in that direction and +wanted merely to make a short call.</p> + +<p>It was but a few minutes before the servant re<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[297]</a></span>turned, +and the hospitable master of the premises +came with him. Mr. Fern <a name="Page_297t" id="Page_297t"></a><a href="#Page_297tn">upbraided</a> Weil for using +so much ceremony, remarking that although he was +living in a retired way, there was always one friend +he was glad to see. Giving up the horse, Archie +accompanied his host to the house, where the latter +said he would send at once for Daisy.</p> + +<p>"A minute," interpolated Archie. "I want a little +talk with you first, alone."</p> + +<p>Mr. Fern looked up curiously. He believed he +knew what his visitor was about to say. He had +long suspected the feelings which Archie entertained +for Daisy. He knew also that his daughter would +consent to wed no man, no matter who, while there +hung over her fair fame the terrible mystery of her +wedding night.</p> + +<p>"I want to tell you," pursued Archie, before his +host could interrupt, "that I have made a great discovery—one +of the utmost moment to your family. +I know what happened on that day so sad to all of +us, and—listen to me, Mr. Fern!—I know that your +child is absolutely blameless in the matter."</p> + +<p>The listener's face grew very white. He understood +imperfectly, but it seemed to him that a tale +he could not bear to hear was about to be forced +upon him.</p> + +<p>"Mr. Weil," he said, earnestly, "I hope you will +not continue this subject. I do not know what +occurred—I do not wish to know. I have consulted +my daughter's sentiments entirely. She prefers to +have the veil unlifted, and I respect her wish."</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[298]</a></span></p> + +<p>The visitor could hardly contain himself for impatience.</p> + +<p>"That has been true hitherto," he replied. "But +Miss Daisy herself will be more than delighted when +she knows I am aware of the entire facts—which she +has been prevented, by a promise extracted from her, +from revealing. Call her, let me tell her that I +know everything, and how I know it, and you will +see the happiest girl in America."</p> + +<p>Mr. Fern shook his head doubtfully. He was +much afraid of doing something to injure Daisy's +feelings. He could not believe she wanted to have +the trouble that had crushed her raked up by any +one. Archie persisted, however, and his arguments +at last won the day.</p> + +<p>"You do not think I would come here with any +tidings I did not believe agreeable?" he said, interrogatively. +"You know I care too much for—for +both of you—to do that."</p> + +<p>When Miss Daisy was summoned, which she was +at last, and Mr. Weil gently let drop a hint of what +he had to tell, the girl was hardly less agitated than +her father had been. Instead, however, as the visitor +expected, of relying on her natural protector +during the expected recital, she whispered to Mr. +Fern, who obediently rose and let her lead him out +of the room. Presently she returned, and took a +chair opposite to Mr. Weil. Her face was so +pathetic, her attitude so entreating, that he quite +forgot what he had come to tell, and leaning toward +her, took her hands in his.</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[299]</a></span></p> + +<p>"Daisy," he said, "I—I—" and he could go no +further.</p> + +<p>"Yes, I know," she answered, in a low voice. +"But there is a reason why I cannot listen to you. I +have told you that before. I ought not even to say +as much as this. I should not even remain in the +room while you explain the least thing."</p> + +<p>He choked down the rising in his throat and hastened, +lest she should follow literally the sentiment +she had outlined and leave him to himself.</p> + +<p>"This has all been true, until now," he said. "You +were under a promise, an oath. But—Daisy, last +night I heard all that passed between you and your +persecutor, and there is no longer any need for mystery +between us."</p> + +<p>She gasped, as if her breath was going.</p> + +<p>"You—you heard!"</p> + +<p>"Everything. I was within forty feet of you. +Are you sorry that the awful cloud is blown away—that +your perfect innocence is proved without a +violation of your plighted word?"</p> + +<p>For the girl was crying, slowly, without hysteria, +crying with both her hands tightly clasped over her +eyes.</p> + +<p>"<i>I</i> did not need it, not I," continued the man, +earnestly. "I knew you had done nothing of your +free will that the whole world might not know. But +I knew, too, that you would be pleased to have your +innocence established. And I was glad for another +reason. I love you, Daisy. I have loved you a very +long time. Your sister was right in that. Had you +not shown such a marked preference for my friend I +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[300]</a></span>would have done my best to win you, months and +months ago. While you felt that you were an object +of suspicion I knew you would not consent to +be my wife. Now, that obstacle is gone and—Daisy—I +want you."</p> + +<p>The hands were withdrawn from the tear-stained +face, a handkerchief was hastily passed over it, and +Daisy turned half away from the speaker.</p> + +<p>"You will not refuse, my love," he murmured, +bending again toward her. "You will promise?"</p> + +<p>One of her hands strayed toward him, and was +clasped joyfully in his own.</p> + +<p>"But, in relation to that other matter," said Daisy, +some moments later, when the sweet tokens of love +had been given and taken, "I must be as silent as +before. I have listened to you, but I have not replied. +You can understand the reason. Never +speak of it to me again, if you do not wish to inflict +pain. It is something I cannot discuss."</p> + +<p>"I may tell your father, though," he whispered.</p> + +<p>"It would be best not. He is content now. No, +I beg you, say nothing to any one."</p> + +<p>And he promised, like the lover he was, and sealed +it with another kiss on her pure mouth.</p> + +<p>"I may tell him of—of our love?" he asked.</p> + +<p>"Oh, yes; we will tell him of that together."</p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[301]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXVIII" id="CHAPTER_XXVIII"></a>CHAPTER XXVIII.</h2> + +<h3>TRAPPING A WOLF.</h3> + + +<p>When Shirley Roseleaf left the hotel that morning +he carried a fishing rod, a rifle, a gamebag and +other acoutrements of the sportsman. In his earlier +years, before he ever came to the city, he had been +accounted something of an expert with these implements. +Since being in this country where there was +so much to tempt a Nimrod he had made a number +of similar excursions. Although it was some distance +to the locality where he intended to go the +young man did not take a conveyance of any kind. +He walked briskly over the road, breathing the pure +air of that early hour, and whistling in a low tone to +himself as he went along.</p> + +<p>Among the other things he carried was a light +lunch, for he did not care to break his fast so +early in the day. He had, besides, a contrivance +for making coffee and for broiling the fish he +expected to catch. Even if his jaunt lasted till night +his physical needs were well provided for. One +would not have imagined, to see his free and easy +swing over the road, that he had anything of greater +moment on his mind than to watch for some stray +rabbit, or a possible deer track.</p> + +<p>Not less than six miles from his starting point, he +came to a small lake, to reach which he had followed +a narrow path that led through the wood. On the +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[302]</a></span>shore was a primitive rowboat, or rather canoe, +which he had purchased on another occasion from a +native for an insignificant price. Into this boat the +novelist stepped, and after safely depositing his traps, +took up the paddle and used it skillfully. When he +had reached approximately the centre of the lake, he +sat down, prepared his fishing tackle and began to +angle for the denizens of the water below.</p> + +<p>With the patience of a true fisherman Roseleaf sat +quietly for two hours, during which time he had +drawn out but few specimens. The long walk had, +however, given him the appetite he needed, and he +now pulled his frail craft toward the shore, with the +intention of lighting a fire and preparing a meal. But +even when he had nearly reached land he saw splinters +flying beneath his feet, and immediately after heard a +dull sound which showed what had caused the +trouble.</p> + +<p>A stray bullet, from some careless hunter, had +penetrated his canoe. The hole was large enough to +render the boat useless, for the water began to come +in rapidly. With two more stout movements of the +paddle Roseleaf forced his craft against the shore and +sprang upon dry land. Then he quietly picked up +the things he had brought with him, and walked a +little away from the scene.</p> + +<p>"These fellows are getting altogether too careless," +he muttered, as he inspected his damp belongings. +"A little more and that thing would have +been tearing splinters in me."</p> + +<p>Scraping some dead wood together, he soon had a +fire started, and the cooking of his breakfast was +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[303]</a></span>begun. He went about the work methodically, +whistling again in that low key he had used when on +the way from his hotel, and stopping now and then +as the noise of a woodbird or some wild quadruped +of the smaller kind came to his ears. He sniffed the +coffee that was boiling furiously and the freshly +caught fish that sent out an appetizing aroma. No +meal served at the Hoffman, the Imperial or the far-famed +Delmonico restaurant, could equal this primitive +repast, for him.</p> + +<p>Finally, all was ready. Helping himself to a large +plateful of the delicious food, and pouring out a +huge tin cup of the coffee, Roseleaf sat down as if +to take his ease while breakfasting. But, instead of +touching the viands he had been at such pains to +prepare, the next thing he did was to fall prone on +the ground. And at the same instant a second bullet +whizzed past him and buried itself with a tearing of +bark and wood in the tree just behind him.</p> + +<p>If Roseleaf had laid down with suddenness he rose +with no less speed. As he sprang to his feet he +picked up his rifle. He made a dozen steps forward, +and then, bringing the weapon to his shoulder, +cried to some one in front of him:</p> + +<p>"Halt, or I fire!"</p> + +<p>A human form that had been creeping away on its +hands and knees, now stood upright. It was perhaps +thirty yards from the speaker, and when it faced him +he saw that the countenance was black.</p> + +<p>"Don't come any nearer and don't go any farther +off," said the novelist, gravely. "You are at a con<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[304]</a></span>venient +distance. I can shoot you best where you +stand."</p> + +<p>The negro looked considerably crestfallen. He +seemed doubtful whether to break and run or stay +and try to face it out.</p> + +<p>"I can't help an accident," he said, at last, when +the other remained covering him with the rifle.</p> + +<p>"No," was the answer. "An accident is liable to +happen to any one, they say. But two accidents, of +the same kind, on the same day—accidents that +might either of them have been fatal if you were not +such an awfully bad marksman—are too many. +When <i>I</i> get ready to fire, there will be no accident."</p> + +<p>The negro was plainly uneasy. He cast his eyes +on the ground and writhed.</p> + +<p>"You have dropped your gun," said Roseleaf. +"That was right. It would have incommoded your +flight, and its only cartridge was used. You would +have had no time to reload. I know that gun very +well; I have heard it many times in the last six +weeks. I knew the sound of it to-day when you +fired the first time. A rifle has a voice, like a man; +did you know that? I knew it was your gun and +that you were at the end of it. With that information +in my possession, of course you couldn't catch +me napping twice. I pretended to watch my cooking, +but in reality I watched nothing but you. +There is no need that you should say anything, Hannibal. +You could not tell me much, if you tried."</p> + +<p>The speaker examined his rifle carefully, still keeping +the muzzle turned toward the person he was +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[305]</a></span>addressing. The latter did not seem to grow less +uneasy.</p> + +<p>"I spent some time last evening," continued Roseleaf, +presently, "in listening to a little conversation you +had with a certain young lady living a mile or so from +this spot. That surprises you, does it? I thought it +might. I learned how you had ruined her peace of +mind, how you had artfully contrived to make her +appear the opposite of what she really was. Now, +you have tried twice within the last hour to murder +me. For this I could have forgiven you. What you +did to that young woman is, however, a more serious +matter. I don't think anything less than pulling this +trigger will expiate that."</p> + +<p>He placed the rifle to his shoulder again, as he +spoke, and glanced along the sight. The negro half +turned, as if of a mind to attempt an escape, and +then, realizing the hopelessness of such a move, sank +on his knees and raised his hands piteously.</p> + +<p>"If you have anything to say, be quick!" said the +hard voice of the man who held the rifle.</p> + +<p>Then Hannibal blurted out his story. He told +how he had been led, step by step, to hope that he +might rise above his station, until the wild idea entered +his brain that he could even make Daisy Fern +love and marry him. He pleaded the disappointments +he had suffered, the terrible revulsion of feeling +he had undergone, the broken life he had been +obliged to take up. He did not want to be killed. +If allowed to go he would swear by all that was +good never to cross the path of the Ferns, or Roseleaf, +or any of their friends again. When his +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[306]</a></span>treaties brought no verbal response he grew louder +in his tone, feeling that something must be done to +move the deaf ears to which he addressed his petition.</p> + +<p>"If I allowed you to leave here, you would try to +shoot me the next time you had a chance," said the +novelist. "I should merely be giving my life in exchange +for yours, which I do not consider a good +bargain."</p> + +<p>"No, I swear it before God!" came the trembling +words in reply.</p> + +<p>"I cannot trust you."</p> + +<p>A slight sound attracted the attention of Roseleaf +as he uttered the latter words. It was the sound +that oars make when dipped in water. With a quick +glance to one side he beheld a rowboat, in which +were seated Archie Weil and Daisy Fern, and they +were coming directly toward him.</p> + +<p>"Here are some of the others you have wronged," +he said, pointing. "I will wait to see if their opinions +agree with mine."</p> + +<p>Daisy saw him first, as Weil was handling the +oars, and she called her companion's attention to +him. Archie called his name.</p> + +<p>"Come here!" was Roseleaf's reply. "I have +winged a black duck and I cannot leave."</p> + +<p>A few more movements of the oars brought the +boat to the shore, and the surprise of its occupants +can be imagined when they saw the tableau that +awaited them. Hannibal was still groveling on the +earth, and the attitude of Roseleaf plainly showed the +cause of the negro's terror.</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[307]</a></span></p> + +<p>"What has he done?" was the first question, and +it was Daisy's voice that asked it.</p> + +<p>"Let him tell," replied Roseleaf, nonchalantly. +"Tell the lady what you did, Hannibal."</p> + +<p>With a courage born of his knowledge of the young +lady's kind heart, Hannibal now turned his attention +toward her. He begged her to plead with his would-be +executioner to give him one more chance for his +life, and reiterated his promises to cease meddling +with all of their affairs if this was granted. As he +spoke Daisy crept nearer to Roseleaf's side, and when +he paused for a moment to gain breath, she laid her +fair hand on the rifle.</p> + +<p>"You would not kill a fellow creature?" she said, +gently.</p> + +<p>"A fellow creature?" he retorted. "No! But a +wolf, a snake, a vulture—yes."</p> + +<p>She shook her head slowly, while Mr. Weil looked +on, uncertain what to do or say. He wanted more +than anything else in his life to lay hands upon the +cause of all her woes.</p> + +<p>"You have not told me yet what he has done," +she said.</p> + +<p>"He shall tell you," replied Roseleaf, sharply. +"Stand up, Hannibal, and answer truly the questions +I am about to propound to you."</p> + +<p>The crouching figure tottered to his feet. The +negro was weak from fear.</p> + +<p>"Did you try twice this morning to murder me?"</p> + +<p>"Yes," replied the shaking voice. "But I was +insane with my troubles—I did not realize what I +was doing—I—"</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">[308]</a></span></p> + +<p>Daisy's slight hand, still on the barrel of the rifle, +was bearing it steadily to the ground.</p> + +<p>"Once," she said to Roseleaf, impressively, "you +told me you loved me! Have you regard enough +left to grant me a favor?"</p> + +<p>He shook his head.</p> + +<p>"There are favors," he said, "that are crimes. It +is one's duty to exterminate vermin, in the interest +of the human race."</p> + +<p>But, even as he spoke, she was having her way. +Her slight strength had taken the weapon from +him.</p> + +<p>Then, with the face of a forgiving angel she turned +toward the negro and uttered very softly one word, +"Go!"</p> + +<p>Glancing at the others to see if he might safely +follow this direction, Hannibal disappeared in the +thick woods behind him. He walked with an unsteady +step. There was a strange lightness in his +brain. Some distance away he found the boat in +which he had come, and entered it, staggeringly. +Pushing from the shore with a feeble touch on his +paddle he set out for his home.</p> + +<hr style='width: 45%;' /> + +<p>The negroes who found his body, a week later, +could not decide whether he had perished by accident +or by deliberate intention. The boat was not +capsized, but it was partially filled with water, indicating +either that he had tried to sink the craft or +had leaned too heavily to one side in something like +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">[309]</a></span>a stupor. When his gun was discovered on the +shore, new speculations were set in motion.</p> + +<p>Those who knew him recalled that he had been +moody for a long time—in fact, ever since he came +from the north. They remembered him as a young +fellow, four or five years previous, not very different +from his mates; and they had stared in wonder when +he returned with fine clothes and money in his +pocket. The dislike between him and his old acquaintances +was mutual. They could not understand +him; and what an inferior mind does not comprehend +it always views with suspicion.</p> + +<p>A grave was made near the border of the lake, and +the single word "<span class="smcap">Hannibal</span>" was written on the +board that marked the spot. But later some envious +hand scrawled beneath it:</p> + +<p>"<span class="smcap">He wanted to be a gentleman!</span>"</p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXIX" id="CHAPTER_XXIX"></a>CHAPTER XXIX.</h2> + +<h3>"THE GREATEST NOVEL."</h3> + + +<p>Archie Weil and Daisy Fern were married in June. +There was no need of waiting longer. It was a case +of true love sanctified by suffering and devotion. +The bright eyes and ruddy cheeks of the bride testified +to her renewed health and spirits. The news +of Hannibal's death—albeit it brought a tear to her +eyes, had removed the only shadow that stretched +across her pathway.</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310">[310]</a></span></p> + +<p>Shirley Roseleaf did not come to the wedding, to +which he was the only invited guest. He wrote +that an important mission from his magazine made +it impossible to accept the invitation, but he sent a +handsome present and a letter to Archie, congratulating +him in the warmest manner.</p> + +<p>For some time Lawrence Gouger had been urging +the novelist to hasten the wonderful story that was +to make his fortune and give a new impetus to the +house of Cutt & Slashem. They had consulted together +a hundred times, and the thirty chapters already +finished seemed to leave but a few weeks' +steady work to be accomplished. Shortly after +the wedding Gouger went to Roseleaf's rooms, one +evening, and begged him to lose no further time.</p> + +<p>"What is there to wait for now?" he asked. +"All the dramatic incidents have occurred. You +only need to wind up with a glory of fireworks, showing +virtue triumphant and vice buried under a North +Carolina sycamore. Come, my dear boy, when may +I expect to see the work completed?"</p> + +<p>Roseleaf did not answer for some seconds.</p> + +<p>"There is a part of this story that you do not +comprehend," he said, finally. "A chapter is yet to +be written at which you have not guessed."</p> + +<p>"Indeed!" exclaimed the listener.</p> + +<p>"Yes," nodded the other. "So far the character +that is supposed to represent myself appears that of +a heartless, cold, unfeeling wretch. Do you think +I shall be satisfied to leave it that way?"</p> + +<p>The critic stared at the speaker in astonishment.</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">[311]</a></span></p> + +<p>"I—I do not understand," he replied.</p> + +<p>"I thought not," said Roseleaf, soberly. "Well, +this story, to be truthful, must do justice to the one +who is supposed to personate its author. And, in +the first place, to avoid all circumlocution, let me tell +you there has never been a moment since I first +loved Daisy Fern that she has not been the dearest +thing on this earth to me!"</p> + +<p>Mr. Gouger could not reconcile this statement with +the events that had taken place, and his puzzled +countenance said as much.</p> + +<p>"I acted like a villain, did I not," continued Roseleaf, +after a slight pause, "when the news was brought +that she had disappeared? I seemed to have no faith +in her, no confidence in Archie, no trust in that poor +old man, her father. Why? I was so madly, insanely +in love that every possible phantasy got possession of +my excited brain. To lose her was to deprive me of +all hope, all ambition, all care for life. So far, I acted +my real self. If what I supposed true had been +proven I think there would have been a murder. +Not of Daisy; ah, no! but of the man who had +robbed me of my treasure. Then I went to Midlands +with Archie and I saw her. I heard her speak, and +like a lightning flash it came to me. He was as honorable +as a man could be and she cared more for him +than for my unworthy self. She had contrasted us +and discovered how much he was my superior. And +I said to myself at that moment, 'I will give her up! +If it costs me my happiness as long as I live I will +give her up! No matter what happens, I will unite +these people, who have been so faithful to me and +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">[312]</a></span>toward whom I have acted the part of a cur and a +coward!'"</p> + +<p>The young man was speaking with perfect composure, +but with intense earnestness.</p> + +<p>"The first thing to be done," he continued, "was +to take myself out of their way. The next was to +unravel the mystery that had made the trouble. I +knew, when my mind had resumed its natural state, +that, whatever had occurred, Daisy was blameless. +I knew that something far out of the common line +had caused her to commit the act which had cast a +blight over her reputation. For weeks I could find +no clue. Then, one day, in the street, I saw Hannibal, +the negro for whom she had borrowed my money +and who I supposed was still in France. I cannot +help the quick temper I have inherited, and I confess +that the sight of that fellow aroused my suspicions +against this girl, only they took a new and more horrible +form.</p> + +<p>"I remembered distinctly what a strong hold Hannibal +had on the Fern family. I recalled, with frightful +distinctness, the manner in which he attended +Daisy at table, his interest in her health, the $1,000 she +had given him, her quick movement to prevent my +striking him when his answers insulted us both. Perhaps—but +I will not dilate on the things that came to +my distorted imagination. It was enough for me to +put a detective on his track. I engaged Hazen, and +in three days he came to tell me that a white woman +had passed the night with Hannibal at a house on +Seventh Avenue, the date corresponding with the +one on which I was to have been married!"</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313">[313]</a></span></p> + +<p>Gouger listened spellbound. It seemed to him +that the most exciting chapter of this weird tale was +yet to be written.</p> + +<p>"If I had lost control of my senses before," pursued +Roseleaf, "what do you suppose happened +when this information was brought to me? But +then I found an excuse for my beloved one. I considered +her the victim of one of those forms of +hypnotism of which there can no longer be any +doubt. She could not have gone there without the +demoniac influence of a stronger personality. He +had charmed her from her home by the exercise of +diabolic arts. My fury was entirely for him. I +sought him at once, only to learn that he had left +the city a few days before, leaving absolutely no +trace. I could not give over the hunt, however. If +he was on the earth I must find him and be avenged +for the wrong he had done. It occurred to me that +an influence so strong as he had exerted would not +be given up. Wherever the Ferns had gone, he +would probably be found. I discovered the whereabouts +of the family, after a great deal of effort, and +went to North Carolina. With the patience of a dog +and the cunning of a fox I laid in wait for weeks, +and one night I saw and heard Daisy Fern and +Hannibal in conversation!"</p> + +<p>There was no movement on the part of the critic. +He sat as still as a block of stone.</p> + +<p>"When they began to speak I could have sworn +that my recent guesses were correct ones. It was at +about the hour of midnight, and she had crept +quietly and alone out of her house to meet this<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314">[314]</a></span> +African. But the first dozen sentences that were +uttered gave me a new version of the affair. It was +by no mesmeric power, but by a threat of injury to +her father that this fellow held her under bond. I +learned that Mr. Fern had done something—I could +not then tell what—which rendered him liable to +imprisonment. I learned, also, beyond question—for +they spoke without restraint, supposing themselves +alone—that, whatever the purpose of Hannibal +when Daisy came to his rooms on the day she +was to have been married, it had not been +accomplished. She was afraid of him, but only for her +father's sake. And I discovered beside, though not +with perfect clearness, that a promise of secrecy accounted +for her refusal to explain the cause of that +absence which had altered the whole course of our +lives.</p> + +<p>"I have said I had watched with patience. I +determined to continue my watch till I understood +the entire situation. About once a week they met in +the way I have described, and as the next date was +always arranged in my hearing there was no difficulty +in my keeping the appointment. In the meantime +I learned that Hannibal was born in the vicinity, +that he was living a hermit life, and that nobody +knew of the surreptitious visits he was paying to +Oakhurst. Then one day I heard that Archie was +at the hotel, and thinking it time that I let him into +the secret I went there, pretending I had just arrived +from the north, when in reality I had been boarding +for months five miles away. The rest you know. I +was enabled to prove to him as well as to myself +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">[315]</a></span>what had actually happened. Since then justice has +been done to us all."</p> + +<p>Mr. Gouger had to speak at last.</p> + +<p>"To <i>you</i>?" he asked. "Do you admit that all this +is just to you?"</p> + +<p>"Without doubt," said Roseleaf. "I forfeited +every right to the woman I had insulted by my suspicions. +There are certain metals that can only be +tried by fire. I was placed in the crucible, and found +wanting."</p> + +<p>The critic shook his head sagely.</p> + +<p>"You are a regular Roman father to your own +delinquencies," he answered. "But tell me another +thing. Would you have shot Hannibal if Mr. Weil +and Miss Fern had not made their appearance?"</p> + +<p>"I have not the least doubt of it. He was in my +eyes at that moment a crawling adder, whose fangs +were liable to penetrate the flesh of some one if he +was not put out of the way. But I am more than +glad I was spared the infliction of his punishment."</p> + +<p>Gouger wore a strange look.</p> + +<p>"And yet he had one most human quality," +said he.</p> + +<p>"Yes, I admit that now," was the reply. "In his +passionate, barbaric way, he certainly loved. When +I revise my novel I shall try to deal fairly with +him."</p> + +<p>"And you will finish it very soon now?"</p> + +<p>"As soon as possible."</p> + +<p>A month later Lawrence Gouger received at his +office a package marked on the outside, "From Shir<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_316" id="Page_316">[316]</a></span>ley +Roseleaf." He could hardly control his excitement +until he had untied the strings, taken off the +wrappings and disclosed the tin box inside. It was +a square box, just the right size for manuscript paper +such as he had seen Roseleaf use, and the heart of +the enthusiast beat high as he took it in his hands. +A jewel case filled with the costliest stones would +not have seemed to him more precious. The fame +of a new author would soon resound through the +world! Cutt & Slashem would have the greatest +work of fiction of recent years in their next catalogue! +And he, Lawrence Gouger, would be given +the credit of discovering—one might almost say of +inventing—this wonder!</p> + +<p>Opening the box, the critic looked at its contents +and then dropped it with an exclamation. It contained +nothing but a small sealed envelope and <i>a +heap of ashes</i>!</p> + +<p>Ashes! Ashes made from recently burned +paper!</p> + +<p>When he recovered enough to open the envelope, +this note was found within:</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>"<span class="smcap">To Lawrence Gouger, Esq:—Dear Sir</span>: Enclosed +herewith you will find the novel for which you have waited +so long. I hope it will please you in all respects, as I certainly +have taken the greatest pains with it.</p> + +<p>"On reading it over I thought it best to more thoroughly +disguise the personality of the characters, lest any of them +might be injured by its publication. There was the happiness +of a newly-made bride to be considered; her husband's +ease of mind; her father's serene old age; her sister's +feelings. There was even a black man who had perhaps +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317">[317]</a></span>suffered enough, and a critic employed by a large publishing +firm who would not like his true character made manifest +in type. In order to protect these people I have applied +a match to the pages. You can best tell whether I +have performed the work too well.</p> + +<p>"If this novel does not bring me the fame you anticipate +I shall not much care; I have lost some of my ambitions. +If it fails to add to my fortune, never mind; a single man +has no great need of wealth.</p> + +<p>"I go to-night on board a steamer which sails for Europe +at daybreak. When you read this I shall be on the sea. I +have secured a position as resident correspondent abroad +for one of the great newspapers. Perhaps I never shall +return. Truly your friend, S. R."</p></div> + +<p>"<i>The idiot!</i>" cried the reader, as he finished perusing +this letter. "<i>The imbecile!</i> Was there ever +such a fool born on this earth!"</p> + +<p>Then he apostrophised the heap of ashes that lay in +the box before him.</p> + +<p>"There never was and never will be so great a work +of fiction as you were yesterday! And yet a little +touch of flame, and all was extinguished! How like +you were to man! Let him have the brain of a +Shakespeare, and a pound weight falling on his skull +ends everything.</p> + +<p>"There was a flood in Hungary last week, in which +a thousand people were drowned. There was an +earthquake in Peru where five hundred perished. A +vessel went down off the Caroline Islands. Taken all +together, they did not equal to this world your loss.</p> + +<p>"The poet knew what he was saying: 'Great wits +are sure to madness near allied.' Oh, to think that +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318">[318]</a></span>a mind that could execute your thrilling pages knew +no more than to destroy them!</p> + +<p>"I will not cast you, sublime ashes, to the winds +of heaven! I will keep you reverently, as one preserves +the cloak of a great man, or the bones of a +mastodon. Behold, I close you again in your +covers, where the eye of no mortal shall henceforth +behold you."</p> + +<p>With the words the disappointed critic performed +the action. And to this day visitors to his room +read with wonder the inscription he has placed on +the box:</p> + +<p>"<i>The greatest novel that ever was written.</i>"</p> + + +<p> </p> +<p class="center"><b>THE END.</b></p> + +<p> </p> +<p> </p> +<hr /> +<p> </p> +<p> </p> +<div class="trans_note"> +<p class="center"><a name="TN" id="TN"></a><big>TRANSCRIBER'S NOTE:</big></p> + +<p class="noindent">Every effort has been made to replicate this text as faithfully as +possible, including obsolete and variant spellings. Obvious +typographical errors in punctuation (misplaced quotes and the like) have +been fixed. Corrections [in brackets] in the text are noted below:</p> + +<p class="noindent"> +<a name="Page_vtn" id="Page_vtn"></a>Table of Contents: typographical error corrected<br /> + +I. A Rejected Manuscript <a href="#Page_vt">1[9]</a><br /><br /> + +<a name="Page_41tn" id="Page_41tn"></a>page 41: possible typographical error queried (not changed in the text)<br /> + +<a href="#Page_41t">would[wouldn't]</a> touch the mooney, maundering mess. It makes +my flesh creep, sometimes, to read it." +<br /><br /> + +<a name="Page_106tn" id="Page_106tn"></a>page 106: duplicate word removed<br /> + +playing at love with each other, might afterwards +find that <a href="#Page_106t">[that]</a> they were experimenting with fire. +<br /><br /> + +<a name="Page_108tn" id="Page_108tn"></a>page 108: possible typographical error queried (not changed in the text)<br /> + +arm around her again, checking himself with difficulty +from <a href="#Page_108t">completeing[completing]</a> the movement) "and dull, +and wanting in manners, but you are the only young +<br /><br /> + +<a name="Page_116tn" id="Page_116tn"></a>page 116: typographical errors corrected<br /> + +about this matter. She <a href="#Page_116t1">shought[thought]</a> the innocent man at +her side had not quite <a href="#Page_116t2">guaged[gauged]</a> the interest that Mr. +<br /><br /> + +<a name="Page_118tn" id="Page_118tn"></a>page 118: typographical error corrected<br /> + +caught her passionately in his arms, and knew no +better way to bring her to <a href="#Page_118t">consiousness[consciousness]</a> than to rain +kisses on her cheeks. As might be expected this +<br /><br /> + +<a name="Page_126tn" id="Page_126tn"></a>page 126: typographical error corrected<br /> + +abilities of Mr. Weil, and he had no idea of <a href="#Page_126t">dispuing[disputing]</a> +the conclusions of that wise guide. +<br /><br /> + +<a name="Page_133tn" id="Page_133tn"></a>page 133: typographical error corrected<br /> + +"To me? He would not dare<a href="#Page_133t">?[!]</a> What angers +me is the way he speaks to the rest of you. He +<br /><br /> + +<a name="Page_149tn" id="Page_149tn"></a>page 149: typographical errors corrected<br /> + +called the Good side nothing stronger <a href="#Page_149t1">that[than]</a> wines +were found on the bill of fare. On the Wicked side +every decoction <a href="#Page_149t2">know[known]</a> to the modern drinker was to +<br /><br /> + +<a name="Page_155tn" id="Page_155tn"></a>page 155: typographical error corrected<br /> + +sexes. He half believed that Jennie Pelham and +Mrs. <a href="#Page_155t">Delevan[Delavan]</a> were sitting by his bed, more brazen +<br /><br /> + +<a name="Page_194tn" id="Page_194tn"></a>page 194: typographical error corrected<br /> + +young novelist. More than this, she would have <a href="#Page_194t">sufficent[sufficient]</a> +on hand to send the future amounts that Hannibal +<br /><br /> + +<a name="Page_251tn" id="Page_251tn"></a>page 251: typographical error corrected<br /> + +Roseleaf waved him back with a <a href="#Page_251t">sweeep[sweep]</a> of his +arm. +<br /><br /> + +<a name="Page_278tn" id="Page_278tn"></a>page 278: typographical error corrected<br /> + +countenance, the utter hopelessness had in a measure +<a href="#Page_278t">diappeared[disappeared]</a>. When Daisy came into the parlor, she +<br /><br /> + +<a name="Page_297tn" id="Page_297tn"></a>page 297: typographical error corrected<br /> + +came with him. Mr. Fern <a href="#Page_297t">upraided[upbraided]</a> Weil for using +so much ceremony, remarking that although he was +</p></div> + +<p> </p> +<p> </p> +<hr class="full" /> +<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A BLACK ADONIS***</p> +<p>******* This file should be named 26599-h.txt or 26599-h.zip *******</p> +<p>This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:<br /> +<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/2/6/5/9/26599">http://www.gutenberg.org/2/6/5/9/26599</a></p> +<p>Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed.</p> + +<p>Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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--git a/26599.txt b/26599.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..ea9e59f --- /dev/null +++ b/26599.txt @@ -0,0 +1,10020 @@ +The Project Gutenberg eBook, A Black Adonis, by Linn Boyd Porter + + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere 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 www.gutenberg.org + + + + + +Title: A Black Adonis + + +Author: Linn Boyd Porter + + + +Release Date: September 12, 2008 [eBook #26599] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII) + + +***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A BLACK ADONIS*** + + +E-text prepared by Mark C. Orton, Linda McKeown, and the Project Gutenberg +Online Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net) + + + +Transcriber's note: + + Every effort has been made to replicate this text as faithfully + as possible; please see detailed list of printing issues at the + end of the text. + + + + + +A BLACK ADONIS. + +by + +ALBERT ROSS. + + + * * * * * + + THE + ALBATROSS NOVELS + + By ALBERT ROSS + + 23 Volumes + + May be had wherever books are sold at the price you paid for this volume + + Black Adonis, A + Garston Bigamy, The + Her Husband's Friend + His Foster Sister + His Private Character + In Stella's Shadow + Love at Seventy + Love Gone Astray + Moulding a Maiden + Naked Truth, The + New Sensation, A + Original Sinner, An + Out of Wedlock + Speaking of Ellen + Stranger Than Fiction + Sugar Princess, A + That Gay Deceiver + Their Marriage Bond + Thou Shalt Not + Thy Neighbor's Wife + Why I'm Single + Young Fawcett's Mabel + Young Miss Giddy + + G. W. DILLINGHAM CO. + Publishers :: :: New York + + * * * * * + + +A BLACK ADONIS. + +by + +ALBERT ROSS. + +Author of + "Out of Wedlock," "Speaking of Ellen," "Thou Shalt Not," + "Why I'm Single," "Love at Seventy," Etc., Etc. + + + "You see!" he answered, bitterly. "Because I am black I + cannot touch the hand of a woman that is white. And yet you + say the Almighty made of one blood all nations of the + earth!"--Page 212. + + + + + +New York: +Copyright, 1896, by G. W. Dillingham. +G. W. Dillingham Co., Publishers. +[All rights reserved.] + + + + + +CONTENTS. + + Chapter Page + + I. A Rejected Manuscript 9 + + II. "Was my story too bold?" 23 + + III. "Her feet were pink" 35 + + IV. With Titian Tresses 49 + + V. Studying Miss Millicent 65 + + VI. "How the women stare!" 79 + + VII. A Dinner at Midlands 93 + + VIII. Holding Her Hand 99 + + IX. "Daisy, my darling!" 110 + + X. "Oh, so many, many maids!" 121 + + XI. Archie Pays Attention 136 + + XII. Dining at Isaac's 143 + + XIII. A Question of Color 155 + + XIV. "Let us have a betrayal" 166 + + XV. The Green-Eyed Monster 177 + + XVI. "I've had such luck!" 190 + + XVII. A Burglar in the House 198 + + XVIII. Black and White 204 + + XIX. "Play out your farce" 215 + + XX. Like a Stuck Pig 226 + + XXI. "We want Millie to understand" 238 + + XXII. Where Was Daisy? 246 + + XXIII. An Awful Night 254 + + XXIV. "This ends it, then?" 263 + + XXV. An Undiscoverable Secret 273 + + XXVI. "I played, and I lost" 282 + + XXVII. Absolutely Blameless 292 + + XXVIII. Trapping a Wolf 301 + + XXIX. "The Greatest Novel" 309 + + + + +TO MY READERS. + + +I do not know how better to use the space that the printer always leaves +me in this part of the book than to redeem the promise I made at the end +of my last novel, and tell you in a few words what became of Blanche +Brixton Fantelli and her husband. + +But, do you really need to be told? + +Could they have done anything else than live in connubial felicity, +after the man had proved himself so noble and the woman had learned to +appreciate him at his true worth? + +Well, whether they could or not, they didn't. Blanche is the happiest of +wedded wives. She still holds to her theory that marriage is based on +wrong principles, and that the contract as ordinarily made is +frightfully immoral; but she says if all men were like "her Jules" there +would be no trouble. + +In this she proves herself essentially feminine. She is learning, albeit +a little late, that man was not made to live alone, and that the love a +mother feels for her child is not the only one that brings joy to a +woman's breast. + +Fantelli does not claim that Blanche is his property. He is her lover +still, even though he has gained the law's permission to be her master. +He recognizes that she has rights in herself that are inviolable. This +is why they live together so contentedly. She would not be his mate on +any other terms. + +If it is not the ideal existence, it is very near it. As near as a man +and woman who care for the world's opinion can live it in these days. + +And now, with heartfelt thanks for the continued favor of the reading +public, which I am conscious is far beyond my desert, I bid a temporary +farewell to American shores. By the time this book is on the shelves of +the dealers I shall be on European soil, there to remain, I trust, for +the better part of a year. Wherever I am, my thoughts will always turn +to you who have made these journeys possible, and there as here my pen +will continue devoted to your service. + + ALBERT ROSS. + + Cambridge, Mass., + _June 1, 1895._ + + + + +A BLACK ADONIS. + + + + +CHAPTER I. + +A REJECTED MANUSCRIPT. + + +"A letter for Mr. Roseleaf," he heard his landlady say to the +chambermaid. And he was quite prepared to hear the girl reply, in a tone +of surprise: + +"For Mr. Roseleaf! This is the first letter he has had since he came." + +The young man referred to stood just within his chamber door, waiting +with some anxiety for the letter to be brought to him. He was about +twenty years of age, of medium height, with rather dark complexion, +curling hair and expressive eyes, and with a natural delicacy of manner +that made him seem almost feminine at first view. + +He had the greatest possible interest in the letter that the postman had +just brought, but he was far too polite to disturb the landlady or her +servant, who were not yet through with it. + +"You can see that it is from a publishing house," commented Mrs. +Ranning, inspecting the envelope with care. "It is from Cutt & Slashem, +who bring out more novels than any other firm in the city. I told you he +was some kind of a writer. Perhaps they are going to publish a book for +him! If they do he will leave us for finer quarters. Novelists make a +mint of money, I have heard. We must do our best to keep him as long as +we can. Be very polite to him, Nellie. He appears to be an excellent +young man." + +Shirley Roseleaf's anxiety to get possession of his letter was not +lessened by this conversation. It seemed as if his entire future hung on +the contents of that envelope tarrying so long in Nellie's hands. The +great publishers, Cutt & Slashem, had had a manuscript of his in their +hands for nearly a fortnight. When they had definitely accepted it, his +path would be perfectly clear. If they rejected it--but he had not got +so far as that. + +The manuscript was a romance--a romance of love! Its author had spent a +great deal of time upon it. He had rewritten it with care, and finally +made a neat copy, of which he was very proud. Then he had thought a long +time over the question of a publishing firm. Cutt & Slashem stood at the +top of their profession, and they finally received the preference. With +the MSS. Roseleaf sent a pretty note, in which he included a delicate +compliment on their success. The MSS. and the note were arranged +tastefully in a neat white package and tied with pink twine. + +After all of those precautions it is no wonder that the novelist felt +surprise when days passed and no reply was sent to him. But never at any +time was he discouraged. Had they intended to reject the novel, he +reasoned, they could as easily have done so in three days as ten. + +He pictured the members of the firm hugging themselves over their good +fortune, passing the manuscript from one to the other, all eager for a +taste of such a marvelous work. He did not think it egotism to believe +they did not get stories like that every day. + +His thoughts flew rapidly as Nellie slowly climbed the stairs. Now he +would be famous, he would be courted, he would be envied! He would also +be very, very rich, though that was not of so much account. + +As Nellie handed him the letter he responded to her pleasant smile with +one of his own, and even pressed a twenty-five cent piece into her hand. +Then he closed his door behind him, bolting it in his eagerness to be +alone. The morning was foggy, and he sank into a chair by the window, +the only part of the room where he could see to read distinctly. + +There was an attraction about the envelope. It was light buff in color, +bearing the address of Cutt & Slashem in large letter on one side of the +front face, besides the names of several of the most famous authors +whose publishers the firm had the happiness to be. + +"Shirley Roseleaf!" It would not look so badly in print. + +So lost was he in the pleasant pictures which these thoughts conjured +up that it was some minutes before he tore open the envelope. Then his +astounded eyes rested upon these lines: + + "Messrs. Cutt & Slashem regret to be obliged to decline + with thanks the MSS. of M. Shirley Roseleaf, and request to + be informed what disposition he desires made of the same." + +Roseleaf read this dizzily. For some moments he could not understand +what that sentence meant. "Obliged to decline" was plain enough; but his +confused mind found some grains of comfort in the request of the firm to +know what he wished done with his manuscript. They must, he reasoned, +consider it of value, or they would not respond in that courteous +manner. Still, he could not comprehend how they had had the asininity to +"decline" it at all. + +Were they unwilling to add another star to their galaxy? + +Could they actually have read the tale? + +A firm of their reputation, too! + +When Roseleaf emerged from his temporary stupor it was into a state of +great indignation. Why, the men were fools! He wished heartily he had +never gone to them. They would yet see the day when, with tears in their +eyes, they would regret their lack of judgment. His first act should be +to go to their office and express his opinion of their stupidity, and +then he would take his MSS. to some rival house. And never, never in the +world--after he had become famous, and when every publisher on both +sides of the Atlantic were besieging him--never, he said, should these +ignorant fellows get a scrap of his writing, not even if they offered +its weight in gold! + +He was too excited for delay, and donning his hat, he took his way with +all speed to Cutt & Slashem's office. At that instant he had more faith +in his novel than ever. As he walked rapidly along he compared it with +some of the stories issued by the firm that had rejected it, to the +great disadvantage of the latter. + +"I wish to see Mr. Cutt or Mr. Slashem," he said, imperiously, as he +entered the counting room. + +"Both are in," said the office boy, imperturbably. "Which will you +have?" + +"I will see them together." + +Had they been tigers, fresh from an Indian jungle, it would have made no +difference to him. + +The boy asked for his card, vanished with it, returned and bade him +follow. Up a flight of stairs they went, then to the left, then to the +right, then across a little hall. A door with the name of the house and +the additional word "Private" loomed before them. + +"Come in!" was heard in response to the knock of the office boy. + +Roseleaf entered, something slower than a cannon ball, and yet +considerably faster than a snail. The two principal members of the firm +were sitting together, with lighted cigars in their mouths, examining a +lot of paper samples that lay upon a table. They did no more at first +than glance up and nod, not having finished the business upon which +they were engaged. + +"Is it any better than the last?" asked Mr. Slashem, referring to the +sample his partner was examining. + +"It's just as good, at least," was the answer. "And an eighth of a cent +a pound less. I think we had better order five hundred reams." + +"Five hundred reams," repeated the other, slowly, making a memorandum in +a little book that he carried. "And the other lot we'll wait about, eh? +Paper is not very steady. It's gone off a sixteenth since Thursday." + +This conversation only served to infuriate still more the visitor who +stood waiting to pour out his wrath. Were these men wasting time over +fractions of a cent in the price of stock, just after they had rejected +one of the greatest romances of modern times! + +With the precision of a duplex machine both partners finally looked up +from the table at the young man. + +"Mr. Shirley Roseleaf?" said Mr. Slashem, interrogatively, glancing at +the card that the office boy had brought. + +"Yes, sir!" was the sharp and disdainful reply. + +"We need nothing in your line," interrupted Mr. Cutt. "I suppose Mr. +Trimm has our other order well under way?" + +The look of indignant protest that appeared in Roseleaf's face caused +Mr. Slashem to speak. + +"This is not Mr. Roseberg," he explained. "My partner took you for an +agent of our bookbinder," he added. + +The novelist thought his skin would burst. + +"I am quite complimented," he said, in an icy tone. "Let me introduce +myself. I am the author of 'Evelyn's Faith.'" + +The partners consulted each other. + +"The similarity of names confused me," said Mr. Cutt. "Is your book one +that we have published?" + +Saints and angels! + +"It is one that was sent to you _for_ publication," replied Roseleaf, +with much heat, "and has been returned this morning--_rejected_!" + +"Ah!" said Mr. Cutt. + +"We have nothing to do with that department," said Mr. Slashem, coming +to the rescue. "You should see Mr. Gouger, on the second floor above; +though if he has rejected your story a visit would be quite useless. He +never decides a matter without sufficient reason." + +"Oh, dear, no!" added Mr. Cutt, feeling again of the paper samples. + +Shirley Roseleaf listened with wild incredulity. + +"Do you mean to tell me," he said, "that you, the members of the firm of +Cutt & Slashem, have rejected my story without even reading it?" + +The partners glanced at each other again. + +"We never read books," said Mr. Cutt. + +"Never," said Mr. Slashem, kindly. "We have things much more important +to attend to. We pay Mr. Gouger a large salary. Why, my young friend, +there are probably a dozen manuscripts received at our office every +week. If we were to try to _read_ them, who do you think would attend +to the _essential_ points of our business?" + +Roseleaf's contempt for the concern was increasing at lightning speed. +He did not care to mince his words, for it could make no difference now. + +"I should imagine that the selection of the books you are to print would +be at least as important as the paper you are to use," he retorted. + +Mr. Cutt looked at him in great astonishment. + +"You are much mistaken," said he. + +"Entirely mistaken," confirmed Mr. Slashem. + +The author had no desire to remain longer, as it was evident he was +losing his temper to no purpose. If it was Mr. Gouger who had rejected +his work, it was Mr. Gouger that he must see. + +Bowing with ironical grace to the examiners of printing paper, he took +leave of them, and mounted to the sanctum of the man who he had been +told was the arbiter of his fate. A girl with soiled hands pointed out +the room, for there was nothing to indicate it upon the dingy panel of +the door; and presently Roseleaf stood in the presence of the individual +he believed at that moment his worst enemy. + +There were two men in the room. One of them indicated with a motion of +his hand that the other was the one wanted, and with a second motion +that the caller might be seated. Mr. Gouger was partly hidden behind a +desk, engaged in turning over a heap of manuscript, and it appeared from +the manner of his companion that he did not wish to be disturbed. + +Somewhat cooled down by this state of affairs, the young novelist took +the chair indicated and waited several minutes. + +"What d--d nonsense they are sending me these days!" exclaimed Mr. +Gouger at last, thrusting the sheets he had been scanning back into the +wrapper in which they had come, without, however, raising his eyes from +his desk. "Out of a hundred stories I read, not three are fit to build a +fire with! This thing is written by a girl who ought to take a term in a +grammar school. She has no more idea of syntax than a lapdog. Her father +writes that he is willing to pay a reasonable sum to have it brought +out. Why, Cutt & Slashem couldn't afford to put their imprint on that +rot for fifty thousand dollars!" + +He had finished saying this before he learned that a third person was in +the room. Upon making this discovery he lowered his voice, as if +regretting having exhibited too great warmth before a stranger. The +novelist rose and handed him a card, and as Mr. Gouger glanced at the +name a gleam of recognition lit up his face. + +"I am glad to see you, Mr. Roseleaf," he said. "I had half a notion to +ask you to call, when I felt obliged to send you that note yesterday. +There are several things I would like to say to you. Archie, perhaps you +would let us have the room for a few minutes." + +The last remark was addressed familiarly to the man who occupied the +third chair, and who looked so disheartened at the prospect of having to +rise therefrom that Roseleaf hastened to express a hope that he would +not do so on his account. + +"Very well," said Mr. Gouger, abruptly. "You heard what I said about +this copy I have just read, though it was not my intention that you +should. I supposed I was talking only to Mr. Weil, who is not in the +profession and does not expect to be. Now, let me say at once, Mr. +Roseleaf, that your contribution is not open to any of the objections I +have cited. You have evidently been well educated. Your English is pure +and forcible. It is a real delight to read your pages. Every line shows +the greatest care in construction. I did with your story what I have not +done with another for a long time--I read it through. Why then did I +reject it?" + +The question was too great for the one most interested to answer, but in +the glow of pleasure that the compliment brought he forgot for the +moment his bitter feelings. + +"Possibly," he suggested, "Cutt & Slashem have more novels on hand than +they feel like producing at present." + +"No," responded Mr. Gouger, disposing of that theory in one breath. "A +house like ours would never reject a really desirable manuscript. If you +will reflect that only one or two of this description are produced each +year you will the more readily understand me. Your story has a cardinal +fault for which no excellence of style or finish can compensate. Shall I +tell you what it is, and before this gentleman?" + +He indicated Mr. Weil as he spoke. Roseleaf's heart sank. For the first +time he felt a deadly fear. + +"Tell me, by all means," he responded, faintly. + +Mr. Gouger's face bore its gentlest expression at that moment. He was +taking valuable time, time that belonged to his employers, to say +something that must temporarily disappoint, though in the end it might +benefit his hearer. + +"Let me repeat," he said, "that your work is well written, and that I +have read it with the greatest interest. Its fault--an insuperable +one--is that it lacks fidelity to nature. Mr. Roseleaf, I think I could +gauge your past life with tolerable accuracy merely from what that +manuscript reveals." + +The novelist shook his head. There was not a line of autobiography in +those pages, and he told his critic so. + +"Oh, I understand," replied Mr. Gouger. "But this I have learned: Your +life has been marvelously colorless. Yet, in spite of that, you have +undertaken to write of things of which you know nothing, and about +which, I may add, you have made very poor guesses." + +Mr. Weil, leaning back in his chair, began to show a decided interest. +Mr. Roseleaf, sitting upright, in an attitude of strained attention, +inquired what Mr. Gouger meant. + +"Well, for instance, this," responded the critic: "You attempt to depict +the sensations of love, though you have never had a passion. Can you +expect to know how it feels to hold a beautiful girl in your arms, when +you never had one there? You put words of temptation into the mouth of +your villain which no real scamp would think of using, for their only +effect would be to alarm your heroine. You talk of a planned seduction +as if it were part of an oratorio. And you make your hero so +superlatively pure and sweet that no woman formed of flesh and blood +could endure him for an hour." + +The color mounted to Roseleaf's face. He felt that this criticism was +not without foundation. But presently he rallied, and asked if it were +necessary for a man to experience every sensation before he dared write +about them. + +"Do you suppose," he asked, desperately, "that Jules Verne ever traveled +sixty thousand leagues under the sea or made a journey to the moon?" + +Mr. Weil could not help uttering a little laugh. Mr. Gouger struck his +hands together and clinched them. + +"No," said he. "But he could have written neither of those wonderful +tales without a knowledge of the sciences of which they treat." + +"He has read, and I have read," responded Roseleaf. "What is the +difference?" + +"He has studied, and you have not," retorted the critic. "That makes all +the difference in the world. He has a correct idea of the structure of +the moon and what should be found in the unexplored caverns of the +ocean; while you, in total ignorance, have attempted to deal in a +science to which these are the merest bagatelles! You know as little of +the tides that control the heart of a girl as you do of the personal +history of the inhabitants of Jupiter! Your powers of description are +good; those of invention feeble. Either throw yourself into a love +affair, till you have learned it root and branch, or never again try to +depict one." + +Mr. Archie Weil smiled and nodded, as if he entirely agreed with the +speaker. + +"What a novel _I_ could make, my dear fellow!" he exclaimed, "if I only +had the talent. I have had experiences enough, but I could no more write +them out than I could fly." + +"It is quite as well," was the response, "your women would all be +Messalinas and fiction has too many now." + +"Not _all_ of them, Lawrence," was the quick and meaning reply. + +"In that case," said Gouger, "I wish heartily you could write. The world +is famishing for a real love story, based on modern lines, brought up to +date. I tell you, there has been nothing satisfactory in that line since +Goethe's day." + +Mr. Weil suggested Balzac and Sand. + +"Why don't you include George William Reynolds?" inquired Gouger, with a +sneer. "Neither of them wrote until they were depraved by contract with +humanity. If we could get a young man of true literary talent to see +life and write of it as he went along, what might we not secure? But I +have no more time to spare, Mr. Roseleaf. I was sorry to be obliged to +reject your story. Some day, when you have seen just a little of the +world, begin again on the lines I have outlined, and come here with the +result." + +Quite dispirited, now that the last plank had slipped from under him, +the novelist walked slowly down the stairs. He did not even ask for his +manuscript. After what he had heard, it did not seem worth carrying to +his lodgings. His plans were shipwrecked. Instead of the fame and +fortune he had hoped for, he felt the most bitter disappointment. All +his bright dreams had vanished. + +A step behind him quicker than his own, made him aware that some one was +following him, and presently a voice called his name. It was Mr. Archie +Weil, who had put himself to unusual exertion, and required some seconds +to recover his breath before he could speak further. + +"I want you to come over to my hotel and have a little talk with me," he +said. "Gouger has interested me in you immensely. I believe, as he says, +that you have the making of a distinguished author, and I want to +arrange a plan by which you can carry out his scheme." + +Mr. Roseleaf stared doubtfully at his companion. + +"What scheme?" he said, briefly. + +"Why, of imparting to you that knowledge of the world which will enable +you to draw truthful portraits. You have the art, he says, the talent, +the capacity--whatever you choose to call it. All you lack is +experience. Given that, you would make a reputation second to none. What +can be plainer than that you should acquire the thing you need without +delay?" + +"The 'thing I need'?" repeated Roseleaf, dolefully. + +Mr. Weil laughed, delightfully. + +"Yes!" he explained. "What you need is a friend able to interest you, to +begin with. Pardon me if I say I may be described by that phrase. Come +to my hotel a little while and let us talk it over." + +It was not an opportunity to be refused, in Roseleaf's depressed +condition, and the two men walked together to the Hoffman House, where +Mr. Weil at that time made his home. + + + + +CHAPTER II. + +"WAS MY STORY TOO BOLD?" + + +"Well, Millie, your letter has come," said Mr. Wilton Fern, as he +entered the parlor of his pleasant residence, situated about twenty +miles from the limits of New York City. "Open it as quick as you can, +and learn your fate." + +His daughter started nervously from her seat near the window, where she +had been spending the previous hour in speculations regarding the very +missive that was now placed in her hands. She was a handsome girl, +neither blonde nor brunette, with eyes of hazel gray and hair of that +color that moderns call Titian red. She took the envelope that her +father gave her, and though she wanted intensely to know the contents +she hesitated to open it. + +"Read it, Millie," smiled Mr. Fern. "Let us learn whether we have an +authoress in our house who is destined to become famous." + +But this remark made Miss Millicent less willing than before to open the +letter in her father's presence. She slowly left the room without +answering and did not break the seal of her communication till she was +in the seclusion of her chamber. + +And it was quite a while, even then, before she summoned the necessary +courage. Some days previous she had sent a MSS. to the great publishing +house of Cutt & Slashem. The writing had taken up the best of her time +for a year. She had high hopes that it was destined to lay the +foundation of an artistic success. Her plot was novel, not to say +startling. It was entirely out of the conventional order. It would be +certain to arouse talk and provoke comment, if it got into print; and to +make sure that it _would_ get into print she had persuaded her father to +write a little note, which she enclosed with the MSS., saying that he +would pay a cash bonus, if the firm demanded it, to guarantee them +against possible loss. + +With this note in her mind, Miss Millicent had felt little doubt that +her story would be accepted and printed. She only wondered how warmly +they would praise her work. It was not enough to have them print it; she +wanted something to justify her in saying to her father, "There, you see +I was not wrong after all in thinking I could have a literary career!" + +At last the envelope was removed, and the girl's astonished eyes lit +upon this cold, dry statement: + + "Messrs. Cutt & Slashem regret to be obliged to decline + with thanks the MSS. of Miss M. Fern, and request to be + informed what disposition she desires made of the same." + +Millicent felt a ringing in her ears. Her hands grew clammy. A dull pain +pressed on her forehead. She felt a faintness, a sinking at the heart. +Was it possible she had read aright? Rejected, in this cruel way, +without even a reference to her father's offer! It was atrocious, and, +girl-like, she burst into a spasm of weeping. + +How could she ever face her father? The sacrifices she had made came +back to her, sacrifices of which she had thought little at the time, but +which now seemed gigantic. There had been nights when she had not gone +to bed till three, other nights when she had been too full of her +subject to sleep and had risen in the small hours to finish some +particularly interesting chapter. Twelve hundred pages there were in +all, note size, in her large, round, almost masculine hand. And this +time was all lost! She had mistaken her vocation. The greatest +publishing house in the country had decided against her. + +Gradually she dried her eyes. It would do no good to weep. She read the +curt answer that had come in the mail, a dozen times. Why could not the +firm have sent her a reason, an excuse that meant something? She wanted +to know wherein her fault lay. It might be possible to correct it. +Perhaps the state of business was to blame. The more she thought, the +more determined she grew to investigate this strange affair, and within +an hour she had donned her street clothes and started, without saying +anything to the rest of the household of her intention, for the office +of Cutt & Slashem in the city. + +She knew that each large concern had one or more "readers," on whose +judgment they relied in such matters. She, therefore, paused only long +enough at the counting-room to get directed to Mr. Gouger. Her knock on +the critic's door brought forth a loud "Come in," and as she entered she +saw two men standing with hats in their hand, as if about to take their +departure. + +"I beg your pardon," she said, "but I wish to see Mr. Gouger." + +"That is my name," responded one of the men, stepping forward. + +"I am Miss Fern." + +Mr. Gouger did not seem very glad to hear it. The hour of one had just +struck, and he was about to go to his lunch. He recognized the girl's +name, as that of the author of the MSS. he had criticized so severely to +his friend, Weil, who was, by-the-way, the third person in the room at +this moment. Had she sent up her card, as is usual with women, he would +have avoided seeing her at any hazard. + +Mr. Weil took a long survey of the young lady, and then retired to the +vicinity of the front windows. He pretended to interest himself in the +rush of traffic that was going on in the street below, but he missed +nothing of what was said, and stole from time to time a glance at his +two companions, particularly the younger one. + +"A mighty pretty girl," was his mental comment. "I hope Lawrence isn't +going to be nasty with her." + +Mr. Gouger motioned Miss Fern rather stiffly to a seat. + +"I do not wish to detain you," she said, with feminine inconsistency, as +she accepted it. "I only want to know, if you will be so kind as to tell +me, what is the trouble with my story." + +The critic was pleased at one thing. Miss Fern's voice was reasonably +clear. She had finished her weeping at home. There was to be no scene, +something he dreaded, and in the course of his connection with this +house he had experienced scores of them. He inspected his caller +critically in the few seconds that elapsed while she was asking this +question, and when she paused he decided to answer her with as much of +the truth as he dared use. + +"The fact is," he began, "a firm like ours is unable to use more than +one novel out of fifty that is submitted to it. Of our friends who send +us manuscripts, the vast majority must, therefore, be disappointed. Now, +your story--shall I be frank?" + +"By all means," answered Miss Fern. + +"Your story, though written with spirit and power, needs a great deal of +revision from a--from a rhetorical standpoint. It is, in fact, +carelessly put together. That is a cardinal fault in a literary +production, and one for which no amount of talent, or even of genius, +can compensate." + +The girl listened with deep interest. She tried to think where the +blemishes alluded to could be, for she had read the story twenty times. +To say nothing of several girl friends, who had listened with evident +wonder and delight, to various parts of the tale, as it progressed. + +"If that is true," answered Miss Fern, slowly--, "could not the trouble +be remedied by sending the MSS. to some very competent person and having +the errors made right?" + +Mr. Gouger smiled. + +"Hardly," he said. "A novel is like a painting. The _ensemble_--do you +understand?--is the thing. Can you conceive a painting being 'done +over'? Your book would lose its quality if subjected to that process." + +A look of discouragement crossed the features of the young woman. + +"Of course, you know best," she stammered. "What would you advise +me--try again?" + +Mr. Gouger raised both his hands. + +"It is difficult to say, in such a case," he replied. "But--if you want +my best opinion--" + +"That is just what I want," said the girl, with ill-concealed +impatience. + +"You are not dependent upon your exertions, I suppose, for a living?" + +Millicent shook her head, almost sorry at the moment that she could not +reply in the affirmative. + +"Then--I should give up the idea of being an authoress." + +This was very unpalatable medicine, and the critic realized it as he +looked at the sombre face before him. + +"Is your rejection of my story based at all," asked Miss Fern, after a +pause, "on the--boldness of its subject?" + +Mr. Gouger smiled again. + +"We publish the works of Hall Caine and George Moore," he said. "I +should not consider your story overbold, if there was nothing else +against it. It is a wonder to me, and always will be, why such young +girls as you choose _risque_ themes, but if the work is well done the +public will pay for it." + +There was a slight blush on Miss Fern's face, partly at the insinuation +and partly at the adverse criticism that had crept thoughtlessly into +the sentence. + +"For my part," she explained, "I wanted to write something that would +attract attention--that would put my name prominently before the public +and keep it there. The girls I read it to thought the scenes just +lovely, though some said perhaps their mothers would not feel that way. +And I told them that the mothers of to-day were very old-fashioned, and +that the public taste was changing rapidly. If the story is too bold, +there are things I could cut out of it, but if you say that would make +no difference, I would rather let them stand. I intend to try some other +concern before I give up." + +Mr. Archie Weil had abandoned all pretence of looking out the window. He +stood with his eyes fastened on the pretty girl, as she made these +statements in such a matter-of-fact way. He wondered what the dickens +the story was about, and made up his mind that he would try to get +possession of it. + +"All the same," responded Mr. Gouger, who had apparently forgotten his +lunch in his growing interest in the conversation, "I don't see where +girls like you obtain such an intimate knowledge of things. You are not +over twenty--excuse me, I am old enough to tell you this without +offence. It is not you alone, but a hundred others who have made me ask +myself this question. As soon as the modern girl gets a bottle of ink +and a pen and begins to let her thoughts flow over paper, it transpires +that she knows everything--more than everything, almost. Why, I was +twenty-five before I was as wise as the heroine of sixteen, in this +story of yours!" + +Miss Fern reddened again, all the more because she had glanced up and +encountered the bright eyes of Mr. Weil fixed upon her. + +"Why, Archie," pursued the literary man--he turned toward Mr. Weil--"you +remember Lelia Dante, you have seen her here. Five or six years ago I +got a letter from that young girl's mother asking me to come to their +residence and hear a story she had written. It was her first one, and +the child was not a day over seventeen. I couldn't believe it when she +came into the room, with her hair tumbled about her shoulders, and began +to read to me the first chapter of 'Zaros.' 'Did _she_ write that?' I +asked her mother, incredulously. 'Certainly,' she replied. 'Without aid +from any one?' 'Absolutely alone.' My hair stood on end. I could not +keep it down for the next week with a brush. You know the story. We +printed it, and it sold well, and that is all that C. & S. cared about +it; but I never understood how that infant could conceive it. No more +than I can understand your ability to write this story of yours, Miss +Fern," he added, pointedly. + +The young woman bridled a little. + +"It does not matter much, if you are not going to print it," she said, +raising her eyes to his. + +He bowed low to express whatever apology might be necessary. + +"I would have accepted it if I could," he said. "My entire life is spent +in reading manuscripts in the hope of discovering one that will make a +hit with the public to whom we cater. When successful I am as pleased as +a South African who fishes a diamond of the first water out of the mine. +Your story, Miss Fern, shows decided talent. You have a greater +knowledge of some of the important things of life, I will wager, than +your grandmother had at eighty, if she lived so long. As I am obliged to +go now, let me add, without mincing matters, that you are very deficient +in English grammar, and that nothing you can write will be acceptable to +any first-class house until that fault is remedied. Are you ready, +Archie?" + +Mr. Weil felt indignant. He could not have spoken to any girl as pretty +as this one in such language, and he thought it quite inexcusable on the +part of his friend to do so. Mr. Gouger, though feeling that it was best +to use little circumlocution, had not meant to wound his caller. But +her countenance showed that he _had_ wounded her, and the natural +gallantry of his younger companion came to the rescue. + +"I am not ready yet," said Mr. Weil, telegraphing at the same time a +series of signals with his eyes. "I want a few minutes' talk with Miss +Fern, if you will introduce me. I think I can say something she will +like to hear." + +Mr. Gouger, who now stood in such a position that Miss Fern could not +see him, shook his head to imply that he did not fancy this arrangement; +but he ended by saying, "Very well." He then abruptly made the +presentation, put on his hat, said good-by, and vanished. + +Miss Millicent, who had risen, turned with an air of puzzled inquiry +toward Mr. Weil. + +"Be seated again, for a moment," he said, politely. "I want your +permission to read your story." + +"Why, I don't know," she answered. "Are you one of the employes of Cutt +& Slashem?" + +He smilingly denied the imputation. + +"I have not that felicity," he added, "but I am much interested in +things literary, and have a rather wide acquaintance in this line of +business. If I could be allowed to read your MSS. perhaps I should form +a milder opinion of its faults than my unbending friend. And in that +case a word from me, to another house, would certainly do you no harm." + +A brighter light came into Miss Millicent's eyes. + +"I shall be only too glad to have you read it," she answered. "It is +hard to believe that I have wasted almost a year in something entirely +worthless. You may take it with pleasure." + +Mr. Weil went to Mr. Gouger's desk, from which he soon came with the +parcel in question. He untied the string and for a moment his gaze +rested on the handwriting. + +"Do you live far from here?" he began; and then added, as he noticed the +address on an enclosed card, "Ah, I see! At Midlands." + +She explained herself rather more to him, giving the full address of her +father, and some particulars about the manner in which she had been +drawn into attempting literary work. He listened intently, all the time +engaged in rapid thought. + +"The best way for me to get a thoroughly correct impression of this +novel," he said, when she came to a pause, "is to hear you read it +aloud. In that manner," he added, as he saw that she was about to +interrupt, "a hundred meanings would come to the surface that a mere +inspection of the pages might fail to show. Beside, there would be an +opportunity for discussion. If convenient to you I would gladly come to +your residence for this purpose." + +The eyes of the young girl brightened. She was greatly pleased at the +idea and said so without delay. + +"Very well," said Mr. Weil, more than delighted with the success of his +experiment. "To-day is Tuesday; shall I come for the first time, say, +Thursday evening?" + +"That would suit me perfectly; or to-morrow, if you wish. I shall put +aside everything and have my time free for you." + +Mr. Weil nodded. + +"Let it be Thursday then. And the hour--shall we call it eight?" + +The time was promptly agreed to. + +"In the meantime, I will take the MSS. and look it over, to form a +general idea of the plot. Here is my card. By-the-way, you will of +course arrange it so that we shall not be interrupted during our +conference. It disturbs anything of that kind to have people coming in +and out. We want to be entirely alone so as to give our full attention +to the work in hand." + +Miss Fern smilingly acquiesced, saying that it was exactly what she +would wish. + +"And do you think there may be hope for it yet--that poor little +manuscript?" she asked, as she stood by the door ready to take her +departure. + +"That is a question I can hardly answer," he replied. "I shall be better +able to tell you in a week or two, I trust." + +She lingered, with her hand on the door knob. + +"My father is willing to take all the financial risks," she said. "That +ought to make a difference, don't you think so?" + +"It would, with many houses," he admitted. "I am glad to know these +things. Thursday, then, Miss--Miss Fern." + +He wanted to call her "Millicent," for he had read the name on the +package he still held in his hand; but on the whole he concluded that +this would be a little premature. + + + + +CHAPTER III. + +"HER FEET WERE PINK." + + +When Miss Millicent Fern entered the office of Lawrence Gouger, as +detailed in the preceding chapter, it will be remembered that she found +that gentleman and his friend, Archie Weil, with their hats in their +hands. The fact was that Mr. Weil had but just entered the room, and +that Mr. Gouger had accepted an invitation to take lunch with him, an +arrangement that was by no means an infrequent one between them. The +entrance of Miss Fern, and the subsequent proceedings, compelled the +literary critic to go out alone, as has been seen. When he returned he +found Mr. Weil still there. + +"Haven't you been to lunch yet!" exclaimed Mr. Gouger. + +"I have not been out of this office," was the reply, "and all appetite +for anything to eat has left me. Lawrence, that is one of the most +interesting girls I ever met." + +Mr. Gouger pursed up his lips, and uttered an impatient, "Pah!" He then +remarked that Mr. Weil had a habit of finding such a quality in the +latest women of his acquaintance. + +"What does she amount to?" he asked. "An overgrown schoolgirl, who did +not half learn her lessons. Read that MSS. she left here, and get +disillusionized in short order. Why, she doesn't even know how to +spell, and her periods and commas are in a hopeless tangle." + +His companion eyed him quizzically. + +"Are periods and commas, even a correct spelling of the English +language, the only things you can see in a bright, handsome girl?" he +demanded. "For shame, Lawrence! You are a dried-up old mummy. Your +senses are numb. A lively wind will come in at the keyhole some day and +blow you out of that chimney." + +Mr. Gouger heaved a sigh, as if to say that discussion with such a +nonsensical fellow was useless, and took his seat at his desk, where an +unfinished pile of MSS. awaited his reading. + +"She's given me leave to take her story home," said Mr. Weil, with a +mischievous expression. + +The critic stared at his friend. + +"Given it to you?" he repeated. "How did that happen?" + +"I asked her for it, naturally. You were so severe on the poor child, +that I couldn't help putting in a cheering word. We talked of the whole +business, and she was willing I should see if my opinion agreed with +yours." + +"_Your_ opinion!" echoed Gouger, testily. "What is that worth? But take +the stuff, if you want it, and when you are done, send it to her; it +will make less rubbish in this confounded hole. One thing I'll tell you, +though, in advance. You'll never be able to make sense of it, unless you +get some one to straighten it out." + +"That's all right," replied the other. "After I have read it through, I +am going to Miss Fern's house, where she will read it to me." + +Mr. Gouger started from his chair. + +"You don't mean that!" he exclaimed. + +"But I do. She asked me, and I'm going. I understand that it's a rather +bold tale, and I can conceive nothing more entertaining than to hear +that kind of thing from the red lips of such a pretty piece of flesh and +blood as has just left here." + +There was an uneasy expression on the face of the critic as he heard +these words. He liked Weil, although they were as different in their +natures as two men could well be. He wanted to please him, but the +aspect of this affair was not agreeable. + +"Look here, Archie," he said, earnestly, "there are some things that I +can't permit, you know. My office must not be made a starting-place for +one of your lawless adventures. You met Miss Fern here. Now, I protest +against your going to her house, pretending that you are interested in +that novel, when your real purpose is of a much more questionable kind." + +Mr. Weil put on the air of one whose feelings are lacerated by an unjust +suspicion. + +"My dear Lawrence--" he began. + +"That's all right," growled the critic. "I may or may not be your 'dear +Lawrence,' but I know you like--like a book," he added, hitting by +accident on a very excusable simile. "You are an old dog that is not +likely to learn new tricks. I shall send this MSS. back to Miss Fern, +myself, enclosing a letter warning her to have nothing to do with you." + +A laugh escaped the lips of Archie Weil at this proposition. + +"If you knew the feminine mind half as well as you do modern +literature," he answered, "you would see how little that would avail. I +have met Miss Fern and made a distinctly favorable impression. Her +address is in my pocket, and I have received a pressing invitation to +call. If you choose to send the MSS. by another messenger you will +relieve me of the task of carrying a bundle, but you will accomplish +nothing more." + +Mr. Gouger's mouth opened in astonishment at the evident advantage which +his friend had gained in so short a time. + +"You must have convinced her that your literary opinions are of value," +he said, presently. "If I write that you are a charletan and entirely +unworthy of attention, what will happen then?" + +The smiling gentleman opposite crossed his hands over his left knee, and +did not delay his answer. + +"I will tell you," he said. "In the same mail she will receive a letter +from me, warning her that a certain party, who has given an adverse +judgment on her writings, may attempt to influence her against others +more likely to decide in her favor. She will be told that, having +rejected a book, this certain party does not wish any one else to print +it. Send the severest note you can construct, Lawrence. I have few +talents, but I know how to write letters." + +The critic could hardly believe that fate had thrown so many cords +around his neck in the brief space of one hour, but the more he thought +the more he became convinced that his best course was to shut his eyes. + +"Well, gang your gait," he said, after a long pause, during which the +look of triumph deepened on his companion's face. "You will have to +answer for your own sins. But I'll tell you one thing, that may save +your time. Women who write racy novels are almost without exception +remarkably correct in their own lives." + +Mr. Weil inquired if his friend was certain of this, and there was a +suspicion of disappointment in his tone. + +"Absolutely," said Mr. Gouger, refreshing his memory. "I can think of a +dozen instances to prove the point. There is Lelia Dante, for instance, +who writes like a--like a--well, you know how she writes. She sticks to +her mother's apron strings like a four-year-old child. They never are +seen apart, I am told. Then there is Mrs. Helen Walker Wilbur, the +poetess. We have a volume of her verse that is positively combustible +from its own heat. The sheets had to be run off the press soaked in +water to keep them from igniting. The room was full of steam all the +time the work was going on. Warm! I should say so! Now, that woman is +vain, and she dresses foolishly, and she does odd things for the sake of +being talked about--but nobody questions her loyalty to her husband. You +would think by some of her poems that an East Indian regiment would not +suffice for her, and yet she is the straightest wife on Manhattan +Island. Oh, I know so many cases. You remember that girl who wrote, +'Love's Extremities,' a work as passionate as Sappho. She is a little +Quaker-like maiden,[A] who dresses and talks like a sister of one of the +Episcopal guilds. These women are on fire at the brain only. They would +repel a physical advance with more indignation than those endowed with +less esthetic perceptions. So, see Miss Fern as much as you like. Should +you attempt anything improper you will prove the truth of my +assertions." + + [Footnote A: Now dead, alas!--A. R.] + +Mr. Weil changed the knee he had been nursing, but the quiet smile did +not leave his countenance. + +"What an inconsistent fellow you are, Lawrence," he said. "I could +convict you of a hundred errors of logic. Do you remember telling Mr. +Roseleaf that a man should have a passion before he attempts to depict +one." + +"And I say so still," retorted Gouger. "_You_ don't call the ravings of +these poetesses and female novelists real life, do you? _You_ know the +actual lover isn't content with kissing the hair and the feet of his +divinity! There is more about women's _feet_ in these poems and novels +than all the rest of their anatomy put together. And what is a woman's +foot? Did you ever see one that was pretty--that you wanted to put to +your lips?" + +"Yes," interrupted Archie, dreamily, "once. At Capri. She was fifteen. +Her feet were pink, like a shell. She was walking along the shore in the +early evening." + +"With the dirt of the soil on them!" exclaimed Mr. Gouger, in disgust. + +"No, she had just emerged from her bath. The sand there was clean as a +carpet, cleaner, in fact. Gods! They were exquisite!" + +The critic uttered an exclamation. + +"I waste time talking to you," he said, sharply. "You are like the rest +of the imaginative crowd. It is a pity you were not gifted with the +divine afflatus, that you could have added your volumes to the nonsense +they print." + +"And which you are always glad to get," interpolated Mr. Weil. + +"Because it will sell. Cutt & Slashem are in this business to make +money, and my thoughts must be directed to the saleable quality of the +manuscripts submitted. If _I_ was running the concern, though, I would +touch the mooney, maundering mess. It makes my flesh creep, sometimes, +to read it." + +Archie Weil uttered another of his winsome laughs. + +"How would you like to be a serpent," he asked, "and have your flesh +creep all the time? But before we dismiss this matter of Miss Fern, I +want you to clear your mind, if you can, of the haunting suspicions you +always have when a woman is concerned. You know there are concerns in +the city who would print her book, with a proper amount paid down, if it +had neither sense, syntax nor orthography. If she wants it fixed up, I +can find tailors to help her out; and if her papa wants it on the +market, why shouldn't he be able to get it there? Now, let us talk a +little about Roseleaf." + +Mr. Gouger brightened at the change of subject. His interest in Mr. +Roseleaf was genuine, and he had already learned that Archie had formed +a sort of copartnership with the novelist, in the hope of making his +future work a success. While the critic could not be said to have any +real faith in the arrangement, it certainly interested him. + +"What strange freak will you take to next?" he asked. "And do you really +expect to make a novelist out of that young man?" + +Mr. Weil's eyes had a twinkle in them. + +"Didn't you say, yourself, that it could be done?" he inquired. "If I +have made any mistake in my investment, I shall charge the loss to you." + +The critic reflected a minute. + +"I'm not so certain it _can't_ be done," he said. "But that's quite +different from investing money in it, as you are doing. A man wants +pretty near a certainty before he puts up the stuff." + +"You greedy fellow!" exclaimed Weil. "Will you never think of anything +but gain? I have to spend about so much money every year, in a continual +attempt to amuse myself, and it might as well be this way as another. I +have a document, signed and solemnly sealed, by which I am to back him +against the field in the interest of romantic and realistic literature, +and in return he is to give me a third of the net profits of his +writings. I don't know that I have done so badly. Perhaps you may live +to see Cutt & Slashem pay us a handsome sum in royalties." + +Mr. Gouger looked oddly at his friend, whose face was perfectly serious. + +"What are you going to begin with?" he asked. + +"Love, of course. It is the A B C, as well as the X Y Z of the whole +business." + +"What kind of love?" + +"The best that can be got," replied Weil, now laughing in spite of +himself. "The very finest quality in the market. Oh, we shall do this up +brown, I tell you." + +"What have you done so far?" asked Gouger. + +"You want to know it all, eh?" responded Mr. Weil. "I don't think I am +justified in letting you too deeply into our secrets. However, you are +too honorable to betray us, and so here goes: I have instructed my +protege that he must fall violently under the tender passion before next +Saturday night." + +"With a lady whom you have selected, of course?" + +"By no means. He must catch his own sweethearts." + +Mr. Gouger played with his watchchain. + +"And this is Tuesday," he commented. "Do you think he will succeed?" + +"He must," laughed Weil. "It's like the case of the boy who was digging +out the woodchuck. 'The minister's coming to dinner.'" + +"You might at least have got an introduction for him," said Gouger, +reflectively. + +"Not I. There's nothing in our agreement that puts such a task on me. +Besides, there's no romance in an introduction. He would write a story +as prosy as one of Henry James' if he started off like that." + +Mr. Gouger nodded his head slowly. + +"That would be something to avoid at all hazards," he assented. + +And at this juncture, to the surprise of both the parties to this +conversation, the young man of whom they were speaking entered the room. + +"I was telling Mr. Gouger of our agreement," said Mr. Weil, as soon as +the greetings were over. "How do you get along? Have you discovered your +heroine yet?" + +Mr. Roseleaf answered, with an air of timidity, in the negative. + +"I don't quite know where to find one," he said. + +Mr. Weil spread out his arms to their fullest capacity. + +"There are thirty millions of them in the United States alone," he +exclaimed. "Out of that number you ought to find a few whom you can +study. What a pity that _I_ cannot write! I would go out of that door +and in ten minutes I would have a subject ready for vivisection." + +The younger man raised his eyebrows slightly. + +"But, that kind of a woman--would be what you would want--the kind that +would let you talk to her on a mere street acquaintance!" + +Mr. Weil leaned back in his chair and stretched his legs. + +"Oh, yes," he said. "She would do for a beginning. Don't imagine that +none of these easy going girls are worth the attention of a novelist. +Sometimes they are vastly more interesting than the bread and butter +product of the drawing rooms. It won't do, in your profession, to +ignore any sort of human being." + +Roseleaf breathed a sigh as soft as his name. + +"You were right, Mr. Gouger," he said, turning to that gentleman. "I do +not know anything. I have judged by appearances, and I now see that +truth cannot be learned in that way." + +"All the better!" broke in Archie. "The surest progress is made by the +man who has learned his deficiencies. You remember the hare and the +tortoise. I have read somewhere that the race is not always to the +swift. You must treat your fellow men and women as if you had just +arrived on this earth from the planet Mars. You must dig through the +strata of conventionality to the virgin soil beneath. The great human +passions are lust and avarice, though they take a thousand forms, in +many of which they have more polite names. For instance, the former, +when kept within polite boundaries, is usually known as Love. As Avarice +makes but a sorry theme for the romantic writer, Love is the subject +that must principally claim your attention. All the world loves a lover, +while the miser is despised even by those who cringe beneath the power +of his gold. Study the women, my lad, and when you know them thoroughly +begin your great novel in earnest." + +Roseleaf listened with rapt attention. + +"And the men?" he asked. + +"The men," was the quick reply, "are too transparent to require study. +It is the women, with their ten million tricks to cajole and wheedle us, +that afford the best field for your efforts." + +Mr. Gouger, who had never been known to take so much time from his work +during business hours, tried to begin his reading, but without success. +When at his usual occupation he would not have been disturbed by the +conversation of a room full of people, so preoccupied was he with what +he had to do; but on this occasion he was too much entertained with his +companions to do anything but hear them through. + +"Is there no such thing as unselfish love--in a woman--love that +sacrifices itself for its object?" asked Roseleaf, with a trace of +anxiety in his tone. + +"M----m, possibly," drawled Mr. Weil. "A female animal with young +sometimes evinces the possession of that sort of thing, and women may +have touches of it on occasions. That will be a good point for you to +remember when you are deeper in your investigations. However, I ought +not to fill your head with ideas of my own. I think what we most desire +in our friend," he added, turning to the critic, "is complete +originality." + +The young man shifted his feet nervously. + +"Pardon me," he said, "would it not be well to talk with people and +learn their impressions? Then I can compare these with my own +experiences, when they come. You would not send a blind man out on the +street unled." + +Archie Weil laughed deliciously. + +"You are ingenious, when you should only be ingenuous," he replied. "You +do not act at all like the young man from Mars that I have in mind. +Perhaps, nevertheless, you are not wholly wrong, for even my traveler +from that planet might have to ask his way to the nearest town. +Supposing you had just reached the earth, and had met me with a thousand +questions. What could I answer that would be of any use?" + +Mr. Roseleaf reflected a moment. + +"You could tell me your idea of a perfect woman," he suggested. + +"Well, I will," said Weil, glancing meaningly at Mr. Gouger. "The +perfect woman is about nineteen years of age. She is neither very light +nor very dark. Her eyes are hazel, with a touch of gray in them. She +measures, say, five feet, four inches in height, and--about--twenty-two +inches around the waist. She has a plump arm, not too fleshy, a +well-made leg, a head set on her shoulders with enough neck to give it +freedom and grace of movement, but not sufficient to warrant comparison +with a swan, or even a goose. Her hands match her feet, being not too +slender nor too dainty. Her hips are medium, but not bulging. She weighs +in the vicinity of a hundred and twenty-five pounds. And her hair--there +is but one color for a woman's hair--is Titian red." + +The young man had taken out his note-book and rapidly sketched this list +of attractions. + +"Every woman cannot have Titian hair," remarked Mr. Gouger. "Would you +condemn one with all the other attributes on account of missing that?" + +"I would, decidedly," was the reply, "when it is obtained so easily. I +think it only costs two dollars a bottle, for the finest shade. Have +you written it all down, Mr. Roseleaf?" + +The young man ran over his notes. + +"I have it--all but the hair," he said. "Of course I could not forget +that." + +"Very well. And this hair must be long enough, but not too long, +remember, for everything unduly accentuated spoils a woman. It should +hang about five inches below the waist, when unfastened, and be thick +enough to make a noticeable coil. There should be sufficient to hide her +face and her lover's when he takes her in his arms." + +Mr. Roseleaf started slightly. + +"Then she should have a lover?" he remarked, curiously. + +"Undoubtedly. Else why the hair and the arms, and the five feet four! It +is a woman's business to be loved and to make herself lovable. When you +have found this woman, if she has no lover, you will be expected to +officiate in that capacity. If she has one, you must supplant him as +soon as possible. And when you have fallen desperately, ravingly in love +with such a creature, you will not have to come to me for further +advice." + +The young man surveyed the speaker with the utmost gravity. + +"Have _you_ ever been in love?" he inquired. + +"Never." + +"Why?" + +"It was not necessary; _I_ did not intend to write novels," said Archie, +with a laugh. "But, come, we have bothered Lawrence enough. Let us go." + +He took the package containing Miss Fern's story, and sauntered out, +paying no attention to the peculiar glances that his friend, the critic, +threw at him as he was leaving. + + + + +CHAPTER IV. + +WITH TITIAN TRESSES. + + +Mr. Weil deciphered the MSS. of Miss Fern with some difficulty. Not that +the handwriting was particularly illegible, though it did not in the +least resemble copperplate engraving; but, as Mr. Gouger had intimated, +the sentences were so badly constructed, and the punctuation so +different from that prescribed by the usual authorities, that he was +continually obliged to go back over his tracks and hunt for meanings. +Nevertheless, within an hour from the time when he sat down in his room +at the Hoffman House and opened the package he had brought, he had to +confess himself deeply interested. + +Miss Fern had conceived some entertaining characters, and some very +unconventional situations. Her people were virile; her hero was strong +if not always grammatical; her heroine did and said things not common in +real life, and yet that were quite reasonable when her peculiar nature +and environment were considered. + +Archie paused once in awhile to wonder how much of all this record was +within the direct knowledge of the young authoress; which expressions +conveyed her own ideas and which sentiments she would personally +endorse. Gouger might be right as to the exceeding purity of most of the +ladies who dealt in eroticism, but in this especial case Mr. Weil meant +to make an investigation on his own account before he accepted as a +universal rule the one his friend had laid down. + +He did not go to sleep that night until he had finished his story. Had +it been arranged by a competent hand he could have read it in four +hours, but as it was he consumed eight in the work. With all its faults, +he liked it. There was something breezy about it, and it had a theme +that he did not remember had been treated exactly in the same way +before. Though, as he himself had said, without much talent for +composition, Archie had read a great many books. It is no proof because +a person cannot write that he would make a poor critic. Mr. Weil might +almost have filled Lawrence Gouger's place at Cutt & Slashem's. He had +written fugitive pieces in his time for the papers, in reference to his +travels, which had been extensive, and had even contributed occasional +book reviews to the magazines. His connection with Gouger enabled him to +keep in touch with what was going on in the literary world, and the +dozens of new volumes which passed through that office were always at +his disposal. + +"She's not a fool, by any means," he remarked to himself, when he put +down the last sheet of Miss Fern's work. "A fellow who understood his +business might put that into such shape that it would be worth using. I +mean to find some one who can do it, and suggest the idea to her, when I +get to that stage in this affair. Let me see, who do I know that could +undertake it?" + +He had begun to undress, and was in the act of taking off his collar as +he spoke. His mind ran over a list of struggling literary men. Something +seemed the matter with most of them. There was Hamlin, but he would be +too exacting, and would want to suggest alterations in the story itself, +which would never do. There was Insley, whose last three books had been +flat failures, and for whom Cutt & Slashem had positively refused to +print anything more; but Insley had gone into the country for the summer +and nobody knew his address. Then there was-- + +"_Roseleaf!_" + +Archie received this thought like an inspiration. He threw his cravat on +the bureau and began tugging at his shoestrings to the imminent danger +of getting them into hard knots that no one could unravel. Roseleaf! Why +not? The boy would do almost anything he suggested, so great was his +confidence that a road to literary preferment could be staked out over +that path. Roseleaf would not undertake the work for the sake of +pecuniary compensation, but the thing could be presented to him in quite +another light. In Miss Fern's story there were living, breathing men and +women. In his own there were beautifully drawn marionettes. He could be +made to see that the study of the young lady's method was worth his +while. And then! + +Mr. Weil's shoes lay on the floor, in the disorder of a bachelor who had +never in his life taken pains to put anything in the place where it +really belonged. He took out the studs of his shirt, pulled that garment +over his head, and then sat for some minutes wrapped in active thought. + +"They must be introduced to each other!" he exclaimed, at last. "Between +them they have every qualification for success; apart they are like the +separated wheels of a watch. There is Shirley, with a style so sweetly +subtle, a grace so perfect, every line a gem; and with it all not a sign +of human emotion. There is Millicent, full of plot and daring and +breathing characters, and bold conceptions, and no more able to write +good English than an Esquimaux squaw. I have both these interesting +persons on my hands, and I must combine them, for their mutual good. + +"I wonder what Gouger will say when I unfold my plan. Perhaps I had best +not tell him. He actually came near threatening, to-day, to send a line +to Miss Fern, warning her against me. He wouldn't have done it, though. +Lawrence has a bark that is worse than his bite by a great deal. Yes, +I'll bring these young folks together. I'll take them as Hermann does +the rabbits, and press them gently but firmly into one. And then sha'n't +we get a combination! And won't Mr. Lawrence Gouger hug himself when the +product of their joint endeavor comes to him for a reading!" + +The muser finished disrobing and donned his night robes, but it was a +long time before he felt like slumber. He could think of nothing but his +scheme. As he revolved it over in his mind, it took many new forms. At +first Roseleaf was to be asked to rewrite the story that Miss Fern had +offered Cutt & Slashem. And afterwards there must be an entirely new +novel, conceived together and worked out slowly, using the best of what +was brightest in both of them. + +The last idea Mr. Weil had before he relapsed into unconsciousness +contained two novels, worked out at the same time. Roseleaf was all +right, if he could only get a glimpse of realism into his work. Miss +Fern would have no trouble if her ideas could find a garb that suited +them. + +There would be a way to make them of service to each other, and the time +to cross a bridge is always when you come to it. So thought Archie Weil, +as he fell asleep. + +In the morning he laughed to think of the description he had given to +Shirley, in his offhand way, of "the perfect woman." It was a faithful +list of Miss Millicent's charms, so far as they were apparent to him. +Shirley had noted them down with great carefulness, and would be sure to +notice how fully the authoress met the ideal he now had in mind. It only +remained for the schemer to say something to Miss Fern that would +suggest Roseleaf to her, whenever they were made acquainted. + +It must be plain to the reader that Mr. Weil's principal intention in +this whole matter was to dispose of the _ennui_ which idleness brings +even to its most adoring devotees. He had a fair fortune, accumulated +by a father who had denied himself every luxury to amass it. Drifting to +New York, he had found the vicinity of the Hoffman House very agreeable, +and his companions, with the exception of Mr. Gouger, were of about as +light views of life as himself. The critic was one of those strange +exceptions with which most of us come in contact, where persons of +entirely opposite tastes and inclinations become attached friends. + +Breakfast was served so late to Mr. Weil that he had not finished that +repast when the young novelist made his appearance. Seating himself on +the side of the table that faced his friend, Mr. Roseleaf responded to +the latter's inquiries in regard to his health by saying that he was +quite well. Indeed, he looked it. His eye was bright, his cheek rosy. +His attire showed just enough of a negligent quality to be attractive. +There was an air about him such as is often associated with an artist of +the pencil and brush. + +"Never better in health," he said, "but very anxious to begin something +definite in the way of work." + +Mr. Weil smiled his most affable smile. + +"What did I tell you to do, first?" he asked, playfully. + +"To fall in love." + +"Which you have not yet done!" + +The young man shook his head. + +"Good Heavens! And you have lost more than a week!" + +Roseleaf colored more than ever. + +"Isn't there something else--that I could--begin on?" he asked, humbly. + +"I don't know of anything. Love is the alphabet of the novelist. You'd +best go straight. Aren't there any eligible young women at your lodging +house?" + +The younger man thought a moment. + +"No; only the chambermaid." + +Mr. Weil sipped his coffee with a wise expression. + +"It may come to that," he said, putting down the cup, "but we'll hope +not. We will hope not. What's the matter with Central Park? There are +five hundred nice girls there every afternoon." + +"But I don't know them," said Roseleaf, desperately. "And--I have been +there. Yesterday one of them looked at me and smiled. I walked toward +her, and she slackened her speed. When I came within a few feet she +almost stopped. Then--I could think of nothing to say to her, and I +walked on, looking in the other direction." + +Several breakfasters in the vicinity turned their heads to note the +couple at the table, from which a laugh that could be heard all over the +room came musically. + +"Why didn't you say 'Good-morning?'" + +"Yes! And she might have said 'Good-morning.' And then it would be my +turn, and what could I have done?" + +Mr. Weil folded up his napkin and laid it by his plate. + +"You coward," he replied, affably, "you could have done a thousand +things. You could have remarked that the day was fair, or that you +wondered if it would rain. And you could have asked her to stroll over +to a restaurant and take a little refreshment. Once opposite to her, the +rest would have come fast enough." + +The novelist took out a handkerchief and wiped the perspiration from his +forehead. It all seemed very easy the way Archie described it, but he +was sure it would be very different in practice. How could he know, he +demanded, that the young lady would go to the restaurant with him? She +might have declined, and then he would have been in a worse position +than ever. + +"Declined!" echoed Archie. "Declined a lunch? Declined ice cream? +Declined champagne frappe! Well, you _are_ ignorant of the sex. My dear +boy, it is evident that I shall have to introduce you to the leading +lady of your company, and if you will be patient for a very few days, I +hope to be able to do so." + +Rousing himself with a show of genuine interest, Roseleaf inquired for +further particulars. + +"Listen," replied the other. "I expect, to-morrow evening, to spend a +few hours in the company of one of the most charming members of her sex. +She, like you, has an ambition to become a successful writer. Like you, +also, she lacks some of the prime qualities that are needed for that +end. It happens, however, that the things wanting are entirely different +in each of your cases--that you will, if you choose, be able to +supplement and perfect each other. I shall tell her that I know a young +man of literary taste who will give her advice on the points in which +she is deficient. With such an opening you will be at once on Easy +street, and if you cannot fall in love within forty-eight hours, I shall +regard you as a case too hopeless to merit further attention at my +hands." + +The young man's cheek glowed with pleasure. + +"That is more like it," he said. "When do you think I shall be able to +meet this young lady?" + +"Within a week or two, at the latest. I must sound her before I trust +you with her, for she is nearly as much a stranger to me, so far, as to +you. Of course there is no objection--quite the contrary--to your +falling in love elsewhere in the meantime, if opportunity serves." + +At this moment Mr. Weil called his companion's attention to a rather +corpulent gentleman who had just entered the breakfast room and was +stopping near the door to hold a brief conversation with some one he had +met there. + +"You see that fellow?" he remarked. "Wait a minute, and I will get him +over here. If you ever want to put a real character into one of your +stories you will only need to take his photograph. In actual life he is +as dull as a rusty meat axe, but for literary purposes he would be a +godsend." + +Catching the eye of the person of whom he was speaking, Mr. Weil +motioned to him to come to his part of the room, and as he approached +arranged a chair for him invitingly. + +"Mr. Boggs, I want to present a young friend of mine to you," said +Archie, rising. "Mr. Walker Boggs--Mr. Shirley Roseleaf." + +Mr. Boggs went through the usual ceremony, announcing that he was most +happy, etc., in the perfunctory style that a million other men follow +every day. Then he took the chair that was offered him, and gave an +order for his breakfast to a waiter. + +"Are you a New Yorker, Mr. Roseleaf?" he asked, when this important +matter was disposed of. + +"Mr. Roseleaf is staying here for the present," explained Mr. Weil. "He +is a novelist by profession, and I tell him there is no better place to +study the sensational than this vicinity." + +The young man's color deepened. He doubted if it was right to introduce +the subject in exactly these terms. Mr. Boggs' next question did not +detract from his uneasiness. + +"Excuse me--I am not altogether up in current literature, and I must ask +what Mr. Roseleaf has written." + +Mr. Weil helped his young friend out of this dilemma as well as he +could. + +"He has written nothing, as yet; at least nothing that has been +printed," he said. "He is wise, I think, in laying a deep foundation for +his romances, instead of rushing into print with the first thoughts that +enter his head, as so many do, to their own subsequent regret and the +distress of their readers. I want him to meet men and women who have +known what life is by their own experiences. You ought to be worth +something to a bright writer, Walker. You have had many an adventure in +your day." + +Mr. Walker Boggs shrugged his shoulders. + +"In my 'day,' yes," he assented. "Enough to fill the Astor and Lenox +libraries and leave enough for Charlie Dillingham and The American News +Company. But that is nothing but history now. My 'day' is over and it +will never return." + +He paused and ran his right hand dejectedly across his vest in the +vicinity of the waist band. Though he knew perfectly what Mr. Boggs +referred to, Archie Weil wanted him to express it in his own words to +Shirley. + +"You wouldn't think," continued Mr. Boggs, after a pause which seemed +filled with strange emotions, "that my figure was once the admiration of +every lady who saw it, that they used to stop and gaze at me with eyes +of positive envy. And now--look at this!" + +He indicated his embonpoint again, and shook his head wrathfully. + +"It is simply damnable," he continued, as neither of the others thought +best to interrupt him. "When I was twenty-four I had a reputation that +was as wide as the continent. When I walked down Broadway you would have +supposed a procession was passing, the crowds gathered in such numbers. +If it was mentioned that I would spend a week at Saratoga or Newport, +the hotels had not a room to spare while I remained. The next year I +married, and as one of the fashion journals put it, two thousand women +went into mourning. For a decade I devoted myself entirely to my wife +and to business. I made some money, and kept out of the public eye. +Then my wife died, and I retired from the firm with which I had been +connected. The next twelve months dragged terribly. I did not know what +to do. Finally I decided that there was but one course open to me. I +must resume again the position I had vacated as a leader of fashion." + +Mr. Weil bowed, as if to say that this was a very natural and +praiseworthy conclusion; precisely as if he had not heard the story told +in substantially the same way a dozen times before. He was watching +Roseleaf's interested expression and had difficulty in repressing an +inclination to laugh aloud. + +"I sought out the best tailor in the city," continued Mr. Boggs. "I went +to the most fashionable hair dresser. I spent considerable time in +selecting hats, cravats and gloves. When all was ready I took a stroll, +as I had done in the old days, from Fiftieth street, down Fifth Avenue +and Broadway to Union Square. I met a few acquaintances who stared at me +slightly, but did not act in the least impressed. The women merely +glanced up and glanced away again. What was the matter? I went home and +took a long survey of myself in the mirror, a cheval glass that showed +me from crown to toe. My costume was perfect. There was not a wrinkle in +my face--this was several years ago, remember. There was not a gray hair +in my head then--there are a few now, I admit. 'What is it?' I asked +myself a hundred times as I stood there, studying out the cursed +problem. My tie was all right, my shirt front of the latest cut, my +watch chain straight from Tiffany's, my--ah! I saw it all in a moment!" + +Roseleaf, who did not see it even yet, wore such an astonished +expression that Mr. Weil had to stuff his napkin into his mouth to +prevent an explosion. + +"It was this devilish abdomen!" said Mr. Boggs, slapping that portion of +his frame as if he had a special grudge against it and would be glad if +he could hit it hard enough to bring it to a realizing sense of its +turpitude. "My figure had gone to the devil! It was not as large as it +is now, but it was large enough to cook my gruel. My waist had increased +so gradually that I had never noticed it. I got a tape and took its +measure. Forty-two inches, sir! The jig was up. With a heart as young as +ever, with a face as good and a purse able to supply all reasonable +demands, I was knocked out of the race on the first round by this +adipose tissue that no ingenuity could hope to conceal!" + +Mr. Weil could wait no longer. His musical laugh rang out over the room. + +"Let this be a warning to you, Shirley," he said, "to wear corsets." + +"It is no joke," was the indignant comment of Mr. Walker Boggs, as he +proceeded to add to his rotundity by devouring the hearty breakfast that +the waiter had just brought him. "I am left like a marooned sailor on +the sea of life. The only occupation that could have entertained me is +gone. It is no time to enter business again, I couldn't have selected a +wiser one to leave it. I don't want to marry, once was enough of that. +The only women I can attract are those commercially inclined females +that any other man could have as well as I. What is the result? My life +is ruined. I take no pleasure in anything. I eat, walk about, go to a +play, sleep. A _pig_ could do as much; and a pig would not have these +memories to haunt him, these recollections of a time so different that I +am almost driven wild." + +Roseleaf felt a sincere pity for the unfortunate gentleman, and did not +see the slightest element of humor in his melancholy recital. But Archie +Weil could not be restrained. + +"You're right about that pig business," he remarked. "You recall the +incident in Mother Goose, where-- + + 'A little pig found a fifty dollar note, + And purchased a hat and a very fine coat.' + +"There are strange parallels in history." + +Mr. Boggs would have replied to this remark in the terms it deserved had +he not been too much engaged at the moment in masticating a particularly +fine chop. As it was he growled over the meat like a mastiff in bad +humor. + +"Are there no remedies for excessive accumulation of fat in the +abdominal region?" asked Weil, taking his advantage. "It seems to me I +have read advertisements of them in the newspapers." + +"Remedies!" retorted the other, having swallowed the food and +supplemented it with a glass of ale. "There are a thousand, and I have +tried them all. I have taken things by the gross. I have paid money to +every quack I could find. For awhile I starved myself so nearly to death +that I went to making my will. And every day I grew stouter. I don't +know what I measure now, and I don't care. A few fathoms more or less, +doesn't count, when one falls from a steamer in midocean." + +Mr. Weil took occasion to say that there was no need for this extreme +discouragement. A little coin in the hand, or a new diamond ring, would +still bring youth and beauty to his disconsolate friend. + +"That's just it," retorted Boggs. "It's the contrast that's killing me. +The only women who would look at me to-day are mercenary ones that +wouldn't care if I was black as Othello or big as George IV. Why, I +could show you a trunkful of letters, written me by the finest women in +this country, when I was at my best. They breathe but one thing--love, +love, love! I lived on it! It was the air that kept my lungs in motion. +And I thought to go back to it so easily! _Ah!_" + +Mr. Boggs commenced upon his fourth chop and emptied the last of the +quart bottle into his glass. + +"Well, I'm sorry for you," said Weil. "I think the times must have +changed, as well as yourself, though. Now, here's a young fellow, with +all the qualifications of face, figure and address that you once had, +and he claims to be unable to make the acquaintance of a single +interesting woman between Brooklyn Bridge and Spuyten Duyvil." + +The heavy eyes of Mr. Walker Boggs rested upon the youthful face +opposite to him. Under the scrutiny to which he was subjected Roseleaf +reddened, in the way he had. He had never looked more handsome. + +"This is evidently a jest of yours," said Boggs, turning to Mr. Weil. + +"Not in the least, I assure you." + +"Then I say he can do what he likes, and I know it," replied the stout +man. "If I had his form I'd have to ask the police to clear the way for +me. I have seen circulation impeded in front of this very hotel because +I was coming out to take my carriage. If he won't look at them, why, of +course, the women can't do it all, but it lies with him." + +Roseleaf's eyes glistened with a strange mixture of hope and fear. He +did not think he would care to be in such great demand as that, but he +dearly wished to break through the iron bars that enclosed him. He +glanced in a glass that paneled the wall near by. He was good-looking +enough, it was no vanity to say so. What he lacked was confidence. + +"He is afraid of them, that's his trouble," smiled Weil. "We will cure +him of that, and when he gets to know women as they are he will give us +a novel that will set all creation by the ears. Gouger--you know +Gouger--says he writes the purest English. All he needs is a taste of +life." + +To this Mr. Boggs gave his unqualified assent. And he added that if he +could be of any service in the matter he would only be too glad. + +"We thank you for the offer, and may be able later to make use of it," +said Mr. Weil. "And now good-morning, for we have important business to +attend to." + +Roseleaf looked long and earnestly at the person they were leaving. He +seemed to him a very ordinary individual. If such a man had won the +love of scores of beautiful women, surely he himself could gain the +affections of one. When he stood with Weil in front of the hotel, by +which an unrivaled procession of ladies and gentleman was already +beginning to pass, though it was only eleven o'clock, he felt much +encouraged. + +"They are looking at you," whispered Archie, "plenty of them. Did you +see those two girls in pink in that landau? Why, they nearly broke their +necks to get the last glimpse of you. There is another lady who would +stop if you asked her, pretty as any of them, though she must be nearly +thirty. Your eyes are not open. Ah, here is something better! In that +carriage, with the Titian tresses!" + +It was Miss Millicent Fern, and she bowed to Mr. Weil. Then her bright +eyes lit up with a new lustre as they fell upon his companion. + + + + +CHAPTER V. + +STUDYING MISS MILLICENT. + + +When Mr. Weil made his appearance at the residence of Mr. Wilton Fern, +the door was opened for him by a young negro of such superb proportions +that the caller could not help observing him with admiration. He thought +he had never seen a man more perfectly formed. The face, though too dark +to suggest the least admixture of Caucasian blood, was well featured. +The lips were not thick nor was the nose flat, as is the case with so +many of the African race. The voice, as the visitor heard it, was by no +means unpleasant. Mr. Weil could not imagine a better model for an ebony +statue than this butler, or footman, or whatever position, perhaps both, +he might be engaged to fill. + +"Yes, sir, Miss Millicent is in, and she is expecting you," said the +negro, in his pleasant and strong tones. "Let me take your hat and +stick. Now, sir, this way." + +Miss Fern came in a few moments to the parlor, where Archie was left, +and greeted him most cordially. + +"There is a sitting-room on the next floor," she said, "where we shall +not be disturbed. I have given Hannibal orders to admit no one, saying +that we shall want the evening entirely to ourselves." + +"Hannibal?" repeated the visitor. "Is that the name of the remarkable +individual who received me just now?" + +"Yes," said Miss Fern, rather coldly. "Though I do not know why you call +him 'remarkable.'" + +"He is so tall, so grand, so entirely overpowering," explained Mr. Weil. +"One would think he might be the son of an African king. I never saw a +black man that gave me such an impression of force and power." + +Millicent elevated her eyebrows a little, as if annoyed at these +expressions. She answered, still frigidly, that she had noticed nothing +unusual about Hannibal. She did not believe she had looked closely +enough at his face to be able to identify him in a court. + +"He would make a fine character for a novel," said Mr. Weil, as they +walked together up the broad staircase. "I could almost write one +myself, around such a personality." + +The young lady looked disgusted. + +"A negro servant!" she exclaimed. "What kind of a novel could you write +with such a central figure?" + +"Perhaps I should not put him in the centre," laughed Archie, determined +to win her good nature. "Every story needs lights and shades. You can't +deny that he would cast a magnificent shadow." + +The humor of this observation struck Miss Fern and she joined mildly in +her companion's mirth. Then she remarked that the central figure of a +novel--the main thing in it--to her mind, should be a being who could be +given the attributes of beauty and grace. The minor characters were of +less account, and would come into existence almost of their own accord. + +"And now, before we do anything more," she said, "I want you to tell me +about that excessively handsome young man that I saw with you yesterday +in Madison Square." + +Weil was delighted at this introduction of his young friend. He began a +most flattering account of Shirley Roseleaf, describing him as a genuine +paragon among men, both in talent and goodness. He drew heavily on his +imagination as he proceeded, feeling that he was "in for it," and might +as well do his best at once. And he could see the cheek of the young +listener taking on a new and more enticing color as he went farther and +farther into his subject. + +"If I have to rearrange my novel--the one Mr. Gouger rejected--I shall +draw my hero after that model," she cried, when he paused for breath. "I +never saw a man who came so near my ideal." + +"But--you would have to alter your hero's character, in that case?" he +said. "I have read your MSS., and your description does not tally with +my young friend at all." + +Miss Fern reddened. + +"You don't mean to claim, do you," she replied, "that physical beauty +and moral goodness always go hand in hand?" + +"They should," he answered, in a tone that was meant to be impressive. + +"Ah, that is another question! _Do_ they? that is all the novelist needs +to know. Did you ever read Ouida's 'Sigma?' There are the two sisters, +one as pure as can be, the other quite the opposite, and the beauty +belongs to the depraved one. I know Oscar Wilde takes a different view +in 'Dorian Grey,' but he is wrong. I am sure that the worst man or woman +in the world--reckoning by what are called the 'amiable vices'--might be +the most lovely to look upon, the most delightful to associate with. Eve +found the serpent attractive, remember." + +Where did she learn all these things? Weil looked at her with +increasing astonishment. "Amiable vices." He liked the appellation. + +"Perhaps you are right," he assented, as if slowly convinced. "If you +wish to be acquainted with Mr. Roseleaf, I will bring him here with +pleasure. My only fear is that he will not interest you. He seems almost +too perfect for earth. Think of a young man who knows nothing of women, +who says he has no idea what it is to be in love, who does not +understand why the ladies who pass down Fifth Avenue turn their heads to +look at him! He, like yourself, is a novelist, but his characters are +beautiful images that lack life. He carves marble figures and attempts +to palm them off as flesh and blood. He really thinks they _are_, +because he has never known the difference. If you could take him, Miss +Fern, and teach him what love really is--" + +The young lady blushed more than before. + +"_I_--" she stammered. + +"In a strictly literary way," he explained. "But," he added, thinking he +was getting upon the edge of a quicksand, "we must not forget the object +of my visit." + +He took the parcel containing her MSS. that he had obtained from Mr. +Gouger, and began to untie the string. Manlike he soon had it in a hard +knot, and Miss Millicent, coming to his rescue, her young hands touched +his and made his heart beat faster. + +"There," she said, when the knot had given way to their joint endeavors. +"It is all right, now. But, before we begin on this, tell me a little +more about Mr. Roseleaf. What has he written? Where was it published? I +will send to-morrow morning and buy a copy." + +Her enthusiasm was agreeable under the circumstances, but the truth had +to be explained to her. + +"What he has written I will let you see, one of these days," he replied. +"As for publishing, he ran upon the same rock that you did--that of Mr. +Lawrence Gouger." + +The beautiful eyes opened wider. + +"So he rejected his work, too! And yet you say that it was well done?" + +"Exquisitely. Shirley's lines are as symmetrical as his face and figure. +His people are dead, that is all the trouble. Gouger scented the +difficulty under which he labors, in a moment. 'Go and fall in love!' he +said to him, 'and you will write a story at which the world will +marvel!'" + +Miss Fern arranged one of her locks of Titian red that had fallen down. + +"And hasn't he taken the advice?" she inquired, in a low voice. + +"Not yet," smiled the other. "He says, like a very child, that 'he +cannot find any one to love.' I walked up the avenue with him to-day, +and afterwards rode in the Park. There were hundreds of the prettiest +creatures, all looking their eyes out at him. And he hadn't the courage +to return one glance, not one. Ah, Miss Fern, it will be genuine love +with Shirley Roseleaf, if any. The imitations one finds in the +fashionable world will never answer for him." + +The young lady breathed a gentle sigh, as her thoughts dwelt on the +handsome figure she had seen in front of the Hoffman House. + +"You may bring him here--yes, I should be glad to have you," she said, +slowly. "But I must ask one favor; do not tell him what I said so +thoughtlessly about his being my ideal. Let me talk with him on fair +terms. It may be, as you suggest, that we shall be of advantage to each +other. When can you arrange it?" + +"Almost any day," smiled Weil. "I will let you know, by mail or +otherwise. And now, this story of yours," he added, thinking it a shrewd +plan to divert her attention from the other matter while it was still +warm in her mind. "Though I have read it through, and think I understand +it fairly well, I am all the more anxious to hear it from your lips. You +will put into the text new meanings, I have no doubt, that have escaped +my observation." + +Miss Fern flushed pleasantly and inquired with a show of anxiety whether +Mr. Weil had found its construction as bad as his friend, Mr. Gouger, +had intimated. + +"To be perfectly honest, it might be improved," he replied. "But the +germ is there, Miss Fern--that necessary thing for a good novel--an +interest that will hold the reader in spite of himself. I disagree with +Lawrence in his essential point. I am sure that a good writer of English +with a taste for fiction could make all the necessary alterations +without in the least detracting from the value of the story. For +instance, I believe if Mr. Roseleaf would take hold of it I could +guarantee to get you a publisher this winter." + +"And do you think he would?" she cried. + +"I think so." + +The authoress was so delighted with this announcement that she conquered +the slight wound to her pride. It would be herself still who had drawn +the picture, who had put the coloring into it; all that the other would +have to do might be described as varnishing. She took up the first sheet +of her writing, and turned up an oil lamp that stood upon the table at +her elbow, the better to see the lines. + +"Are you ready?" she asked. + +"Quite ready," smiled Mr. Weil. + +In a voice that trembled a little, and yet not unpleasantly to the +listener, Miss Fern began to read her manuscript. The opening chapter +introduced the heroine and two gentlemen, either one of whom might be +the hero. As the book is now so well known it is needless to transfer +its features to these pages. + +Presently the authoress paused and seemed to wait for her guest's +criticism. + +"That is one chapter," she said. + +"Yes. I remember. And the second one is where Algernon begins to +disclose a very little of his true nature. Shall we not have that now?" + +"As you like. I thought perhaps you would give me advice as we +proceeded, some fault-finding here and there, a suggestion of +alterations." + +He shook his head affably. + +"Not yet," he answered. "Up to this point I see nothing that requires +condemnation." + +"Nor praise, perhaps?" she said, in a low tone. + +"That might be true, also," he replied. "The first chapter of a novel is +only the laying of the cloth and the placing of a few dishes. The viands +that form the meal are still in the kitchen." + +She smiled at the simile. + +"But even the laying of the cloth is important," she said. + +"Your cloth is laid most admirably," he answered. "And now we will have +the castor, which in this case, I believe, contains a certain quantity +of mustard and red pepper." + +At this she laughed the more, and glanced through a few of the sheets in +her hands before she spoke again. + +"Did you form any opinion about--about _me_--from this story?" she +asked, constrainedly. "Did you, in brief, think it had taken a bold girl +to write it?" + +He hesitated a moment. + +"Yes," he said, at last. "A bold girl, a daring girl, a brave girl. Not +one, however, whose own conduct would necessarily be like that of the +woman she has delineated." + +She was so pleased that she put down the MSS. and leaned toward him with +both hands clasped together. + +"You are very, very kind," she said, impressively. + +"No, merely truthful," he replied. "With your permission I want to +retain that last quality in all my conversations with you. When you ask +me a question I wish to be perfectly free to answer according to my +honest convictions." + +"It is what I especially desire," she said, brightening. "No one able to +judge has heard anything of this story except your friend, Mr. Gouger. I +know it is bold, sometimes I think it is brazen. I can conceive that +there are excellent people who would say it never should have been +written. To my mind, the moral I have drawn more than justifies the +plainness of my speech. You can tell better than I where I have +overstepped the proper bounds, if there be such places. You are, of +course, a man of the world--" + +The protesting expression on the face of her companion arrested her at +this point. + +"That depends on what you mean by 'a man of the world?'" + +"It is a common expression." + +"And has many definitions. Before I plead guilty to it, I want to know +just how much you intend by it." + +Miss Fern put down the page she had taken up and a puzzled look crossed +her pretty face. + +"You make it hard for me to explain myself," she said. "I suppose I +meant--" + +"Now, be as honest as you asked me to be," he interrupted. + +"Well, then, I suppose you are a man like--like other men." + +"But there are many kinds of other men." + +The young lady tried several times to make herself clearer, and then +asked, with a very pathetic pout, that she might be permitted to +proceed with her reading, as the hour was growing later. It was not a +very important point, any way, she said. + +"I cannot entirely agree with you," replied Archie. "If you are to be a +writer of fiction, you should not consider any time wasted which informs +you in reference to your fellow creatures. It is from them that you must +draw your inspiration; it is their figures you must put, correctly or +incorrectly, on your canvas. Don't understand me as dictating to you, my +dear Miss Fern. I only wish, as long as you have referred to me, to know +of what I am accused." + +To this Miss Fern answered, with many pauses, that she had not intended +to accuse her visitor of anything. And once more--with evident +distress--she begged to be permitted to drop the matter and return to +her reading. + +"Very well," he assented, thinking he had annoyed her as much as was +advisable for the present. "As they say in parliamentary bodies, we will +lay the question on the table, from which it can be taken at some more +fitting time. I am as anxious as you can be to get into Chapter II." + +She read this chapter to the end, and paused a few seconds to see if he +had any comments to make, but he shook his head without breaking +silence, and she went on with the story. He pursued the same plan till +the end of the fifth chapter. + +"It is interesting, exciting and true," he remarked, referring to the +closing scene. "And I cannot help feeling arise in my brain the question +that Mr. Gouger put when he read it: How could a young, innocent girl +like you depict that situation with such absolute fidelity." + +He had come to the point with a vengeance. But to Miss Fern his manner +was far more agreeable than if he had approached it by stealth, or in an +insinuating way. She had anticipated something of the sort and had tried +to prepare herself to meet it. + +"Does not nature teach us some things?" she asked, speaking +straightforwardly, though her color heightened in spite of her efforts. +"Given a certain condition, an intelligent mind can prophesy results." + +He shook his head in mild disagreement with her. + +"Gouger is an expert, and he denies this, as a regular rule, at least. +You should have heard him argue it with Roseleaf. 'Either throw yourself +into a love affair,' he said, 'or never try to depict one.' Excuse me, +Miss Fern, you bade me be frank--" + +She assented, with a grave nod of her shapely head. + +"You may have been in love--I do not ask you whether you have or +not--but you cannot have known personally of the sort of love that you +have depicted in these pages. I call it little less than miraculous that +you should draw the scene so accurately." + +She colored again, this time partly with pleasure, for she was very +susceptible to compliments. + +"Perhaps your statement may explain to you," she said, pointedly, "what +I meant a few minutes ago by calling you 'a man of the world.' You +recognize at a glance what I had to construct from my imagination." + +Archie Weil's face changed as he realized how deftly he had been caught. +He had meant to pretend to this girl that he was more than usually +ignorant of the nether side of life. + +"Don't think too badly of me because I happen to know what is clear to +every man," he said, impressively. + +"To every one?" she answered. "To your friend, Mr. Roseleaf?" + +"Ah! He is an exception to all rules. And yet, Gouger says he can never +write a successful book till he is more conversant with life than he is +at present." + +She looked troubled. + +"With life?" she echoed. "With sin, do you mean?" + +"With the ordinary things that men know, and that most of them at some +time experience." + +Her bright eyes were temporarily clouded. + +"What a pity!" she exclaimed. + +"Yes," he said, for it was his humor to agree with her. "It is a pity." + +There was a pause of a minute, and then she asked if she had read enough +for one evening. He answered that as it was now past ten o'clock it +would not be easy to get much farther and that he would come again +whenever she chose to set the time. + +"You do not say much about my work," she said, anxiously, as he prepared +to go. + +"Silence is approval," he responded. "I can talk it over with you +better when you have reached the end. I have things to say, and I shall +not hesitate to say them then." + +"When is it most convenient to you to come?" she inquired. + +"Any time," he answered. "I don't do much that is really useful. But +wait till you see Shirley. He will atone for the shortcomings you find +in me." + +She repeated the word "Shirley," as if to test its sound. + +"You are your father's only child, are you not?" he asked, thoughtfully. + +"No. I have a sister, Daisy, a little younger than I." + +"And has she a literary turn, also?" + +"Not in the least." + +Archie arose, and Miss Millicent accompanied him to the front door. The +tall negro came to open the portal, but Miss Fern told him, with the +same quality of dislike in her tone which Weil had noticed before, that +he need not wait. + +"He is really a magnificent piece of humanity," said Archie, when the +man had disappeared. "I never saw anything quite like him." + +"You admire negroes, then?" said the young lady, almost impolitely. + +"I like representatives of every race," he answered, as if not noticing +her. "There are interesting specimens in all. I number among my +acquaintances several Chinamen, a Moor, a Mexican, Jews, Portuguese and +Russians innumerable. If that fellow was not in your employ I would +engage him to-morrow, merely as a study." + +Miss Fern took the hand he held out to her and set the next meeting for +Saturday evening. Then she said: + +"If you want Hannibal, perhaps papa would oblige you. I certainly would +do all I could to persuade him." + + + + +CHAPTER VI. + +"HOW THE WOMEN STARE!" + + +The next day Archie Weil lunched with Lawrence Gouger. He wanted to talk +with his friend about the young author and authoress. Gouger listened +with interest to the story he had to relate, and nodded approval when it +appeared that Archie had behaved admirably thus far in relation to Miss +Millicent. + +"Do you know anything about Mr. Fern?" he asked, when the other had +reached a period. + +"Nothing." + +"Well, neither did I, a week ago, but I have taken pains to inform +myself. He is a highly respectable elderly party, who deals in wool. He +married a very beautiful lady, who has now been dead eight or ten years +and he lives altogether in the society of his two daughters. If you +succeed in getting Millicent's book on the counters you will earn his +everlasting gratitude. They say he is not literary enough himself to be +a judge of its merits, and if she has fifty copies to present to the +family friends it will probably be all he will ask." + +Mr. Weil uttered a low whistle. + +"I don't know what the family friends will say of it," he replied, "but +I call it pretty warm stuff. If the list includes many prudes they will +hardly thank the girl for sending such a firebrand into their houses." + +"Pshaw!" said Gouger. "The world is getting used to that sort of thing, +and they won't mind it a bit. Besides, they will be so lost in +admiration of their cousin's name on the cover that they will think of +nothing else. What did you make out of her? Is she as innocent as I +predicted?" + +Archie poured out a glass of Bass' ale and sipped it slowly. + +"Quite," he said, as he put it down on the table. "And she's no dunce, +either." He went on to tell of the trap he had fallen into. "I'm dying +with impatience to get her and Roseleaf together. They'd make an idealic +couple." + +Mr. Gouger inquired what he was waiting for. + +"Oh, I want to do the thing right," said Weil. "I want to learn her as +thoroughly as I can, before I bring him upon the stage. It will take +three or four evenings more to hear the rest of her novel, and another +to discuss it. I shall get around to him in about a fortnight, at the +rate things are going. He will keep. What do you suppose he is doing +now? Writing poetry! He sent a piece a few days ago to the _Century_, +and they accepted it." + +"He will be gray when it appears," said the critic. "It takes a long +time for anything to see the light in that publication." + +"But in this case an exception will be made," said Weil. "They have +assured him that it will come out in their very next issue. He will be +so proud to see his name in print that I expect to find difficulty in +holding him back. A poet who appears in the Century has certainly +stepped a little higher on the ladder." + +The critic agreed to this, and remarked that such a man as Roseleaf +should give his whole attention to poetry. + +"Wait!" cried Archie. "Give him time. See him after he has fallen head +over ears in love with charming Millicent Fern. There is something in +him, I feel sure, and between that dear girl and myself we will bring it +out. By-the-way, there is a character I want you to meet," he added, as +Mr. Walker Boggs came into the room. "You have never had the pleasure, I +think, though you have heard me speak of him." + +Mr. Boggs had his attention attracted by a waiter who was sent for the +purpose and came with great willingness to occupy a seat with Mr. Weil +and his friend. + +"We were talking of a New York merchant just now," said Archie, when the +introductions were over, "and it occurs to me that you, who know almost +everybody, may have some knowledge of him. He is in the wool business, +I hear, and I think you once told me you had done something in that way. +His name is Wilton Fern, and he lives at Midlands." + +"Do I know anything about him?" echoed Mr. Boggs. "I should say so. He +was my partner for seven years, and I still have a little stake left in +the concern, on which I am drawing interest." + +Mr. Weil showed his astonishment at this statement. What a very small +world it was, after all! Then, after pledging his friend not to mention +that he had ever discussed the matter with him, he went guardedly into +the particulars of Miss Millicent's book, and of his having called at +the house for the purpose of passing judgment upon it. + +"I didn't know that was in your line," replied Boggs. + +"Well, it was this way," answered Archie. "Mr. Gouger's decision didn't +exactly suit the young lady, as it was not very favorable. Mine will be +quite to her taste, as I view her abilities in a more favorable light. +Now tell us all about the family, as the only one of them I have met is +Miss Millicent. Why, this is a regular find, old man! You should have +told me a week ago that you possessed all this information that I have +been aching to get hold of." + +Thus adjured, Mr. Boggs entered upon his story. From which it appeared +that he knew the Ferns, root and branch, and had dined with them dozens +of times. + +"What sort of a chap is the pater?" asked Weil. + +"A very well-kept man of nearly seventy, with a great deal of what is +called 'breeding' in his manner, and a face like the portrait of a +French marquis cut out of a seventeenth century frame. He doesn't look +like a business man at all, and between ourselves he's not much of a +one. All the money he ever made--saving my apparent egotism--was when I +was in the concern. I've heard he's got a big mortgage on his residence +and is going down hill generally. Too bad; nice fellow; sorry for him; +such is life." + +Archie asked if Boggs would do him a personal and particular favor, if +it would not cause him much trouble; and on being answered in the +affirmative, said he would esteem it a great honor if he could be +introduced to Mr. Fern by that gentleman's former business associate. + +"I suppose I shall run across him at Midlands, some evening," he said, +"and get one of those presentations that are the most aggravating things +in the world. I don't want that to happen, and the best way, to use an +elegant phrase, is to take the bull by the horns, or in this case, the +sheep by the tail. Will you make an accidental call on him to-morrow +afternoon and let me be of the party?" + +Mr. Boggs responded that he would be delighted. And this matter being +settled, all parties could give more direct attention to their lunch +than they had been doing for the preceding ten minutes. + +"You must have heard of my friend Boggs, in the days when he was a +figure on the streets of this town," said Weil, presently, returning to +what he knew was the favorite subject of that personage. "You've lived +here for twenty years, and of course the name of Walker Boggs is +familiar to you." + +Mr. Gouger looked a good counterfeit of complete mystification for some +seconds, and then a gleam as of sudden recollection shot across his +face. + +"Certainly, certainly!" he said. "Mr. Boggs was what is popularly known +as a lady killer, if I am not mistaken. You got married, did you not, +Mr. Boggs, some ten or eleven years ago?" + +The party addressed acknowledged the practical correctness of the date. + +"Why, it comes back as plain as day," said the critic. "The _Herald_ had +a page about you, including your portrait and some verses by a well +known poet. It said your marriage had cast a gloom over Manhattan Island +and some of the up-river counties." + +Mr. Boggs gloomily nodded, to show that the statement was true. Then he +touched his most rotund portion with a significant look. + +"I'm a widower now," he said, "and nothing but this--_this_--stands in +my way. As Shakespeare says, ''Tis not as deep as a well, nor as wide as +a church door, but--' The ladies never look at me now, and all on +account of this d--d flesh, which hangs like a millstone around my +neck." + +Cutt & Slashem's critic, ignoring the peculiar character of the metaphor +used, remarked politely that he thought no lady of sense would put great +stress on such an insignificant matter. + +"Insignificant!" echoed Boggs. "I'll bet it's fifty inches around, +come! And it's not the 'ladies of sense' I'm after. Quite the contrary." + +One of Archie Weil's explosive laughs followed this statement, which +caused an expression of mild injury to settle over the countenance of +Mr. Boggs. + +"You're getting on toward forty, and you ought to quit," said Weil. +"Confound the women! Let them go." + +"That's well enough to talk about," replied Boggs, gruffly. "How would +you like to follow your own advice?" + +Weil uttered an exclamation. + +"I? I have precious little to do with them, I assure you. For a man of +my correct habits I have the worst name of any one I know. Everybody +insinuates things about me, and they can prove nothing." + +"We'll ask Isaac Leveson about that," sneered Boggs. "By-the-way, that +wouldn't be a bad place to take young Roseleaf to, when you get to +instructing him in earnest. I met the young fellow on the avenue last +night and walked around with him for a couple of hours. He's a darling!" + +"Roseleaf?" cried both the other gentlemen, in one breath. + +"To be sure. How the women stared at him! I couldn't blame them; his +waist isn't over thirty, and he's as handsome as--as I was at his age. I +told him he could have all the loveliness in New York at his feet, if he +liked." + +Weil smiled significantly at Gouger. + +"What did he reply to that?" he asked. + +"Oh, he had an ideal in his head, and none of those we saw quite came up +to it; for I did get him to raise his eyes and look at the prettiest +ones. I drew out of him slowly that he would have nothing to do with a +girl unless she had red hair; that--" + +Mr. Weil uttered a laugh so hearty that it attracted the attention of +everybody in the room. Mr. Boggs paused to inquire the cause of this +outbreak, but Archie assured him that something entirely out of the +present discussion had just occurred to him, which was to blame for his +impoliteness. + +"A girl must have _Titian_ hair," repeated Mr. Boggs, accepting the +explanation, "or he would not consider her. He ruled out all the +striking blondes and brunettes, saying that he liked only those of a +medium shade. We came across one that answered these descriptions, an +exquisite little creature who looked as if she would swallow him could +she get the chance. And then there came out another idea. He would not +think of this fairy because she was so short. 'I want a woman five feet, +four inches tall,' he said, as if the article could be made to order, in +case the size did not happen to be in stock. Then, would you believe it, +he found a girl embracing every attribute he had mentioned. Her hair was +just the right shade, her height must have hit the mark exactly, her +complexion was medium. But no. She was too heavy. She would weigh a +hundred and forty-five, he said, quite twenty pounds too much. If we had +found a girl that filled all his description he would have invented +something new to bar her out of the race." + +Mr. Weil remarked that he was not so sure of Roseleaf's insincerity. He +believed the right woman would yet be discovered, and that a case of the +most intense affection would then spontaneously develop. + +"In fact," he added, "I have the identical creature in mind. It is clear +to us--to myself and Mr. Gouger here--that Shirley will never write a +thrilling romance till he has fallen wildly, passionately in love." + +Mr. Boggs smiled slightly, and then sobered again. + +"Shall you have him marry, also?" he inquired, pointedly. + +"Why not?" + +"Because it will finish him; that's why. The romance in a modern +marriage lasts six weeks. At the end of that time he will be useless for +literary purposes, or anything else." + +Mr. Weil shook his head in opposition to this rash statement. + +"My theory is," said he, "that a novelist should know everything. To +write of love he should have been in love; to tell of marriage he should +have had a wife--a real one, no mere imitation; to talk of fatherhood +intelligently he should become a father. How can he know his subjects +otherwise?" + +The stout man smiled significantly. + +"And if he wishes to write of murder, he must kill some one. And if he +wants to depict the sensations of a robber he must take a pistol and ask +people to stand, on the highway." + +"Now you are becoming absurd," said Archie. + +"No more than you," said Boggs. "You go too far, and you will find it +out. Let your novelist fall in love. That will do him good. But don't +let him marry, or you will lose him, mark my word. Let him contemplate +matrimony at a distance. Let him reflect on the glory of seeing his +children about his knees. So far, so good. But when you have shelved him +with a wife of the present era, when you have kept him up nights for a +month with a baby that screams--his literary capacity will be gone. Make +no mistake!" + +Mr. Weil, half convinced, and much surprised to hear such wisdom from +this unexpected source, made an effort to maintain his ground. + +"Nearly all the modern novelists _are_ married," he remarked. + +"Yes, and nice stuff they write, don't they? Namby-pamby, silly-billy +stories, misleading in every line! They are the most unsafe pilots on +the shores of human life. They start, without exception, from false +premises. Their chart is wrong, their compass unreliable, their +reckoning ridiculous from beginning to end. Where did you ever see a bit +of real life that resembled these abortions? Do lovers usually fall on +their knees when they propose? Is the modern girl an idiot, knowing less +of the facts of nature than an oyster? Is the conversation between men +and women filled exclusively with twaddle? You would think so, from +reading these books; and why? They are written by married people, most +of them, people who don't dare step over the line of the commonplace any +more than a woman would dare order her dressmaker to put pockets in her +gown!" + +Archie looked at Mr. Gouger, who nodded a partial approval of these +statements. Mr. Boggs betook himself with more interest to his chops. +And the other two gentlemen, remarking that time pressed, bade him +good-by for the day. + +"I see you agree with him that I shouldn't marry Roseleaf?" said Archie, +with a rising inflection. + +"There is certainly point in what he says," replied Mr. Gouger. + +"But--confound it! With the boy's disposition, it will be a delicate +business," retorted Weil. "I don't know as I can carry him to the point +of passionate love for pretty Miss Fern, and then shut off the steam +when it suits me." + +This matter was discussed for the next ten minutes, as the friends +walked along toward the office of Cutt & Slashem. + +"I think you are foolish to delay so long introducing him to her," said +Gouger, finally. "I don't see that you are making any progress +whatever." + +"Ah, but I am," replied Weil. "I am making both of them more and more +anxious for the meeting. Shirley walks the street feverishly impatient, +and I have no doubt mutters her name in his dreams. Millicent talks +about her ideal of manly beauty. When they get together failure will be +impossible." + +Mr. Gouger laughed at the idea that Roseleaf was "feverishly impatient" +to meet any girl, and ventured to predict that the young man would have +to be put in irons to get him to the residence of the Ferns when the +time came; or at least to keep him there. + +"Just the point I am working on," replied Weil. "Under ordinary +circumstances I would have to handcuff his wrists to mine, but I am +making such a strong impression on his imagination that he is crazy to +go. And once she gets him under her influence--I tell you, Lawrence, she +is no ordinary girl." + +"She certainly does not write like one," smiled the critic, "either in +her subject or her English. You may make something of him--I rather +think you will--but not of her. Her ideas are wild, and her realism a +little too pronounced even for the present age." + +"She has truth on her side, you admit," said Archie. + +"Yes, to a remarkable degree." + +"Well, that ought to be something, if Boggs' estimate of the modern liar +is correct. Shirley will help her to style, give her his own, if +necessary. I am going to land both of these fish, if only to spite you, +Lawrence. You tossed them away with that fine contempt of yours, and you +will weep hot tears for it before you die." + +At the door of Cutt & Slashem's they met the two members of that firm, +who paused to say a word to Mr. Gouger. They were anxious for a new book +to bring out as soon as possible, and were regretting with him that +nothing worth publishing seemed to present itself. + +"You may strain matters, it necessary," said Mr. Cutt. "We can't keep +up on reprints forever. I hope you made no mistake in rejecting that +book of Mrs. Hotbox. I hear it is selling well." + +Mr. Gouger's face was, as ever, immovable before his employers. + +"What 'Fire and Brimstone?'" he inquired. "The authorities seized the +entire edition this morning." + +Mr. Cutt looked at Mr. Slashem, with a startled expression. + +"In that case, I am glad we escaped it," he said. "We shouldn't like +that sort of an affair, of course." + +Mr. Weil, who knew both the gentlemen well, inquired what they thought +of Mrs. Hotbox's production. + +"I have never seen it," said Mr. Slashem. + +"Nor I," said Mr. Cutt. + +The partners disappeared into the counting-room, where they had an +interview with a binder who had offered to do their work at one-tenth of +a cent a hundred copies less than the concern with which they were then +dealing. Archie said good-by to Gouger, and went off to find Roseleaf, +with whom he had engaged to take, later in the day, a ride through the +Park. + +"How soon am I to see your paragon?" sighed the young man, as they were +making the grand round of that famous drive. + +"Within a week, I hope. Are you getting uneasy?" + +"I am getting lonesome," was the gloomy reply. "And I want to begin +work." + +"Well, it will soon pass now. To-morrow evening I am to hear another +installment of her novel. Two more sittings after that will finish it, I +should say. And the next thing will be--you. But have you seen no one +else in all this time that you care for?" + +The young man looked aimlessly at the fleecy clouds that hung low on the +horizon. + +"No," he answered. + +"And you think you are ready for a passionate affection, if the right +person is found?" + +"I will try," he said, simply. + +Mr. Weil roused himself and touched his horse with the whip. + +"Try!" he echoed. "You will not have to try. She will carry you off your +feet, at the first go. Shirley, I have found you a superb woman, that +you _must_ love. All I want to feel sure of is, that you can control +yourself enough to behave in a reasonable manner." + +Roseleaf looked up inquiringly. + +"She belongs to an eminently respectable family," explained Archie. "Her +father is a gentleman of the most honorable type. She has a young +sister, who--" + +Roseleaf, slow at all times, had at last begun to comprehend. + +"You surely don't think--" he began. + +"Ah, that is the question! A novelist must learn so very much--a +novelist who is to depict the truth, as you are to do. Where should he +stop? What experience should he refuse, provided it may be utilized in +his work? A responsibility that is no light one will rest on me, my dear +boy, when I have introduced you to this family, and left you to your +own devices." + +Roseleaf's eyes opened wider at these mysterious suggestions, but he did +not like to make any more inquiries. Weil changed the conversation, +calling attention to the women they met, who turned their handsome heads +to look at the young man, as their equipages almost touched his. + +"What an awfully wide swath you are cutting!" was Archie's exclamation, +as the throng increased. + + + + +CHAPTER VII. + +A DINNER AT MIDLANDS. + + +True to his appointment Walker Boggs met Mr. Weil on the following +afternoon, and set out with him for Wilton Fern's office. Though +engaged, as has been already stated, in the wool trade, Mr. Fern did not +have on the premises to which these worthies repaired a very large +assortment of that product. His warehouses were in another part of the +city, and all the wool that was visible to his customers was arranged in +sample lots that would easily have gone into a barrel. Mr. Weil, +notwithstanding the description that Boggs had given of his ex-partner, +was not prepared to see such an exceedingly fine specimen of humanity as +the one introduced to him. The word "gentleman" was written in large +characters on his broad forehead and in every word he spoke. It +certainly was not often, said Archie to himself, that one encountered +that sort of man in business. + +"I have already heard something of you, sir," said Mr. Fern, affably, +but with the dignity that was a part of his nature, no more to be +discarded than his eyes. "That is, if you are the same gentleman that +has kindly offered to assist my daughter in arranging a story she has +written." + +Mr. Weil admitted the correctness of the supposition, but disclaimed any +special credit for what he had done. He explained briefly how he was +drawn into the case. The visit lasted upwards of an hour, during which +the conversation wandered from literature to business and politics, and +all sorts of things. + +Mr. Weil could not tell from Mr. Fern's manner of alluding to his +daughter's work whether he had a very high idea of its value or not. +Indeed, there was very little to be learned from this grave gentleman +that was not expressed in the language he used. He was inclined, Archie +thought, to reticence, for when there was a lull in the conversation it +was always one of the others who had to start it going. The thing that +might be counted a substantial gain, out of the whole affair, was an +invitation to dinner for the following Wednesday, in which Mr. Roseleaf +was included, and Mr. Boggs also. + +Before the Wednesday set for the formal dinner at the Ferns', Mr. Weil +had heard the whole of Miss Millicent's novel read by the lips of that +charming young woman. There was certainly something very strong in it, +in spite of its grammatical faults. It would be a very good story when +"Dr." Roseleaf had put it into a little better English. + +The meeting between Roseleaf and Millicent was most interesting to the +one who had been the means of bringing them together. The girl put out +her hand with a straightforward motion of welcome, and it was accepted +with something resembling timidity by the young man, who did not even +raise his eyes to hers. The talk that followed was nearly all her own, +Shirley's part in it being largely monosyllabic replies to her +statements and suggestions. + +When Miss Daisy was presented to both the gentlemen, for the first +time--Mr. Boggs she remembered very well--she drew their attention for a +few moments from her sister, but soon relapsed into the more +insignificant place which she seemed to prefer. She was not as large in +any way, as Millicent, and did not seem likely to become so. Her hair +was of a soft shade of light brown, and her eyes a decided blue. In the +presence of her sister she did not expect to shine, and was evidently +relieved when she could go into a corner and talk over times long past +with Walker Boggs. + +Mr. Fern came in rather late, but still before the hour announced for +dinner. He had his habitual look of quiet elegance, but withal an +expression of care about his face, that Weil attributed to the business +troubles of which Boggs had spoken. The manner of the daughters toward +him was marked by the watchful eyes of the chief conspirator. Millicent +merely looked up and said, "Papa, this is Mr. Roseleaf, of whom we have +spoken," and then when the greetings that followed were exchanged, went +on talking with those about her as if there had been no interruption. +Daisy, on the other hand, crept softly to her father's side, and putting +an arm around his neck, kissed him when she thought no one observed her. + +"You are tired, papa," she whispered. + +"No, no!" he said, brightening. "I am very well." + +It was at the table that Mr. Fern had his first conversation with +Roseleaf, and the two men got along nicely together. Shirley acquitted +himself creditably. Weil, who saw everything, noticed that the negro, +Hannibal, in superintending the service in the dining-room, lingered +more about Miss Daisy's chair than any other, and took extra pains to +see that her wants were anticipated. In spite of this, however, Mr. Fern +frequently asked his younger daughter to have more of certain dishes, as +if his mind was constantly turned in that direction. + +"How long do you think it will require to do the work you have so +generously undertaken?" asked Mr. Fern of Roseleaf, when the dessert was +reached. + +"It is impossible to say," stammered the young man. "Some weeks, at +least." + +"So I supposed," said Mr. Fern. "That being the case I wish to tender +you the hospitality of my home. It would be a great deal of trouble for +you to come every day from the city, and I know we could make you +comfortable here." + +Roseleaf was about to decline the offer with thanks, when Mr. Weil spoke +to him in a low tone. + +"Take it, by all means," he said. "It's a chance in a lifetime. You know +nothing of family life. Don't dream of refusing." + +The delay allowed Miss Millicent to add her request to that of her +father, and fearing to let his protege answer, Mr. Weil boldly spoke for +him. + +"It is a good idea," he said. "He will have his baggage brought up +to-morrow. There's nothing like being on the ground, when there's work +to be done. And, with the general permission, I am going to run out +pretty often myself, to see how things progress." + +The bright, off-hand way of the last speaker seemed to please Mr. Fern, +for he heartily seconded this suggestion. When the table was vacated, +Mr. Fern asked if he might be excused for a few minutes, while he wrote +a couple of important letters, and requested Walker Boggs to show the +guests through the grounds, where they could smoke their cigars till he +returned. + +Accordingly Weil and Roseleaf accompanied their new guide out of doors +and across an extensive lawn to an arbor at the further end, where a +handsome prospect of the Hudson unfolded itself. As Archie was wishing +for some feasible way of getting rid of Boggs, temporarily, that +gentleman espied an acquaintance in the adjacent road and went off to +speak to him. + +"Are you in love yet, you dog?" asked Archie, as soon as he and his +young friend were alone. "What! You're not! Don't let an hour pass, +then, before you are. The best of all proverbs is, 'Never put off till +to-morrow what you can do to-day.'" + +"How can I do this to-day?" was the doleful response. + +"How can you help it, you mean? There she was at the table--Titian hair, +hazel-grey eyes, lovely waist--everything. Love! _I_ could fall in love +with that girl, marry her, get a divorce and commit suicide, within +forty-eight hours." + +Even Roseleaf had to smile at this extravagant statement. + +"Do you want me to do all of those things?" he asked. + +"Only the first one, at present. If you can't do that, give up all ideas +of being a novelist and secure a place in some factory or counting-room. +Everything is ready for you. You are _persona grata_ here. Nothing can +come in your way. Oh, don't exasperate me!" + +Roseleaf haltingly said he would do his best; and the next day he came +to Midlands, prepared to spend a month or longer. + + + + +CHAPTER VIII. + +HOLDING HER HAND. + + +For the first three days Roseleaf gave most of his time to reading the +MSS. that Miss Fern had written. He could not say that he liked it, +exactly, but that was not necessary. To fill in the time, he consented +to let the girl read his own story that Gouger had rejected, though he +did this with trepidation, having a dread that she would think it +insipid. When she had finished it, however, her delight was unbounded. + +"It is lovely!" she exclaimed, in response to his inquiring eyes. "I +cannot see why they refused it. I haven't been so interested in a story +in years." + +When he had read _her_ story through he began to rewrite it, departing +as little as possible from the original. As soon as he had a chapter +finished he would give it to her, for comparison, and criticism, if she +chose to make any. She proved, however, a most charming critic, her +shafts falling mainly upon herself, for she declared that her novel +seemed unworthy of its elegant new dress. She conceived a shyness toward +this quiet youth, and blushed when the striking situations and bold +language of her tale came into the conversation. It was so different +from his own work! + +"It is too bold. I am sure it is," she said, repeatedly. "I ought to +begin again. My plot has too much freedom, too little conventionality. +People will say a very strange girl must have written it." + +And he would tell her that he did not think so; that the strength of her +ideas was very great, and that the public would find excuses enough for +anything that interested and entertained it. He even added that he +wished he possessed her knowledge, her insight into life, her +fearlessness to tread on any ground that her subject made desirable. + +Between them they were doing very good work, without doubt. Mr. Weil +took some of the completed chapters to Lawrence Gouger, who returned +them with a smile that spoke volumes. Cutt & Slashem would take the +story when it was ready, if the subsequent pages kept up to the mark of +the first ones. + +"Don't forget your own book," said Gouger, in a note he enclosed for +Roseleaf. + +Mr. Weil was not backward in accepting the cordial invitation he had had +to join the Ferns at dinner whenever he could make it convenient. +Besides this he called frequently at the wool office, and ingratiated +himself into Mr. Fern's good graces in many ways. Within a fortnight he +knew all there was to be known about wool, in which he seemed to have +conceived a great interest. In his talks with Roseleaf he spoke +learnedly on this subject, referring to the foreign and domestic +staples, like one who had made the matter a life study. + +"What a queer thing trade is!" he exclaimed, on one of these occasions. +"Here we find a man who ought to adorn an atelier, or a seat in +Congress, and yet is obliged to guide his entire existence by the price +of such a confoundedly dull thing as the hair on a sheep's back. He +votes a certain political ticket on account of the attitude of the party +on Wool; he dines off mutton and lambs' tongues; he casts his lot with +the Sheep at church. I don't know but he would feel a genuine pleasure +in having Wool pulled over his eyes. And still I am convinced that he +never ought to have been in the Wool business at all, and that +Boggs--what a drop--is right in his impression that it will eventually +swamp him." + +Roseleaf asked how Mr. Fern got into the trade in the first place. + +"Well, as I understand it, Boggs was looking for a partner. Mrs. Fern +had some cash and her husband wanted to put it into a good thing, from a +financial standpoint. They did well while they were together. When Boggs +pulled out they had a clear $200,000 apiece. Boggs--confound him!--has +his yet; Fern hasn't. He's proud as the devil, and didn't tell me this, +by any means. It would break him up completely to have to go into +bankruptcy. Really, I wish I could do something for him." + +Roseleaf looked up inquiringly. + +"Why, I've got a fair amount of money," explained Archie, "and perhaps a +lift over these hard times might be the making of him. I'm not +particularly a philanthropist, but I like this fellow wonderfully well +for such a new acquaintance. I shall give him a delicate hint in a day +or two, and if I can fix things without too much risk--we have to +protect ourselves, you know--I am willing to do so." + +This struck Shirley Roseleaf as rather odd. He had never thought about +Mr. Weil in that way. Whether he was rich or poor had never entered his +head. He began to wonder if he was very wealthy. He certainly lived +well, and had no visible occupation of the sort the census takers call +"gainful." + +"It is an interesting family, though," pursued Archie, in his rambling +way. "I wish I could get into it as you did, you rascal, and observe it +at shorter range. Even the servants are worth studying. Look at that +Hannibal; who can say that the African race is inferior when it produces +such marvels! I can hardly take my eyes off the black paragon when he is +present. How he passes the soup--as if it were some heavenly decoction, +made by the gods themselves and sent to earth by their favorite +messenger! With what grace he opens the carriage door! with what majesty +he mounts to his seat by the driver! I wonder if he has a sister. She +would be worth a journey to see. I have met such women on their native +soil, statuesque, slender, full-breasted, square-shouldered, with jars +of water on their heads and clinking silver anklets. What a cursed thing +is our American prejudice against color! No other people carries it to +such an extent. In the Latin Quarter the West India blacks are prime +favorites with the pretty grisettes." + +The young man could not help a slight shiver at this information. He did +not in the least agree with the sentiments his friend was advancing, but +neither did he think it wise to contradict him. + +"Then there is the little one--Miss Daisy"--continued Weil, branching +suddenly into that topic. "So quiet, so self-abased, as if she would not +for the world attract one glance that might be claimed by her elder +sister, who is perfectly willing to be a monopolist of attention. A nice +girl, sweet as a fresh-plucked lily. There must be treasures hidden +under all that reticence. Still waters run deep, the silent swine devour +the milk. I think I ought to investigate the child. If you are to have +that aggregation of beauty known as Millicent, what prevents me from +securing a slight hold in the affections of the junior?" + +Roseleaf shook his head in a way that might have meant almost anything. +He never could tell how much in earnest his friend was when he took up a +vein like this. Neither could he imagine little Daisy in the role of an +entertainer for such a very wise man as Archie, not only much her senior +but a thousand times her superior in knowledge and acquaintance with +things that people talk about. + +"Keep your eye on her--she will be worth watching," said Weil, with one +of his laughs at the sober face before him. "She is worth almost as much +to a rising author as the negro--not quite, but nearly. Then there is +the pater-familias; is there anything in him? No, he will be of no +service to you. And that brings us back to our superb Millicent, with +whom you must now be wildly infatuated." + +Roseleaf shook his head again. + +"No--not yet," he said. + +"But, what do you do all the time? How can you sit by the side of a +pretty girl, and kiss her cheeks, and put your arm around her, and yet +keep from falling in love?" + +The younger man gasped at each of these suggestions, like one who has +stepped into icy water and feels it gradually creeping upward. + +"I have done none of those things," he faltered. + +"None of them! Then I shall not let you stay here!" cried Archie. "What +does the girl expect? That we are going to make her reputation in the +literary world and get nothing for ourselves? I never heard such +effrontery! She refuses to give you the least opportunity, does she--the +jade!" + +More and more confused grew the other at these expressions. + +"You don't understand--you are quite in error," he articulated. +"She--she has refused me nothing, because--because I have asked +nothing." + +Mr. Weil uttered a disheartened groan. + +"But this will not do, my dear fellow!" he said. "How can you accomplish +anything unless you make a beginning? Rewriting the story that she has +written will not advance you one step on the path you profess such +anxiety to tread. That is only an excuse--a make-believe--a pretence +under which you have been given quarters in this house and allowed every +chance in creation to learn your lesson. Are you afraid of her, or what +is the matter? Does she overpower you with her beauty? Tell me where +your difficulty lies." + +But Shirley could hardly answer these apparently simple questions. He +said he feared the trouble might be in the formality of the situation. +How could Mr. Weil expect, he asked, that a spontaneous case of +love-making would develop from such a condition of things. + +"Stuff!" cried Archie, with a grimace. "If you and she were members of a +theatrical company, and were cast as a pair of lovers, you wouldn't find +so many pitfalls. You would go ahead and repeat the lines of your part, +wouldn't you? All you want is to do the same now." + +"But what _are_ the 'lines of my part?'" inquired the other, dolefully. + +"Take her hand once in yours and they will come to you," retorted Weil. + +Roseleaf reddened so much that Archie regretted the severity of his +tone, and hastened to turn the conversation to something more agreeable. +He made up his mind, however, to have a talk with Miss Fern, and at the +first opportunity he did so. It was on an afternoon when he knew +Roseleaf was in the city, and he came to the point at once, after his +own fashion. + +"How are you and my young friend getting along?" he asked her. + +"Oh, as well as possible," she responded. "I am learning to like him +more and more. I really shall be sorry when his task is done." + +Mr. Weil shrugged his shoulders. + +"There's a bit of selfishness in your words, Miss Fern," he said. "Have +you forgotten that he is not here to be useful to _you_ alone; that you +agreed to do what you could for _him_, as well?" + +The girl cast down her pretty eyes in confusion. + +"I am sure I have tried to be agreeable," she replied, gently. + +"That is not enough," replied Archie, gravely. "What he needs is +something--some one--to stir his blood, to awaken his fancy. I told you +in the first place that you ought to make him fall in love with you--for +literary reasons. He must feel a sensation stronger than mere friendship +for a woman before he can write such a story as will bring him fame." + +Miss Millicent did not grow more comfortable under this suggestion. She +remarked, after a long wait, that she did not see how the end sought was +to be accomplished. Love, she said, was not a mere expression, it was a +deep, actual entity. Two people, playing at love with each other, might +afterwards find that they were experimenting with fire. + +"I have heard," she continued, her fair cheeks growing crimson, "that +there are women--" + +Then she paused and could go no further. But he understood. + +"There are women--thousands of them," he admitted, "who would willingly +do what I ask. If it is necessary, he must go to them." + +She wanted to say that she hoped it would not come to that--she wanted +to convey to her companion the horror she felt for what she supposed his +words implied--but she could not. It was so much easier to write of +things than to talk of them to a man like him. + +"Do you call it quite fair," he asked, "to claim all and give nothing? +He does not require much. Could you not let him take your hand, and--" + +"And--" + +"Possibly, touch your lips with his?" + +Miss Fern rose to her feet with a fierce gesture. + +"Sir!" she exclaimed. + +"Very well," replied Mr. Weil, shortly, turning away. + +The girl resumed her seat, with rapidly rising and falling bosom. She +was in a quandary. The suggestion she had heard would have sounded from +any other lips like a premeditated insult. Coming from this man the +venom seemed to have vanished. + +Roseleaf felt somewhat discouraged after his latest talk with Weil. He +wanted to make a start, to do something, no matter how little, toward +the object he fully believed was to be attained. That evening while +walking with Miss Fern (for it was their frequent habit to go out of +doors unchaperoned) he found himself unconsciously taking her hand--that +hand for which he had until now felt a genuine fright. And she, after +all her resolutions never to permit anything of the sort, gave it to +him, as they strolled together along an unfrequented byway. + +"I want so much to make a Name," he was saying fervently. "I have tried +and tried to begin such a book as Mr. Gouger wants, but I cannot. Won't +you help me, dear Miss Fern? Won't you show me what I lack? I know you +can, if you will. They tell me I have had no experiences, and that I +must have--not a real affair, you know, but an inkling of what it is +like. I have tried to say things to you and have been in fear that you +would not like them, and have held my peace. But now, I can wait no +longer." + +In his exuberance Roseleaf spoke at last with ardor, and even went so +far as to attempt to put one of his arms around the waist of the fair +creature by his side. On her part Miss Fern was nearly overcome by +surprise. + +In one instant the timid young gentleman had changed into the similitude +of a most ardent swain; but in the next he became again his natural +self, with the added confusion resulting from his excited and mortified +state. + +"Let me take you home," he said, when he saw that she could find no +words even to chide him. "Let me take you home; and to-morrow I will go +away." + +Go away! She did not like that idea! Her book was not yet finished, for +one thing; and besides he was a nice young fellow, and had meant no +offense. + +"There is no reason why you should go," she stammered. "I forgive you, I +am sure." + +"Do you!" cried Roseleaf, grasping her hand again in his joy. "You are +kindness itself to say so. I must appear very stupid" (here he half put +his arm around her again, checking himself with difficulty from +completeing the movement) "and dull, and wanting in manners, but you are +the only young lady I have ever known on terms of the least intimacy." + +Miss Fern replied that she did not mind what had occurred, and hoped he +would forget it. She added that she would do anything she could for +him, and had the most earnest wish that they should be friends. + +At the gate they paused, and in some way their eyes were looking into +each other. The girl laughed, a relief to feelings that had been for the +past ten minutes somewhat overcharged. + +"Well, you have made a beginning," she said, mischievously, for she +wanted to drive the sober expression from his clouded face. + +"A beginning?" he echoed. + +"Yes," she said. "You have held my hand." + +He crimsoned. + +"You said you would forgive me," he murmured. + +"With all my heart," she responded, putting the hand in his again. + +He felt a thrill go through him, but it was a pleasant sensation. + +"I came very near putting my arm around you," said he, looking away from +her. "Do you forgive that, too?" + +She took the hand away and struck him playfully on the cheek with the +palm of it. + +Then, before he surmised what she intended, she ran brightly up the +steps of the house and vanished. + + + + +CHAPTER IX. + +"DAISY, MY DARLING!" + + +It was Roseleaf's full intention to say something about this adventure +to his instructor in the art of love, Mr. Archie Weil, but somehow he +was not able to summon the requisite courage. He had a delicate sense +that such a thing ought not to be repeated, where it might by any +possibility bring a laugh. And about this time the novelist's attention +began to be attracted toward the younger sister, who had till then +almost entirely escaped his observation. + +He noticed particularly the ceaseless devotion that the black servant of +the family exhibited toward her. She might have been a goddess and he a +devotee; a queen and he her slave. Hannibal moved about the girl like +her very shadow, ready to anticipate her slightest wants, while Daisy +seemed to take this excess of attention as a matter of course. + +Millicent constantly showed her dislike for the servant. + +"I don't see how you can endure to have him touch you," she said to +Daisy. "He knows better than to lay his hands on me. I have told papa +often that I want him discharged, and he ought to consider my wishes a +little." + +To this Daisy answered that the boy, as she persisted in calling the +giant, meant well and was certainly intelligent. Her father did not like +to change servants, for it took him a long time to get used to new +ones. So Millicent tossed her head, returned to her collaboration with +Mr. Roseleaf, and things went on as usual. + +Imperceptibly Shirley began to take an interest in Daisy. She did not +run away from him, and he discovered, much to his surprise, that she was +worth talking to. She was not exactly the child he had supposed, and she +had the full value of her eighteen years in her pretty head. He got into +the habit of taking short strolls with her, on evenings when Millicent +was occupied with Archie, and when, as often happened, Mr. Fern was away +with Hannibal in the city. There was a sequestered nook at the far end +of the lawn, in which the pair found retreat. Before he realized it, +Roseleaf had developed a genuine liking for these rambles, and was +pleased when the evenings came that brought Mr. Weil to dinner. + +Daisy was ingenuous, to a degree, if surface indications counted for +anything. The words that flowed from her red lips were as unstudied as +the pretty attitudes she assumed, or the exceedingly plain but very +becoming dresses that she wore. After she once got "used" to Roseleaf +she treated him quite as if she had been five years his senior. + +"Are you a rich man?" she asked him, on one of those early autumn +evenings that they passed together. + +Her manner was as simple as if she had said that it looked like rain, +and his answer was hardly less so. + +"No, Daisy. I have not much property, but I intend to earn more, +by-and-by. Did you think, because I seem so idle, that I was a +millionaire?" + +"No," she answered, a shade of disappointment in her face. "I only +wanted, in case you had plenty of money, to get you to lend me some." + +He stared at her through the half-light. Her features were turned in a +direction that did not reveal them very well. What did she want of +money! + +"How much do you need?" he inquired, wondering if it was within his +power to oblige her. + +"Oh, too much, I am afraid. And I cannot answer any questions, because +the object I have is a secret. I don't think my plan very feasible, for +it might be years and years before I could pay it back. You won't mind +my speaking of it, will you?" + +Curiosity grew stronger, and as politely as possible he renewed his +question as to how much the girl needed to carry out her plan. + +"I don't know, exactly," she said, thoughtfully. "Perhaps a thousand +dollars a year for five or six years; it might take less." + +"It is a great deal," he admitted. "Does your father know what you +contemplate?" + +The girl changed color at once. + +"Oh, no. I should not like to have him, either. He would say it was very +foolish. And yet I am sure it would not be. The money would do much +good--yes, ever so much." + +The young man thought hard for a few moments. A desire to see a brighter +light flash into those young eyes possessed him. He debated seriously +the idea of handing her his patrimony, as he would have given her a +pound of candy if she had wanted it. + +"I might give you part," he said, after a pause. "Perhaps your thousand +for the first year or two." + +She looked him full in the face, and put both her hands in his +impulsively. + +"You are too good," she exclaimed, with fervor. "But you cannot afford +so large a gift. No, I would only take it if you had a very large sum, +and could not possibly miss it. I asked carelessly. I should not have +done so--I was selfish to think of such a thing." + +"I want to speak to you about something, also," said Roseleaf, after a +strained pause. "I have noticed of late that your father has some +trouble on his mind." + +She started suddenly. + +"Ah!" was all she said. + +"And I have wondered if there was anything I could do to--to aid +_him_--to relieve him. Because, I would like it very much if I could, on +account of--of--" + +She looked up inquiringly. + +"I have been so much a member of your family, in a certain way, that a +grief like this appeals strongly to me," he said, haltingly. + +She paled slightly as she repeated his words. + +"A grief?" + +"Well, distress, annoyance, whatever it may be called. If there is +anything I can do, I shall be more than happy." + +The girl sat for some moments with her eyes on the ground. + +"He _is_ troubled," she said, finally. "I am glad to talk with you, for +I cannot get him to tell me anything. He is greatly troubled, and I am +worried beyond expression. I can't understand it. He has always confided +in me so thoroughly, but now he shakes his head and says it is nothing, +trying to look brighter even when the tears are almost ready to fall. +What can it be, Mr. Roseleaf? He has no companions outside of his office +and this house? He sits by himself, and isn't a bit like he used to be +and every day I think he grows worse." + +Roseleaf asked if Daisy had talked much with her sister about it. + +"No," she said, with a headshake. "I don't believe Millie has noticed +anything. She is so occupied with her literary matters"--there was a +sarcastic touch upon the word, that did not escape the listener--"she +has no time for such things. I hope you won't think I mean to criticise +her," added the young girl, with a blush. "I know you care a great deal +for my sister, and--" + +She stopped in the midst of the sentence, leaving it unfinished. And +Roseleaf thought how interesting this girl had become. + +"Let me confide in you, Daisy," he said, in his softest tone. "I do not +care 'a great deal,' nor even a very little for your sister. You see," +he went on, in response to the startled look that greeted him, "I am to +be a novelist. To be successful in writing fiction, I have been told +that I ought to be in love--just once--myself. And I came here and tried +very hard to fall in love with Miss Millicent; and I simply cannot." + +Daisy's fresh young laugh rang out on the air of the evening. + +"Poor man!" she cried, with mock pity. "And hasn't she tried to help +you?" + +"No. She hasn't. And as soon as I get the work done I have commenced for +her, I am going away." + +The child--she was scarcely more than that--grew whiter, but the shadows +of the evening hid the fact from her companion. + +"You ought not to go," she said, slowly, and rather faintly, "until you +have made another trial." + +"Oh! It is useless!" he replied. + +"Is it that you cannot love--Millie--or that you cannot love--any one?" + +He hesitated, puzzled, himself, at the question. + +"I never did love any one--any woman," he confessed, "and perhaps I +never shall. But your sister seems peculiarly hard to love. Yet she is a +very handsome girl and equipped with a mind of unusual calibre." + +Daisy acknowledged this description of her sister's charms. She remarked +that it was strange that such a combination did not suffice to +accomplish the desired result. + +"There are people who do find her entertaining," she added. "Mr. Weil is +one of them." + +"Oh, Archie!" said Roseleaf. "He finds everything entertaining. It is +nothing worth remarking. She is the exact description of his ideal in +feminine face and form. He once gave me the list of the excellencies of +a 'perfect woman,' and your sister has them all." + +The younger Miss Fern had her own opinions about this matter. She +thought the innocent man at her side had not quite gauged the interest +that Mr. Weil took in her family. + +"I will make a proposition," she said, with a light laugh, when they had +talked longer upon the subject. "I am afraid it won't seem worth much to +you, and perhaps you can do better; but why can't you stay here, and--if +Millie won't do--make love to _me_?" + +Darkness is responsible for many things. In the light, Daisy could not +have uttered those words, even in jest. There, when the sun had set and +the stars were not yet on duty, she found the courage to make that +suggestion. + +"You are very kind," he stammered, when he grasped her meaning. "But I +do not think it will answer. I am afraid love cannot be pushed to any +point without its own initiative." + +"That is probably the case with _real_ love," replied the girl, "but an +imitation that would serve your purpose might be evolved in the way I +have indicated. For instance, you could take my hand in yours--like +this--and I could lean toward you in--this way. And then, if you had +sufficient courage--" + +Before he dreamed of doing it, it was done! He had kissed her on her +tempting lips, placed within an inch of his own. + +"You are too good a scholar," she pouted, rising to her feet in some +confusion. "I did not give you leave to do that." + +"I beg your pardon most humbly," he answered, with intense contrition. +"May I assure you that the act was wholly involuntary and that I am very +sorry for it?" + +She turned and surveyed him in the shadow. + +"Are--you--_very_--sorry?" she repeated. + +"Yes." + +"Why?" + +"Because I have made you angry." + +"Do I seem angry?" + +"At least, I have injured your feelings." + +Her face was close to his again. + +"Well, I forgive you. There, let us make up." + +She raised herself on the tips of her toes and kissed him twice. + +All the blood in this young man's body seemed to rush to his head and +then back with violence to his heart. + +"_Daisy!_" he stammered. "_Daisy!_" + +But she sprang away as he tried to embrace her, and standing two yards +off, tauntingly cried that he did not know what love was, and that no +one could ever teach him. Taking up the challenge he started toward her. +She ran away, he in pursuit. She had gone but a few steps when she +tripped over an object in the path and went down. In trying to stop +himself Roseleaf fell by her side. + +"Daisy!" he cried. "Are you injured?" + +She did not answer. In the darkness he saw her lying there so still that +he was frightened. He caught her passionately in his arms, and knew no +better way to bring her to consciousness than to rain kisses on her +cheeks. As might be expected this only served to prolong her swoon, +which was not a very genuine one, if the truth must be told, and it was +some seconds before she opened her eyes and caught him, as one might +say, in the act. + +"How dare you!" she demanded, shrinking away from him. + +"Daisy, my darling!" he answered, his voice tremulous. "I thought you +were dead, and I knew for the first time how dearly, how truly I loved +you!" + +She laughed, not very heartily. She had hurt herself truly in her fall, +and her feminine nerves were jarred. + +"You are doing nicely," she said. "For a beginner, one could ask nothing +better. And now, if you will help to rise, I think it would be more +proper." + +"No." He spoke with force and passion. "You must not think I am +trifling. _I love you!_ Yes, I love you! _I worship you!_" + +"I do not see," she remarked, insisting in spite of him that she must +assume a standing position, "how you differ in your expressions from the +lovers I have read of in novels. It is quite time that we returned to +the house. To-morrow, if you like, I will give you another lesson." + +Shirley was a picture of utter despair. His new sensations almost +overwhelmed him. In one second the dead arteries in his body had leaped +into the fullest life. The touch of that young maiden's lips had +galvanized him. He could not bear to leave her with those mocking words. +But at that moment a voice was heard in the direction of the residence. + +"Miss--Dai-sy! Miss--Dai-sy!" + +It was Hannibal, who had returned from a drive with Mr. Fern. They could +see him dimly coming across the lawn with the girl's cloak in his hand. +Daisy, with one quick grasp of the fingers that hung close to hers, said +good-night to her companion, and started in the direction of the +servant. If she intended--as seemed probable--to pretend she was out +alone, Roseleaf did not mean to share in that deception, and he followed +close behind her. + +"Here I am, Hannibal," called Daisy. "Ah, you have my coat. It was very +kind of you. Has papa come home? I am coming in. I did not think how +late it was." + +The negro stopped as he saw the strollers, and knew that they had +undoubtedly been together. What more he suspected no one can say with +certainty. But he threw the cloak upon the grass that bordered the +pathway and turned on his heel without a word. + +"Confound his impudence!" exclaimed Roseleaf, when he had recovered +sufficiently from his surprise to speak. "I have a good notion to +follow him and box his ears." + +The soft hand of the girl was on his sleeve in a moment. + +"Say nothing to him--_please!_" she answered. "He--he is very thoughtful +for me--of my health--and I was careless. Papa must have sent him." + +The touch on his arm mollified the young man at once. He tried to make +out the lines of the pretty face that was so near him and yet so far +away. + +"We are to study again to-morrow, then," he said, taking up her +statement with an assumed air of gayety. "At what hour?" + +But she broke away from him abruptly, and ran into the house without a +word. Hannibal stood in the doorway and Roseleaf thought he +distinguished harsh sounds from the negro's lips; but this seemed so +incredible that he conceived his senses at fault. + +Looking at his watch the novelist saw that it was still early enough to +take a stroll by himself and ponder over his new happiness--or misery, +which was it?--under the open sky. It was two hours later that his +latchkey turned in the door, and in that time he had resolved either to +make Daisy Fern his wife or commit suicide in the most expeditious +fashion. + + + + +CHAPTER X + +"OH, SO MANY, MANY MAIDS!" + + +The only disagreeable thing about falling in love with Daisy was that +Roseleaf felt compelled to reveal the truth to Archie Weil. He believed +he was bound to do this by a solemn contract which he had no moral right +to ignore. Perhaps Weil might claim that he had no business to fall in +love with one sister when his "manager" had picked out the other for +this operation. Be that as it may, there was no use in evading the +question. It must be talked over, be the result what it might. + +"Well, I know what love is now," was the abrupt way in which the young +man opened the subject on the following afternoon. + +He had ridden to the city, as Weil was not expected at the residence of +Mr. Fern that day. The hope he had formed the previous evening of +getting another interview with Daisy had not materialized, she having +gone on some short journey before he could intercept her. + +"You do!" was the equally abrupt reply, uttered in a tone that betrayed +undoubted astonishment. "What do you mean?" + +Roseleaf reddened. + +"It came to me all at once, last evening," he said, avoiding the gaze of +his companion. "We were down at the end of the lawn, you know--" + +Archie interrupted him with a sudden shout. + +"Not _Daisy_!" + +"Yes." + +"You are in love with _Daisy_!" + +Roseleaf bowed. + +"Upon my word!" + +There was nothing in any of these expressions that conveyed the +information which the younger man craved, namely, whether his friend +approved what he had announced, but he stole a look at him and saw that +he appeared more astounded than angry. + +"You dear boy," he said, "I don't know what to say to you. You blush +like a maiden over the acknowledgment. I am half inclined to believe you +are the girl in the case, and your partner in love some great, strapping +fellow on whose bosom you intend to pillow your coy head. So it is +Daisy, eh? And last night it came to you? Tell me how it happened." + +Comforted in a measure by the good nature of his friend, Roseleaf +proceeded to give the outlines of what had occurred, suppressing the +more intimate facts with which the luckier reader is acquainted. He +admitted the touch of hands, but did not mention the pressure of lips to +lips. He told of the girl's swoon, but said nothing of the extraordinary +measures adopted to bring her to her senses. But, while he made no +insinuations, nor pretended to see through the meshes in this net, the +experience of Mr. Weil served him in good stead. He could fill in the +vacant places in the story with substantial correctness. + +"I don't know what Miss Millicent will say to all this," he remarked, +when the recital came to a pause. + +"I think she was just beginning to like you a little herself. Most of +our talk last evening was about you, and when I mentioned, as I took my +leave, that you were probably out walking with Daisy, I could see +distinct traces of jealousy. I want to be fair with my client. I told +her that you came there to learn love from her, not from her little +sister. If all this should result in breaking her heart, I don't see how +I could excuse myself. And the other one, she seems such a child, I +never thought of her in that connection. Why, how old is she--not over +eighteen, I think." + +Roseleaf answered that Daisy would be nineteen on her next birthday, an +ingenious way of stating age that was not original with him. + +"All right," said Archie, digesting this statement slowly. "And now, +what is your programme?" + +Roseleaf looked surprised at the business-like nature of the question. + +"I mean to secure her consent to marry me, as soon as possible," he +said. + +"And then?" + +"Why, see her father, I suppose. Isn't that the most important thing to +do?" + +Mr. Weil shook his head decidedly. + +"Not by any means. You must not act with undue haste. Mr. Fern would say +she was too young to think of matrimony, a proposition you could not +successfully dispute. Besides, should he happen to give his consent and +appoint a week from Wednesday for the happy occasion, see what a mess +it would put you in." + +The suggestion caused the brightest of smiles to illumine the +countenance of the listener. + +"It would make me the happiest of mortals!" he cried. "There is nothing +that could prevent my summoning the clergyman and securing the prize I +desire." + +Mr. Weil grunted. + +"H--m! And in the meanwhile what would become of your great novel?" + +This question brought a sober pause to the young novelist. + +"I could write it after my wedding," he answered, finally. + +"Could you? You could write nothing at all then--nothing that any one +would pay a cent to read. I have told you from the start that what you +want is a _grande passion_, something to stir your soul to its depths. +You are on the verge of that experience. Already you have had a glimpse +of what it will be like. For the first time the touch of a woman's +fingers has driven sleep from your eyelids. No, you didn't tell me you +laid awake all night, but I saw it by looking at you. You can shut +yourself up in your room now, and rhapsodize over the dear face, the +lovely mouth, the soft voice of your beloved. In another week, if this +keeps on, you can write like a combination of George Eliot (after she +met Lewes) and Amelie Rives (before her marriage). A month later, Gouger +might rave over your productions, for you will be on the Matterhorn of +bliss unsatisfied." + +A slight laugh, at his own excess of description, issued from the lips +of Mr. Weil, but the countenance of his companion was as firm as a rock. + +"You are right," said Roseleaf, gravely. "Already I see the vast +difference between this sensation of love and the thing I imagined it to +be when I wrote those silly pages that Cutt & Slashem did so well to +reject. But I am torn between two desires. I want to write my +novel--until yesterday I thought no wish could be so great. And I also +want my wife." He breathed the word with a simple reverence that +affected even the flinty heart of his hearer. "I shall never rest easy +until I find her wholly mine, to love, honor and cherish while God gives +me breath!" + +The hand of the elder man dropped heavily on the table by his side. + +"_Good!_" he exclaimed. "_Very_ good! You could not have said it better. +There is an opportunity before you to accomplish both of these things. I +only wish to impress upon you the fact that they must come in the order +I have indicated, or one of them will never come at all. Write your +story while the fever of passion is on you. The dead calm of married +life would only bring the sort of novel that the shelves are already +piled with, nauseating to the public and a drug in the hands of the +publishers." + +Roseleaf doubted the full correctness of these conclusions. He thought, +with that dear girl by his side, he could write with all the fervor of a +sweetheart, for his affection was to have no boundary, no limit, no end. +But he had a high opinion of the abilities of Mr. Weil, and he had no +idea of disputing the conclusions of that wise guide. + +"Do you think she will accept me?" he asked, wistfully, returning to the +main question. "It came so sudden, and there was very little said, and +it was late; and then Hannibal came after her, and she went into the +house. Everything was left in a state of uncertainty." + +"Did nothing show whether you were indifferent to her?" was the wily +interrogation that followed. "Usually I believe something conveys the +sweet word 'hope' to the waiting one. And what do you say about +Hannibal? That he came to call your charmer and took her away from you?" + +Without reserve the young man repeated what had happened. Archie seemed +deeply interested, but whatever his thoughts he did not express them at +the time. + +"And that reminds me of another thing," said Roseleaf. "Have you noticed +anything strange about Mr. Fern?" + +"Yes," said Mr. Weil, "I have noticed. I wondered if you had done the +same. Have you discovered what the trouble is?" + +"No, and Daisy doesn't know, either. Indeed, she is much distressed +about it. Remember, this is a secret between us, for perhaps I had no +right to talk of their affairs. He is in a state of great depression, +and as he is so regular in his habits I can't imagine what to lay it to. +You are so shrewd, couldn't you find out?" + +Mr. Weil rose and took a few paces up and down the room. + +"You are the fellow to do that, not I," he said, presently. "Yes, hear +me out. You are in a sense a member of his family, and would have a +natural right to allude to the state of his health. Then, if you were to +put in a word about Miss Daisy--why, you might kill several birds with +one stone." + +Roseleaf looked much puzzled. + +"I thought," he said, "that you wanted me to postpone the matter of my +marriage as long as possible." + +"Your marriage, yes. But not the preliminaries. They may require a dozen +bouts with the old gentleman. The first time he will probably laugh you +out of the room as a silly young noodle; the second he will say that he +has nothing against you personally, but that his 'baby' is too infantile +to think of such things for ten years yet; the third he will begin to +see the situation in its right light, and after that it will be only a +matter of detail. All these things will be of the greatest value to you +in the novel you are going to write, and you must not on your life miss +a single one of them. + +"Drop into the wool shop, catch his royal highness there, and for the +first thing express solicitude for his health. Unless he is on his guard +more than is likely you ought to catch some slight straw to show what +ails him. Then follow it up with a word or two about Miss Daisy, and you +will have spent a good afternoon, even if he doesn't smile on your suit +at first hand, and take you to his manly breast as his long-lost +son-in-law." + +The reasonings set forth in these propositions were so evidently correct +that Roseleaf resolved to adopt them just as soon as he could bring +himself into the proper mood. In the meantime, however, he wanted to +have a little further talk with Daisy, for he could hardly ask her +father for her hand without the semblance of permission on her part. He +tried to remember all she had said to him at the foot of the lawn, and +was compelled to admit that it was very little indeed. The only things +he was certain of were the kisses, but his experiences were so slight +that he could not tell how much weight to give even these. + +That evening he tried his best to get a word with her alone, but she +eluded him, and he was obliged to go to the boudoir of her sister and +read over that young lady's MSS. as it stood revised by his careful +hands. + +"Well, another chapter will finish it," said Miss Fern, when he put down +the pages. "And then Mr. Gouger will decide whether Cult & Slashem +consider it worth printing." + +"Yes," he answered, gravely. "They will print _your_ story now, without +doubt. But _I_ am as far as ever from satisfying their requirements." + +Millicent thought how supremely selfish she must seem, talking always of +her own hopes and doing nothing to help the one who had made her success +possible. She saw that he wore a dejected look, and she began to +sincerely pity him. When our own ships are safely in sight of the +harbor we have more time to dwell on the derelicts in which the property +of our friends is embarked. + +"Perhaps, when we get this disposed of, I can help you," she suggested. + +It was nearly a week before Roseleaf could get another talk with Daisy, +a week that tried him to the utmost, for he could think of nothing but +her, and could not understand her reasons for treating him so strangely. +At last he wrote her a letter, giving it to Hannibal to deliver, in +which he said that he was about to return to his city lodging and wanted +to know if she meant him to leave without a kind word at parting. He +thought the negro looked peculiar as he took the note, half as if he did +not intend to accept the commission to deliver it; but he concluded that +this must be imagination. He wondered why Archie Weil took such a fancy +to Hannibal. If Roseleaf was lucky enough to claim Daisy as his wife, he +would never have that figure darken his door. + +The letter must have been taken to its destination without delay, for an +answer was brought in the course of an hour, stating in the briefest +language that Miss Daisy would await him in the parlor, after lunch. + +At the table Miss Fern was present, as usual, but not her father, his +business in the city keeping him away at that hour. At meals it was +Daisy's habit to say little, leaving the conversation to her sister and +whoever else happened to be there. At the end of this particular lunch +Millicent went up stairs to her chamber and Daisy betook herself to the +parlor, followed a few minutes later by the young man. + +"Why have you treated me so coldly?" were his first words, when he found +himself alone with her. + +"Oh, dear, that is a very bad beginning!" she said, smiling. "I shall +have to instruct you in some of the simplest things, I see already. When +you wish to make friends with a woman, don't begin by scolding her. I am +here because you wrote that you wished a kind word. Don't give me too +many cross ones, please." + +He sighed impatiently. + +"Daisy," he exclaimed. "I hope you are not going to make fun of me! I +have passed a most miserable week. After the glimpse of heaven you gave +me, that evening--" + +She put on an air of mock surprise. + +"Did I do that! It was much more than I intended, then. I fear you are +inclined to use extravagant metaphors, Mr. Roseleaf. But, never mind. +You are going away, and I am very, very sorry. However, as you came here +on Millie's account, and not on mine, I suppose I have no right to say +so." + +The fair brow of the young man was a mass of wrinkles. + +"I can't understand why you speak so lightly," he answered. "You know--I +told you--that I love you--that there is nothing in all the world so +dear to me--that I want your promise to be my wife. I can't go from here +without that consolation. Daisy, I ask you, in all sincerity, to say +that as soon as your father's consent is obtained, you will name a day +when you will marry me." + +The smile faded from the girl's lips. Something brought to her mind a +very sad reflection. + +"You ask a great deal," she said. "Much more, I think, than you realize. +Until a week ago I was nothing to you. We lived under the same roof, we +took our evening strolls together, we talked like the commonest +acquaintances, and that was all. Then, in a moment, you discovered that +your heart was on fire. I have not ascertained what made the marvellous +change. I am sure you cannot tell yet if it be a genuine and lasting +one. Were I inclined to believe I ever should be willing to go to the +lengths of which you speak, I should assuredly want time for the +maturest reflection. In the first place, I know almost nothing about +you. One would not engage a--a coachman--without more inquiry. How can a +girl promise to trust her entire future to a man with whom she has but a +casual acquaintance? Such things need consideration. I know my father +would say so. And if he heard only the nicest things about you, I doubt +if he would like to have you take me from him--especially now, when his +heart is heavy and he leans so much on my love and care. No, you are in +too great haste." + +His impatience grew to boiling heat as he listened. How could she find +so many reasons, and (he was obliged to confess) such sensible ones, to +bring against him? + +"There is one thing you _can_ do," he said, with an attitude of deep +dejection. "You can tell me if you love me." + +She tossed her head with a feminine movement that was wholly charming. + +"Yes, I could tell you that, but it would be a very improper thing, +under the circumstances, provided I was able to give you the answer you +seem to wish. If I did care for you, would I like to say so in definite +words when anything further might turn out to be impossible? A girl +would not wish to have a man that she was never to marry going about +with the recollection that she said, 'I love you.'" + +"Then you can say nothing at all?" he asked sadly. "Shall I be uncertain +whether at the end of my term in purgatory I am to be raised to a state +of bliss or dashed into the Inferno?" + +She laughed; a delicious little laugh. + +"You are getting hyperbolical," she answered. "There are ten thousand +better women than I." + +"But I don't want them," pleaded the young man. "Did you ever read the +lines of Jean Ingelow: + + "'Oh so many, many, many + Maids and yet my heart undone. + What to me are all or any? + I have lost--my--one.'" + +Daisy replied that the sentiment was very sweet, and added that when a +lover could quote such admirable poetry with accuracy, there was hope +for him. Do what he would, Roseleaf could not make her see that +everything in his future life depended on "one little word" from her. +She persisted that he was misled by the violence of his first +affection, and that if he would only let a month or two pass he would +discover that his pulse would fall off a number of beats to the minute. + +"And is that what you want?" he asked, reproachfully. "Would you like to +have me come back two months later, and tell you my love had ceased?" + +"Yes, if it was the truth. How much better than to learn it after my +vows had been pledged and I was bound to you for the rest of my days!" + +He rose and went with quick steps to her side, catching up her hand and +covering it with kisses. She did her best to stop him, whispering, with +a glance toward the door, that they might be interrupted at any minute. + +"By whom!" he retorted, stung at her coldness. "Your sister has gone up +stairs, and there is no one else in the house." + +"Hannibal might come in," she said, in a low tone. "He has no way of +knowing that I do not wish to be interrupted." + +He grew angry at the mention of that name. But the warning had its +effect and he sat down, nearer to her than before, his heart beating +rapidly. + +"I hate the fellow!" he exclaimed bitterly. "It is a good thing I am +going away, or I should strike him some day for his insolence!" + +Daisy paled at the vehemence of her companion. + +"Has he been insolent to you?" she murmured. + +"To me? He would not dare! What angers me is the way he speaks to the +rest of you. He came with your cloak that night, acting as if he was +your master, instead of your servant. I have heard him speak to Mr. +Fern in a way that made me want to kick him! Why does your father bear +it? Why do you? Has Hannibal some mysterious hold on his situation?" + +The girl heard him patiently, though the roses did not come at once to +her white cheek. + +"I am afraid," she said, when he had finished his tirade, "that you +despise him for his color. It is a prejudice that seems to me--and to my +father--unchristian and uncharitable. Perhaps, in the anxiety to make +Hannibal forget that God gave him a darker skin than ours, we may have +gone to the other extreme, and treated him with too great consideration. +But I think you overstate the case." + +Her gentle words smote upon the ears that heard them, and in a moment +Roseleaf was affected by the most lively contrition. Without attempting +to excuse himself he begged her pardon, which she readily granted. + +"When do you leave us?" she asked. + +"To-morrow morning." + +"But you will call--occasionally?" + +"If I may." + +His tone was so sad that Daisy assured him he ought to have no doubt of +that. + +"I understand," she added, "that you have probably helped Millie to a +reputation that she craves above everything, and she ought not to prove +entirely ungrateful. We have enjoyed your stay here, and shall be most +sorry to have you go. I should be glad to think you would honor us with +your company to dinner not less often than once each week." + +For the first time a ray of light came into his face. + +"Oh, may I?" he cried. "Then I shall not be shut off entirely from +seeing you?" + +"No, indeed," she answered. "Father likes you and Mr. Weil too well--you +will bring him, of course. Once a week, at least--if it were twice it +wouldn't do any harm; and if it were three times--" + +His face was now one bright beam of light. + +"Daisy," he cried. "I believe you do not hate me after all!" + +"I hope you never thought I did," she responded. "Why is it that a man +can see no middle ground between positive dislike and marriage? I expect +to like a good many men in the course of my life, but I can only marry a +very few of them." + +He was obliged to laugh at this, and to say that she would only marry +_one_, if he had _his_ way. Before they had finished with this subject +Roseleaf was in a state of high good nature, though he had little +apparently upon which to base the rise in his spirits. + +"Can't I say something--just a hint, if no more, to your father?" he +asked, getting down again to business. + +"Pretty risky!" she answered, sententiously. "He wouldn't give you much +encouragement I fear." + +The young man caught eagerly at the word. + +"You _fear_!" he echoed. "God bless you, Daisy!" + +Bearing in mind what she had previously said about the unlocked doors, +he did not attempt to suit the action to the phrase. But his happy face +spoke volumes. + +"You had best say very little to father at present," said Daisy, +soberly. "He is most unhappy." + +"I wish I knew what troubled him!" he exclaimed. + +"I wish so, too, if you could aid him," she answered, earnestly. + +"Who knows but I may?" he asked, with a smile that she hoped would prove +prophetic. + + + + +CHAPTER XI. + +ARCHIE PAYS ATTENTION. + + +Roseleaf took rooms at his old lodgings in the city, and set in earnest +about the work of beginning his great novel. He had interviews with Mr. +Gouger, at which he detailed the slight thread of plot which he already +had in mind, profiting by the critic's shrewd suggestions. It was +decided that he should portray, at the beginning, a youth much like +himself, who was to fall in love with an angelically pure maiden. The +outline of their respective characters were to be sketched with care, +and sundry obstacles to their union were to be developed as the story +progressed. Gouger warned his young friend not to write too fast, and to +content himself for the present with delineating the phase of love with +which he had become familiar. + +"Later on," he said, "when your hero finds that this girl is not all his +bright fancy painted her--when it is proved beyond a doubt that she has +played him false, that she has another lover--" + +Roseleaf turned pale. + +"But that will never be!" he interrupted. + +"It will, of course--in the story," corrected Gouger. "She will lead him +a race that will make him an enemy to the entire sex, if she is used for +all the dramatic effect possible. People expect to find immaculate +purity in the earlier chapters of a story, as they do in small children. +With the progress of the action they look for something more exciting. +To sketch a seraph who remains one would only be to repeat the failure +you made in your other effort--the one you brought to me the day I met +you first. It is not the glory of heaven that attracts audiences to our +churches, but the dramatic quality of hell. A sermon without a large +spice of the devil in it would be much worse than a rendition of Hamlet +minus the Prince. Put your heroine in the clouds, if you will, at the +beginning. The higher she goes, the greater will be her fall, and the +greater, consequently, your triumph." + +The young novelist shivered as he listened to these expressions. How +could he build a heroine on the model of Daisy Fern, and conceive the +possibility that she would ever allow her white robes to touch the +earth? He might have constructed such a plot with Millicent as the +central figure, though that would be by no means easy; but Daisy! +Impossible! He asked the critic if it would not do to send the hero of +the tale to perdition, while leaving his sweetheart immaculate to the +close. + +"No," said Gouger, decidedly. "A man's fall is not much of a fall, any +way you put it. The public is not interested in such matters. It demands +a female sacrifice, like some of the ancient gods, and it will not be +appeased with less. I expect you to be new and original in your +treatment of the theme, but the subject itself is as old as fiction. You +have too little imagination, as I have told you before. You must +cultivate that talent. Having conceived your paragon, imagine her placed +under temptations she cannot resist; surround her with an environment +from which she cannot break; place her in situations that leave her no +escape." + +Roseleaf shook his head. + +"I am afraid I never shall be able to do it," he said. + +"Pshaw! Don't talk of failure at this stage of the game. All you have to +do is to introduce upon the scene a thoroughly unprincipled man of good +address, who is fertile in expedients. You will find your model for that +among a dozen of your acquaintances. Why, take Archie Weil, and hold him +in your mind till you are saturated with him." + +What did Mr. Gouger mean? That Mr. Weil would actually do these dreadful +things, would in his own person perpetrate the outrage of winning a pure +girl to shame. It seemed childish to ask such a question, and yet such a +meaning could easily be taken from what the critic had said. No, no! All +he could have meant was that Mr. Weil might serve as a figure on which +to lay these sins--that he could be carried in the writer's mind, as a +costumer uses a stuffed frame to hang garments on while in the process +of manufacture. + +"Then there is Boggs," added Gouger, with a laugh. "You ought to find +some place for a fellow like him, if only for the comic parts of your +novel, and there must be a little humor in a book that is to suit the +mass. A writer for a magazine said recently with much truth, 'He who +would hit the popular taste must aim low.' I think Boggs could furnish +the cheap fun for an ordinary novel, without too great a wear on the +writer. Go ahead, my boy. Write a half dozen chapters in your own +idyllic way, and then get Archie to take you to a few places where your +mind will be turned to opposite scenes. It takes all sorts of edibles to +suit the modern palate." + +So Roseleaf wrote, slowly, patiently, with devotion to his art, until he +had completed five chapters of his story. And Gouger read it and went +into ecstacies, declaring it the best foundation he had ever seen for a +most entrancing romance. + +"He has wrought his people up to such a superlative height," said the +critic to Mr. Weil, "that the _chute_ will be simply tremendous! How +simply, how elegantly his sentences flow! If he can handle the necessary +wickedness that must follow, the sale of 'Uncle Tom's Cabin,' or 'Thou +Shalt Not,' will be eclipsed without the least doubt. But, the question +still is, _can_ he?" + +"There's no such question," was the response. "He must, that's the way +to put it. Confound it, he shall! And the next thing for him to do is +to take a few visits with me to the underground regions, where he can +get such slight shocks to his literary system as will enable him to take +up the vein he must work." + +During this time Roseleaf did not forget the invitation he had received +to dine with the Ferns. It did him good to see Daisy, although he could +not now get her for a moment to himself. He sighed to her over the +table, and across the parlor, after the party had retired to that part +of the house, and she answered him with little bright smiles that acted +like an emollient on his hurt spirit. He had never found the courage to +beard her father in his den--of wool--and was not even sure that the +affair had reached a stage where anything could be gained by taking such +a step. What he wanted was a word of assurance from Daisy that she would +wait for him till he had made a Name in literature, or proved his +ability in some definite manner. There was no indication that any one +else was in the way; everything pointed to a contrary probability. But +there is nothing so desolate as the heart of a lover whose fair one is +just beyond his reach. + +Mr. Weil accompanied Shirley on most of these visits, and knew very well +what was going on. None of the glances exchanged between the young +people were so much their exclusive property as they believed. Had +Archie possessed eyes in the back and sides of his head, he could have +seen little more than he did. While appearing to devote his entire +attention to Mr. Fern and Millicent--principally the former, he found +time to watch Roseleaf and Daisy, and even the negro Hannibal. + +He noticed that the servant was no less devoted than formerly to the +youngest member of the household. He saw him hover around her at the +table like a protecting spirit, letting her want for nothing that +thoughtfulness could procure. And he noticed that Daisy seemed as +oblivious of this as she had always been. She accepted these +extraordinary attentions quite as if Hannibal were some automaton, +acting with a set of concealed springs--a mechanism in which there was +nothing of human life or intelligence. + +Mr. Fern was the same gentlemanly host as of yore, with the same dark +cloud hanging over him, whatever might be its cause. Courteous by nature +to an exceptional degree he could not assume a gayety he did not feel. +There was some terrible weight bearing him down, some awful incubus of +which he was unable to rid himself. The only person who did not notice +it was Millicent, and the one it troubled most was Daisy, on whose sweet +young face the share she had in her parent's griefs had already begun to +leave its impressions. + +Millicent's novel was soon placed in Mr. Gouger's hands, completed. The +original theme was unaltered, but in its new garb of perfect English no +one would have recognized the rejected work. The combination of the +girl's strength of mind and the man's elegance of diction was +successful. The critic recommended its acceptance without a word of +dissent, and Cutt & Slashem even consented, on his suggestion, to +forego the guarantee against loss which they had of late demanded from +all authors whose names were unknown to the reading public. + +"I have fixed it for you, Archie," he said, when that gentleman next +made his appearance at the sanctum. "No deposit or guarantee, and ten +per cent. of the retail price for royalty. So take a train to your +inamorata's house and tell her the news." + +Mr. Weil did not seem to wholly relish the announcement. + +"In the first place," he remarked, "you have no business to speak of +Miss Fern as my inamorata; and in the second you will pay her more than +ten per cent. or you won't get the book to print." + +At this, Mr. Gouger, after the manner of all publishers and their +agents, proceeded to show to Mr. Weil that it was perfectly impossible +to pay another cent more than the figure he had named; and before he had +finished he agreed to see the firm and get the amount raised +considerably, provided the sales should exceed five thousand copies. In +short, Mr. Weil secured a very respectable contract for a new author, +and one that was sure to please Miss Fern, if she was in the least +degree reasonable. + +"I wish you would hurry up Roseleaf," remarked Gouger, when this matter +was disposed of. "When will you take him down into the depths and let +him see that side of life?" + +"I have arranged a journey for to-morrow night," said Weil. "We shall go +to Isaac Leveson's and make an evening of it. Unless things are +different there from usual, he will lay the foundation for all the +wickedness he needs to put into his story." + +The critic nodded approval. + +"He will probably have a Jew in it, then--a modernized Fagan." + +"Yes," said Weil. "And a negro. A tall, well-built negro, who has a +white man for his slave!" + + + + +CHAPTER XII. + +DINING AT ISAAC'S. + + +On the following day, when Shirley Roseleaf presented himself at the +Hoffman House, he found Mr. Weil awaiting him in a state of great good +nature. + +"Go home and make yourself ready for a dive into the infernal regions," +he said, merrily. "I am going to take you to a place where the devil +spends his vacation, and show you a set of women as different from those +you have lately met as chalk is from indigo. Be here at nine o'clock +this evening, prepared for the descent." + +A vision of subterranean passages crossed the mind of the listener, and +he thought of tall boots and a tarpaulin. + +"How shall I dress--roughly, I suppose?" he inquired. + +"Certainly not. Put on your swallow tail, and white tie. Vice in these +days wears its best garments. You cannot tell a gambler from a +clergyman by his attire. Dress exactly as if you were going to the +swellest party on Fifth Avenue. The only addition to your toilet will be +a revolver, if you happen to have one handy. If you do not, I have +several and will lend you one." + +If he expected to startle the young man he was in error. Roseleaf merely +nodded and said he would take one of the weapons owned by Mr. Weil. + +"We shall not use them--there are a thousand chances to one," said +Archie. "New York is like Montana. You remember what the resident said +to the tenderfoot, 'You may be a long time without wantin' a we'p'n in +these parts, but when you do you'll want it d--d sudden.'" + +When Roseleaf returned, the hands of his watch indicated the time at +which he had been asked to make his appearance, but Mr. Weil did not +take him immediately to the point of destination. Instead he walked over +to a variety theatre that was then in operation on Twenty-third street, +and after spending a short time in the auditorium guided the young man +into the "wineroom." Here the ladies of the ballet were in the habit of +going when off the stage, for the sake of entertaining the patrons with +their light and frivolous conversation, and inducing them if possible, +to invest in champagne at five dollars the bottle. + +Archie was, it appeared, not unknown to the throng that filled this +place, for his name was spoken by several of both sexes as soon as he +entered. He nodded coolly to those who addressed him, and took a seat +at a table with his companion. With a shake of his head he declined the +offers of two or three fairies of the ballet to share the table, and +ordered a bottle of Mumm with the evident intention of drinking it alone +with his friend. + +Roseleaf slowly sipped the sparkling beverage. He was cautioned in a +whisper to drink but one glass, as it was necessary that he should keep +a perfectly clear head. Weil remarked in an undertone that he had only +ordered the wine as an excuse for remaining a few minutes. + +"I call this 'the slaughter house,'" he added, in a voice still lower. +"Girls are brought here to be murdered. Not to have their throats cut," +he explained, "but to be killed just as surely, if more slowly. I have +seen them come here for the first time, with good health shining out of +their rosy cheeks, delighted at the unwonted excitement and the amount +of attention the frequenters of the place bestowed. I have watched them +growing steadily paler, having recourse to rouge, the eyes getting +dimmer, the voice growing harsher, the temper becoming more variable. +And then--other fresh faces came in their stead. There are killed, on an +average, twenty girls a year here, I should say; killed to satisfy the +appetites of men, as beeves are killed in Chicago, but not so +mercifully." + +The novelist looked into the faces that were nearest to him and thought +he could discern the various grades of which his friend spoke--the new, +the older, the ones whose turn to give way to others would soon come. +All of them were drinking. Most had on the stage dresses they had just +worn or were about to wear in the performance. Some had finished their +parts and were enveloped in street clothes, ready to take their +departure with the first male who asked them. And they were drinking, +drinking, either in little sips or in feverish gulps, as they would at a +later day, when the five-dollar wine would be replaced by five cent beer +or perhaps the drainings of a keg on the sidewalk. + +Mr. Walker Boggs soon came into the wine-room and joined the pair at Mr. +Weil's table. He called for a whiskey straight, pushing the champagne +aside with an impatient movement. + +"I won't punish my stomach with such stuff, even if it _has_ gone back +on me," he exclaimed. "That will knock out any man who drinks it between +meals." + +Mr. Weil assented to this proposition, and to show his full belief in it +filled his own glass again and tossed its contents down his throat. + +"What brings you here?" he asked, quizzically. + +"Those creatures," replied Boggs, with a motion of his hand toward the +members of the ballet. "They're all that's left me now. _They_ don't +mind the size of my waist. My hold on _them_ is as strong as ever. But +_you_ ought not to be here," he broke in, turning to Roseleaf. "It will +be years before you get to this stage, I hope." + +Mr. Weil hastened to explain. + +"Shirley is merely observing," said he. "He came at my request. We are +going next to Isaac Leveson's." + +Mr. Boggs grew interested. + +"So, so! You intend to show him Isaac's to-night?" + +"Yes. Isn't it a good idea?" + +The stout man shrugged his shoulders as if he had nothing to say on that +point. The movement was essentially a Frenchy one and might have meant +anything. + +"Perhaps you would like to go with us," said Archie. + +"What do you intend to do there?" + +"Tell Mr. Roseleaf all the secrets." + +Mr. Boggs stared at the speaker. + +"Isaac won't let you," he answered, grimly. + +"Won't he? He'll have to. Why, what's the odds? The boy won't give him +away. And if he should--" His voice sank to a whisper. + +Mr. Weil then proceeded to explain to his young friend that "Isaac's" +was a peculiar affair, even for Gotham. It had entrances on two streets. +Into one door went the most respectable of people, intent on getting an +exceptionably good dinner, which was always to be had there, cooked in +the French style and elegantly served. At that end of the house there +were several dining-rooms that would hold forty or fifty guests, and +several others made to accommodate family parties of six to twelve. If a +couple happened to stray in and inquire for a room to themselves the +head waiter informed them that it was against the rule of the house to +serve a private dinner to less than four people. + +It was evident that the establishment was conducted on the most moral +principles, and in a way to prevent the possibility of scandal. For +though a great many couples undoubtedly take dinners in private rooms +with the utmost propriety, it must be admitted that such a course is +open to suspicion and might be used as a basis for unpleasant rumors. +Mr. Leveson, who kept this hotel, took great pride in saying that +nothing in all New York bore a better name, and no amount of bribery +would have induced one of his employes--on _that_ side of the house--to +vary the rules laid down. + +But on the _other_ side of the building--at the entrance on the other +street--ah, that was different! + +If only the most respectable customers entered the first door it was +almost equally true that none but those who lacked that quality used the +second. Mr. Leveson sometimes remarked with glee, at twelve o'clock at +night, that he would give a hundred dollar bill for an honest man or +woman in any of the rooms up-stairs. The waiters had instructions to +"size up" all comers with care, and to admit no accidental parties who +might apply for entrance under a misapprehension as to the character of +the place. + +"We are all full, sorry to say," was the established formula. "There is +a very good restaurant just around the corner, on ----th street." And in +this manner the shrewd restaurateur got all the custom he wanted, while +preserving the natural atmosphere in each part of his dominions. + +The meals served in these two places were prepared by one chef, and +served from one kitchen. Thus the virtuous and vicious patrons were +supplied with exactly the same dishes. But on what may be called the +Good side nothing stronger than wines were found on the bill of fare. On +the Wicked side every decoction known to the modern drinker was to be +had for the asking. Then, again, the doors of the Good side were closed +at eleven o'clock, while it was often daylight before the last patron of +the Sinful side reeled into his carriage. + +After a little more talk Mr. Boggs seemed satisfied and consented to +join the party. + +Mr. Leveson was notified of the presence of the newcomers and met them +at the door. Isaac was of a decidedly Jewish cast of countenance, +slightly gray, not very tall, and quite round shouldered. He put out a +lank hand toward Roseleaf, when that young gentleman was named as a +matter of introduction, but put it down again when Mr. Weil curtly said +handshaking was out of date. Archie had seen a disinclination in the eye +of his friend to touch the fingers of the Hebrew, and with his usual +quickness had solved the difficulty. The party entered a private office +at the left of the entrance, where Mr. Leveson inquired what he should +order for them to drink. + +"You will order nothing, at present," said Weil, in a contemptuous way +that excited the astonishment of Mr. Roseleaf. "When I wish for anything +I will ring. Who is there in the house?" + +The manager of the establishment bowed humbly, and proceeded to run over +the list of his customers. + +"There is Major Waters and his wife--" + +"Together!" exclaimed the questioner. + +"Oh, no! The Major has the little blonde that he has brought for the +last month; his wife has Mr. Nikles of the Planet. Then--" + +But Mr. Weil interrupted him again. + +"You'll let them run into each other some day and there'll be a nice +time." + +"Never fear that. The boys understand thoroughly. He comes earlier and +stays later than she. Besides, we never let anybody meet on the stairs. +The waiters cry out, 'You must go back; it is bad luck!' if any of them +seem in danger of running into each other. They are as safe from +discovery here as if they were in places a mile apart." + +Some one descended the stairs at this moment and Leveson tiptoed to the +door and opened it half an inch to peer at them. + +"You know I have no object in saying these things," said Weil, "except +to save your precious self from trouble. Who is that going out?" + +"Some new people; it is the third time they have been here." + +"Well," asked Weil, impatiently, "who are they?" + +Leveson held up both his hands as if to beg a moment to answer. + +"They come from Brooklyn. I don't know their names. I think neither is +married." + +"I have a curiosity about things," explained Weil to his friends, "that +I cannot account for. You remember how Silas Wegg used to talk about +'Aunt Jane' and 'Uncle Parker.' Well, I have the same way of studying +the men that wander in here of an evening, with other people's wives and +daughters. There is so little really entertaining in this confounded +world that I seize upon anything promising a change with avidity. Isaac +tells me all the secrets of his queer ranch, and they prove wonderfully +interesting, sometimes. You see," he added, addressing himself +particularly to Roseleaf, "not a couple comes into this place that would +like to have it known." + +Roseleaf bowed constrainedly. + +"And how does Mr. Leveson know them?" he inquired. "They surely do not +register, or if they do their names must be fictitious." + +Mr. Weil laughed. + +"He has ways of finding out," said he. "There are little birds that fly +in at the window and tell him." + +"I should not think he would wish to know," commented Roseleaf. +"Especially when it is evident they would not like to have him." + +Archie laughed again. + +"Let me explain, then," he said. "I need not mind Boggs here, who is +discretion itself. Leveson's reason--of course, I can rely on your +silence?" + +The young face reddened at the insinuation that he might betray a +secret. + +"I was sure of it," said Archie, so quickly that Roseleaf felt at ease +again. "Well, the reason why Isaac wants to know what is going on is, he +is connected with the police." + +Roseleaf said "Ah!" and opened his eyes wider. + +"People who go to places like this," continued Mr. Weil, "are of great +interest to the guardians of the peace. And by the police I do not mean +the members of the regular force so much as the special service. It is +to the latter that we go when a confidential clerk has robbed us or we +become suspicious that our wives are unfaithful. Nine times out of ten +the chief of the private detective office knows in advance all we wish +him to ferret out. When he has told us that we will set investigations +on foot, and that he hopes to learn something of the matter within a few +days, he bows us out of his bureau with an air that implies that we have +not come to the wrong party. And as soon as we are gone he turns to a +ledger, and in a few minutes has found an abstract that tells him +everything. + +"Let us suppose," said Mr. Weil, "that a jeweler misses twenty valuable +pieces of _bijouterie_ from his stock. The circumstances prove that they +were taken by some one in his employ. He thinks of his clerks, and +cannot find the heart to accuse any of them of such a grave crime. He +goes to the detective office and states his case. When he is gone the +chief turns to the book and finds this: + +"'L. M. Jenkins, clerk at Abram Cohen's, Sixth Avenue; about +twenty-three, medium height, dark, dresses well. Rooms at No. -- +Twenty-Ninth street. Has been giving expensive suppers as well as +valuable jewelry to Mamie Sanders, No. so-and-so, Such-a-street. They +dined together at Isaac Leveson's on such-and-such dates.' Etc., etc., +etc. + +"Now, he can recover the jewelry and get that clerk into quod in three +hours, if he likes. Naturally he won't expedite things in that way, +because he wants some excuse for running up a large bill, unless it be +a bank case, where he prefers to make a great impression and get himself +solid with the directors. But he will collar the fellow and recover the +stuff, and all because he knew about it long before any one in the store +had a suspicion." + +Mr. Leveson returned. Mr. Weil asked that one of the private rooms on +the second floor be put in order at once, for himself and friends. He +then inquired what ladies were in the house unoccupied by escorts. + +"Miss Pelham has been waiting an hour for the Judge," replied Isaac, +"but I don't think he'll come. He disappoints her half the time now. And +Mrs. Delavan, who has just come in, found a note from Col. Lamorest, +asking her to excuse him to-night." + +Archie looked pleased. + +"They'll do," he said. "Tell them to come and dine with us. But," he +paused, and looked at Roseleaf, "we need still another." + +The color mounted to the cheeks of the young novelist, as he understood +the thought that prompted this statement. + +"Not on my account--I would much rather not," he stammered. + +"You will kindly leave that to my judgment," replied Archie, +impressively. "Remember, you are not the instructor here, but the pupil. +There must be some one else, Isaac." + +Mr. Leveson hesitated. He was mentally going over the rooms upstairs and +taking stock of what was in them. + +"There are two girls," he said, at last, "who used to work in one of +the dry goods stores, but you wouldn't want them. They are very strict, +and they dress plainly,--and I am afraid the other ladies wouldn't like +to associate with them." + +Mr. Weil grew vastly irritated by this statement. He brought his hand +down on the table with a bang. + +"The other ladies!" he echoed, angrily. "When you tell Mrs. Delavan and +Jenny Pelham that you want them to dine with us, you know that ends it! +As to these shop girls, what do you mean by calling them _strict_? What +would a _strict_ girl be doing in _this_ house?" + +Mr. Leveson cringed before his interrogator and made the old, imploring +movement with his hands. + +"Let me explain," he said. "These girls came here a few weeks ago with +some traveling men. They took dinner, but Adolf says neither drank a +drop of wine. A few days later they came again, with other escorts, and +the same thing occurred." + +"Why did you let them in?" demanded Weil. + +"Because I knew the gentlemen." + +Archie started to say something, but checked himself. + +"And after that they came alone and asked to see me," pursued Isaac, +humbly. "They said they had been thrown out of work, and thought there +might be an opportunity to do something here, like waiting on the +guests. And while we were talking, two old customers of the house called +to dine, alone, and asked me if they could get some one to share the +meal with them. And, it seemed quite providential--" + +Archie stopped the voluble speech by striking his hands sharply +together. + +"Enough!" he said. "When the dinner is ready send one of them in. That +will make the three we need." + +In half an hour the dinner was ready to be served. Then Isaac came with +the information that the girls refused to be separated. + +"What a nuisance!" exclaimed Weil. "Well, send both of them, then. We'll +take care of them, somehow." + + + + +CHAPTER XIII. + +A QUESTION OF COLOR. + + +The next morning, when Roseleaf awoke, he was for some time in a sort of +stupor. Through the bright sunlight that filled his room he seemed to +scent the fumes of tobacco and of liquor. The place was filled, he +imagined, with that indefinable aroma that proceeds from a convivial +company made up of both sexes. He half believed that Jennie Pelham and +Mrs. Delavan were sitting by his bed, more brazen than the bell which, +from a neighboring steeple, told him the hour was ten. And surely, by +those curtains there, hiding the flame that filled their cheeks, were +the two "shop-girls," their pinched faces denoting slow starvation. +Boggs, and Isaac Leveson, and Archie Weil were there, all of them; and +the young man tossed uneasily on his pillow, struggling with the +remnant of nightmare that remained to cloud his brain. + +When he was able to think and see clearly he sat up and rang for a +pitcher of ice water. He was consumed by thirst, and his forehead ached +blindly. When he had bathed his head and throat he turned, by a sudden +impulse, to his table, and took out the MSS. of the story he had begun. +Slowly he read over the pages, to the last one. Then, seizing his pen, +he devoted himself to the next chapter, without dressing, without +breakfasting. + +It was four o'clock when he ceased work. He realized all at once that he +was feeling ill. The fact dawned upon him that he needed food, and +donning his garments, he took his way listlessly to a restaurant and +ordered something to eat. As he swallowed the morsels, he fell to +wondering how much temptation _he_ would be able to bear, with hunger as +a background. + +He passed a good part of the evening in walking the streets, selecting, +instinctively, sections where he was least likely to meet any one he +knew. When he returned to his room he read over the MSS. he had written +that day, and into his troubled brain there came a sense of pleasure. +Gouger was right. To tell of such matters in a novel, one should know +them himself. Roseleaf could never have written of vice before he saw +Leveson's. Now, it was as plain to him as print, almost as easy to use +in fiction as virtue. What was to follow? He pondered over the plot he +had mapped out, and it grew clearer. + +Daisy had given him no further encouragement--at least in words--since +that day she had said it was "risky" to ask her father, but he felt +certain that she regarded him with favor, and that if Mr. Fern put no +obstacles in the way she would not refuse to wed him when the right time +came. He thought it would be wise to obtain one more brief interview +with her, before proceeding to extremities, and determined to do his +best to draw her aside, when he made his next visit to her house. This +settled, he went to bed again and slept soundly. + +When the day to go to Midlands arrived Shirley's courage began to ooze a +little. So much depended upon the attitude of his dear one's mind, +which, for all he knew, had changed since he talked with her, that he +fairly trembled with apprehension. He avoided Mr. Weil, with whom he +usually took the train, and went out early. Alighting at a station a +mile or two away from the right one, he walked through the woods, trying +to think how to act in case matters did not turn out as he hoped. Under +the branches he strolled along, until he came within sight of the roofs +of Midlands; and then he threw himself at the foot of a tree close to +Mr. Fern's grounds, and gave himself up to reverie. + +When he laid down here it was only five o'clock, and he was not expected +at the house for a full hour. It pleased him to be so near the one he +loved, and to lie where he could dream of her sweet face and see the +outlines of the house that sheltered her, while she had no knowledge of +his presence. Just over there was the arbor, where he had first had the +supreme bliss of touching her lips with his own. If he could get her to +come there with him again--to-night--when the others were occupied with +their talk of earthly things, and if she would only tell him frankly +that he might go to her father, and that her prayers would go with him! +A soft languor came over his body at the deliciousness of these +reflections, but it was dissipated by the sound of voices which +presently came to him from the other side of the hedge. + +"I can't exactly understand, Miss Daisy," said one of the voices, which +he had no difficulty in recognizing as that of Hannibal, "why you wish +me to go away?" + +There was an assurance in the tone that Roseleaf did not like. He had +noticed it before in the intercourse of this negro with his employers. +There was something which intimated that he was on the most complete +level with them. + +"I want you to go," said Daisy, in her quiet way, "because education is +the only thing that will make you what you ought to be. There are a +hundred chances open to you, in the professions, if you can take a +college course. Unless you do, you can hope for nothing better than such +employment as you have now." + +It made the listener's blood boil to think that these people should be +consulting in that way, like friends. Daisy ought to have a better sense +of her position. + +"I will not refuse your offer, at least not yet," replied Hannibal, +after a slight pause. "It may be as you say--if I graduate as a doctor +or a lawyer. But I know that I live in a country where my color is +despised--and all that could possibly come to me here as a professional +man is work among my own race. I should be a black lawyer with black +clients; or a black physician, with black patients. To really succeed I +should go across the ocean to some land where the shade of my skin would +not be counted a crime." + +Daisy's face could not be seen by the listener, but he was sure it was a +kindly one, and this made him fume. The situation was atrocious. + +"It should not be considered so anywhere," said the girl, gently. + +"It is an outrage!" responded the black. "Having stolen our ancestors +and brought them here from their native country, the Americans hate us +for the injury they have done. In France, they tell me, it is not so. +Oh, if I _could_ gain an education, and become what God meant to make +me--a man!" He paused as if the thought was too great to be conceived in +its fullness, and then said, abruptly: "Where can you get this money?" + +Roseleaf's suspicions were now keenly aroused and he dreaded lest she +should bring his name into the conversation. + +"Your father would not give it to you--without an explanation," pursued +the negro. "And you have no fortune of your own." + +"I will get it--let that suffice," interrupted the girl. "I can give you +$1000 a year for two years, at least, and I hope for two or three more, +if you will go to Paris and put yourself under instruction. Can you +hesitate to accept a proposal of that kind? I thought you would seize it +with avidity." + +As Daisy said this she arose, and started slowly toward the house. +Hannibal walked by her side talking in a tone so low that nothing more +was intelligible to the eavesdropper she little suspected was so near. +But suddenly the girl stopped, and Roseleaf heard her cry with startling +distinctness: + +"_How dare you!_" + +The voice that uttered these words was filled with rage, and the girl's +attitude, as Roseleaf could see--for he had risen hastily to his +feet--was one of intense excitement. Then she added: + +"If you ever speak of that again, they will be the last words I will +ever exchange with you. My offer is still open--you can have the money +if you wish it--but never another syllable like this! Understand me, +Hannibal, never!" + +Miss Daisy passed on toward the house, alone. The negro stood where she +had left him, his head bowed on his breast, as if completely cowed by +the rebuke. Roseleaf's heart beat rapidly. What gave this fellow such +power over these people? How could he say things to call out such an +exclamation as that of Daisy's, and yet hold her promise to pay him a +large sum of money, instead of getting the prompt discharge he merited? + +And this was what the girl wanted to do with the $1,000, she had asked +him to lend her! Should he still give it to her? Yes, if it would rid +the country of that insolent knave who, from whatever cause, occupied a +position that must be growing unendurable to those who had to bear with +him. + +What had Hannibal said, that made her turn as if grossly insulted, and +speak with a vehemence so foreign to her nature? Roseleaf would have +enjoyed following the negro and giving him a severe trouncing. Though +Hannibal was twenty pounds heavier and considerably taller than he, the +novelist had not the least doubt of his ability to master him. He +believed the courage of an African would give way when confronted by one +of the superior race; and at any rate, righteous indignation would count +for something in so just a contest. + +There were no traces of excitement on Daisy's pretty face as she +welcomed the guests of the family. Weil arrived at about the same time +as Roseleaf, coming directly from the station, and Mr. Fern arrived a +little later. Millicent looked her best, which is saying no less than +that she was a beauty, and Archie told her politely that she ought to +sit for a painting. When the dinner was served, Hannibal took charge as +usual. Shirley watched him with an interest he had never felt before, +and nodded assent when Weil whispered behind his napkin, "Good material +for a novel in that fellow, eh?" + +The opportunity for a word alone with Daisy came earlier than Roseleaf +expected. In fact she herself proposed it, while passing out of the +dining room. She said she had something particular to tell him. + +"It is about that money you were so kind as to say I could have," she +explained, when they were far down the lawn, and out of hearing of the +others. "I want it very much and very soon. It--it will be all right, I +hope, and--and not cause you any inconvenience." + +"I will bring it, or send it to-morrow," he replied, instantly. "But I +still wonder what you intend to do with it." + +She smiled archly. + +"A good act, I assure you," she replied. "Something of which you would +certainly approve, if you knew all the circumstances. You are very kind, +and if it was darker here I should be--almost--tempted to kiss you." + +He replied that it was growing darker rapidly, and that the requisite +shadow could be obtained if they stayed out long enough; but she said +she could remain but a few moments, and turned in the direction of the +house. + +"But, Daisy!" he cried, and then paused. "You--you know there is +something of very great importance that I want to talk about. I get so +little chance, and I want so much to tell you things. I have been trying +to go to your father's office, and I can't find courage." + +"I didn't know you were thinking of buying wool," she said, +mischievously. + +"I want one little lamb, to be my own," he answered, "to love and +cherish all my life long. Am I never to have it?" + +She sobered before the earnestness of his sad face. + +"You are a dear boy," she said, "and I love you. There! Don't say +anything more to me to-night. I have made a foolish confession, for +which I may yet repent. We must go in. They will be looking for us." + +She looked at his countenance and saw that it was radiant. + +"I can endure anything now," he said. "You love me, Daisy--can it be +true? I will go in with you--and I will wait. But not too long, my +sweetheart; do not make me wait too long. Repent your confession, +indeed! If you do, it will be from no fault of mine. _Daisy!_" + +As he said these things they were gradually nearing the piazza, where +the negro was taking in the chairs. + +"I have something pleasant to tell you," whispered Daisy. "You don't +like Hannibal. Well, he is going away soon." + +Roseleaf assumed surprise. + +"Has your father discharged him?" he asked. + +"No, he intends to leave of his own accord. He believes himself fitted +for better work. Hush! He may hear you." + +As they passed the servant, Daisy said, "Good-evening, Hannibal." It was +her invariable custom, and she spoke with the greatest courtesy. But in +this case the negro did not raise his eyes, nor turn his head toward +her, nor make the slightest sign to show that he heard. + +It was too much for Roseleaf, and he stopped. + +"Did you hear Miss Daisy address you?" he demanded, sharply. + +Hannibal looked up, with a curious mixture of amusement, contempt and +hate in his dark face. + +"I did," he answered. + +"Why did you not answer?" + +"Because I did not choose." + +Daisy threw herself in front of Roseleaf, just in time to prevent +Hannibal's receiving a blow. + +"Oh, stop!" she exclaimed, "I beg you!" + +The noise and the sound of raised voices brought Mr. Fern and his other +daughter, with Archie Weil, to the door. Mr. Fern took in the situation +at a glance, and his troubled face grew more distressed. + +"Mr. Roseleaf," he said, speaking as if the words choked him, "I am +surprised--that you should--hold an altercation like this--in my +daughter's presence." + +Roseleaf did not know what to do or say. Daisy's pleading eyes decided +him, much against his judgment, to drop the matter where it was, galling +to his pride though it might be. He escorted his sweetheart into the +parlor, where the entire party followed, in a most uncomfortable state +of mind. + +"How can you permit that negro to insult your guests?" demanded +Millicent, as soon as the door was closed. "It is beyond belief. If he +is master of this house it is time the rest of us left it. I am certain +Mr. Roseleaf did not act without great provocation." + +Before Mr. Fern could answer, Daisy had spoken. + +"It is over now, and there is nothing to be said. Hannibal is going away +in a few days, and that will end your trouble." + +The father turned such an incredulous look toward his daughter that it +was evident he had heard nothing of this. + +"Going?" he echoed, faintly. "Going?" + +"Yes," said Daisy. "He told me to-day. He is going to some country where +his color will not be counted a misdemeanor." + +Roseleaf had difficulty in maintaining the silence with which he had +determined to encase himself. But Daisy did not wish him to speak, and +her will was law. + +"Well, I am glad of that!" exclaimed Millicent. "In a country where they +consider such people their equals, he will not meet the pity and +consideration he has so abused here. Still, I do think, father, that you +ought to apologize to Mr. Roseleaf for the way in which you have +addressed him." + +This freed the young man's tongue. + +"By no means," he said. "Very likely I was wrong to say anything." + +"You were not wrong!" retorted Millicent. "You were entirely right. You +would have been justified in punishing the fellow as he deserved. It is +others who are wrong. If he were not going, I would never stay to see +repeated what I have witnessed in the last six months." + +Mr. Fern seemed to have lost all ambition for controversy. His elder +daughter's cutting words evidently hurt, but he would not reply. + +Mr. Weil came to the rescue by introducing a new topic of conversation, +that of a European tenor that was soon expected to startle New York. +Daisy went to the piano, and played softly, talking in whispers to +Roseleaf, who leaned feverishly over her shoulder. But she made no +allusion to Hannibal, and he did his best to forget him. + +"What do you make of that?" asked Mr. Weil, when he was in a railway +car, on the way back to the city with his young friend. "A glorious +chance for a novelist to find the reason that black Adonis is allowed +such latitude." + +But Roseleaf was not listening. He was thinking of a sweet voice that +had said: "You are a dear boy and I love you!" + + + + +CHAPTER XIV. + +"LET US HAVE A BETRAYAL." + + +Mr. Archie Weil had become quite intimate with Mr. Wilton Fern; so much +so that he called at his office every few days, took walks with him on +business errands, went with him to lunch (to the annoyance of Lawrence +Gouger, who did not like to eat alone) and sometimes took the train home +with him at night, on evenings when Shirley Roseleaf was not of the +party. Everybody in the Fern family liked Archie. Even Hannibal, who had +conceived a veritable hatred for Roseleaf, brightened at the entrance of +Mr. Weil either at the house or office, the negro seeming to alternate +between the two places very much as he pleased. Millicent liked him +because he was so "facile," as she expressed it; a man with whom one +could talk without feeling it necessary to pick each step. Daisy liked +him because her father did, and because Roseleaf did, and because he +treated her with marked politeness that had apparently no double +meaning. + +And they all got confidential with him, which was exactly what he wanted +them to do; only the one he most wanted to give him confidence gave him +the least. This was Mr. Fern, himself. + +Try as he might, Archie could not discover what clouded the brow of the +wool merchant, what made him act like a person who fears each knock at +the door, each sound of a human voice in the hallway of his office. He +could find no reason for Mr. Fern's attitude toward Hannibal, whose +manners were as far removed as possible from those supposed to belong to +a personal servant. There must be a cause of no ordinary character when +this polished gentleman permitted a negro to insult him and his +daughter, in a way to excite comment. What it was Mr. Weil was bent on +discovering, but as yet he had made little progress. + +It was on account of this plan that Mr. Weil affected to like Hannibal +so well. He used to spend hours in devising ways for securing the truth +from that source. Hannibal, however, gave no signs of intending to +reveal his secret, and if he was going abroad to study, it seemed +unlikely that the investigator would get at many facts in that quarter. + +One day, Mr. Weil happened to call at the office of the merchant at an +hour when the latter was out, and found Hannibal in possession. As this +was an opportunity seldom available, Archie entered into a lively +conversation with the fellow. + +"They tell me you are soon going to leave us," he said, as a beginning. +"I hear that you are going to Europe." + +"Yes," said Hannibal, with a certain wariness. + +"If I can tell you anything about the country I shall be glad," said +Weil, affably. "I have spent considerable time there. You don't +understand the language, I believe?" + +The negro simply shook his head. + +"It's easy enough to acquire. Get right into a hotel with a lot of +students, and pitch in. Though they _do_ say," added the speaker, +archly, "that the best method is to engage a pretty grisette. The poet +was right: + + "'Tis pleasing to be schooled in a strange tongue + By female eyes and lips; that is, I mean, + When both the teacher and the taught are young-- + +"You know the rest." + +The answering smile that he expected, did not come into the negro's +face. If possible, it grew still more reserved and earnest. + +"There's one good thing, if you'll excuse my mentioning it," pursued +Archie, "and that is, the French have no prejudice whatever against +color. Indeed, a colored student gets a little better attention in Paris +than a white one." + +Then the silent lips were unlocked. + +"Could a black man--_marry_--a white woman, of the upper or middle +classes?" asked Hannibal, slowly. + +"To be sure. There was the elder Dumas, and a dozen others. I tell you +there's absolutely no color line there. They judge a man by what he is, +not by the accident of race or skin. You'll see such a difference you'll +be sorry you didn't go years before." + +Hannibal sat as if lost in thought. + +"Mr. Fern will miss you, though," continued Archie. "Yes, and the +family. You seem almost indispensable." + +A suspicious glance was shot at the speaker, but his face bore such an +ingenuous look that the suggestion was dismissed. What could he know? + +"They will get some one else," said the negro, quietly. + +"Yes, but in these days it is not easy to get people one can trust. Mr. +Fern will not find any one to take your place in a moment. And just now, +when he evidently has a great deal of trouble on his mind, it will be +unpleasant to make a change." + +Hannibal was completely deceived by the apparently honest character of +these observations. He could not resist the temptation to boast a +little, that peculiar trait of a menial. + +"I know all about Mr. Fern's affairs," he agreed. "Both here and at the +house. He would not trust the next man as he has me." + +Mr. Weil nodded wisely. + +"I see, I see," he answered. "You know then what has annoyed him of +late--that which has puzzled all the rest of us so much. You know, but +having the knowledge in a sort of confidential capacity, you would, of +course, have no right to reveal it." + +Hannibal straightened himself up in an exasperating way. + +"You will not find what troubles Mr. Fern," he said, loftily. "And now, +may I ask _you_ something. Do you expect to marry his eldest daughter?" + +An inclination to kick the fellow for his impudence came so strong upon +Mr. Weil that it required all of his powers to suppress the sentiment. +But through his indignation there struggled his old admiration for this +elegant physical specimen. He wished he could get a statue modeled from +him, before the original left the country. + +"That is a delicate question," he managed to say. + +"I know it," replied Hannibal. "But I have observed some things which +may have escaped you. Shall I tell you what I mean?" + +Not at all easy under this strain, the curiosity of Mr. Weil was so +great that he could only reply in the affirmative. + +"Miss Millicent," explained Hannibal, slowly, "is in love--very much in +love--with another person." + +A stare that could not be concealed answered him. + +"You have not seen anything to indicate it?" asked the negro. "I thought +as much. She has done her best to cover it, and yet I can swear it is +true. She _likes_ you, as a friend. But she _loves_ him, passionately." + +He was in for it now and might as well follow this strange matter to the +end. + +"Do I know this individual?" asked Archie. + +"Yes. You brought him to the house and introduced him to her." + +The man gave a slight cry, in spite of himself. + +"Not Roseleaf!" + +Hannibal bowed impressively; and at the moment Mr. Fern's footsteps were +heard in the entry. + +Mr. Weil did not know, when he tried to think about it afterwards, +whether the wool merchant noticed particularly that he and Hannibal had +been talking together, or suspected that they might have confidences. +His head was too full of the startling statement he had heard, and when +he was again upon the street he wandered aimlessly for an hour trying to +reconcile this view with the facts as they had presented themselves to +his mind previously. + +Millicent in love with Roseleaf! She had said very little to the young +man, so far as he had observed. Her younger sister--sweet little +Daisy--had monopolized his attention. If it were true, what an instance +it was of the odd qualities in the feminine mind, that leave men to +wonder more and more of what material it is constructed. But _was_ it +true? Was Hannibal a better judge, a closer student, than the rest of +them? He did not like Millicent, any better than she liked him. Was he +trying a game of mischief, with some ulterior purpose that was not +apparent on the surface? + +Out of it all, Archie Weil emerged, sure of but one thing. He must use +his eyes. If Millicent loved Roseleaf, she could not hide it +successfully from him, now that he had this clue. + +The girl's novel was selling fairly well. Weil had made a bargain with +Cutt & Slashem that was very favorable. It gave him an excuse to talk +with the authoress as much as he pleased, and he used his advantage. He +brought her the comments of the press--not that they amounted to +anything, for it was evident that most of the critics had merely skimmed +through the pages. He came to tell her the latest things that Gouger had +said, what proportion of cloth and paper covers were being ordered, and +the other gossip of the printing house. And now he talked about the work +that Shirley was engaged on, and grew enthusiastic, declaring that the +young man would yet make a place for himself beside the Stevensons and +Weymans. + +Millicent struck him as caring much more for news of her own production +than that of the young man who had been represented as the object of her +adoration. If she was half as fond of Roseleaf as Hannibal intimated, +she was certainly successful in concealing her sentiments from the +shrewd observer. The result of a fortnight's investigation convinced +Weil that the negro had made a complete mistake, and all the hypotheses +that had arisen were allowed to dissipate into thin air and fly away. + +Another two weeks passed and Hannibal still remained with the Ferns. An +inquiry of Daisy produced the answer that he thought of remaining in +America till spring. The girl tried to act as if it made not the +slightest consequence to her whether he went or stayed, but she did not +succeed. Mr. Weil knew that she wished most heartily for the time when +the negro would take his departure. She was bound up in her father, and +Hannibal was worrying him to death--from whatever cause. She wanted the +tie between him and this black man broken, and hated every day that +stood between them and his hour of sailing. + +Roseleaf was almost as uneasy as Daisy over the delay. He had given her +the money she asked for, though no allusion to its purpose had been +made. + +She still had it, somewhere, unless she had given it to the one for whom +it was intended. When she took the package from his hand she rose on her +tiptoes and kissed him with the most affectionate of gestures. It was +the second occasion on which he had been permitted to touch her lips, +and he appreciated it fully. He realized from her action how deeply she +felt his kindness in providing her with the funds that were to relieve +her father of an incubus that was sapping his very life. + +"You don't find much use for our black Adonis yet, I see," said Weil, as +he laid down the latest page of the slowly building novel. "I had hoped +you would penetrate the secret of his power over your heroine's father, +by this time." + +"No, I cannot understand it at all," replied Roseleaf. "And if you, with +your superior quickness of perception, have found nothing, I don't see +how you could expect me to." + +"You have greater opportunities," said Weil, with a smile that was not +quite natural. "You have the ear of the fair Miss Daisy, remember," he +explained, in reply to the inquiring look that was raised to him. + +"Ah, but she knows nothing, either," exclaimed Roseleaf. "I am sure of +that." + +Mr. Weil was silent for some moments. + +"Well, if you cannot find the true cause," he said, "you will have to +invent a hypothetical one. Your novel cannot stand still forever. +Imagine something--a crime, for instance, of which this black fellow is +cognizant. A murder--that he peeped in at a keyhole and saw. How would +that do?" + +Roseleaf turned pale. + +"You know," he said, "that you are talking of impossibilities." + +"On the contrary, nothing is impossible," responded the other, +impatiently. "College professors, delicate ladies, children not yet in +their teens, have committed homicide, why not this handsome gentleman in +the wool business? Or if you _won't_ have murder--and I agree that blood +is rather tiresome, it has been overdone so much--bring a woman into the +case. Let us have a betrayal, a wronged virgin, and that sort of thing." + +The color did not return to the young man's cheek. + +"Which is still more incredible in the present case," he said. "Do you +think Wilton Fern could do evil to a woman? Look in his face once and +dismiss that libel within the second." + +A desperate expression crossed the countenance of the elder man. + +"You must agree that he has done something!" he cried. "He wouldn't +allow a darkey to annoy him like this for fun, would he? He wouldn't +wear that deathly look, and let his child grow thin with worriment, just +as a matter of amusement!" + +To this Roseleaf could not formulate a suitable answer. He felt the +force of the suggestions, but he would not associate crime with the +sedate gentleman who was the object of these suspicions. He simply could +not think of anything disreputable in connection with Daisy's father, +and it seemed almost as bad to invent an offense for the character in +his novel whose photograph he had thus far taken from Mr. Fern. + +Daisy was surprised, a month after this, to have Mr. Weil stop her in +the hallway, and speak with a new abruptness. + +"Why don't that cursed nigger start for Europe?" he asked. + +She glanced around her with a frightened look. She feared ears that +should not might hear them. But she rallied as she reflected that +Hannibal was miles away, in fact in the city with her father. + +"He is going soon," she replied. "But why do you allude to him by that +harsh term? I thought you rather liked him." + +"I do," he answered. "I like him so well that if he continues to talk +to--to your father--as I heard him the other day, I will throw him into +the Hudson: I can't stand by and see him insult an--an old man--much +longer." + +The girl looked at him with sad eyes. + +"I thought I had succeeded in silencing that kind of talk," she said. +"Mr. Roseleaf used to speak very violently of Hannibal, but he has +listened to reason of late. Let me beg you to see nothing and hear +nothing, if you are the friend of this family you have given us reason +to believe." + +She extended her hand, as if to ask a promise of him, but he affected +not to see it. + +"When does he intend to go?" he demanded. + +"Before the 1st of April." + +"I will give him till that date," he answered, "but not an hour beyond. +He will sail out of this country for some port or other, or there will +be a collision. You must not, you shall not defend him!" he added, as +she was about to speak. "I know the harm he is doing, and it must have +an end!" + +Turning from her suddenly he went out of doors. Far down the road he +stopped to look around, pressing his hand to his forehead, like one who +would make sure he is awake, and not the victim of some fearful dream. + + + + +CHAPTER XV. + +THE GREEN-EYED MONSTER. + + +Before the first of April came, Hannibal sailed. During the winter he +had taken lessons in French of a city teacher, until he believed he +could get along after a fashion with that language. He announced to +Daisy that he would go on the third of March, then he changed it to the +tenth, and again to the seventeenth. Each time, when the date +approached, he seemed to have a weakening of purpose, a dread of +actually plunging into the tide that set toward foreign shores. The girl +had interviews with him on each of these occasions, at which what passed +was known only to themselves. And each time, when she had reached her +own room, she threw herself on her bed and wept bitterly. + +But, at last, on the twenty-fourth, he went. With his overcoat on his +arm, his satchel and umbrella in his hands, he said "Good-by" to the +little party that gathered at the door. He had been treated with great +consideration in that home. Perhaps he realized this to some extent as +he was about to turn his back upon it. Certain it is that he could not +hide the choking in his throat, as he said the words of farewell. Archie +Weil, who stood there with the rest, thought he saw a strange look in +those black orbs as they dwelt a moment on the younger daughter; but it +passed so quickly he could not be sure. + +Mr. Fern was there, and Roseleaf. Millicent had responded, when a +servant went to inform her that Hannibal was going, that she was very +glad. Did she wish to go down? By no means. She hoped she was not such a +fool. + +Weil, who watched everybody, saw an unmistakable relief in the careworn +countenance of Mr. Fern, when the tall form of his late servant +disappeared at the gate. + +"I hope you will do well," had been the last words of the merchant, and +Daisy had added, "So do we all, I am sure." Roseleaf had not spoken. He +had stood a little apart from the others, his mind filled with varying +emotions. It was he who had furnished the money to carry out this plan, +and if it made one hour of Daisy's life happier he would be content. + +Within an hour it was evident that a cloud had been lifted from the +entire household. Everybody felt brighter and better. Roseleaf eyed Mr. +Fern with surprise, and had half a mind to go to his office the next day +and tell him how dearly he loved his daughter. It was the first time +anything like a smile had been upon that face since he had known its +lineaments. + +Archie Weil devoted his attention, as usual, to Millicent. He did not +talk to her about Hannibal, knowing how distasteful was the subject. He +discussed her novel, of which she never seemed to tire, and asked her +about another, which she had begun to map out. She told him she was sure +she could do better the next time, and spoke of the assistance Mr. +Roseleaf would furnish if needed, quite as if that was a matter already +arranged between her and the young novelist. + +Archie wondered if Millicent knew the extent of the attachment that had +grown up between Shirley and her sister. She seemed to feel sure that he +would be at hand when wanted. Could it be that she believed he would +ultimately become her brother-in-law? The negro's guess had almost been +blotted out of his mind. There had been absolutely nothing in his +observation to confirm it. + +A day or two after the departure of Hannibal, Mr. Fern had a +conversation with Daisy, in which he dwelt with more stress than she +could account for on a special theme. He was talking of Walter Boggs and +Archie Weil, and he cautioned her earnestly to treat both gentlemen with +the greatest consideration. The girl detected something strange in his +voice, and she stole apprehensive glances at him, hoping to read the +cause in his eyes. + +"Why, papa, I never see Mr. Boggs," she said. "It is weeks and weeks +since he came here. As for Mr. Weil, we all treat him nicely, I am sure, +and are glad to have him come." + +"Yes," he admitted. "You use him quite right, my child. I am not +complaining; only, if you could show him _particular_ attention, +something more than the ordinary--" He paused, trying to finish what he +wished to say. "There may be a time when he will be of great value to +me--and--I want him to feel--you observe things so cleverly--do you +think Millicent cares for him?" + +Daisy looked up astonished. + +"Cares--for--Mr. Weil?" + +Her father nodded. + +"He has been here several times a week for months, and most of his time +here has been spent with her. I thought--I hoped that she cared for +him." + +He thought! He hoped! Daisy had never had such an idea in her head until +that moment. She had a dim idea that her father would give up either of +his daughters with great regret, although she could not help knowing +that the relations between him and Millicent were not as cordial as +those between him and herself. And he "hoped" that Millie would marry, +and that she would marry Mr. Weil! Her mind dwelt upon this strange +thought. She tried to find a reason for it. Was there any stronger +incentive in her father's mind than a desire to see Millie well settled +in life, with a good husband? + +Had he a fear that the time might soon come when he could not provide +for her? + +Or was there a worse fear--the kind of fear that had haunted him in +relation to Hannibal? + +Every time Mr. Weil came to the house after that the young girl watched +him as closely as he had ever watched her. He did not exchange a word +with her father that did not engage her attention. And the conclusion +she came to was that, whatever the object of Mr. Fern in this matter, +Mr. Weil was honor itself. + +Daisy had never made much of a confidant of Millicent, and the latter +had the habit of keeping her affairs pretty closely to herself. It was +no easy task, then, that the young sister had in view when she came to +a decision to talk with Millie about Mr. Weil. + +Her father had expressed a hope that Millie and Weil would marry. Mr. +Fern had some strong reason for his wish. Whatever it was, Daisy, with +her strong filial love, wanted it gratified. + +"Millie, what do you think of marriage?" she asked, one day, when the +opportunity presented itself. + +"I suppose it's the manifest destiny of a woman," replied her sister, +quietly. + +Much encouraged, Daisy proceeded to allude to Mr. Weil, praising him in +the highest terms, and saying that any girl might be proud to be honored +with his addresses. Millie answered with confirmatory nods of the head, +as if she fully agreed with all she uttered. But when her sister spoke, +the words struck Daisy like a blow. + +"I am glad to hear this," she said, in a voice more tender than usual. +"I think Mr. Weil would have proposed to you long ago, but that he +feared the result." + +Daisy gasped for breath. + +"Millie!" she cried. "Do you mean that Mr. Weil--that--why, I do not +understand! He has hardly spoken to me, while he has spent nearly every +minute he has been here, with you!" + +"Of course he has," responded the other. "What could be more like a case +of true love? If ever a man lost his head over a woman he has lost his +over you, Daisy. And, at any rate, you must know that _I_ care nothing +for him. You certainly could see where _my_ affections were engaged." + +Daisy pressed her hand dreamily to her forehead. She had never known her +sister to show the least partiality to any other man. + +"I understand you less than ever," she faltered. + +"Are you so blind?" exclaimed Millicent, with superior wisdom. "Did you +think Mr. Roseleaf had been so closely engaged all this time in my +literary work without learning to care for me? I presume you will think +I ought to blush, but that is not my way. The strangest thing is that I +should have to explain what I thought every one knew." + +Poor little Daisy! She was so crushed by these statements that she did +not know what reply to make, which way to turn for consolation. + +"He has told you that he loves you?" she managed to articulate. + +"He has shown it, at least," was the answer. "He had not been here a +week before he tried to put his arms around me. I had to let him hold my +hand to avoid an absolute quarrel. He is not an ordinary man, Daisy, and +does not act like others, but we understand each other. He is waiting +for something better in his business prospects, and as I am so busy on +my new book I am glad to be left to myself for the present." + +It was the old story. Daisy could not doubt her sister's version of her +relations with Mr. Roseleaf. When he called the next time there was a +red spot in both her cheeks. He told her with happy eyes that he had at +last secured something which made it possible to speak to her father. +He had been offered a position on the Pacific Quarterly, at a good +salary, and another periodical had engaged him to write a series of +articles. + +"They tell me I have no imagination," he explained, "but that I do very +good work on anything that contains matters of fact. I have some money +of my own, but I did not want to tell your father I was an idle fellow, +without brains enough to make myself useful in the world. The novel on +which I base such great hopes might not seem to him worth considering +seriously, you know. So I can go with a better account of myself, and I +am going this very week." + +The bright light that shone from the face at which she looked made her +waver for a moment, but she found strength to answer that he must not +speak to Mr. Fern about her--now, or at any other time. She did not want +to marry, or to be engaged. She wanted to live with her father, and take +care of him, and she wanted nothing else. + +"Millie will marry," she added, as a parting thrust, meant to be very +direct and bitter. "One of us ought to stay with papa." + +For a while he was too overwhelmed by her changed attitude to make a +sensible reply. When it dawned on him that she meant what she said, he +appealed to her to take it back. He could not bear the thought of giving +her up, or even of waiting much longer for the fulfillment of his hopes. +He spoke in the most passionate tone, and his whole being seemed wrought +up by his earnestness. The girl was constantly thinking, however, that +this was the same way he had addressed Millicent, and that there was no +trust to be placed in him. + +"Calm yourself," she said, when he grew violent. "I have tried to be +honest with you. I have thought of this matter a great deal. You will +admit that it is of some importance to me." + +"To you!" he echoed. "Yes, and to me! I do not care whether I live or +die, if I am to lose you!" + +She wanted to ask him if he had told Millie the same thing, but she +could not without making an explanation she did not like to give. + +"There are others," was all she said. "Others, who will make you +happier, and be better fitted for you--in your career as a writer." + +He never thought her allusion had reference to any particular person, +and he answered that there was no one, there never could be any one, for +him, but her. He had never loved before, he never should love again. And +she listened, thinking what a capacity for falsehood and tragic acting +he had developed. + +After two hours of this most disagreeable scene, Roseleaf left the +house, moody and despondent. It would have taken little at that moment +to make him throw himself into the bosom of the Hudson, or send a bullet +through his brain. + +On the way to the station he met Mr. Weil, who could not help asking +what was the matter. + +"Oh, it's all up!" he answered. "She has refused me, and I am going to +the devil as quick as I can." + +"What are you talking about?" exclaimed the other, staring at him. "You +don't mean--Daisy!" + +"That's just what I mean. I went there to tell her of my good luck, and +to say I was going to ask her father's consent; and she met me as cold +as an iceberg, and said she had decided not to marry. So I'm going back +to town without a single reason left for living." + +Mr. Weil stood silent and nonplussed for a few seconds. Then a bright +idea came into his head. + +"Look here, Mr. Impetuousness," said he. "I know this can be arranged, +and I'm going to see that it's done. My God, the same thing happens in +half the love affairs the universe over! Give me a few days to +straighten it out. Go home and go to work, and I'll fix this, I promise +you." + +It took some time to persuade Roseleaf to follow this advice, but he +yielded at last. Weil pleaded his warm friendship, begged the young man +to do what he asked if only to please him, and finally succeeded. A few +minutes later Archie had secured an audience with Daisy. + +Too shrewd to risk the danger of plunging directly into the subject he +had in mind, Mr. Weil talked on almost everything else. It happened that +Millicent was away, which enabled him to devote his attention to the +younger sister without appearing unduly to seek her. But Daisy, only +half listening to what he said, was pondering the strange revelation her +sister had made, and thinking at each moment that a declaration of love +might be forthcoming. + +She remembered her father's injunction to treat this man with +particular courtesy, and was in a quandary what to do in case he came to +the crucial point. But to her surprise, instead of pressing his own +suit, Mr. Weil began to support in a mild manner the cause of Mr. +Roseleaf. + +"I met Shirley leaving here," he said, in a sober tone, "and he was in a +dreadful state. You didn't say anything cross to him, I hope." + +With these words there seemed to come to Daisy a new revelation of the +true character of this man. Loving her himself, he was yet loyal to his +friend, who he believed had a prior claim. As this thought took root it +raised and glorified its object, until admiration became paramount to +all other feelings. + +"Why should I be cross to him?" she asked, evading the point. "There are +no relations between us that would justify me in acting as his monitor +or mentor." + +Mr. Weil shook his head. + +"He loves you," he said. "You cannot afford, my child, to trifle with a +heart as noble as his." + +The expression, "my child," touched the girl deeply. It had a protective +sound, mingled with a tinge of personal affection. + +"I hope you do not think I would trifle with the feelings of any +person," she said. "Still, I cannot marry every man who may happen to +ask me. You know so much about this matter that I feel justified in +saying this; and I earnestly beg that you will ask no more." + +But this Mr. Weil said gently he could not promise. He said further that +Roseleaf was one of his dearest friends, and that he could not without +emotion see him in such distress as he had recently witnessed. + +"You don't know how fond I am of that boy," he added. "I would do +anything in my power to make him happy. He loves you. He will make you a +good husband. You must give me some message that will console him." + +He could not get it, try as he might; and he said, with a forced smile, +that he should renew the attack at an early date, for the cause was a +righteous one, that he could not give over unsatisfied. He took her arm +and strolled up and down the veranda, in such a way that any visitor +might have taken them to be lovers, if not already married. She liked +him better and better. The touch of his sleeve was pleasant. His low +tones soothed the ache in her bosom, severe enough, God knows! When her +father came from the city he smiled brightly to see them together, and +after hearing that Millicent was away, came to the dinner table with the +gayest air he had worn for months. + +Another week passed, during which Mr. Weil went nearly every day to +Midlands, and communicated to Roseleaf on each return the result of his +labors, coloring them with the roseate hues of hope, though there was +little that could legitimately be drawn from the words or actions of +Miss Daisy. The critic for Cutt & Slashem had also been given more than +an inkling of the state of affairs, and had perused with delight the +chapters last written on the famous romance. He saw that the next +experience needed by the author was a severe attack of jealousy, and as +there was no one else to play the part of Iago he himself undertook the +role. + +"Archie Weil is pretty popular with the Fern family, isn't he?" was the +way he began, when he called on Roseleaf. "I met the old gentleman the +other day and he seemed absolutely 'gone on' him, as the saying is. They +tell me he's out at Midlands every day. Got his eye on the younger +daughter, too, they intimate." + +It takes but little to unnerve a mind already driven to the verge of +distraction. The next time that Weil saw Roseleaf, the latter received +him with a coolness that could not be ignored. When he pressed for a +reason, the young man broke out into invective. + +"Don't pretend!" he cried. "You've heard of the case of John Alden. +What's been worked once may go again. I'm not entirely blind." + +Mr. Weil, with pained eyes, begged his friend to explain. + +"Tell me this," shouted Roseleaf. "Do you love that girl, yourself?" + +Unprepared for the question, Archie shrank as from a flash of lightning, +and could not reply. + +"I know you _do_!" came the next sentence, sharply. "And I know that it +is owing to the inroads you have made--not only with her but with her +father--that I have been pushed out. Well, go ahead. I've no objection. +Only don't come here every day, with your cock and bull stories of +pleading _my_ cause, for I've had enough of them!" + +The novelist turned aside, and Mr. Weil, too hurt to say a word, arose +and silently left the room. His brain whirled so that he was actually +giddy. Not knowing where else to turn he went to see Mr. Gouger, to whom +he unbosomed the result of his call. + +"Don't be too serious about it," said Gouger, soothingly. "It's a good +thing for the lad to get his sluggish blood stirred a little. In a day +or two he'll be all right. That novel of his is coming on grandly!" + +Weil was in no mood to talk about novels, and finding that he could get +no consolation of the kind he craved, he soon left the office. The +critic laughed silently to himself at the idea of the biter having at +last been bitten, and then took his way to Roseleaf's rooms. + +No answer being returned to his knock, he opened the door and entered. +At first he thought the place was vacant, but presently he espied a +still form on the bed. The novelist was stretched out in an attitude +which at first suggested death rather than sleep, and alarmed the +visitor not a little. Investigation, however, showed that he was simply +in a tired sleep, worn out with worry and restless nights. + +"What a beauty!" whispered Gouger. "A very dramatic scene could be +worked up if that sweetheart of his were brought here and made to stand +beside the couch when he awakes. Yes, it would be grand, but it would +need his own pen to trace the words!" + +The hardly dry pages of the great manuscript that lay on an adjacent +desk caught the eyes of the critic, and he sat down to scan them +closer. As he turned the leaves he grew so delighted as to become almost +uncontrollable. + +"He's a genius, nothing less!" he said, rapturously, and then tiptoed +softly from the chamber. + + + + +CHAPTER XVI. + +"I'VE HAD SUCH LUCK!" + + +One day Mr. Fern came home in a state of great excitement. He had not +acted naturally for a long time and Daisy, who met him at the door, +wondered what could be the cause of his strange manner. He caught his +daughter in his arms and kissed her like a lover. Tears came to his +eyes, but they were tears of joy. He laughed hysterically as he wiped +them away and told her not to mind him, for he was the happiest man in +New York. + +"I've had such luck!" he exclaimed, when she stared at him. "Oh, Daisy, +I've had such grand luck!" + +She led him to a seat on a sofa and waited for him to tell her more. + +"You can't imagine the relief I feel," he continued, when he had caught +sufficient breath. "I've had an awful time in business for years, but +to-day everything is all cleared up. The house over our heads was +mortgaged; the notes I owed Boggs were almost due; I had given out +paper that I could see no way of meeting. And now it is all provided +for, I am out of financial danger, and I have enough to quit business +and live in ease and comfort with my family the rest of my days!" + +Daisy could only look her surprise. She could not understand such a +transformation. But she loved her father dearly, and seeing that he was +happy made her happy, too; though she had had her own sorrows of late. + +"Tell me about it, father," she said, putting an arm around his neck. + +"You couldn't understand, no matter how much I tried to make it clear," +he answered, excitedly. "There was a combination that meant ruin or +success, depending on the cast of a die, as one might say. Wool has been +in a bad way. Congress had the tariff bill before it. If higher +protection was put on, the stocks in the American market would rise. If +the tariff rate was lowered they would fall. I took the right side. I +bought an immense quantity of options. The bill passed to-day and the +President signed it. Wool went up, and I am richer by two hundred and +fifty thousand dollars than I was yesterday!" + +For answer the girl kissed him affectionately, and for a few moments +neither of them spoke. + +"I don't wonder you say I can't understand business," said Daisy, +presently. "It would puzzle most feminine brains, I think, to know how a +man could purchase quantities of wool when he had nothing to buy with." + +The father drew himself suddenly away from her, and gazed in a sort of +alarm into her wide-opened eyes. + +"That is a secret," he said, hoarsely. "It is one of the things business +men do not talk about. When stocks are rising it is easy to buy a great +deal, if one only has something to give him a start." + +"And you _had_ something?" asked Daisy, trying to utter the words that +she thought would please him best. + +"Yes, yes!" he answered, hurriedly. "I--had--something! And to-morrow I +shall free myself of Boggs, and of--of all my troubles. I shall pay the +mortgage on the house, and we can have anything we want. Ah! What a +relief it is! What a relief!" + +He panted like a man who had run a race with wolves and had just time to +close the door before they caught him. + +"May I tell Millie?" asked the girl. "She has worried about the house, +fearing it would be sold." + +He shook his head as if the subject was disagreeable. + +"She will find it out," he said. "There is no need of haste. And at any +rate I don't want you to give her any particulars. I don't want her to +know how successful I have been. You can say that I have made +money--enough to free the home. Don't tell any more than that to any +one. It--it is not a public matter. I was so full of happiness that I +had to tell you, but no one else is to know." + +Daisy promised, though she asked almost immediately if the prohibition +extended to Mr. Weil. He was such a friend of the family, she said, he +would be very much gratified. + +She had reached thus far in her innocent suggestion, when she happened +to glance at her father's face. He was deathly pale. His body was limp +and his chin sunken to his breast. + +"Father!" she exclaimed. And then, seized with a nameless fear, was +about to summon other help, when he opened his eyes slowly and touched +her hand with his. + +"You are ill! Shall I call the servants?" she asked, anxiously. + +He intimated that she should not, and presently rallied enough to say he +was better, and required nothing. + +"What were we speaking of?" he asked, in a strained voice. + +"We were talking of your grand fortune, and I asked if I might not tell +Mr.--" + +He stopped her with a movement, and another spasm crossed his face. + +"You will make no exception," he whispered. "None whatever. My affairs +will interest no one else. If you are interrogated, you must know +nothing. Nothing," he added, impressively, "nothing whatever!" + +Mr. Fern's recovery was almost as quick as his attack, although he did +not resume the gaiety of manner with which he had opened the subject. +After dinner he talked with Daisy, declaring over and over that she had +been on short allowance long enough, and asserting that she must be +positively in a state of want. She answered laughingly that she needed +very little, and then suddenly bethought herself of something and grew +sober. + +"Do you feel rich enough to let me exercise a little generosity for +others?" she inquired. + +He replied with alacrity that she could do exactly as she pleased with +whatever sum he gave her, and that the amount should be for her to name. + +"You don't know how big it will be," she replied, timidly. + +"I'll risk that. Out with it," he said, smiling. + +"Supposing," she said, slowly, "that I should ask for a thousand +dollars?" + +"You would get it," he laughed. "In fact I was going to propose that you +accept several thousand, and have it put in the bank in your name, so +you would be quite an independent young woman. You must have your own +checkbook and get used to keeping accounts. I will bring you a +certificate of deposit for three thousand dollars, and each six months +afterwards I will put a thousand more to your credit, out of which you +can take your pin money." + +It seemed too good to be true, and the girl's face brightened until it +shone with a light that the father thought the most beautiful on earth. +Now she could return the thousand dollars she had borrowed of Mr. +Roseleaf, a sum that had given her much uneasiness since she broke off +her intimate relations with the young novelist. More than this, she +would have sufficient on hand to send the future amounts that Hannibal +would need to keep him abroad. It was such a strange and delightful +thing to see smiles on her father's face that she did not want anything +to disturb them. She was quite as happy as Mr. Fern, now that this cloud +had been lifted from her mind. + +The next day was a bright one for the wool merchant. By noon he had sent +for Walker Boggs and astonished that gentleman by handing him a check in +full for the entire amount of his indebtedness. In answer to a question +he merely said he had been on the right side of the market. Mr. Fern +also settled with his mortgage creditor, and went home at night happy +that his head would again lie under a roof actually as well as in name +his own. Notes which he had given came back to him soon after, and he +burned them with a glee that was almost saturnine. Burned them, after +looking at their faces and backs, after scanning the endorsements; +burned them with his office door locked, using the flame of a gas-jet +for the purpose. + +The ashes lay on the floor, when a knock was heard and Archie Weil's +voice answered to the resultant question. Mr. Fern lost color at the +familiar sound, but he mustered courage. + +"I've come to congratulate you," said Archie, warmly. "They say you have +made a mint of money out of the rise in wool." + +"Who says so?" asked Mr. Fern, warily. + +"Everybody. Don't tell me it's not true." + +"I've done pretty well," was the evasive reply. "And I'm going out of +business, too. It seems a good time to quit." + +Mr. Weil made a suitable answer to this statement and the two men talked +together for some time. After awhile the conversation took a wider turn. + +"Where's your young friend, Roseleaf?" asked Mr. Fern, to whom the +matter did not seem to have occurred before. "I don't believe I have +seen him at Midlands for a month." + +"No, he doesn't come," replied Archie, growing darker. "If you wish a +particular reason, you will have to ask it of your daughter." + +Mr. Fern looked as if he did not understand. + +"He became very fond of her," explained Archie, "and for some reason, he +does not know what, she has evinced a sudden dislike to him." + +Mr. Fern looked still more astonished. + +"Millie is a strange girl," he ventured to remark. "But I supposed--I +was almost sure, her affections were engaged elsewhere; and, really, I +thought he knew it." + +Mr. Weil stared now, for it was evident his companion was far from the +right road. He was also interested to hear that Miss Fern had anything +like a love affair in mind, for he had supposed such a thing quite +impossible. + +"I was not speaking of Miss Millicent, but of Miss Daisy," he said. + +The wool merchant rose from his chair in the extremity of his +astonishment. + +"You meant that--that Mr. Roseleaf--was in love with Daisy!" he said. +"And that she seemed to reciprocate his attachment?" + +"I did. And also that a few weeks ago she asked him to cease his +visits, giving no explanation of the cause of her altered demeanor. He +is a most excellent young gentleman," continued Weil, "and one for whom +I entertain a sincere affection. Her conduct is a great blow to him, +especially as he does not know what he has done to deserve it. I trust +the estrangement will not be permanent, as they are eminently suited to +each other." + +The face of Mr. Fern was a study as he heard this explanation. + +"If he was an honorable man, why did he not come to _me_?" he asked, +pointedly. + +"He was constantly seeking Miss Daisy's permission to do so," replied +Archie. "Which she never seemed quite willing to give him." + +"She is too young to think of marriage," mused Mr. Fern, after a long +pause. + +"He is willing to wait; but her present attitude, giving him no hope +whatever, has thrown him into the deepest dejection." + +From this Mr. Weil proceeded to tell Mr. Fern all he knew about +Roseleaf. He said the young man was at present engaged on literary work +that promised to yield him good returns. He had a small fortune of his +own beside. Everything that could be thought of in his favor was dilated +upon to the fullest extent. + +"I don't believe I can spare my 'baby,'" said Mr. Fern, kindly, "for any +man. You plead with much force, Mr. Weil, for your friend. How is it +that _you_ have never married. Are you blind to the charms of the sex?" + +For an instant Archie was at loss how to reply. + +"On the contrary," he said, at last, "I appreciate them fully. I have +had my heart's affair, too; but," he paused a long time, "she loved +another, and there was but one woman for me. Perhaps this leads me to +sympathize all the more with my unfortunate young friend." + +Mr. Fern said he would have a talk with Daisy, and learn what he could +without bringing in the name of his informant. + +"We fathers are always the last to see these things," he added. "It +would be terrible to give her up, but I want her to be happy." + + + + +CHAPTER XVII. + +A BURGLAR IN THE HOUSE. + + +Millicent Fern lay wide awake a few nights later, at Midlands, when the +clock struck two. She was thinking of her second novel, now nearly ready +for Mr. Roseleaf's hand. There was a hitch in the plot that she could +best unravel in the silence. As she lay there she heard a slight noise, +as of some one moving about. At first she paid little attention to it, +but later she grew curious, for she had never known the least motion in +that house after its occupants were once abed. She thought of each of +them in succession, and decided that the matter ought to be +investigated. + +Millicent had no fear. If there was a burglar present, she wanted to +know. She arose, therefore, and slipped on a dress and slippers. Guided +only by the uncertain light that came in at the windows, she tiptoed +across the hall, and in the direction in which she had heard the noise. +She soon located it as being on the lower floor where there were no +bedrooms, and a thrill of excitement passed over her. She crept as +silently as possible down the back stairs, and toward the sound, which +she was now sure was in the library. + +What was the sound? It was the rustling of papers. It might be made by a +mouse, but Millicent was not even afraid of mice. She was afraid of +nothing, so far as she knew. If there was a robber there, he would +certainly run when discovered. At the worst she could give a loud +outcry, and the servants would come. + +She tiptoed along the lower hall. A man sat at her father's desk, +examining his private papers so carefully, that he seemed wholly lost in +the occupation. + +The room was quite light. In fact, the gas was lit, and the intruder was +taking his utmost ease. His face was half turned toward the girl, and +she recognized him without difficulty. + +It was Hannibal! + +Hannibal, whom she supposed at that moment in France! + +Without pausing to form any plan, Millicent stepped into the presence of +the negro. + +"Thief," she said, sharply, "what do you want?" + +They had hated each other cordially for a long time, and neither had +changed their opinion in the slightest degree. Hannibal looked up +quietly at the figure in the doorway. + +"I have a good mind to tell you," he said, smiling. + +"You will _have_ to tell me, and give a pretty good reason, too, if you +mean to keep out of the hands of the police," she retorted. "Come!" + +He laughed silently, resting his head on his hands, his elbows on the +desk. Millicent's hair hung in a loose coil, her shoulders were but +imperfectly covered by her half buttoned gown, the feet that filled her +slippers had no hosiery on them. She was as fair a sight as one might +find in a year. + +"Do you remember the time I saw you in this guise before?" he asked, in +a low voice. + +A convulsion seized the girl's countenance. She looked as if she would +willingly have killed him, had she a weapon in her hand. But she could +not speak at first. + +"It was you who sought me then," said the negro. "And because I bade you +go back to your chamber, you never forgave me. Have you forgotten?" + +Gasping for breath, like one severely wounded, Millicent roused herself. + +"Will you go," she demanded, hotly, "or shall I summon help?" + +"Neither," replied Hannibal. "If you inform any person that I am here, I +will tell the story I hinted at just now. Besides, I would only have to +wait until your father came down, when he would order them to release +me, and say I came here by his request." + +Millicent chafed horribly at his coolness. + +"Came here by my father's request!" she echoed. "In the middle of the +night! A likely story. Do you think any one would believe it?" + +"I do not think they would. It would not even be true. But he would say +it was, if I told him to, and that would answer. Don't you know by this +time that I have Wilton Fern in a vise?" + +Yes, she did know it. Everything had pointed in that direction. +Millicent could not dispute the insinuation. + +"What has he done, in God's name, that makes him the slave of such a +thing as you?" she cried. + +"I will answer that question by asking another," said the negro, after a +pause. "Do you know that Shirley Roseleaf hopes to wed your sister?" + +The shot struck home. With pale lips Millicent found herself trembling +before this fellow. + +"You love him," pursued the man, relentlessly. "You do not need to +affirm or deny this, for I know. He loves Daisy, and unless prevented, +will marry her. I hold a secret over your father's head which can send +him to the State prison for twenty years. If I confide it to you, will +you swear to let no one but him know until I give you leave?" + +The girl bowed quickly. She could hardly bear the strain of delay. + +"Then listen," said the negro. "To save himself in business he has +committed numerous forgeries upon the names of two men. One of them is +Walker Boggs and the other Archie Weil. Very recently he has been +successful in his speculations, and has called in many notes with these +forged endorsements. But the proofs of his crimes are ample, and I +possess them. If he ever proposes to let Roseleaf marry Daisy, hint to +him of what you know, and he will obey your will. I shall be in the +city. Here is my address. If you need me I am at your service. +Understand, I shall not harm your father unless he makes it necessary. I +only mean to use the fear of what might await him, and you can do the +same. It is time I was going. I have found all I want here, though I had +enough before." + +He handed Millicent a card on which was the address he had mentioned, +and she allowed herself to take it from his hand. Then he started to +pick up a package of papers that lay where he had put them on the table, +when a third figure, to the consternation of both, brushed Millicent +aside, and stepped into the room. It was the younger sister. + +"Give that to me!" she demanded, imperiously, reaching out her hand for +the package. + +The apparition was so unexpected that the previous occupants of the +library stood for a few seconds staring at it without moving a step. +Daisy was dressed in much the same manner as Millicent, but she thought +only of the danger that threatened one she loved better than life--her +father. + +"Give that to me!" she repeated, approaching Hannibal closer. + +Without a word the negro, his head bowed, handed it to her. + +"And now," she said, in the same quick, sharp tone, "the others!" + +"They are not here," he answered, huskily. + +"Where are they?" + +"At my lodgings in the city." + +Instantly Daisy snatched the card from her sister's hand. + +"At this place?" she asked, hastily scanning the writing. + +"Yes," said Hannibal, in a voice that was scarcely audible. + +"I will be there this morning at ten o'clock. See that they are ready." + +The negro bowed, while his chest heaved rapidly. + +"And now," said the girl, pointing to the door, "go!" + +He hesitated, as if he wanted to say more to her, but recollecting that +she would meet him so soon, he turned and obeyed her. At the threshold +he only paused to say, "You must come alone; otherwise it will be of no +use." And she answered that she understood. + +She followed some paces behind and closed the door after him, pushing a +bolt that she did not remember had ever been used before. + +Then she turned to encounter her sister; but Millicent had disappeared. + + + + +CHAPTER XVIII. + +BLACK AND WHITE. + + +When Daisy reached her own room again, she felt assured that no one but +herself and Millicent knew what had occurred. This was something. Had +her father awakened, she did not know what might have followed. She had +seen him too often, pale and distraught, in the presence of his +relentless enemy, not to entertain the greatest thankfulness that he had +slept through this terrible experience. At any cost it must be kept from +him. She would beg, pray, entreat Millicent to seal her lips. And in the +morning she would go to the address Hannibal had given her and obtain +his proofs of her father's guilt, removing the frightful nightmare that +had so long hung over that dear head. + +Would Hannibal surrender his documents? He had made a tacit promise to +do so, and she had faith that she could make him keep his word. She knew +the negro had a liking for her that was very strong. + +She had made it possible for him to become a man--by giving him the +money that took him to France. Why had he returned so suddenly? What new +fancy had caused him to give up his studies and recross the sea to enter +her doors at night, to plunder still further secrets from her father's +private desk? There were a thousand reasons for fear, but the devoted +daughter only thought of saving the one she loved at all risks. She +would dare anything in his behalf. + +And this father of hers--that she had revered from babyhood--was a +forger! He had made himself liable to a term of imprisonment in the +common jail! He was a criminal, for whom the law would stretch out its +hand as soon as his guilt was revealed! His previous high standing in +the community could not save him; nor the love of his children; nor his +new fortune--won by such means as this. Nothing could make his liberty +secure but the silencing of the witness to his fault, the negro who had +carefully possessed himself of certain facts with which to ruin his +benefactor. + +What did Hannibal want? Surely he had no revenge to gratify, as against +her or her father! They had treated him with the greatest consideration. +Only once--that day on the lawn--had Daisy spoken to him in a sharp +tone, and then the provocation was very great. Since then she had raised +the money that was to make a man of him. What did he require now? An +increased bribe to keep him away? Well, she would get it for him. She +would spend one, two, three thousand dollars if necessary to purchase +his silence; if it needed more she could borrow of--of Mr. Weil. + +Yes, Mr. Weil was the friend to whom she would turn in this emergency. +He had lost nothing, apparently, by the unwarranted use of his name. The +notes on which his endorsement had been forged were all paid. When she +met Hannibal she would ascertain his price and then the rest would be +easy. Her father need not even know the danger to which he had been +exposed. + +In the morning she went to Millicent's room early, in order to have a +conversation with her undisturbed. Millicent was sleeping soundly and +was awakened with some difficulty. + +"I've only been unconscious a little while," she said, in explanation. +"I thought I never should sleep again. Oh, what a disgrace! My father a +forger! Liable to go to prison with common criminals, to wear the +stripes of a convict! It seems as if my degradation could go no lower." + +Reddening with surprise at the attitude of her sister, Daisy answered +that the thing to be thought of now was how to save Mr. Fern from the +consequences of his errors. + +"You're a strange girl," was Millicent's reply. "You don't think of me +at all! Won't it be nice to have people point after me in the street and +say, 'There goes one of the Fern girls, whose father is in Sing Sing!' I +never thought I should come to this. There's no knowing how far it will +follow me. I doubt if any reputable man will marry me, when the facts +are known." + +Thoroughly disgusted with her sister's selfishness, Daisy cried out that +the facts must _not_ be known--that they must be covered up and kept +from the world, and that she was going to bring this about. She reminded +Millicent of the evident suffering their father had undergone for the +past two years, changed from a light-hearted man into the easily alarmed +mood they had known so well. + +"If he deserved punishment, God knows he has had enough!" she added. +"And there is another thing you and I ought not to forget, Millie. +Whatever he did was in the hope of saving this home and enough to live +on, for us! During the last week he has had an improvement in business. +He has paid all of those people whose claims distressed him. You have +seen how much brighter it has made him. Now, when he had a fair prospect +of a few happy days, comes this terrible danger. Surely you and I will +use our utmost endeavors to shield him from harm. Even if he were the +worst of sinners he is still our father!" + +But Millicent did not seem at all convinced. She could only see that her +reputation had been put in jeopardy, and that a dreadful fear would +constantly hang over her on account of it. + +"It is your fault, as much as his, too!" she exclaimed, angrily. "You +both made as much of that negro as if he were a prince in disguise. I've +told you a hundred times that he ought to be discharged. I hope you'll +admit I was right, at last." + +There was little use in reminding her sister that Hannibal had shown +himself the possessor of some information that endangered Mr. Fern +before either he or Daisy began to cultivate his good will; for she knew +it well enough. What Daisy did say was more to the point. + +"Have you _always_ hated him?" she asked, meaningly. "What did he mean +last night by his reference to a time when you _sought_ him, _en +dishabille_?" + +Millicent sprang up in bed, with flashing eyes. + +"He is a lying scoundrel!" she cried, vehemently. "I never did anything +of the kind, and I do not see how you can stand there and repeat such a +calumny!" + +"The strange thing about it," replied Daisy, quietly, "is that you did +not dispute him. But then, you did not know a third person was present. +When I meet him this morning I shall ask for further particulars." + +Millicent sprang from the bed and threw herself at her sister's feet. + +"Would you drive me mad!" she exclaimed. "I am distracted already with +the troubles of this house, and now you wish to hear the lying +inventions of one you know to be a blackmailer and a robber! Don't +mention my name to him, I entreat you. He is capable of any slander. You +can't intend to listen to tales about your sister from such a low, base +thing!" + +Having Millicent at her feet, Daisy was pleased to relent a little. + +"Very well," she said. "I will not let him tell me anything about you. +But I want you to promise in return that you will do all you can to +protect father from the slightest knowledge of what happened last night. +I am afraid it would kill him. So far he believes us ignorant of his +troubles. If I can make an arrangement to send Hannibal back to France +he will remain so. Be sure you do not arouse his suspicions in any way, +and we may come out all right yet." + +The promise was made, and, as nothing could be gained by prolonging the +conversation, Daisy withdrew. In the lower hall she met her father, and +his bright smile proved to her that he was still in blissful ignorance +that any new cloud had crossed his sky. Millicent did not appear at +breakfast, for which neither of the others were sorry. It enabled Mr. +Fern to talk over some of his plans with his younger daughter. Among +them was a possible trip abroad, for he said he felt the need of a long +rest after his troubled business career. + +The last suggestion opened a new hope for Daisy. If worse came to worst, +and there was no other way to escape the jail, flight in a European +steamer could be resorted to. It would mean expatriation for life, as +far as he was concerned, but that would be a thousand times better than +a lingering death inside of stone walls. He could raise a large sum of +ready money, and they would want for nothing. Millie would not wish to +go with them, probably. She would stay and marry--how the thought choked +Daisy--marry Mr. Roseleaf; unless indeed, the young novelist did what +she had foreshadowed, repudiated the thought of allying himself with a +tainted name. + +Roseleaf! The bright, happy love she had given him came back to the +child like a wave of agony. + +Making an excuse that she had shopping to do, Daisy took the train to +the city with her father, and parted from him at a point where the +downtown and uptown street cars separated. Then she took a cab and drove +to the address given her. + +It was not the finest quarter in the city, and she would have hesitated +at any other time before taking such a risk as going there alone. At +present she thought of nothing but the object of her visit. Inquiry at +the door brought the information that the lady was expected and that she +was to go upstairs and wait. The woman who let her in was a pleasant +faced mullatress, and several young children of varying shades were +playing on the stairs she had to ascend. Daisy mounted to the room +designated, which proved to be a small parlor, with an alcove, behind +the curtains of which was presumably a bed. + +As the weather was quite warm, the girl went to the front windows and +opened them, in order to admit the fresh air. Then she sat down and +waited impatiently. There was a scent in the room which she associated +with the Ethiopian race, a subtle aroma that she found decidedly +unpleasant. It gave her an indefinable uneasiness, and she mentally +remarked that she would be glad when the ordeal was over. Her nerves +were already beginning to suffer. + +After the lapse of fifteen minutes, Hannibal entered. He had the look of +one who had passed a sleepless night, and despite the blackness of his +complexion, his cheeks seemed pale. + +"Good-morning," said Daisy, rising. + +"Good-morning," he replied. + +And then there was a brief space of silence, each waiting for the other. + +"I am here, you see," said the girl, finally, with an attempt at a +smile. "And now will you give me the things I came for, as I cannot stay +long?" + +The negro tried to look at her, tried many times, but failed. His eyes +shifted uneasily to all the other objects in the room, resting on none +of them more than a second at a time. + +"You wonder," he said, after another pause, "why I returned to America, +why I came to your house last night. I thought I could tell you--this +morning--and I have been trying to prepare myself to do so--but I +cannot. You blame me a great deal, that is evident in every line of your +face, but you do not know what I have suffered. Were your father to go +to jail for the term the law prescribes, he would not endure the agony +that has been mine." + +He looked every word he spoke and more. + +"I am sorry, truly sorry for you," she replied. "But why could you not +leave all your troubles, when you went to France, and begin an entirely +new life? You found it true what I told you, I am sure, about the lack +of prejudice--on account of your--race." + +He nodded and cleared his throat before he spoke again. + +"Oh, yes; but it is not the prejudice _there_ that worries me. It is the +prejudice _here_. It is the barrier my color brings between me and the +only being whose regard I crave!" + +The girl's cheeks grew rosier than ever, but she affected not to +understand, and once more reverted to the errand that had brought her +thither. + +"You promised me the documents with which my poor father has been +tortured," she said, reproachfully; "let us not talk of other things +until you have given them to me." + +The negro drew from a pocket of his coat a fair-sized package tied with +a ribbon. + +"They are all there," he said. "Every scrap, every particle of proof, +everything that could bring the breath of suspicion upon your father's +honesty. All there, in that little envelope." + +She reached for it, but instead of giving it to her, Hannibal caught her +hand, and before she dreamed what he intended, pressed a kiss upon it. +The next moment the girl, with a look of outraged womanhood, was rubbing +the spot with her handkerchief, as if he had covered it with poison. + +"You brute!" she exclaimed. "You--you--" + +She could not find the word she wanted; nothing in the language she +spoke seemed detestable enough to fill the measure of her wrong. + +"You see!" he answered, bitterly. "Because I am black I cannot touch the +hand of a woman that is white. You have claimed to be without the hatred +of the African so ingrained among Americans; you have talked about the +Almighty making of one blood all the nations of the earth; and yet you +are like the rest! A viper's bite could not have aroused deeper disgust +in you than my lips. And all because the sun shone more vertically on my +ancestors than it did on yours!" + +Daisy was divided between her horror of the act he had committed and her +anxiety to do something to free her father from his danger. She +suppressed the hateful epithets that rose to her tongue and once more +entreated the negro to give her the packet he held in his possession. + +"You can do nothing with it but injure a man who has been kind to you," +she pleaded. "And if you use the information you have, and afterwards +repent, it will be too late to remedy your error. Give it to me, and +return to France with the proud consciousness that you are worthy the +position you wish to occupy." + +Hannibal shook his head with decision. + +"That would be very well if I ever could be considered a man by the one +for whose opinion I care most. But while I am to her a creature +something below the ape, a mere crawling viper whose touch is pollution, +I will act like the thing she thinks me. To-day I possess the power to +make a high-born gentleman dance whenever I pull the string. You ask me +to give up this power, and in return you offer--nothing." + +"One would suppose," remarked Daisy, struggling with herself in this +dilemma, "that the ability to inflict pain was one a true nature would +delight to surrender. My father has done no harm to you." + +The negro bent toward her and spoke with vehemence. + +"But his daughter has! She has made my life wretched. Whatever position +I may attain will be worthless to me, without the love I had hoped might +be mine." + +"_Love!_" cried the girl, recoiling. "_Love!_" + +"Love and marriage," he replied. "In France we could live without the +hateful prejudices that prevail in America. I have natural ability +enough, you have told me so a thousand times, and I could make myself +worthy of you. As my wife--" + +Daisy rose and interrupted him fiercely. + +"Cease!" she exclaimed. "There is a limit to what I can endure. If you +mean to make any promise of that kind a prelude to my father's freedom +from persecution, we may as well end this conversation now as later. He +would rather rot in prison than have his child sacrifice herself in such +a manner!" + +She started toward the door, and he did not interrupt her passage, as +she half expected he would do; but he spoke again. + +"All this because I am black," he said. + +"Because you are a cruel, heartless wretch!" she answered, her eyes +flashing. "Because you have abused the goodwill of a generous family; +because you have tortured a kind old man and a loving daughter. If you +were as white as any person on earth, I would not marry you. Worse than +all outward semblance is a dark and vile mind. Do what you like! I defy +you!" + +The door opened and closed behind her. Hannibal heard her retreating +footsteps grow fainter on the stairs, and then there was silence. + +"I might have known it," he said, aloud. "I did know it, but I kept +hoping against hope. She would wed a Newfoundland dog sooner than me. +Nothing is left but to make her repent her action. I will bring that +father of hers to the dust, if only to revenge the long list of injuries +his race has inflicted on mine!" + + + + +CHAPTER XIX. + +"PLAY OUT YOUR FARCE." + + +When Daisy left the house where she had the interview with Hannibal, she +walked for some minutes aimlessly along the street. Her mind was in a +state of great excitement. She realized that she had defied a man who +could inflict the deepest injury on the father she dearly loved. How she +could have done otherwise was not at all clear, but the terror which +hung over her was none the less keen. The proposal of the negro--to +marry her--filled her with a nameless dread that made her teeth chatter, +though it was a warm day. Rather would she have cast her body into the +tides that wash the shores of Manhattan Island. Even to save her father +from prison--if it came to that--she could not make this sacrifice. She +now felt for Hannibal a horrible detestation, a feeling akin to that she +might entertain for a rattlesnake. Whatever good she had seen in him in +other days had vanished under the revelations of his true character. + +What to do next was the absorbing question. A great danger hung over her +father. A dim idea of seeking the mayor--or the chief of police--and +imploring their mercy, entered her brain. Then she thought of Roseleaf, +whose aid she might have secured, if he had not proved himself a +double-dealer, capable of making love to herself and Millicent at the +same time. And then came the resolve to seek out Mr. Weil, the one +person in all this trouble that seemed clear of wrong. Her sister had +told her that he loved her. Well, if necessary she would marry him. At +least he was a man of honor, and white. Yes, she would go to him and +throw herself upon his mercy. + +Daisy knew that Archie made his headquarters at the Hoffman House, and +summoning a cab she asked to be taken to that hotel. Ensconced in the +ladies' parlor she awaited the coming of the man she wanted and yet +dreaded so much to see. Luckily he was in the house, and in a few +moments responded in person to her card. + +"Why, Miss Daisy," he stammered. "What is the matter? Nothing wrong, I +trust. You look quite pale. Is it anything--about--your father?" + +The girl was pale indeed. Now that Mr. Weil was so close, the danger +that he might not be willing to help her rose like a mountain in her +path. She did not know exactly how grave a matter forgery was--whether +it was something that the injured party would be able or likely to +forgive. If she should tell him everything, and he should refuse to be +placated--what could she do then? + +There was no one else in the parlor, but seeing that she wanted as much +seclusion as possible, Mr. Weil motioned the girl to follow him to a +remote corner, where the curtains of a recessed window partially +concealed them. He felt that she had come on a momentous errand. His +suspicions concerning Mr. Fern were apparently about to be verified, and +if so, he did not mean that other ears should hear the tale. + +"Mr. Weil," began Daisy, tremblingly, "I don't know what to say to you. +I am in great distress. Would you--will you--help me?" + +He responded gently that he would do anything in his power. He bade her +calm herself, and promised to be the most attentive of listeners. + +Reassured by his kind words and manner, the girl began again; but she +could not tell her story connectedly, and after making several attempts +to do so, she broke out in a new direction. + +"I want so very much of you, dear Mr. Weil. And I am nervous and afraid +to ask what I would like. I will give you anything you please in return. +Yes, yes, anything." + +He smiled down upon her face, on which the tears were making stains in +spite of her. + +"You are promising a great deal, little girl," he said. + +"I know it; I realize it fully," she responded quickly. "But I mean all +I say. I did not think I could, once, but I am quite resolved now. +Millie told me you were in love with me, and feared I would refuse you. +But I won't. No, no, I will marry you--indeed I will--if you will only +save my darling father!" + +The concluding words were spoken in the midst of a torrent of sobs that +shook the girlish frame and affected powerfully the strong man that +witnessed them. + +"Daisy, dear child, don't speak like this," he answered. "If I can do +anything for your father I will most gladly, and the price of your sweet +little heart shall not be demanded in payment, either. Leave that matter +entirely out of the question, and tell me at once what you desire." + +She heard him with infinite delight, and wiping her eyes she began, in +broken tones, to relate the history of Hannibal's revelations. As she +proceeded his brow darkened, and when she had finished he muttered +something that sounded very much like a curse. + +"And what do you wish of me?" he asked, when she had ended. + +"To keep him from having my father put in prison; to give us time to +escape, if there is no other way; and to forgive the harm to yourself. I +know," she added earnestly, "it is a great deal to ask, but I have no +one else to go to. He has paid every cent, and you will lose nothing. +Tell me, dear Mr. Weil, is there anything you can do?" + +He had the greatest struggle of his life to keep from bending over that +trembling mouth and pressing upon it the kiss he knew she would not +refuse; that mouth he had coveted so long and which must never be +touched by his lips! + +"Can I do anything?" he repeated. "Certainly. I can stop that fellow so +quickly he won't know what ails him. Have no fear Miss Daisy. Go home +and rest in peace. Before the sun sets I will remove the last particle +of danger from your father's path." + +The girl sprang to her feet and would have thrown her arms around his +neck had he not prevented her. + +"You are certain you can do this?" she cried, beaming with happy eyes +upon him. + +"There is not the least question of it. But--I must demand payment for +my trouble. I shall not do this work for nothing." + +With a hot blush Daisy lowered her eyes to the carpet. + +"I have already told you what I will do," she said, trembling. "If you +accomplish what you say, have no fear but I shall keep my word." + +There was an element of pride and truth in the way she spoke that struck +the hearer strongly. The reverent smile on his face grew yet deeper. + +"I am placed in a peculiar situation," he said, after a slight pause. +"Your sister has, unintentionally, no doubt, misrepresented matters in a +way that may be embarrassing for us both. When I have removed the +troubles that stand in your way, I will talk this over with you." + +Daisy looked up quickly. What could he mean? + +"I beg you to explain," she stammered. "If there has been any mistake no +time can be better to set it right than now." + +The man toyed with the lace of the window curtain. He had no intention +of evading his duty, and yet he did not find it agreeable as he +proceeded. + +"Your sister told me," he said, finally, "that--you loved me. She was +wrong. I knew all the time she was wrong. You have just offered to give +yourself to me in marriage in exchange for the efforts that I am to make +on your father's behalf. But I would not marry a woman who did not love +me--who only became mine from gratitude. No, I could not accept you +under such circumstances." + +The young girl glanced at him timidly. + +"I wish you knew how much I liked you," she said. "I never knew a man I +respected more." + +"That is most gratifying," he answered, "for I hold your good opinion +very highly. You must think I speak in riddles, for I have said that I +demand payment for my services, and yet that I would not accept the +greatest gift it is in your power to bestow upon me. Let me wait no +longer in my explanation. When I have put your father out of all danger +from this blackmailer--and I can easily do it, never fear--you must do +justice to Shirley Roseleaf." + +She shivered at the name, as if the east wind blew upon her. + +"He is not a true man," she replied, in a whisper. "He has forfeited all +claim to my consideration." + +"Why do you say that? I am afraid there is another misunderstanding +here, my child." + +Then he drew out of her, slowly at first, the revelations that Millicent +had made. And he disposed of the charges, one by one, until there was +nothing left of them. + +"Could you--would you--only go with me to his rooms," he added, "and see +him lying there, wan and pale, disheartened at the present, hopeless for +the future, you would change your mind. He has never in his life loved +but one woman, and that one is yourself. I will not undertake to say why +you have been told differently, though I could guess. Shirley Roseleaf +loves you, Miss Daisy, and you love him. When I have made good my +promise, I shall ask you to come to my friend's side and bring him back +to health with the sunshine of your presence." + +Daisy was more than half convinced, for the strong affection she had had +for the young man plead for him in every drop of her blood. + +"Is he so very ill?" she asked, dreamily. + +"He has not left his room for a week," was the answer. "Nothing his +friends can say will move him. He is in such a state of mind that he +even refuses to have me with him; me, until very lately, his closest +friend. But if I tell him you have relented, there is no medicine on +earth will have such an instant effect." + +The girl thought for some moments without speaking. + +"It is my father first, of course," she said at last. "But while you are +arranging matters concerning him, I do not see any reason to keep me +from helping a sick boy. I--yes, I will go with you now." + +He looked the gratitude he could not speak, and fearful that in her +mercurial mood she might change her mind, he accompanied her without +delay to the street, and procured a cab, in which they were driven +rapidly to Roseleaf's lodgings. On the way, with that loved form so near +him, Archie Weil had a constant struggle. She might be his, if he would +forget duty. + +And he loved her! God, how he loved her! He could marry her, and perhaps +after a fashion make her happy. The perspiration stood on his forehead +as he dwelt on the bliss that he had resolutely cast aside. + +Roseleaf's landlady came to the door in person and informed the callers +that her guest was in about the same condition as he had been for some +days. He was not ill in bed, but he did not leave his room. When she +sent up his meals he received them mechanically, and they were often +untouched when the domestic went for the dishes. He wrote several hours +a day, though he was undoubtedly feeble. Did he have any visitors? Only +one, Mr. Gouger, who was with him at the present moment. Should she go +up and announce them? Very well, if it was not necessary. Mr. Weil could +show the lady into the adjoining room, which was empty, until he had +announced her presence in the house to his friend. + +Archie whispered to Daisy when he left her at Roseleaf's door, that he +would come for her as soon as possible. He did not enter the sick boy's +chamber at once, for something in the conversation that came to his ears +arrested his steps at the threshold. Mr. Gouger's voice was heard, and +Archie's ears caught the sound of his own name. + +"You should let me send to Mr. Weil," said Gouger. "I am sure he can +explain everything. You have written all you ought for the present. He +would take you to ride and bring the color to those white cheeks of +yours." + +"But he cannot bring me the girl I love," responded Roseleaf, with a +profound sigh. "Even if I have done him injustice, she is lost to me +now. You know appearances were against him. Why, you agreed with me +about it. I don't want to see any one. I want to go away from here, and +forget my sorrows as best I can in some far distant place." + +There was a sadness in the tone that went to the listener's heart. The +door was slightly ajar and Archie took the liberty of looking into the +room. Roseleaf lay stretched out in a great chair, and Gouger leaned +over him, appearing for all the world like some sinister bird of prey. +Mr. Weil felt for the first time in his life that there was something +uncanny in the aspect of the book reviewer. He did not think he could +ever be close friends with him again. And what did Shirley mean by +saying that Lawrence had "agreed" with him when he heard such base +opinions? + +The critic was fingering with apparent satisfaction a pile of MSS. that +lay on the table. It had grown vastly since Archie saw it the last time, +and must be fifteen or twenty chapters in extent now. + +"You must not go away until you have finished this wonderful work," +replied Gouger, with concern. "A few more months--a little further +experience in life--and your reputation will be made! Ah, it is +wonderful! It is magnificent! The world will ring with your praises +before the year is ended. Such fidelity to nature! Such perfection of +detail! In all my career I have never seen anything to approach it!" + +Shirley moved uneasily in his chair. + +"Do you ever think at what cost I have done this?" he asked. "I know the +pain of a burn because I have held my hands in the fire. I know the +agony of asphyxiation, because I have dangled at the end of a rope. I +can write of the miner buried beneath a hundred feet of clay, because I +have had the load fall on my own head. To love and find myself beloved; +then to see happiness snatched without explanation from my grasp; to +feel that my best friend has been the one to betray me! That is what I +have passed through, and from the drops of misery thus distilled, I have +penned those lines you so much admire. I have written all I can of these +horrors. I will not begin again till I have caught somewhere in the +great sky a glimpse of sunlight!" + +Mr. Weil could wait no longer. He pushed open the door and went to the +speaker's side. + +"The sunlight is awaiting you," he said, gazing down upon the figure in +the armchair. "You have only to raise your curtain." + +Mr. Gouger sprang up in astonishment at the sudden arrival, and perhaps +a little in alarm also; for he could not tell how long the visitor had +been eavesdropping at the portal. But Roseleaf turned his languid eyes +toward his old friend, and was silent. + +"Shirley, my boy," pursued Weil, with the utmost earnestness, "I can +prove to you now that Daisy Fern loves you and you alone." + +Roseleaf did not move. His lips opened and the words came stiffly. + +"You can promise many things," he said, "but can you fulfill any of +them?" + +So cold, so unlike himself! + +"What will convince you?" demanded Weil. "Shall I bring a letter from +her? Or would you rather she came in person, to tell you I speak the +truth?" + +The shadow of a smile, a smile that was not agreeable, hovered around +the corners of the pale mouth. + +"I shall write no more," said the lips, when they opened, "until I have +seen her and heard the reason for my rejection. I will discover who my +enemy is. I will unmask the man or the woman that has done me this +injury. Till then, I shall write no more. No, not one line." + +Mr. Gouger was nonplussed by the new turn in affairs. He knew that Weil +had some basis for what he said, that he was not the man to come with +pretence on his tongue. Neither of the other persons in the room paid +the least attention to him, any more than if he had not been present. It +was like a play, at which Gouger was the only spectator. + +"Could you bear it if I brought her to you to-day, if I brought her here +now?" asked Archie, beseechingly. "If I go and get her, and she comes +with me, will the shock harm you?" + +The ironical smile deepened on the face of the younger man. + +"Play out your farce," he said. + +Casting one look of apprehension at Roseleaf, Mr. Weil turned toward +the door that entered the hallway. Before he could reach it, a female +form came into the room and caught his arm. Together they faced the +recumbent figure in the chair. This lasted but a moment. Then Daisy +broke from her escort and threw herself at her lover's feet. + +"Come," whispered Archie, to the critic. "Let us leave them alone." + + + + +CHAPTER XX. + +LIKE A STUCK PIG. + + +Hannibal was neither better nor worse, morally, because his color was +black. There are men with white complexions who would have done exactly +as he did. There are others as dark as Erebus who would have done +nothing of the sort. + +He was no ordinary negro. His intelligence was above the average. When +he first entered the employ of Mr. Fern, that gentleman took every pains +to encourage the aptitude for learning that he found in him. Hannibal +accompanied his employer to his office, where he was entrusted with +important commissions, which he seemed for a long time to execute with +faithfulness and discrimination. At home he performed his duties in a +way that gave great satisfaction. At the end of the first six months Mr. +Fern would have hated to part with a servant that he believed difficult +to replace. + +But the great source of trouble arose gradually. Hannibal began to +entertain a sentiment for his master's younger daughter that was +impossible of fruition. Daisy treated him in the most considerate +manner, never dreaming what was going on behind his serious brow. +Millicent, ungovernable in all things, began early to show the bitterest +enmity toward the negro, while her sister, seeing that her father liked +and appreciated him, tried by her own kindness to compensate for the +other's rudeness. What caused Millicent's feelings Daisy had no means of +knowing, and she had not the least suspicion until she heard the +conversation in the library the night the house was entered. Even then +she did not take the subject much to heart, for she did not comprehend +all that Hannibal had meant to convey in the brief and sarcastic +expression he used. Daisy had a mind too pure to believe anything so +heinous of her own sister as Hannibal had intimated. + +The passion of love is a thing that grows in curious ways. What made it +seem to Hannibal that there was hope for him was the discovery that Mr. +Fern was committing forgeries and that the proofs might be his for the +taking. If he could hold such a power as that over this gentleman, who +could say that even so great a mesalliance as his daughter's marriage to +an African might not be arranged? + +The negro proceeded cautiously. He secured the proofs he wished, and let +Mr. Fern know tacitly that he had them. The terror, the undisguised fear +that followed, the admittance of the menial to a totally different +position in the household and the office, showed that the servant had +not underrated the importance of his acquisition. + +Not one word bearing directly on the subject passed between them. The +condition of the merchant was more horrible than it would have been had +his employe said outright, "I have the proof that you are a forger--I +can send you to prison for twenty years, and I will do so unless you do +so-and-so for me." He did not know how Hannibal meant to use his +information. He was afraid to broach the matter to him. He could only +wait and suffer; and suffer he did, as a proud-spirited, high-minded man +who has made an error must suffer, when such a sword hangs over his +head, ready at any moment to fall. + +As Walker Boggs had said, Mr. Fern was not by nature a business man. +After the former's retirement from active participation in the concern +there was a series of losses. When Mr. Fern took his pen and began to +imitate the signature of his late partner on a sheet of paper, nothing +but some such course stood between him and bankruptcy. He felt certain +that if he could tide over twenty-four hours he would be saved. Before +he left his office he had made a note, written Mr. Boggs name across the +back of it, and raised money thereon. + +He did this many times afterwards, but finally, when he again wanted a +name to save himself with, he dared not use this one. Boggs had called +in to remark that he should withdraw the capital he had lent as soon as +the term arranged for had expired. The sum was already infringed upon, +had the investor known it. The next name used was that of Archie Weil. +Archie had been to the house a good deal to see Millicent. Mr. Fern +believed there was a love affair between them, and he caught at the +straw of possible protection in case of discovery. The forgeries became +numerous, and the total amount on that day when the passage of a new +tariff saved the venturesome speculator, was very large. Hannibal was at +this time in foreign parts, or at least so the merchant supposed. He +soothed his conscience with the reflection that this additional wrong +act would enable him to right the others that preceded it. And things +might have gone well had not the negro returned, consumed with the love +he bore the younger daughter, and had not his love turned to vinegar by +her contemptuous rejection of his advances. + +An hour after Daisy left him, Hannibal had made up his mind to be +revenged. He had faltered a little in the meantime, asking himself what +good it would do to bring disgrace on the head of this poor old man, but +his injuries were too strong for mercy. He was despised by them all; he +would show them that, black as he was, his ability to hurt was no less +strong than theirs. Roseleaf had made the first impression on that young +heart he himself had craved. It remained to be seen whether he would wed +the daughter of a convict. There would be something pleasant, too, in +disgracing Millicent, who had once placed herself in a position where he +could have blasted her reputation forever, and had afterwards dared to +treat him as if he were the dirt beneath her shoes. Yes, Hannibal +decided, he would go to Mr. Weil and Mr. Boggs, and show them the way +this man had used their names, hawking them in the public market without +their knowledge. + +When Hannibal reached the Hoffman House and inquired for Mr. Weil, he +was told that he was absent. An hour later he received the same answer. +A visit to the residence of Mr. Boggs elicited a reply precisely +similar. In fact, the day wore away and evening arrived before he found +them. + +In the meantime, Mr. Weil had not been idle. While Daisy and Shirley +Roseleaf were tearfully exchanging their explanations, he sent a +messenger to Mr. Boggs, asking that gentleman to come to him without +delay. An hour later the messenger arrived with the gentleman, and +having engaged a room for temporary use, and seen to it that Roseleaf +wanted nothing at present but his fair nurse, Archie pulled Boggs in and +locked the door securely. + +"What's all this?" exclaimed Boggs. "You look and act as if there was +the devil to pay." + +"There is," was the short answer. "I want you to do one of the most +creditable acts of your life. I want it as a personal favor, and I'm +going to have it, too." + +Mr. Boggs crossed his hands over his paunch and waited for further +information. + +"Are you a first-class liar?" was Mr. Weil's next question. "Could you, +in an emergency, do yourself justice as an eminent prevaricator? Are you +able, for a certain time, to banish truth from your vicinity?" + +Mr. Boggs remarked, in response to these astonishing suggestions, that +he could tell much better what his friend was about if he would drop +metaphor. + +Mr. Weil hesitated. He saw no way but to trust this man with the facts, +and yet he dreaded the possibility that he might prove obstinate. + +"By-the-way," he said, as if to change the subject temporarily, "have +you been out to see Fern lately?" + +Mr. Boggs shook his head. + +"You ought to," said Weil. "He's improved a thousand per cent. in the +last few weeks. His financial luck has made a new man of him." + +"I'm glad of that," responded the other. "And I'm glad too that I've got +my money out of his firm, for I had a strong suspicion at one time that +he was running pretty close to the wall." + +Mr. Weil nodded to show that he believed this statement, and then grew +sober. + +"Sometimes, when men get into a tight place financially," he said, "they +do queer things. Supposing I should tell you that Mr. Fern had endorsed +checks and notes in a way he was not authorized to do?" + +The stout man opened his eyes wider. + +"That would be a piece of news," he answered. "But, if he did, he's made +it all right by this time, of course, and nobody is the loser." + +Mr. Weil drew himself up in his chair, as if righteously indignant. + +"Do you think that is enough?" he demanded, raising his voice. "By Gad, +supposing I tell you my name was one of those he monkeyed with!" + +The other did not seem much perturbed. + +"If the paper is all in, I wouldn't make a fuss about it, if I were +you," he replied. "Fern is a good fellow. He has gone out of business, +and I hope he'll never go in again. Take my advice, if you have learned +anything to his discredit, and keep it to yourself." + +Weil could hardly control himself. + +"Do you think I intend to let him forge my name on his notes and checks +and not put him under arrest!" he cried; "when the proofs are beyond +question?" + +Mr. Boggs bowed and said he meant that, exactly. He further remarked +that he was astonished that his friend had any other idea in his mind. +The Fern family was one in which he had been favorably received and he +ought to do everything possible to prevent harm to any of its members. +As he proceeded in this vein, Mr. Boggs grew so earnest that he did not +notice the broad smile of happiness that was creeping over the face of +his companion, and was not prepared to find a pair of manly arms clasped +around his neck. + +"You--you!" Archie Weil was trying to say. "You dear, kind, sensible +fellow. You've made me the happiest man on earth! Of course _I_ wouldn't +trouble Fern, but I was afraid _you_ would. He used your name as well as +mine, the rascal! Everything is paid up, and all the trouble now is that +a miserable scamp has got hold of some of the paper and wants to +blackmail him. And what I called you here to-day for is to get you to +agree--with me--to acknowledge every scrap of that paper as being our +own!" + +The sudden change was more than Mr. Boggs could bear for a moment. He +sat, to use a common expression, "like a stuck pig," staring at Archie. + +"You remember the nigger that worked for Fern," explained Mr. Weil. "He +got hold of some of these notes and checks, in Fern's office, and is +coming to look us up to-day, for the purpose of having his employer +arrested. A nice game, eh? But we will foil him, won't we? We'll show +him a trick worth several of his! He's probably gone to the Hoffman +House and he'll hang round till he finds me. I'll send word that I am to +be home this afternoon at five. You will be there with me. We'll tackle +him together. When he tells us that he has some forged paper in his +possession we'll act astonished and enraged; we'll ask him to show it to +us; and when we've got it all in our hands we'll say the signatures are +our own, and kick him down stairs. Are you with me, Walker? Is it a go, +old boy?" + +The agreement was made without more ado. Mr. Boggs began to see the +humorous element in the affair, and actually came nearer laughing than +he had done since the day he discovered that the size of his waist +placed him out of the list of eligible "mashers." + +When everything was settled, Mr. Weil excused himself for a few moments, +while he tiptoed to Roseleaf's door and knocked. Daisy came to open it, +and when she saw who the visitor was she blushed charmingly. + +"Come in," she said. "I am sure both of us are glad to see you." + +Shirley's eyes met those of his friend with a strange expression. He +knew now that all his suspicions were unfounded, that Weil had proved +himself noble and true. But the apologies that he owed could not be +suitably made in the presence of a third person, and he made no +reference to them. His changed appearance was enough, however, for +Archie. The reconciliation with the girl of his heart was perfect, and +the happiness that shone from their faces repaid their good friend for +his sacrifice. + +"I think I ought to take Miss Daisy to her train now," said Archie, +after the exchange of a few ordinary remarks. "She can come to see you +to-morrow again, and before many days we will have matters arranged with +pater familias, so that Shirley can go out to Midlands in his proper +capacity. Oh, you need not redden, little woman! The love you two have +for each other does both of you credit." + +Returning to Mr. Boggs, for the sake of allowing the young couple a few +minutes for their good-bys, Archie dismissed that gentleman with the +understanding that not later than half-past four he would join him in +his room at the Hoffman House. Soon after he escorted Miss Fern to her +station, and before he left the building Archie sent a dispatch to her +father, asking him to come to the city and meet him at his hotel at four +that afternoon. + +Everything worked to a charm. Mr. Fern arrived at the time designated +and went promptly to Mr. Weil's apartments. A brief explanation of what +was about to occur threw the wool merchant into a state of extreme +agitation, but he was assured that the last particle of danger to +himself would be removed before he left the Hoffman House. He was asked +to step into an inner room of the suite, the door of which was to be +left ajar, and to make no move unless he was called. + +Mr. Boggs came at his appointed hour, and Hannibal soon after. Delighted +to find both gentlemen--accidentally, as he supposed--the negro began +without delay to explain the cause of his visit. He stated the manner in +which he had discovered the forgeries, and said he thought it only his +duty to let the facts be known. + +Messrs. Weil and Boggs exchanged glances of well-simulated surprise as +the discoverer proceeded. + +"How long is it since you first knew of this matter?" asked Mr. Weil, +when Hannibal came to a pause. + +"Something like eighteen months." + +"And you allowed this swindle to go on all that time without saying a +word!" said the questioner. "I am surprised, when I remember that for a +long time you saw me almost daily." + +"That is true," was the quiet response. "I could not easily bring myself +to disgrace one whose bread I was eating. But that does not matter now. +I have here a number of notes on which Mr. Fern has forged both of your +names. The law will hold him just as strongly as if I had exposed him at +the time." + +He exhibited a package of papers, and unsuspiciously passed them to the +two gentlemen. Undoing the band Archie Weil spread the documents on the +centre table and went over them carefully with Mr. Boggs, separating +those which bore their several names. A close perusal of all the notes +followed, and finally Mr. Weil looked up and asked if there were any +more. + +"No, those are all," said Hannibal. "I believe there are thirty-six of +them." + +Mr. Weil consulted in a low tone with Mr. Boggs. They seemed puzzled +over something. + +"If these are really all the notes you have," said Archie, "there has +been a great mistake on your part. These endorsements are genuine in +every case. Where are the forged papers of which you spoke?" + +The negro stared with all his might at the speaker. + +"Genuine!" he repeated. + +"Undoubtedly, as far as my name is concerned. I have lent my credit to +Mr. Fern for a long time." + +"That is equally true of myself," spoke up Boggs, slowly. "I wrote every +one of these signatures and I am willing to swear to them." + +Hannibal's eyes flashed with baffled rage. He had been trapped. These +men had conspired to save his late employer from his clutches. They had +lied, deliberately, and he was powerless against their combined +assertions, although he knew the falsity of all they said. + +"You will be as glad as we to learn the truth," said Archie, in a softly +modulated voice. "It would have grieved you to know that your kind +employer had made himself amenable to the criminal law. Your only +object in this matter was to ease your conscience, and do justice. There +is nothing, now, to prevent your returning at your earliest convenience +to France." + +The negro rose and took up his hat. + +"This is very nice," he growled, "but I want to tell you that you are +not through with me yet." + +Mr. Weil rose also. + +"I trust," he said, "that you are not going to be impolite. I certainly +would not be guilty of discourtesy to you. But let me assure you of one +thing: If you ever, hereafter, annoy in the slightest degree my friend, +Mr. Fern, or any member of his family, you will wish heartily that you +had never been born. We can spare you now, Mr. Hannibal." + +With the last words, Archie waved his hand toward the door, and without +further reply than a glare from his now blood-shot eyes, the African +strode from the apartment. + +"I want you to take a ride in the Park with me, for an hour or so, and +then we will return here for dinner," said Mr. Weil to Mr. Boggs. + +He did this to allow Mr. Fern to leave the house without Boggs' knowing +he was there, and also to avoid a meeting that he felt would be too full +of gratitude to suit his temperament just then. + + + + +CHAPTER XXI. + +"WE WANT MILLIE TO UNDERSTAND." + + +Millicent Fern had been so busy on her second novel that she had hardly +noticed the prolonged absence of Shirley Roseleaf from her father's +house. Her first story was selling fairly well and she had received a +goodly number of reviews in which it was alluded to with more or less +favor. Not the least welcome of the things her mail brought was a check +bearing the autograph of Cutt & Slashem, that tangible evidence which +all authors admire that her efforts had not been wholly in vain. She had +put a great deal of hard work into her new novel, and felt that, when +Mr. Roseleaf added his polish to the plot she had woven, it would make a +success far greater than the other. + +Millicent thought she understood the young man perfectly. To her mind he +was merely awaiting the moment when she was ready to name the day for +their marriage. To be sure he had not asked her to wed him, but his +actions were not to be misunderstood. She would accept him, for business +reasons, and the romance could come later. Together they would +constitute a strong partnership in fiction. While she was wrapped up in +her writing it was quite as well that he remained at a respectful +distance. Between her second and her third story she would have time to +arrange the ceremony. + +When Roseleaf made his next appearance at dinner, in the house at +Midlands, Miss Fern smiled on him pleasantly. She remarked that he +lacked color, and he replied that he had been suffering from a slight +illness. Then she spoke of her new story, revealing the plot to a +limited extent, and said it would be ready for him in about two weeks. +The astonished young man saw that she considered his services entirely +at her disposal, without question, whenever she saw fit to call upon +them. He talked it over with Daisy. + +"You know," stammered the girl, "that Millie thought you were in love +with her. That would account for everything, wouldn't it?" + +"But where did she ever get that idea!" he exclaimed, desperately. + +"She says you tried to put your arm around her." + +"Just to practice. Just to learn what love was like. I told you how +ignorant I was, the same as I did her. Archie said she would show me, +but it didn't amount to anything. It was only when I asked you, Daisy, +that I began to understand. Do you remember how you stood on your toes +and kissed me?" + +The girl bade him be quiet and not get too reminiscent, but he would +not. + +"It taught me all I needed to know, in one instant," he persisted. "Ah, +sweetheart, how much happiness and suffering I have had on your +account!" + +He stooped and kissed her tenderly as he spoke. + +"And after this it will be happiness only," she whispered. + +Another kiss answered this prediction. + +"What can I do if she asks me to rewrite the whole of another novel?" +asked Roseleaf, with a groan. + +"I think you might find time to oblige her," said Daisy. "But you ought +to explain things--you ought not to let her misunderstand your position +any longer." + +He said that this was true, and that he would act upon the suggestion. +He had her father's consent, and nothing could stand in the way of his +marriage to Daisy before the year ended. It was not right, of course, to +go on with the implication of being engaged to both the sisters. + +"But I wish I could escape doing that writing," he added. "I hate +fiction, any way; I have been at work on one of my own that I fear I +never shall finish. There is much sadness in novels, and I like joy so +much better. I believe I shall abandon the whole field." + +This she would not listen to. She said her husband that was to be must +become a famous writer, for she wanted to be very proud of him. And Mr. +Fern came in to the room, and having the question put to him, decided it +in the same manner, as he was sure to do when he learned that his +younger daughter held that opinion. + +The retired merchant bore the appearance of a man from whose shoulders +the severe burden of a great weight had fallen. The tiger that had +crouched so long in his path, ready at any moment to spring, had been +vanquished. Beyond the profound humiliation of knowing that his sin was +exposed to the gaze of two of his intimate friends, he had no cause for +present grief. Both of them had proved friends indeed, and nothing was +to be feared from any quarter. Hannibal had disappeared immediately +after the interview at the Hoffman House, and it was supposed had gone +back to France. + +There was to be no haste about the wedding, after all. Now that the +young couple felt perfectly sure of each other they were more willing +than they had been to wait. The freedom that an understood engagement +brings to Americans was theirs. If Millicent had only known the true +condition of affairs, and was content with them, they would have been +perfectly satisfied. + +An old story tells how a certain colony of mice came to the unanimous +conclusion that a bell should be hung around the neck of a cat for which +they had a well-defined fear; and it also relates that none of the +rodents were willing to undertake the task of placing the warning signal +in the desired position. Both Shirley and Daisy wished heartily that +Millicent could be told the exact condition of their hopes and +expectations, but neither had the courage to inform her. Many of their +long conversations referred to this matter, and one day, when they had +discussed it as usual, Daisy hit upon a bright idea. + +"You don't suppose, do you, that Mr. Weil would tell Millie for us? He +has done so many nice things, he might do one more." + +Roseleaf wore a thoughtful expression. He realized how much Archie had +already done for him--realized it more fully than Daisy did; but he said +the matter was worth thinking of. He wanted very much to have it +settled. + +"Would--would you--ask him?" he stammered. "He would do anything for +you." + +"Yes," she responded, softly, "I will ask him. But we had best be +together. I do not want to broach the matter unless you are there." + +In a few days the opportunity came. Mr. Weil heard the voice he loved +best explaining the situation. + +"We want Millie to understand," said Daisy. "If she--if she still likes +Shirley herself, there may be an unpleasant scene, and you will see how +difficult it is for either of us to tell her. But you, who have done so +many kindnesses for us, could convey the information to her without the +diffidence we should feel. Will you, dear Mr. Weil?" + +And Archie said he would, and that it would be a pleasure to him. And a +bright light illumined the faces of the young people, as another stone +was rolled out of the pathway their feet were to tread. + +Mr. Weil did not know how to approach his subject except by a more or +less direct route. One day he was talking with Miss Fern about her new +novel, and she spoke of Mr. Roseleaf in connection with its nearness to +the required revision. + +"I don't know as Shirley will find time to help you out," he replied. +"He is so busy just now with Miss Daisy." + +She did not seem to comprehend him in the least. + +"Oh, he is merely filling in the time, as a matter of amusement," she +answered. "When I am ready he will be." + +He looked at her earnestly. + +"Is it fair to speak of love-making as a matter of amusement, Miss +Fern?" + +"Love-making? Is he, then, practicing for his novel with Daisy, also?" +she inquired. "I am afraid he will get erroneous views of love in that +quarter. She is such a child that she can have little knowledge of the +subject." + +She had evidently no suspicion of the truth, and he determined to become +more explicit. + +"Perhaps that is exactly what he wishes," said he. "The virgin heart of +a young girl certainly affords tempting ground for the explorations of a +novelist." + +For the first time she showed a slightly startled face. + +"I trust you do not mean that Mr. Roseleaf is deceiving my sister with +pretended affection?" she said. "I did not think him that kind of man. +If he is making love to her, as you call it, surely she understands that +it is only for the purposes of his forthcoming novel?" + +Mr. Weil drew a long breath. + +"Is it possible," he asked, "that you do not know him better than even +to hint that suspicion? Shirley Roseleaf is honor personified. He would +not lead any woman to believe him her lover unless he truly felt the +sentiments he expressed." + +Miss Fern looked much relieved. + +"I am glad to hear you say so," she replied. + +Archie was plunged into a new quandary. He had evidently made no +progress whatever thus far. + +"No," he continued, slowly, "he has not deceived Miss Daisy. His love +for her is as true as steel. I understand their engagement is to be +announced in a few days." + +If he had known the pain that these words would bring to their +hearer--if he had foreseen the anguish that was portrayed on that brow +and in those eyes--friend as he was of the young couple who had set him +to this errand, he would have shrunk from it. Millicent made no verbal +reply. Spasms chased each other over her white face. She seemed stricken +dumb. Her hands, lifted to her forehead, trembled visibly. And Mr. Weil +sat there, uncertain what to do, as silent as herself. + +Gradually the force of the storm passed, and Miss Fern staggered faintly +to her feet. Mr. Weil offered to support her with his arms, but she +refused his aid with a motion that was unmistakable. She was making +every effort to conceal her agitation, and she dared not trust herself +with words. After taking a weak step or two, and finding that she could +not walk unassisted, she rested herself upon the arm of a large chair, +and signed to him to leave her. Much mortified, but knowing no other +course, he bowed profoundly and obeyed the signal. + +The next morning he received the following letter at his hotel: + + "MR. A. WEIL:--SIR: If you are in any respect a + gentleman--which I may be excused for doubting--you will + not allude in the presence of any one to the exhibition I + made to-day. Had I had the least preparation I could have + controlled myself. You adroitly took me at a complete + disadvantage, and you saw the result. + + "I leave to-morrow for a new home. Never again shall I live + under the roof of those who have betrayed me. Do not think + I shall succumb to grief because of my sister's conduct. + She is welcome to her victory. No answer to this is + expected. Yours, M. A. F." + +Luckily Archie had escaped from Midlands without meeting either Daisy or +Roseleaf, and he obeyed as strictly as possible the injunction he +received from the elder sister. All he would say was that he had +informed her of the engagement and that she had made no reply. When he +was told a day or two later that Millicent had left the house, he merely +remarked that he was not much surprised, as she was a girl of strong +will and usually did about as she pleased. + +Mr. Fern, at first much distressed over his daughter's action, grew +reconciled when he thought of it more at length. He sent a liberal +allowance to her, which she did not return, and made arrangements by +which she could draw the same sum at her convenience at a bank in the +city. + + + + +CHAPTER XXII. + +WHERE WAS DAISY? + + +The wedding was arranged to occur in the month of October, and the +preparations, so dear to the hearts of all young women, were pushed with +dispatch. There were to be no ceremonials beyond the ones necessary, and +the company to visit the nuptials was limited to a dozen of the family's +most intimate friends. When the evening came, Walker Boggs was on hand, +wearing an extra large waistcoat, and a countenance such as would have +best befitted a funeral. Lawrence Gouger came, his keen eye alert, +foreseeing several chapters in the great novel that Roseleaf was +writing, based on the experiences of the next few weeks. But Archie Weil +wrote a note at the last minute, regretting that a business engagement +that could not be postponed had called him to a distant point, and +sending a magnificent ornament in large pearls for the bride, to whom he +wished, with her husband, all health and happiness. + +Mr. Gouger had had many arguments with Mr. Weil, in opposition to the +early date set for the wedding. He had shown that, according to the best +models, the hero of Roseleaf's novel--which was practically the young +man himself, ought to pass through some very harrowing scenes yet before +his wedded happiness began. He feared an anti-climax, and was +apprehensive that the wonderful romance would lie untouched for long +months while Roseleaf sipped honey from the lips of his beloved. And he +acted as if these things were entirely at the disposal of Mr. Weil--as +if the young couple were mere marionettes whose actions he could +control. + +"You could put it off if you liked," Gouger said, complainingly. "You +could introduce other elements that would be the making of the novel, +and you ought to do it. They should not marry before next spring, at the +earliest. You run the risk of spoiling everything." + +"Good God!" cried Archie. "You talk like a fool. I would have postponed +it forever, if I could, and you know it. But she loves him, and there is +nothing to be gained by delay. Confound you and your old novel! With the +happiness of two human beings at stake you talk about a piece of fiction +as if it was worth more than a blissful life!" + +Gouger straightened himself up in his chair. + +"It is worth a hundred times more!" he answered, boldly. "A novel such +as Roseleaf's ought to be would give pleasure to millions. But I see you +are bound to have your way. The only hope left is that there will be +trouble enough after marriage to spice the story to the end. A milk and +water, nursing-bottle existence for them would make all the work already +done on this manuscript mere wasted time!" + +Weil turned from his friend in disgust. Could the man talk nothing, +think nothing, but shop? + +But Archie did not come to the wedding. He knew the final strain would +be more than he could bear. It was one thing to sacrifice the woman he +loved and quite another to see her given into the arms of the rival he +had encouraged. One may do the noblest things, at a respectful distance, +and find himself physically unable to view them at greater proximity. + +Of course Shirley Roseleaf was almost too happy to breathe. But even the +happiest of lovers somehow manage to inhale a sufficiency of oxygen to +keep life in them, though they have no knowledge of the process by which +this is accomplished. He had seen several of his productions in type, +some in the leading magazines, and he had a permanent position now on +the staff of a great periodical. When the month he had allowed himself +as necessary for a wedding journey was ended, he would settle down to +work, and he knew no reason why he might not make a success in his +chosen field. And there was Daisy--always Daisy--he would never again be +separated from Daisy! Who that has loved and been loved can doubt the +perfect content of this young man? + +The saddest face at Midlands was that of Mr. Fern, who failed in his +best attempts to appear cheerful. He was not sorry that his daughter was +to be married, he would not have put a single obstacle in her way; but +she was going from him, and the very, very dear relations they had so +long sustained would never be exactly the same again. It was the destiny +of a woman to cleave to her husband. He found no fault with the law of +nature, but he had clung to Daisy so devotedly that he could not welcome +very sincerely the hour that was to take her away. + +The marriage was to be early in the evening. Everything was ready, even +to the trunks, filled with traveling and other dresses. The night was to +be passed at the Imperial Hotel in the city, and the journey proper to +be begun some time on the following day. + +On the most momentous morning of her life, Daisy Fern announced that she +had an errand to do in the city and would return shortly after twelve +o'clock. As she was so thoroughly her own mistress nobody thought of +questioning her more particularly. But twelve o'clock came, and one +o'clock, and three, and five, and she neither was seen at Midlands nor +was any message received from her. + +By the latter hour Mr. Fern was in a state of excitement. The entire +house was in an uproar. The servants were catechised, one by one, to see +if perchance any of them could guess the young lady's destination. Word +was sent by telephone to various places in the city, asking information, +but none was received. She had left the house, ostensibly to go to New +York, and nothing could be learned of her from that moment. + +As Mr. Roseleaf was not expected until some time later, Mr. Fern went at +last to the city and sought the young man at his rooms. He found him in +the company of Lawrence Gouger, dressed for the ceremony, and impatient +for the arrival of the hour when he should start for his bride's abode. +It may be conceived that the news Mr. Fern brought was not the +pleasantest for him. + +"You--you have not seen Daisy?" came the stammering question, as the +father paused on the threshold of Roseleaf's room. + +"To-day? Why, certainly not!" was the stupefied answer. "I was just +about to start for your house." + +Mr. Fern sank upon a sofa just inside the door. + +"Something--has--happened!" he groaned. "Ah, my boy, something has +happened to my child!" + +Roseleaf looked at Mr. Gouger, who in turn looked at Mr. Fern. + +"She--went away--this morning--on an errand," enunciated the father, +slowly, "saying--she would return--at noon. And--that is the last +we--have seen--of her. Oh, it seems as if I should go mad!" + +It seemed as if Shirley Roseleaf would go mad, too. He looked like one +bereft of sense, as he stood there without uttering a word. + +"Perhaps she has returned since you left home," suggested Mr. Gouger, on +the spur of the instant. "Don't lose heart yet. Let me send to a +telephone office and have them inquire. You have a 'phone in your house, +have you not, Mr. Fern?" + +The father bowed in reply. He was too crushed to say anything +unnecessary. Touching a button, Mr. Gouger soon had a messenger +dispatched for the information desired, and in the meantime he tried, by +suggesting possibilities, to soothe the two men. + +"You shouldn't get so excited," he protested. "There are a hundred +slight accidents that might be responsible for Miss Daisy's delay. +Perhaps she has met with an insignificant accident, and the word she +has sent to her father has gone astray--as happens very often in these +days. That would account for everything. Or she may have taken the wrong +train--an express--that did not stop this side of Bridgeport, and +hesitated to telegraph for fear of alarming you. 'Don't cry till you're +hurt' is an old proverb. Why, neither of you act much better than as if +her dead body had been brought home!" + +They heard him, but neither replied. They waited--it seemed an hour--for +an answer to the telephonic message, and it came, simply this: "Nothing +has been heard as yet of Miss Fern." + +The thoroughly distressed and disheartened father shrank before the gaze +of the lover, when this news was promulgated by Mr. Gouger. + +"What swindle is this?" were the bitter words he heard. "Have you +decided on another husband for your daughter, and come to break the news +to me in this fashion?" + +Mr. Gouger interfered, to protect the old man whose suffering was +evidently already too acute. + +"Hush!" he exclaimed. "Can't you see that you are killing him? Be +careful!" + +Roseleaf waved him back with a sweep of his arm. + +"Your advice has not been asked," he replied, gutturally. "I can see +some things, if I _am_ blind. That girl has gone to the man she +loves--the man he," indicating the father, "wanted her to marry. He is +rich, and I am poor, and he has won! It is plain enough! And he +pretended, day by day, to my face, that he had given her up for my sake; +and she put her arms around me, and beguiled me into confidence, in +order to strike me the harder at the end. Well, let him have her! I +wouldn't take her from him. But there's an account between us that he +may not like to settle. When you see your friend, tell him that!" + +Mr. Fern heard these terrible sentences like a man in a dream. It could +not be Roseleaf that was uttering them--the man to whom his young +daughter had given the full affection of her innocent heart! He was mad +to talk that way. Mad! mad! + +"You will repent these rash statements," said the old gentleman, rising +faintly from his seat. "You will repent them, sir, in sackcloth. I wish +with all my heart that Mr. Weil was here, for he would at least try to +help me find my child." + +Mr. Gouger suggested that Mr. Weil would be at Midlands soon, as he had +an invitation to the wedding. + +"No," replied Mr. Fern, chokingly. "I received word from him to-day that +he could not attend. He is out of the city." + +Roseleaf gave vent to an expression of nausea. + +"Are you yourself deceived?" he exclaimed. "He will not attend _my_ +wedding; certainly not! He is attending _his own_. If, indeed, he does +not compass his ends without that preliminary." + +Weak and old as Mr. Fern was he would have struck the speaker had not +the third person in the room interfered. + +"Do you dare to speak in that manner of my daughter!" he cried. "Must +you attack the character not only of my best friend but of my child as +well? I thank God at this moment, whatever be her fate, that she did not +join her life to yours!" + +With a majestic step he strode from the presence of his late prospective +son-in-law. Gouger, with a feeling that some one should accompany him, +followed. But first he turned to speak in a low key to the novelist. + +"Do not go out to-night, unless you hear from me," he said, +impressively. "This may not be as bad as you think, after all. I will go +to Midlands and return with what news I can get. Don't act until you are +certain of your premises." + +The young man was removing his wedding suit, already. + +"I shall not go out," he responded, aimlessly. + +"You might write a few pages--on your novel," suggested the critic, as +he stood in the hallway. "There will never be a better--" + +A vigorous movement slammed the door in his face before he could +complete his sentence. + +Hastening after Mr. Fern, Gouger accompanied him home, where the first +thing he heard was that there was still no news of the missing one. + + + + +CHAPTER XXIII. + +AN AWFUL NIGHT. + + +It was an awful night for Wilton Fern. The presence in the house of Mr. +Gouger and Mr. Boggs aided him but little to bear the weight that +pressed upon his heart. It was better than being entirely alone, but not +a great deal. Together they listened whenever their ears caught an +unusual sound. Twenty times they went together to the street door and +opened it to find nothing animate before them. + +Morning came and still no tidings. The earliest trains from the city +were visited by servants, for the master of the house was too exhausted +to make the journey. And at nine o'clock the gentlemen who had passed +the night at Midlands took the railway back to New York, with no +solution of the great problem. + +Mr. Gouger had not been in his office an hour before the door opened and +in walked Archie Weil. The critic started from his chair at the +unexpected sight, and remarked that he had not expected to see his +visitor so early. + +"I presume you heard the news and came home at once," he added, +meaningly. + +Mr. Weil was pale, and wore the look of one whose rest has been +disturbed. + +"I don't know what you mean," he replied. "I was called away on business +that I could not evade, and came back as soon as I could. I fear the +Ferns thought it rather rough of me to stay away from the wedding, but I +could not very well help it. You were there, of course. Everything went +off well, I trust." + +The speaker had the air of a man who tries to appear at ease when he is +not. His voice trembled slightly and his hands roamed from one portion +of his apparel to another. + +"Then you have heard nothing!" repeated Gouger, gravely. "Prepare +yourself for a shock. There was no wedding last night at the Ferns'. +Miss Daisy disappeared yesterday morning, and has not been seen since." + +If Mr. Weil had been pale before, his face was like a dead man's now. +With many expressions of incredulity he listened to the explanations +that followed. He declared that the occurrence was past belief, and that +he could see no way to account for it. Clearly something had happened +that the girl could not prevent. She would never have absented herself +of her own accord. She loved the man who was to be her husband, and if +she had wished to postpone her marriage she could have easily arranged +it. + +"I can think of nothing but a fit of temporary insanity," he added, with +a sigh. "And Shirley--poor fellow--how does he take it? Completely +broken up, I suppose?" + +When he heard the attitude that Mr. Roseleaf had assumed, Mr. Weil +seemed stupefied. Little by little Mr. Gouger revealed to him the +answers that the young man had made to Mr. Fern, finally referring to +the charge that he (Mr. Weil) had eloped with the bride. Archie's face +grew more and more rigid as he listened, but the anger that the relator +had anticipated did not show there. + +"He is crazy," was the mild reply. "I will go and see him, at once, and +enlist his assistance in the thorough search that must be undertaken. +Come, Lawrence, leave your work for an hour and go with me." + +Remembering his promise to return in the morning with the latest +tidings, Mr. Gouger put on his hat and coat and entered the cab which +his friend summoned. He felt that he was about to witness another +chapter that would make most dramatic reading in that great novel! + +"You had best let me go in first," he whispered, when they stood at +Roseleaf's door. "He is in an excitable frame of mind, I fear." + +For answer, Archie brushed the speaker aside and preceded him into the +chamber, without the formality of a knock. Roseleaf lay before them in +his easy chair, bearing evidence in his attire that he had not disrobed +during the night. He greeted his visitors with nothing more than a look +of inquiry. + +"I only heard of your terrible disaster a few moments ago," said Mr. +Weil. "I learn that Miss Daisy had not been heard from up to nine +o'clock this morning. We must bring all our energies to bear on this +matter, Shirley. Her father is unable to help us much. For all we know +she may be in the most awful danger. Rouse yourself and let us consult +what is best to do." + +Incredulousness was written on the quiet face that looked up at him from +the armchair. + +"Why don't you tell us what you have done with her?" said the bloodless +lips, slowly. + +Mr. Weil trembled with suppressed emotion. + +"This is no time for recriminations," he replied, "or I might answer +that in a different way. We must find this girl. Before we go to the +police let us consider all the possibilities, for they will deluge us +with questions. Did any one think," he asked, suddenly, turning to +Gouger, "of sending word to her sister Millicent?" + +Mr. Gouger replied that they had done so. A servant had been dispatched +early in the evening to Millicent's residence and had returned with the +answer that she had heard nothing of Miss Daisy and did not wish to. She +had previously sent a sarcastic reply to an invitation to attend the +wedding. + +"And she never came to comfort her father in his distress!" exclaimed +Mr. Weil. "What a daughter!" + +They could get nothing out of Roseleaf. He answered a dozen times that +it would be much easier for Mr. Weil to send Daisy home or to write to +her father that she was in his keeping, than to attempt the difficult +task of deceiving the police, who would have enough shrewdness to unmask +him. + +"Then you will do nothing to help us?" demanded Archie, his patience +becoming exhausted, though he kept his temper very well. "In that case +we must lose no more time. Ah, Shirley! I thought you worthy of that +angelic creature, but now--" + +He checked himself before finishing the sentence, and went out into the +hall. + +"I think I had best go to Midlands and consult with Mr. Fern," he said +to Gouger in a low tone. "There is a possibility that his daughter has +returned since you came away. What an awful list of horrible thoughts +crowd on one! If you can help me any I will send you word later." + +When Mr. Weil was gone, Mr. Gouger opened the door and looked again into +Roseleaf's room. The young man had not changed his position in the +least. + +"He has started for Midlands," he said. "What do you think of his +explanation in regard to his absence last night?" + +"I think--I know--it is a lie!" was the quick reply. + +"You really believe she went away to meet him--and that he has passed +the last twenty-four hours with her." + +"Undoubtedly." + +The critic waited a minute. + +"Do you think they are married?" he asked. + +Roseleaf closed his eyes, as a terrible pain shot across them. He +wondered dimly why this fellow should delight in uttering things that +must cause suffering. Gouger deliberated whether to say more, but +thinking that he had left the right idea in the young man's mind for the +purpose he had in view, he softly withdrew from the chamber and left the +house. When Roseleaf looked up again, some minutes later, he was alone. + + * * * * * + +Mr. Weil's hand was grasped feebly by the owner of Midlands, when he +came into the presence of the gentleman. Though completely exhausted Mr. +Fern had not been able to sleep. He listened wearily while his caller +suggested possibilities to account for his daughter's absence, but could +not agree that any of them were probable. When the idea was broached of +communicating with the police he shrank from that course, but finally +admitted that it must be adopted, if all else failed. In answer to a +hundred questions he could only say that he had no idea of anything that +could make her absence voluntary. + +"She loved her chosen husband devotedly," said the old man. "When she +hears what I have to tell her she will hold a different opinion." + +"Then," said Archie, ignoring the latter expression, "she must either be +the victim of an accident, a fit of aberration, or--" + +He could not bear to finish the sentence, but the father bowed in +acquiescence. + +Lunch was served and Mr. Weil sat down to it, trying by his example to +persuade Mr. Fern to take a few mouthfuls. Neither of them had any +appetite, and the attempt was a dismal failure. + +"I leave everything to you," said the host, as Mr. Weil prepared to take +his departure. "You are the truest friend I ever had, and whatever you +decide upon I will endorse. But I have an awful sinking at the heart, a +feeling that I shall never see my child alive. Do you believe in +premonitions? I have felt for weeks that some misfortune hung over me." + +Before Mr. Weil could reply a servant entered with a telegraphic message +that had just been received. Tearing it open hastily Mr. Fern uttered a +cry and handed it to his companion: + + "I am alive and uninjured. Look for me to-morrow.--Daisy." + +A gush of tears drowned the exclamations of joy that the father began to +utter. + +"Alive!" he exclaimed. "And will be home to-morrow! Ah, Mr. Weil, hope +is not lost, after all. But why, _why_ does she leave me in my +loneliness another night? Is there any way in which you can explain this +mystery?" + +Mr. Weil confessed his inability to do so. He tried, however, to show +the father the bright side of the affair, and bade him rest tranquil in +the certainty that only a few hours separated him from the child he +adored. When Daisy came home she would explain everything to his +satisfaction. In the meantime he ought to indulge in thankfulness for +what he had learned rather than in regrets. + +"Go to bed and get a good rest," he added. "I will make a journey to the +telegraph office in the city and see if it is possible to trace this +message. If I learn anything I will ring you up on the telephone at +once. And remember, if you do not hear from me, there is a proverb that +no news is good news. Daisy has promised to come home to-morrow. This +is something definite. An hour ago we were plunged in despair. Now we +have a certainty that should buoy us up to the highest hope." + +Catching at this view of the case, Mr. Fern consented to seek rest and +Mr. Weil took the next train to the city. Engaging a carriage he bade +the driver take him with all speed to Mr. Roseleaf's residence. +Notwithstanding the harsh manner in which he had been treated by his +late friend, he wanted to be the first to inform him that Daisy had been +heard from. He was smarting, naturally, under the imputation upon his +own honor, and felt that the telegram in his hand would at least remove +that suspicion. + +"I couldn't help coming again, Shirley," he said, when he was in the +presence of the novelist. "I know, despite the cruel manner you have +assumed, that you still love Daisy Fern and will be glad to hear that +she is safe from harm. Here is a telegram that her father has just +received, stating that she is well and will be at home to-morrow." + +His face glowed with pleasure as he held out the missive, but darkened +again when Roseleaf declined to take it in his hand. The young man had +not moved, apparently, from the chair in which he had been seen three +hours before, and his expression of countenance was unchanged. + +"Does she say where she passed the night--_and with whom_?" he inquired. + +"No. But she says she is well and will return. Is not that a great deal, +when we have feared some accident, perhaps a fatal one?" + +The novelist uttered a sneering laugh. + +"My God, Shirley, why do you treat me like this!" exclaimed Mr. Weil, +excitedly. "I have been your friend in everything, as true to you as man +could be! If I had done the dastardly thing of which you accuse me, why +should I come to you at all? I could have taken my bride and gone to the +other end of the earth. We need not have adopted these contemptible +measures. But although I _did_ care for this girl--more than I ever +cared or ever shall care for another--I knew it was _you_ she loved and +I did all I could to aid you in your suit. Have you forgotten how I +brought her here, as you lay in that very chair, and removed the +misunderstandings that had grown up between you? As God hears me, I have +no idea what caused her absence last night! I am going now to the +telegraph office to trace, if possible, the message and find where she +is at present, for I want to relieve her father's mind still more." + +Roseleaf seemed partially convinced by this outburst. He left his chair, +and began slowly to arrange his attire before the mirror. + +"If you are sincere," he said, "I will accompany you. I will also do my +best to discover the resting-place of this young woman. You must remain +with me till she is found. If we do not see her before to-morrow +morning, we will walk into her presence at Midlands together. Do you +agree to this?" + +"With all my heart!" was the joyous reply. + +In ten minutes they entered the carriage at the door, and were driven to +the station from which the telegram had been sent. + + + + +CHAPTER XXIV. + +"THIS ENDS IT, THEN?" + + +There was nothing to be learned at the telegraph office. As near as +could be remembered a boy had brought the message, paid for it and +vanished. Only one discovery amounted to anything. The original dispatch +was produced and proved to be in Daisy's handwriting. Roseleaf attested +to this, and he knew the characters too well to be mistaken. + +It was not advisable, in Mr. Weil's opinion, to go to the police, after +the receipt of this word from the missing girl. It would only add to the +notoriety of the family in case the press got hold of the news. But he +did think it wise to go to see Isaac Leveson and find a man named Hazen, +whose reputation as a detective was great. He could rely on the absolute +silence of both of them. The ride to Isaac's was consequently made next, +and by good fortune Hazen happened to be in. He listened gravely to the +situation as it was outlined by Mr. Weil, but expressed his opinion that +nothing would be gained by doing anything before the next day. + +"That telegram is genuine," he said. "It follows that, unless she is +detained forcibly, she will be at home to-morrow. The writing in this +message is not like that of a person under threats, like one compelled +to send a false statement. Your best way is to wait till she comes home, +providing it is not later than she indicates, and hear her story. +Perhaps it will explain the mystery. If she declines to do this, I will +undertake to probe it to the bottom, if you wish." + +Mr. Roseleaf took no part in this discussion. He was becoming convinced +that Archie Weil was innocent of any complicity in this affair, but he +was still disinclined to talk much. + +"Where shall we go now?" he asked, when they came out of the restaurant. + +"To the Hoffman House?" said Weil, interrogatively. "I believe with +Hazen that we can do nothing to-night." + +Very well, to the Hoffman House they would go. But they had not been in +Weil's room five minutes when a boy came up with a telephonic message +from Mr. Fern, stating that Daisy was safe at Midlands. + +"Let us return without delay," said Weil, enthusiastically. "We should +not lose a moment in removing this terrible cloud! Come, Shirley, we can +catch the six o'clock train if we hasten." + +Mechanically the younger man followed his companion through the hall, +down the elevator and into a carriage at the door. Forty minutes later +they alighted from the train at Midlands and were soon in the familiar +parlor at Mr. Fern's. A servant who had admitted them, stated that Miss +Daisy had been home about two hours but that she was now lying down. He +would inquire whether she would receive the visitors. + +What seemed an interminable time followed before the appearance of Mr. +Fern and his daughter. When at last they came in together, leaning on +each other, they were two as forlorn objects as one can imagine. The +sight of his sweetheart's woe-begone face smote Roseleaf like a blow. He +regretted to the bottom of his heart the cruel things he had thought and +said of her. + +"Daisy!" he exclaimed, stepping forward. "Daisy--my--" + +He could get no further, for Mr. Fern, with a majestic motion of his +hand, waved him back. The presence of the intended bridegroom was +evidently not agreeable to the old gentleman. + +"Sit down," said Mr. Fern, in a quavering voice, addressing himself +wholly to Weil. "I telephoned _to you_ that my daughter had returned, +for I knew _you_ would be anxious." He bore with special stress on the +word "you." "I--I did not know that you intended to bring--any other +person." + +The allusion to Roseleaf was so direct, that he could not help +attempting some kind of a reply. + +"Who could be more anxious than I?" he asked, in a tone that was very +sweet and tender; in vivid contrast, the old man thought, to his manner +of the preceding evening. "No one has a greater interest to learn where +she has been these long, desolate hours." + +Mr. Fern abandoned his intention not to recognize the fact that Roseleaf +was present, and turned upon him with a fierce glare in his sunken eyes. + +"What right have _you_ to ask questions?" he demanded, pressing the +trembling form of his daughter to his own. "You were the first to doubt +her--even her innocence--this lamb that would have given her life for +you only yesterday! She has returned to _me_, and henceforth she is +_mine_! You could not have her though you came on your knees! You wish +to know where she has been! Well, you never _will_! She will not tell +you! It is her own affair. I am speaking for _her_ when I say that we +desire no more of your visits to this house; we are through with you, +thank God!" + +It would be hard to tell which of the two men who listened to this was +the more surprised. Mr. Weil felt his heart sink as well as did +Roseleaf. Daisy clung to her father, without raising her eyes, and there +was nothing to indicate that she disputed his assertions. + +All was over between her and Roseleaf! Nothing could bring them together +again! And she did not mean to divulge the cause of her remaining away a +day and a night--that day and night that had been expected to precede +and succeed her marriage. + +Shirley rose slowly. He bent his eyes earnestly on the father and +daughter, and his voice was firm. + +"When one is dismissed, there is nothing for him but to go. I regret +sincerely what I said last night, when the horror of this thing came +suddenly upon me. I love you, Daisy, and I know by what you have told me +so often that you love me. Are the foolish utterances of a distracted +man to separate us forever? Conceive the agony I was in when at the very +moment I was to start for my wedding I heard that my bride could not be +found! If I had not adored you passionately would I have been on the +verge of madness, saying and doing things without reason and excuse? I +am ordered to leave you, my sweetheart, and if you do not bid me stay I +can only obey the mandate. But I love you more at this moment than ever. +All I ask to know is why you made this flight. If your answer is +satisfactory there will be nothing on my part to prevent our marriage." + +Archie Weil wished that he could have led this young man aside for just +a moment, to show him that this was no time to make demands or exact +conditions. He had no doubt that Daisy would explain everything, a +little later. All that was wanted now was a revocation of the dismissal +that Mr. Fern had pronounced. But he could not control the stormy ocean +upon which they rode. + +"You seem singularly obtuse," came the shaking voice of the old +gentleman. "It is not for _you_ to dictate terms. We want to see you no +more. Is not that clear enough?" + +It certainly did not seem to be. Roseleaf lingered, wondering if these +were really to be the last phrases he would hear in that house--in that +very room where he had expected to hear the words that would make this +sweet girl his for life. + +"Daisy," he said, addressing himself once more to the silent figure, "I +cannot believe you have so soon learned to hate me!" + +She looked up at the solemn face and then dropped her eyes again. + +"You will tell me where you were?" he pleaded. "It is my right to +know." + +She looked up again, with a wild horror in her features. + +"Oh, I _cannot_!" she cried. "I _never_ can tell you. I never _can_!" + +This statement shocked more than one person in that room. Up to this +moment Mr. Fern had only understood, from the disjointed expressions of +his daughter when she entered the house, that she did not wish to be +questioned at that time. She had also explained to him that she had sent +the telegram to make the coast clear of all except her parent, as she +did not wish to meet others on her first arrival. When he had urged the +duty of informing Mr. Weil she had acquiesced, not dreaming that Mr. +Roseleaf would be in his company. + +And now the old man felt that there was more in the answer she had given +than he had suspected--something very like a confession of wrong. Mr. +Weil felt this also, though he could not believe Daisy meant anything +very heinous, and Shirley Roseleaf had a dagger in his breast as he +reflected what interpretation might be given to her words. + +"You _cannot_!" he repeated, ignoring the position in which he stood, +and the presence of the others. "_You must!_" + +Mr. Weil made haste to allay the storm that he saw was still rising. + +"Let us be considerate," he said. "Miss Fern is not well. She is tired +and nervous. To-morrow, when she has rested, she will be only too glad +to tell us the history of her strange disappearance." + +Mr. Fern looked uneasily from his daughter to the gentlemen and back +again. He loved her dearly, and in this new danger that seemed to +threaten her--danger perhaps even to her reputation--he wanted more than +ever to shield her from all harm. Whatever had happened she was his +child. She should not be baited and badgered by any one. But Daisy did +not give him time to speak in her defense. She answered Mr. Weil almost +as soon as the question left his lips. + +"It cannot be. Not to-morrow, nor at any other time, can I tell you--or +any person--anything. You must never ask me. It would merely give me +pain, and heaven knows I shall suffer enough without it. Let me say a +little more, for this is the last time I shall ever speak of these +things. To you, Mr. Weil, I want to give my warmest thanks. You have +been a true friend to me and mine. I do not mean to seem ungrateful, but +I can tell you no more. And as for you, Shirley," she turned with set +eyes to the novelist, "you know what we were to each other. It is all +ended now. Even if you had expressed no disbelief in me when you heard I +had disappeared, it would be just the same. I hold no hard feelings +against you, whatever my father may say. It is simply good-by. I shall +not remain here much longer. Do not let this make you unhappy any longer +than you can help. Now, you must excuse me, for my strength is gone." + +Daisy had been much longer saying these things than the reader will be +in perusing them. They had come in gasps, as from one in severe pain, +and there were pauses of many seconds. When she had finished she rose, +and leaning heavily on the feeble old man who escorted her, walked +slowly out of the room. + +"Well, this ends it, then," said Roseleaf, gloomily, following the fair +figure with heavy eyes. + +"No, Shirley, it does not; it _shall_ not!" replied Weil. "There is some +dreadful mistake here, and a little time will clear it away. Have +patience." + +The novelist gazed at the speaker with a strange look. + +"I have treated you like a brute," he said, slowly. "And I have treated +Mr. Fern just as badly. My punishment is well deserved. But how can this +puzzle of her absence be accounted for! Of course she would have had to +satisfy me on that point before I could have married her." + +The listener turned giddily toward a window. + +"And yet you talk of love!" he said, recovering. "If that girl had done +me the honor she did you I would not have _asked_ her such a question--I +would have refused to _listen_ if it gave her the slightest pain to +tell." + +"I wonder she did not love you instead of me--for she did love me once," +was the sober reply. "You would be a thousand times better, more +suitable, than I." + +There was no reply to this, but the two men walked slowly out of the +house and to the station, where they took the next train for the city. +On the way they talked little, and at the Grand Central Depot they +separated. + +Lawrence Gouger, who had in some strange way learned the news of Miss +Fern's return, was awaiting Roseleaf in his rooms. + +"Well, I hear the missing one is found," he said, as the novelist came +in. + +"Yes. She is with her father. But the peculiar thing is that she closes +her lips absolutely about her absence. She not only refuses to speak +now, but announces that her refusal is final." + +Mr. Gouger hesitated what card to play. + +"When does the marriage take place?" he asked, finally. + +"With me? Never. I have been thrown over. Unless she had explained I +could not have married her, any way; could I?" + +The critic said he did not know. It would certainly have been awkward. + +"And what is your theory?" he added. "Do you still lay anything to +Weil?" + +"No. I am completely nonplussed. But, never mind. It is over." + +Roseleaf stretched himself, and yawned. + +"Do you know, Gouger, I almost doubt if I have really been in love at +all. I feel a queer sense of relief at being out of it, though there is +a dull pain, too, that isn't exactly comfortable. I told Archie coming +in that she should have married _him_. Upon my soul I wish she would. +She's an awful nice little thing, and he has a heart that is genuine +enough for her. Well, it's odd, anyway." + +Astonishment was written on the face of the other gentleman as he heard +these statements. + +"You have at least gained one point," he said, impressively. "You have +done the best part of the greatest novel that ever was written. Sit down +as soon as you can and finish it, and we shall see your name so high up +on the temple of fame that no contemporary of this generation can reach +it." + +"So high the letters will be indistinguishable, I fear," responded +Roseleaf, with a laugh. "Where do you think I can get the heartiest +supper in New York? I am positively starved. I don't believe I've eaten +a thing since yesterday. If you can help me any to clear the board, let +us go together." + +This invitation was accepted, and Roseleaf began making a more +particular toilet, taking great pains with the set of his cravat and +spending at least ten minutes extra on his hair when he had finished +shaving himself. He never had allowed a barber to touch his face. + +"You won't lose any time on the novel, will you?" asked Gouger, +anxiously, while these preparations were in progress. "You must take +hold of it while the events are fresh in your mind." + +"All right. I'll begin again to-morrow morning, and stick to the work +till it's done. Where shall we go to supper? I'll tell you--Isaac +Leveson's." + +The critic could not conceal his surprise at the overturn that had taken +place so suddenly in the young man's conduct. He stared at him with a +look that approached consternation. + +"You want to go there!" he exclaimed, unable to control himself. "You +wish to dine with some pretty girl, eh?" + +Roseleaf started violently. + +"No, no! Not--yet!" he answered. "We can get a supper room without that +appendix. I wish to be among men as mean as myself. I want to dine in a +house full of people who would cut a woman's throat--or break her +heart--and sleep soundly when they had done it!" + + + + +CHAPTER XXV. + +AN UNDISCOVERABLE SECRET. + + +The Ferns did not stay much longer at Midlands. Crushed by their +misfortunes neither cared to remain near the scenes that had made them +so unhappy, nor where they would be likely to meet faces which kept +alive their grief. The father knew no more than at first concerning the +strange conduct of his daughter. She had told him nothing, and he had +not asked her a single question. It was enough for him that she was +bowed with a great trouble. His only thought was to mitigate her +distress in every possible way. He was old--how old he had not realized +until that week when she changed from a happy, laughing girl, standing +at the threshold of a marriage she longed for, to a sombre shadow that +walked silently by his side. He was the one who under ordinary +circumstances should have received the care and the thoughtfulness--but +everything was altered now. He guided and directed the younger feet, +even though his own were faltering and slow. + +Where they had gone no one seemed to know. Archie Weil received one +brief note from Mr. Fern thanking him again in touching phrase for his +many kindnesses, and saying that Daisy wished to add her most earnest +wish for his happiness. The letter said they were going away for some +time; but no more. He went one day to Midlands, hoping to learn +something from the servants, and found the home entirely deserted. A +neighbor told him a real estate agent near by had the keys, but that the +place was neither for sale nor to rent. The agent, when found, could add +nothing to his stock of information. Mr. Fern had merely mentioned that +he was going on a journey and asked to have a man sleep at the house +during his absence, as a precaution against robbery. + +Mr. Weil saw Roseleaf two or three times, but the interviews were so +unsatisfactory that he felt them not worth repeating. The novelist told +him, as he had told Gouger, that he did not believe he had ever really +loved Daisy, and was actually relieved now that the strain was ended. No +persuasion could turn him from this statement, which he made rather in +explanation of his present course than as a defense of it. Gouger had +persuaded him that a love affair was necessary to develop his talents as +a writer. Before he knew what he was about, such an affair had been +precipitated upon him. He had felt its pleasures and pains to the +uttermost, and now it was ended. All that was left as a result was a +pile of MSS. which the critic pronounced wonderful. It was as if he had +been in a trance, or mesmerized. Henceforth he would confine his +writings to actualities or to poetic imaginings. + +Talking with a man who held these views was not inspiring, to put it +mildly, and Archie reluctantly gave up all hopes of making Daisy Fern a +happy woman through this source. He had dreamed of unraveling the +mystery that surrounded her and placing the young couple again in the +position which, by some horrible mischance, had been so vitally changed +in the short space of one day. Though he still loved Daisy with all the +warmth of his nature, Archie had no thought of trying to win her for +himself. She had given the fullness of her innocent heart to Roseleaf +and he did not believe she was one to change her affections to another +so soon as this. + +What had happened! What had happened! He thought it over day by day, and +night by night. + +Among the things he did before leaving New York--for he felt that a +journey was necessary for him--was to seek out Millicent. He found the +elder sister adamant to every suggestion of love for her family. She +believed herself injured by them, and would have nothing more to do with +either. As to the strange affair regarding Daisy she declared she had no +theory. She did not think it sufficiently interesting even to try to +formulate one. Her time was given to writing, and she had found another +assistant that quite filled Roseleaf's place. The firm of Scratch & +Bytum had accepted her latest novel, as she did not care to have +anything more to do with Mr. Gouger. + +When she mentioned the name of Roseleaf, Mr. Weil looked at her +intently, and saw that she uttered it with the utmost calmness. She had +hardened. Her fancied grievances had made her a different woman. She was +cynical before, but now she was bitter. He would not have believed that +such an alteration could have taken place in so short a time. + +"What is your new book about?" he asked, trying to be polite. + +"Crime!" she answered briefly. "It deals with the lowest of the low. It +suits the mood I am in. I am writing of things so terrible that they +will hardly be credited. To get at my facts I have to go into the most +depraved quarters, and associate with the _canaille_. But I am going to +make a hit that has not been equaled in recent years!" + +He smiled sadly. + +"Roseleaf had the same expectation," he said. "And yet he tells me that +he is doing nothing on that wonderful tale over which I have heard +Gouger rave so often. He has reached a point where he can go no farther, +and unless he rouses himself, all he has done is merely wasted time." + +Millicent closed her eyes till they resembled those of a cat at noonday. + +"Keep watch for mine," she said. "It will be all I claim for it." + +During the winter Mr. Weil was in California. As spring approached he +returned to the East and visited a well known resort in North Carolina, +where by one of those curious coincidences that happen to travelers, he +found himself placed at table exactly opposite to Mr. Walker Boggs. The +ordinary salutations and explanations followed, and then Mr. Boggs +alluded to a more interesting subject. + +"I think I can surprise you," he remarked, "by something that I learned +the other day. Mr. Fern and Miss Daisy are living within five miles of +here." + +It was certainly news, and entirely unexpected at that. Those people +might be in Greenland, for all Archie had known, and indeed he had +supposed they were on the other side of the ocean. He listened with +interest while Boggs went on to say that they had hired an old +plantation house and grounds and were living a strictly secluded life. +The narrator had seen them in one of his drives through the country, and +had talked a few minutes with Mr. Fern; but--and he said it with a touch +of pique--he had not been invited to visit them, nor had any apology +been made for the neglect. + +"By George, I thought it rather tough!" he added, "considering the way +you and I got him out of that nigger's clutches." + +"But you must remember what he has since endured," replied Archie, +mildly. + +"And there's been no explanation, of any sort?" + +"Not the slightest. I'd give half I'm worth if I could get a clue. It +worries me all the time. A life like that girl's ruined--simply +ruined--in twenty-four hours, and nobody able to tell why! It's enough +to drive a man frantic!" + +Mr. Weil did not drive immediately to Oakhurst, which he learned was the +name of the estate that Mr. Fern rented, but he enclosed his card in a +hotel envelope and sent it there by mail, without a word of comment. If +they thought it best to see him he would be glad to go, otherwise he +would not intrude on their privacy. + +Several days after--mails were slow in the South--an answer came. It +briefly requested that Mr. Weil and Mr. Boggs, if the latter were still +in town, would come to lunch on the following Wednesday. Boggs fumed +slightly at the apparent difference made between him and Weil, but ended +by going with his friend to Oakhurst. + +Mr. Fern did not look any worse than when Archie had last seen +him--indeed, if anything, he had improved in appearance. Time helps most +griefs to put on a better face, and though the marks of what he had +passed through would not be likely to leave his countenance, the utter +hopelessness had in a measure disappeared. When Daisy came into the +parlor, she also wore a mien not quite so crushed as when she left the +room at Midlands with her words of farewell. Whatever her trouble was, +it had not left her without something to live for. Her youth was doing +its work, and it seemed to the anxious eyes of the onlooker that time +would restore her nearly, if not quite, to her former radiance. + +In the presence of Mr. Boggs, neither father nor daughter cared to +discuss the past. They talked of the plantation on which they resided, +of the pleasant drives in the vicinity, and of matters connected with +the world in general, of which they had learned through the newspapers. +But after the lunch was finished Archie found himself alone with Daisy, +wandering through the extensive oak forest that gave the place its +name. + +"How long shall you stay here?" he asked her, as a prelude to the other +questions he wanted to follow it. + +"I don't know," she replied. "We shall probably go north during the warm +weather, perhaps to the White Mountains." + +He suggested that it must be rather lonesome at Oakhurst. + +"Not for us," she said, quickly. "We are all in all to each other, and +require no thickly settled community to satisfy us." + +"Daisy," he said, after a pause, "there are things I must say to you, +and I hope--with all my heart--you will find a way to answer them. In +the first place, do you believe me, really, truly, your friend?" + +She placed her hand in his for answer. The action meant more than any +form of words. + +"Then, tell me--tell me as freely as if I were your brother, your +priest--why you stayed from home that night." + +She withdrew the hand he held, to place it with the other over her eyes. + +"It is impossible," she responded, with a gasp. "I told you that I never +could explain, and I never can." + +He looked sorely disappointed. + +"I know no person on earth--not even my father," she proceeded, giving +him back the clasp she had loosened, "that I would tell it to sooner +than you. I have not given him the least hint. I know it leaves you to +think a thousand things, and I can only throw myself on your mercy; I +can only ask you to remember all you knew of me before that day, and +decide whether a girl can change her whole mental and moral attitude in +a moment." + +He drew her arm caressingly through his, and breathed a sigh on her +forehead. + +"Not for one second have I doubted your truth!" he replied. "Believe +that, Daisy, through everything. But I hoped for an explanation, for +something that might assist me to punish the guilty ones, for such there +must have been." + +The face that she turned toward him was full of terror. + +"Why do you say that?" she exclaimed. + +"Because--" + +"No, no!" she cried, interrupting him. "I do not want to hear you! We +must not talk on the subject! There is nothing to be told, nothing to be +guessed. This must be alluded to no more between us. It must end here +and now!" + +Thoroughly disappointed, he could do no more than acquiesce in the +decision, and he indicated as much by a profound bow. Then she changed +the conversation by an abrupt allusion to Roseleaf. When he told her, as +he thought it wisest to do, how well the young man had borne his loss, +she said she was very thankful. She had feared that he would suffer when +he came to his senses, and it was a mercy that this reflection had been +spared her. + +He spoke of her sister, and of the call he had made upon her, +suppressing, however, the disagreeable features of her remarks. Daisy +said she had written twice and received no reply. It was evident that +the separation in the family was final. + +Toward evening the visitors drove back to their hotel, discussing the +strange events that had occurred. Archie Weil did not close his eyes +that night. The love he had tried to suppress broke forth in all its +original fervor. He could not sleep with the object of his adoration +five miles away, so lonely and so desolate. + + * * * * * + +The next day Mr. Boggs went away, and the next after this, a new visitor +carried from the north. On coming out upon the veranda to smoke, Mr. +Weil found Shirley Roseleaf there. + +The surprise was mutual. Dying of ennui, Archie was glad even to meet +the novelist. They talked for hours and afterward went to ride together. +It appeared that Roseleaf had come south to get material for an article +in the interest of the magazine on which he was employed. + +One night, a week later, Roseleaf came into Weil's room and asked if he +would like to take a moonlight canter with him. Glad of any means to +vary the awful monotony Archie accepted, and the horses were soon +mounted. Weil noticed that the route was in the direction of Oakhurst, +but as he supposed Roseleaf knew nothing of the presence of the Ferns +there, and as the family were doubtless abed at this time, he made no +attempt to induce him to take an opposite course. It was a sad pleasure +to pass within so short a distance of the roof that sheltered the one he +loved best. On they rode, until they were within a mile of Oakhurst, +and then Roseleaf drew his animal down to a walk. A little further he +turned sharply into a by-path and alighted. + +"What's all this?" asked Archie, stupefied with astonishment. + + + + +CHAPTER XXVI. + +"I PLAYED AND I LOST." + + +Roseleaf did not immediately reply. He busied himself by tying his horse +to a tree, taking particular pains to make the knot good and strong. He +apparently wanted a little time to think what form of words to use. + +"I want you to see something that will interest you," he said, finally, +in the lowest tone that could well be heard. "If you will follow my +example and accompany me some distance further I think you will be paid +for your trouble." + +Mr. Weil was pale. He felt certain that this strange visit had been +premeditated, and that some revelation regarding the Fern family was +about to be made. The dread of an unknown possibility for which he had +no preparation--affecting the girl for whom he had so deep a +love--unmanned him. + +"I have a right to ask you to explain," he responded. "If your statement +is satisfactory I will accompany you gladly. I do not see the need of +any mystery in the matter." + +The younger man drew a long breath and looked abstractedly at the ground +for some moments. Then he spoke again: + +"There are subjects," he said, "that one does not like to discuss. There +are names that one hesitates to pronounce. If you will tie your horse +and go with me, your eyes and ears will make questions unnecessary." + +A momentary suspicion flashed through the mind of the other--a suspicion +that he was being beguiled to this lonely spot from a sinister motive +that boded his safety no good. But it was immediately dismissed, and +after another second of delay, Archie slipped from his saddle and +followed the example of his companion. + +"Lead on," he said, laconically. + +Without waiting for a second invitation, Roseleaf began to penetrate the +wood. He found a footpath, after going a short distance, and crept along +it slowly, taking evident pains not to make unnecessary noise. They were +going in the direction of Oakhurst, and in less than ten minutes the +chimneys of that residence could be seen in front of them. A little +further and Roseleaf stopped, placing himself in the attitude of an +attentive listener. + +The silence was profound. A slight chill permeated the atmosphere, but +neither of the prowlers felt cold. On the contrary, perspiration covered +the bodies of both of them. Roseleaf went, very slowly, along the path, +till he came near a fence, and then, diverging from it, drew himself +quietly into a thick copse, motioning Weil to follow. Here the leader +sank to the ground, with a motion which indicated that the journey was +temporarily, at least, at an end, and the second member of the party +followed his example. + +Half an hour passed with nothing to indicate the reason for these most +peculiar actions. Half an hour that was interminable to Mr. Weil, torn +with a thousand fears as to what it might all portend. At last, however, +a faint sound broke the stillness. Some one was approaching. Roseleaf +touched the shoulder of his companion to indicate the necessity of +absolute silence. + +Hardly ten feet away there passed a tall, athletic form, walking with a +quick stride, as of one who has no suspicion that he is watched by +unfriendly eyes. As the man's face became visible in the moonlight it +was well that Roseleaf had a pressure of warning on his companion's +shoulder. It was almost impossible for the latter to restrain an +exclamation that would have ruined everything. + +It was the face of Hannibal, the negro! + +Horrified, Archie turned his bloodshot eyes toward Roseleaf. What could +this strange visit of Hannibal's to that vicinity presage? Did he intend +to murder the master of the house and abduct the daughter? What was he +doing there, at an hour not much short of midnight? The terrors of his +previous imaginings gave way to yet more horrible ones. + +But the mute appeal that he shot at his companion produced no answer, +except a resolute shake of the head--an absolute prohibition against +the least sound or movement. + +Hannibal reached the fence and, without any attempt at concealment, +climbed over it into the enclosure where were situated the house and +outbuildings of the Oakhurst estate. He acted like one who knows his +ground and has no occasion to pick his way. He went, however, but a +little farther in the direction of the residence. In a place where the +shadow of a smokehouse hid him from the possible view of any one looking +from the windows, he waited in an attitude of expectation. + +The difficulty of controlling himself grew stronger and stronger for +Archie Weil. He wanted to end this terrible doubt--to spring over that +fence, pinion this fellow by the throat and demand what business he had +on those premises at that hour. Roseleaf realized all that was passing +in his mind, and kept his hand still on his shoulder, at the same time +warning him by signs that the least movement would ruin everything. It +seemed to Archie, when he thought it over afterward, that he had never +endured such pain. He knew beyond reasonable doubt that Hannibal was +awaiting some one by appointment. Who could it be? That was the +stupendous question that Roseleaf might have answered in a whisper, but +that he preferred for some mysterious reason his friend should discover +in the natural course of events. And that course was horribly, +torturously slow! + +Everything has an end, and the dread of the watcher changed to another +feeling as he saw distinctly one of the outer doors of the residence +open and Daisy Fern's form come out. Without glancing to the right or +the left she walked in the direction where the negro was waiting. For an +instant, overcome by his apprehensions, Archie closed both his eyes in +despair. The voice of Roseleaf was at last heard in his ear, a whisper +nearly inaudible, conjuring him not to betray his presence whatever the +provocation. + +When Archie opened his eyes again he saw that Hannibal stood in an +attitude of respect. When the girl approached he bowed, without offering +any more intimate courtesy. Daisy had the look of one who has made up +her mind to endure an unpleasant interview and desires to end it as +quickly as possible. + +"Well?" she said, in a low tone. + +"I am going to-morrow," he replied, in a voice that shook with emotion. + +"Yes." + +"And, as I told you, I want to say good-by once more." + +Archie breathed a trifle easier. He could not tell what fears had +crowded upon him--they were indistinct in their horribleness--but some +of them had already flown. + +"You are as cold as ever," continued the rich voice of the negro, in a +cadence that was meant to be reproachful. + +"Do you think I could be anything else?" was the quick reply, as if +forced from lips that had meant to remain silent. "Has your conduct been +such as to make me like or respect you?" + +The negro's eyes fell before her indignant gaze. + +"No," he answered, humbly. "I expect nothing; I ask nothing. I can see +my mistakes now. And yet, it would have been no different had I played +the part of an angel toward you. The entire question with you was +settled in advance by the fact that my skin was black." + +The pressure on Weil's shoulder grew heavier, from time to time, as his +companion realized his temptation to break from his covert. + +"If it had been as white as any man's who ever lived," replied Daisy, +boldly, "your conduct would have earned the contempt of a +self-respecting person! A blackmailer, an abductor, a conspirator +against the peace of mind of an old man and a young girl who never +harmed you! I wonder you can talk of other reasons when you created so +many by your wicked acts!" + +Hannibal shrugged his shoulders. + +"It is true, nevertheless," he replied. "I am a negro. In a moment of +insanity I dreamed I was a Man! I dreamed I might gain for my wife a +woman whose ancestors had been born in a more northerly clime than my +own. To gain that end I took the only course that seemed open. I +possessed myself of an influence that would make her father fear me. +Well, I played and I lost--and then, like other players and losers, even +white ones, I was desperate. You were to be married to another--a man I +hated. Life had lost its only charm, I could not bear that you should be +his bride. My torture was intense. I asked but for death." + +These revelations, so novel to at least one of the listeners, smote him +with terrific force. + +"You asked for more!" said the girl, hoarsely. "You asked for my death +as well as your own. And you wanted me to die in such a situation that +all the world would say I had perished willingly with you. Could +anything more cowardly be conceived! Was anything more dastardly ever +devised! It was the morning of my wedding day; my father was waiting for +me at home; my promised husband was preparing for the bridal; my friends +were invited to the ceremony. What were all these to you? With +Mephistophelian cunning you sent me a letter in another person's +handwriting, saying that, if I would come to a certain address, and pay +fifty dollars, several forged notes given by my father would be returned +to me. You knew I would respond. You knew I would tell no one where I +was going, as I did not expect to be detained more than an hour, and +there was apparently the strongest reasons for secrecy. And when I was +completely in your clutches you gave me the alternative of _marrying_ +you--ugh!--or of taking the poison you had so carefully prepared. Oh, +how _could_ you! how _could_ you, when you professed to _like_ me!" + +There was a low gurgle in Archie Weil's throat, that he could not +suppress. Fearful that it might be heard in that dead silence, Roseleaf +shook his companion slightly. Mingled with his other emotions there now +came to Weil a stupefied wonder at the apparent coolness of the +novelist. + +"When one is willing to die for his love, it should not be questioned," +said the negro. "I could not have you in life--I wanted you in death. I +wanted the world, which had despised me, to think a beautiful woman had +preferred to die with me rather than marry a man she did not wish to +wed. But why should we recall that dreadful day and night? You won the +victory. You, with your superior finesse, triumphed over the African as +your race has always triumphed over mine. I demanded love or death. You +dissuaded me from both. And the next day I permitted you to depart, and +saw vanish with you the last hope of happiness I shall ever feel." + +The rich voice of the speaker broke completely at the close, but the +girl who heard him seemed to feel no sympathy for his distress. + +"Always yourself!" she exclaimed. "Do you ever think of the life you +left to _me_--a life hardly more kind than the murder you contemplated. +Before you opened the portals that you had meant for my tomb you made me +swear never to reveal where I had passed those hours. Never, no matter +what the provocation, was I to utter one word to implicate you in the +tragedy that had ruined two households. _You_ were the one to be +protected--_I_ the one to suffer! Had it not been for the sacrifice to +my reputation in being found there with you dead--no explanation being +possible from my closed lips--I would have accepted the alternative and +swallowed the poison rather than live to bear what I do to-day!" + +Weil closed his eyes again. His brain was swimming. + +"And you are sure," asked the negro, after a pause, "that you have not +violated that promise? You can still swear that you have never, even by +a hint, given the least cause of suspicion against me?" + +"Never!" said the girl. "I consider my oath binding, notwithstanding the +manner in which it was obtained. You may live in what peace your +conscience allows you, free at least from that fear." + +The negro evidently believed her, for he heaved a sigh of relief. + +"Well, good-by," he said. + +"Good-by," she replied. "And--you are not to come again, remember. There +is nothing to be gained from another meeting between us. If--if you want +money--I can send it to you." + +He lifted his head rather proudly at the last suggestion. + +"I do not want any," he said. "I am not low enough for that. I took the +sum from you to go to France, because I hoped--in my infatuation--that I +could make myself something that you would not despise. If I had wanted +money I could have got thousands out of your father, and I could still, +notwithstanding the pretence of those men that they wrote the signatures +I saw him forge. No, I mean to give you back what I had from you, if +ever I can compose my mind enough to go to work and earn it. I have no +ambition. I stay in my mother's cabin, day after day, unable to make the +least effort. Perhaps I can do something--in time." + +The negro took a step away, and then turned, as if unable to go so +abruptly. + +"Good-by," he said, again. + +"Good-by," answered Daisy, impassively. "I want to tell you, now I think +of it, where I got that $1,000 I gave you. It was lent to me by the man +you hated so, Mr. Roseleaf." + +Hannibal did not seem to care for this information. + +"He did not lend it for any good-will to me," he replied. "I have heard, +by-the-way, that he did not mind losing you--this man for whom you +spurned a heart that worshiped your very footprints. I believe some day +I'll take a shot at him." + +The girl shuddered. + +"It would be like you," she said, "if no one was looking, and he did not +know of your presence. I don't believe, with all your claims, there is a +manly trait in you." + +The tall form drew itself up and the athletic arms were folded firmly. + +"Take care!" said the red lips, sharply, and the ivory white teeth +gleamed. + +"Oh, I am not afraid," replied Daisy. "My maid is watching us from +behind the blinds of my room. I told her my own story about why I was to +meet you, but should harm happen to me the alarm bell would ring out." + +Startled visibly at this information, Hannibal glanced in the direction +indicated, and then began to take his departure in earnest. + +"All right," he said, as he mounted the fence. "Keep your word and I'll +keep mine. But if you play any tricks, remember that's a game for two." + +The men could not arise without startling Daisy, who would undoubtedly +have uttered a loud scream had they suddenly appeared before her vision. +They saw her stand there for at least ten minutes, before she went into +the house. When she was out of sight, Weil crawled into a safer place +and rose to his feet. + +"I am going to follow that cur!" he muttered, between his teeth. + +"To-morrow is soon enough," was the calm reply of his friend. "I know +where he lives." + + + + +CHAPTER XXVII. + +ABSOLUTELY BLAMELESS. + + +Most men who are by nature excitable surprise their friends on occasions +by exhibiting great calmness. Shirley Roseleaf, who had often been +thrown into the greatest heat by far less important happenings than the +one just narrated, seemed a picture of repose as he walked through the +wood with his friend in the direction of the horses they had tethered. + +"How did you discover they were going to have this meeting?" asked Weil, +nervously. "I am all at sea." + +"I have been on his track ever since the day I was to have been +married," was the reply. "I didn't intend to leave a mystery like that +unsolved. I discovered that the Ferns were living here, and that +Hannibal originated a few miles further on. I found that Miss Daisy was +still a little afraid of him, that he was using an influence over her +which was to say the least strange. Before I got at the truth I had some +queer misgivings, you may believe." + +Mr. Weil stared at his companion. + +"But how did you learn all this?" he demanded. + +"Oh," said Roseleaf, with a slight laugh, "I've been in this +neighborhood for two months. They haven't met once but I heard every +word they said. Little by little I gained the truth of the matter. And +to-night, as it was perhaps the last time they would be together, I +wanted you to understand it perfectly." + +Archie frowned at the thoughts that crept in upon his brain. + +"Excuse me for saying that you don't appear to mind it much," he +muttered. "If you have heard many conversations like the one to which I +just listened, and could go away without expressing the thoughts you +ought to feel, you are made up differently from me." + +"That may be so, too," smiled the other, good-humoredly. "But remember +that things are changed. I once was a man in love--now I am simply a +writer of romance." + +The elder man shivered. + +"Could one be actually in love with a girl like that and then recover +from it?" he asked, half to himself. + +"I don't think I ever was very much in love," was the quick reply. "But +never mind that. Let us talk of Hannibal. You spoke of going after him. +What would you have done had you carried out that intention?" + +Weil had not thought of the matter in this concrete form. He had wanted +to punish the negro for his crimes against the woman he so dearly loved, +against the old man for whom he had such a warm affection. How he would +have accomplished this he had not decided. The first thing was to follow +and tax the wretch with his offense. Subsequent events would have +depended on the way Hannibal met the accusation. Certainly the temper of +the pursuer would have been warm, and his conduct might have been +severe. + +"I don't know," he said. "I should have told him for one thing that he +would have to reckon with something more than a weak girl or a poor old +man if he annoyed that family again. In case he had been impertinent I +cannot say what I might have been tempted to do." + +"All the more reason for congratulating yourself," replied Roseleaf, as +they reached the horses, "that you did not follow him. He has promised +to keep away from the Ferns, and I think they have seen the last of him. +What is done can't be undone, ugly as it is. Now," he continued, +vaulting into his saddle, "your course is reasonably plain. You must +visit Miss Daisy soon, let her know that the extent of her misfortune is +in your possession, and after a reasonable time, ask her to marry you." + +Archie Weil, who had also mounted his horse, came near falling from the +back of the animal at this very abrupt suggestion. + +"That is just what you should do," continued Roseleaf, without allowing +him to speak. "You are desperately in love. Daisy likes you very well, +and it would take but little effort on your part to induce even a warmer +sentiment. Her father thinks you one of the angels that came down to +earth and forgot to return to heaven. She ought not to go through life +alone. Her only trouble is the suspicion that rests on her name--a +suspicion she considers herself bound in honor to do nothing to lift. +Show her that you know how innocent she is, and you will bring a new +light to her eyes, a new smile to her lips." + +"But," asked Archie, catching at the straw, "how can I tell her--how can +I explain the source of my information?" + +Roseleaf laughed. + +"By the novel method of using the truth, or at least a part of it," he +said. "Tell her you were out riding and saw Hannibal, and followed him. +You needn't count me into it. Why, you've got to let her know, or else I +have. It's a thing she would almost give her life to have revealed +without her aid. Go like a man and take that heavy weight off her young +soul." + +Finally Weil consented. He would not discuss the question of whether he +would afterwards speak of the hope that lay nearest his heart. But he +would go to her, as Roseleaf suggested, and relieve her of the strain +that had worn so deeply. He would go the very next day. The sooner it +was accomplished the better. The more he thought of it the more +delighted he grew that he could carry such tidings. He could make Daisy +happier. That was enough for him--at present. If he could make himself +happy at a future date--but there was time enough for that. + +He sat upright in his saddle and exulted as his horse bounded nimbly +over the ground. Why was it not already day, that he might turn the +beast in the opposite direction! The hours would be very long before the +sun rose and he could start on his joyful errand. The sombre hue of his +countenance disappeared before the contentment that began to fill his +breast. + +He slept well, notwithstanding the fact that he expected to lie awake +all night when he retired. In the morning, on going down to breakfast, +he found that Shirley had left still earlier, leaving word that he had +started on a quest for game. Weil did not mind. He had enough before him +for one day. He was going to see Daisy, and he had that to tell which +would lighten the load she had so long felt compelled to carry. + +He waited until after nine o'clock, feeling that some regard must be +paid to _les convenances_, even on such an important occasion as this. +When he was in the saddle he rode as slowly as he could bring himself to +do, to make his arrival still later. At last he reached the gate of +Oakhurst, and when he had summoned the porter he sent him for Mr. Fern, +stating that he had happened to ride in that direction and wanted merely +to make a short call. + +It was but a few minutes before the servant returned, and the +hospitable master of the premises came with him. Mr. Fern upbraided Weil +for using so much ceremony, remarking that although he was living in a +retired way, there was always one friend he was glad to see. Giving up +the horse, Archie accompanied his host to the house, where the latter +said he would send at once for Daisy. + +"A minute," interpolated Archie. "I want a little talk with you first, +alone." + +Mr. Fern looked up curiously. He believed he knew what his visitor was +about to say. He had long suspected the feelings which Archie +entertained for Daisy. He knew also that his daughter would consent to +wed no man, no matter who, while there hung over her fair fame the +terrible mystery of her wedding night. + +"I want to tell you," pursued Archie, before his host could interrupt, +"that I have made a great discovery--one of the utmost moment to your +family. I know what happened on that day so sad to all of us, +and--listen to me, Mr. Fern!--I know that your child is absolutely +blameless in the matter." + +The listener's face grew very white. He understood imperfectly, but it +seemed to him that a tale he could not bear to hear was about to be +forced upon him. + +"Mr. Weil," he said, earnestly, "I hope you will not continue this +subject. I do not know what occurred--I do not wish to know. I have +consulted my daughter's sentiments entirely. She prefers to have the +veil unlifted, and I respect her wish." + +The visitor could hardly contain himself for impatience. + +"That has been true hitherto," he replied. "But Miss Daisy herself will +be more than delighted when she knows I am aware of the entire +facts--which she has been prevented, by a promise extracted from her, +from revealing. Call her, let me tell her that I know everything, and +how I know it, and you will see the happiest girl in America." + +Mr. Fern shook his head doubtfully. He was much afraid of doing +something to injure Daisy's feelings. He could not believe she wanted to +have the trouble that had crushed her raked up by any one. Archie +persisted, however, and his arguments at last won the day. + +"You do not think I would come here with any tidings I did not believe +agreeable?" he said, interrogatively. "You know I care too much for--for +both of you--to do that." + +When Miss Daisy was summoned, which she was at last, and Mr. Weil gently +let drop a hint of what he had to tell, the girl was hardly less +agitated than her father had been. Instead, however, as the visitor +expected, of relying on her natural protector during the expected +recital, she whispered to Mr. Fern, who obediently rose and let her lead +him out of the room. Presently she returned, and took a chair opposite +to Mr. Weil. Her face was so pathetic, her attitude so entreating, that +he quite forgot what he had come to tell, and leaning toward her, took +her hands in his. + +"Daisy," he said, "I--I--" and he could go no further. + +"Yes, I know," she answered, in a low voice. "But there is a reason why +I cannot listen to you. I have told you that before. I ought not even to +say as much as this. I should not even remain in the room while you +explain the least thing." + +He choked down the rising in his throat and hastened, lest she should +follow literally the sentiment she had outlined and leave him to +himself. + +"This has all been true, until now," he said. "You were under a promise, +an oath. But--Daisy, last night I heard all that passed between you and +your persecutor, and there is no longer any need for mystery between +us." + +She gasped, as if her breath was going. + +"You--you heard!" + +"Everything. I was within forty feet of you. Are you sorry that the +awful cloud is blown away--that your perfect innocence is proved without +a violation of your plighted word?" + +For the girl was crying, slowly, without hysteria, crying with both her +hands tightly clasped over her eyes. + +"_I_ did not need it, not I," continued the man, earnestly. "I knew you +had done nothing of your free will that the whole world might not know. +But I knew, too, that you would be pleased to have your innocence +established. And I was glad for another reason. I love you, Daisy. I +have loved you a very long time. Your sister was right in that. Had you +not shown such a marked preference for my friend I would have done my +best to win you, months and months ago. While you felt that you were an +object of suspicion I knew you would not consent to be my wife. Now, +that obstacle is gone and--Daisy--I want you." + +The hands were withdrawn from the tear-stained face, a handkerchief was +hastily passed over it, and Daisy turned half away from the speaker. + +"You will not refuse, my love," he murmured, bending again toward her. +"You will promise?" + +One of her hands strayed toward him, and was clasped joyfully in his +own. + +"But, in relation to that other matter," said Daisy, some moments later, +when the sweet tokens of love had been given and taken, "I must be as +silent as before. I have listened to you, but I have not replied. You +can understand the reason. Never speak of it to me again, if you do not +wish to inflict pain. It is something I cannot discuss." + +"I may tell your father, though," he whispered. + +"It would be best not. He is content now. No, I beg you, say nothing to +any one." + +And he promised, like the lover he was, and sealed it with another kiss +on her pure mouth. + +"I may tell him of--of our love?" he asked. + +"Oh, yes; we will tell him of that together." + + + + +CHAPTER XXVIII. + +TRAPPING A WOLF. + + +When Shirley Roseleaf left the hotel that morning he carried a fishing +rod, a rifle, a gamebag and other acoutrements of the sportsman. In his +earlier years, before he ever came to the city, he had been accounted +something of an expert with these implements. Since being in this +country where there was so much to tempt a Nimrod he had made a number +of similar excursions. Although it was some distance to the locality +where he intended to go the young man did not take a conveyance of any +kind. He walked briskly over the road, breathing the pure air of that +early hour, and whistling in a low tone to himself as he went along. + +Among the other things he carried was a light lunch, for he did not care +to break his fast so early in the day. He had, besides, a contrivance +for making coffee and for broiling the fish he expected to catch. Even +if his jaunt lasted till night his physical needs were well provided +for. One would not have imagined, to see his free and easy swing over +the road, that he had anything of greater moment on his mind than to +watch for some stray rabbit, or a possible deer track. + +Not less than six miles from his starting point, he came to a small +lake, to reach which he had followed a narrow path that led through the +wood. On the shore was a primitive rowboat, or rather canoe, which he +had purchased on another occasion from a native for an insignificant +price. Into this boat the novelist stepped, and after safely depositing +his traps, took up the paddle and used it skillfully. When he had +reached approximately the centre of the lake, he sat down, prepared his +fishing tackle and began to angle for the denizens of the water below. + +With the patience of a true fisherman Roseleaf sat quietly for two +hours, during which time he had drawn out but few specimens. The long +walk had, however, given him the appetite he needed, and he now pulled +his frail craft toward the shore, with the intention of lighting a fire +and preparing a meal. But even when he had nearly reached land he saw +splinters flying beneath his feet, and immediately after heard a dull +sound which showed what had caused the trouble. + +A stray bullet, from some careless hunter, had penetrated his canoe. The +hole was large enough to render the boat useless, for the water began to +come in rapidly. With two more stout movements of the paddle Roseleaf +forced his craft against the shore and sprang upon dry land. Then he +quietly picked up the things he had brought with him, and walked a +little away from the scene. + +"These fellows are getting altogether too careless," he muttered, as he +inspected his damp belongings. "A little more and that thing would have +been tearing splinters in me." + +Scraping some dead wood together, he soon had a fire started, and the +cooking of his breakfast was begun. He went about the work +methodically, whistling again in that low key he had used when on the +way from his hotel, and stopping now and then as the noise of a woodbird +or some wild quadruped of the smaller kind came to his ears. He sniffed +the coffee that was boiling furiously and the freshly caught fish that +sent out an appetizing aroma. No meal served at the Hoffman, the +Imperial or the far-famed Delmonico restaurant, could equal this +primitive repast, for him. + +Finally, all was ready. Helping himself to a large plateful of the +delicious food, and pouring out a huge tin cup of the coffee, Roseleaf +sat down as if to take his ease while breakfasting. But, instead of +touching the viands he had been at such pains to prepare, the next thing +he did was to fall prone on the ground. And at the same instant a second +bullet whizzed past him and buried itself with a tearing of bark and +wood in the tree just behind him. + +If Roseleaf had laid down with suddenness he rose with no less speed. As +he sprang to his feet he picked up his rifle. He made a dozen steps +forward, and then, bringing the weapon to his shoulder, cried to some +one in front of him: + +"Halt, or I fire!" + +A human form that had been creeping away on its hands and knees, now +stood upright. It was perhaps thirty yards from the speaker, and when it +faced him he saw that the countenance was black. + +"Don't come any nearer and don't go any farther off," said the novelist, +gravely. "You are at a convenient distance. I can shoot you best where +you stand." + +The negro looked considerably crestfallen. He seemed doubtful whether to +break and run or stay and try to face it out. + +"I can't help an accident," he said, at last, when the other remained +covering him with the rifle. + +"No," was the answer. "An accident is liable to happen to any one, they +say. But two accidents, of the same kind, on the same day--accidents +that might either of them have been fatal if you were not such an +awfully bad marksman--are too many. When _I_ get ready to fire, there +will be no accident." + +The negro was plainly uneasy. He cast his eyes on the ground and +writhed. + +"You have dropped your gun," said Roseleaf. "That was right. It would +have incommoded your flight, and its only cartridge was used. You would +have had no time to reload. I know that gun very well; I have heard it +many times in the last six weeks. I knew the sound of it to-day when you +fired the first time. A rifle has a voice, like a man; did you know +that? I knew it was your gun and that you were at the end of it. With +that information in my possession, of course you couldn't catch me +napping twice. I pretended to watch my cooking, but in reality I watched +nothing but you. There is no need that you should say anything, +Hannibal. You could not tell me much, if you tried." + +The speaker examined his rifle carefully, still keeping the muzzle +turned toward the person he was addressing. The latter did not seem to +grow less uneasy. + +"I spent some time last evening," continued Roseleaf, presently, "in +listening to a little conversation you had with a certain young lady +living a mile or so from this spot. That surprises you, does it? I +thought it might. I learned how you had ruined her peace of mind, how +you had artfully contrived to make her appear the opposite of what she +really was. Now, you have tried twice within the last hour to murder me. +For this I could have forgiven you. What you did to that young woman is, +however, a more serious matter. I don't think anything less than pulling +this trigger will expiate that." + +He placed the rifle to his shoulder again, as he spoke, and glanced +along the sight. The negro half turned, as if of a mind to attempt an +escape, and then, realizing the hopelessness of such a move, sank on his +knees and raised his hands piteously. + +"If you have anything to say, be quick!" said the hard voice of the man +who held the rifle. + +Then Hannibal blurted out his story. He told how he had been led, step +by step, to hope that he might rise above his station, until the wild +idea entered his brain that he could even make Daisy Fern love and marry +him. He pleaded the disappointments he had suffered, the terrible +revulsion of feeling he had undergone, the broken life he had been +obliged to take up. He did not want to be killed. If allowed to go he +would swear by all that was good never to cross the path of the Ferns, +or Roseleaf, or any of their friends again. When his treaties brought +no verbal response he grew louder in his tone, feeling that something +must be done to move the deaf ears to which he addressed his petition. + +"If I allowed you to leave here, you would try to shoot me the next time +you had a chance," said the novelist. "I should merely be giving my life +in exchange for yours, which I do not consider a good bargain." + +"No, I swear it before God!" came the trembling words in reply. + +"I cannot trust you." + +A slight sound attracted the attention of Roseleaf as he uttered the +latter words. It was the sound that oars make when dipped in water. With +a quick glance to one side he beheld a rowboat, in which were seated +Archie Weil and Daisy Fern, and they were coming directly toward him. + +"Here are some of the others you have wronged," he said, pointing. "I +will wait to see if their opinions agree with mine." + +Daisy saw him first, as Weil was handling the oars, and she called her +companion's attention to him. Archie called his name. + +"Come here!" was Roseleaf's reply. "I have winged a black duck and I +cannot leave." + +A few more movements of the oars brought the boat to the shore, and the +surprise of its occupants can be imagined when they saw the tableau that +awaited them. Hannibal was still groveling on the earth, and the +attitude of Roseleaf plainly showed the cause of the negro's terror. + +"What has he done?" was the first question, and it was Daisy's voice +that asked it. + +"Let him tell," replied Roseleaf, nonchalantly. "Tell the lady what you +did, Hannibal." + +With a courage born of his knowledge of the young lady's kind heart, +Hannibal now turned his attention toward her. He begged her to plead +with his would-be executioner to give him one more chance for his life, +and reiterated his promises to cease meddling with all of their affairs +if this was granted. As he spoke Daisy crept nearer to Roseleaf's side, +and when he paused for a moment to gain breath, she laid her fair hand +on the rifle. + +"You would not kill a fellow creature?" she said, gently. + +"A fellow creature?" he retorted. "No! But a wolf, a snake, a +vulture--yes." + +She shook her head slowly, while Mr. Weil looked on, uncertain what to +do or say. He wanted more than anything else in his life to lay hands +upon the cause of all her woes. + +"You have not told me yet what he has done," she said. + +"He shall tell you," replied Roseleaf, sharply. "Stand up, Hannibal, and +answer truly the questions I am about to propound to you." + +The crouching figure tottered to his feet. The negro was weak from fear. + +"Did you try twice this morning to murder me?" + +"Yes," replied the shaking voice. "But I was insane with my troubles--I +did not realize what I was doing--I--" + +Daisy's slight hand, still on the barrel of the rifle, was bearing it +steadily to the ground. + +"Once," she said to Roseleaf, impressively, "you told me you loved me! +Have you regard enough left to grant me a favor?" + +He shook his head. + +"There are favors," he said, "that are crimes. It is one's duty to +exterminate vermin, in the interest of the human race." + +But, even as he spoke, she was having her way. Her slight strength had +taken the weapon from him. + +Then, with the face of a forgiving angel she turned toward the negro and +uttered very softly one word, "Go!" + +Glancing at the others to see if he might safely follow this direction, +Hannibal disappeared in the thick woods behind him. He walked with an +unsteady step. There was a strange lightness in his brain. Some distance +away he found the boat in which he had come, and entered it, +staggeringly. Pushing from the shore with a feeble touch on his paddle +he set out for his home. + + * * * * * + +The negroes who found his body, a week later, could not decide whether +he had perished by accident or by deliberate intention. The boat was not +capsized, but it was partially filled with water, indicating either that +he had tried to sink the craft or had leaned too heavily to one side in +something like a stupor. When his gun was discovered on the shore, new +speculations were set in motion. + +Those who knew him recalled that he had been moody for a long time--in +fact, ever since he came from the north. They remembered him as a young +fellow, four or five years previous, not very different from his mates; +and they had stared in wonder when he returned with fine clothes and +money in his pocket. The dislike between him and his old acquaintances +was mutual. They could not understand him; and what an inferior mind +does not comprehend it always views with suspicion. + +A grave was made near the border of the lake, and the single word +"HANNIBAL" was written on the board that marked the spot. But later some +envious hand scrawled beneath it: + +"HE WANTED TO BE A GENTLEMAN!" + + + + +CHAPTER XXIX. + +"THE GREATEST NOVEL." + + +Archie Weil and Daisy Fern were married in June. There was no need of +waiting longer. It was a case of true love sanctified by suffering and +devotion. The bright eyes and ruddy cheeks of the bride testified to her +renewed health and spirits. The news of Hannibal's death--albeit it +brought a tear to her eyes, had removed the only shadow that stretched +across her pathway. + +Shirley Roseleaf did not come to the wedding, to which he was the only +invited guest. He wrote that an important mission from his magazine made +it impossible to accept the invitation, but he sent a handsome present +and a letter to Archie, congratulating him in the warmest manner. + +For some time Lawrence Gouger had been urging the novelist to hasten the +wonderful story that was to make his fortune and give a new impetus to +the house of Cutt & Slashem. They had consulted together a hundred +times, and the thirty chapters already finished seemed to leave but a +few weeks' steady work to be accomplished. Shortly after the wedding +Gouger went to Roseleaf's rooms, one evening, and begged him to lose no +further time. + +"What is there to wait for now?" he asked. "All the dramatic incidents +have occurred. You only need to wind up with a glory of fireworks, +showing virtue triumphant and vice buried under a North Carolina +sycamore. Come, my dear boy, when may I expect to see the work +completed?" + +Roseleaf did not answer for some seconds. + +"There is a part of this story that you do not comprehend," he said, +finally. "A chapter is yet to be written at which you have not guessed." + +"Indeed!" exclaimed the listener. + +"Yes," nodded the other. "So far the character that is supposed to +represent myself appears that of a heartless, cold, unfeeling wretch. Do +you think I shall be satisfied to leave it that way?" + +The critic stared at the speaker in astonishment. + +"I--I do not understand," he replied. + +"I thought not," said Roseleaf, soberly. "Well, this story, to be +truthful, must do justice to the one who is supposed to personate its +author. And, in the first place, to avoid all circumlocution, let me +tell you there has never been a moment since I first loved Daisy Fern +that she has not been the dearest thing on this earth to me!" + +Mr. Gouger could not reconcile this statement with the events that had +taken place, and his puzzled countenance said as much. + +"I acted like a villain, did I not," continued Roseleaf, after a slight +pause, "when the news was brought that she had disappeared? I seemed to +have no faith in her, no confidence in Archie, no trust in that poor old +man, her father. Why? I was so madly, insanely in love that every +possible phantasy got possession of my excited brain. To lose her was to +deprive me of all hope, all ambition, all care for life. So far, I acted +my real self. If what I supposed true had been proven I think there +would have been a murder. Not of Daisy; ah, no! but of the man who had +robbed me of my treasure. Then I went to Midlands with Archie and I saw +her. I heard her speak, and like a lightning flash it came to me. He was +as honorable as a man could be and she cared more for him than for my +unworthy self. She had contrasted us and discovered how much he was my +superior. And I said to myself at that moment, 'I will give her up! If +it costs me my happiness as long as I live I will give her up! No matter +what happens, I will unite these people, who have been so faithful to me +and toward whom I have acted the part of a cur and a coward!'" + +The young man was speaking with perfect composure, but with intense +earnestness. + +"The first thing to be done," he continued, "was to take myself out of +their way. The next was to unravel the mystery that had made the +trouble. I knew, when my mind had resumed its natural state, that, +whatever had occurred, Daisy was blameless. I knew that something far +out of the common line had caused her to commit the act which had cast a +blight over her reputation. For weeks I could find no clue. Then, one +day, in the street, I saw Hannibal, the negro for whom she had borrowed +my money and who I supposed was still in France. I cannot help the quick +temper I have inherited, and I confess that the sight of that fellow +aroused my suspicions against this girl, only they took a new and more +horrible form. + +"I remembered distinctly what a strong hold Hannibal had on the Fern +family. I recalled, with frightful distinctness, the manner in which he +attended Daisy at table, his interest in her health, the $1,000 she had +given him, her quick movement to prevent my striking him when his +answers insulted us both. Perhaps--but I will not dilate on the things +that came to my distorted imagination. It was enough for me to put a +detective on his track. I engaged Hazen, and in three days he came to +tell me that a white woman had passed the night with Hannibal at a house +on Seventh Avenue, the date corresponding with the one on which I was to +have been married!" + +Gouger listened spellbound. It seemed to him that the most exciting +chapter of this weird tale was yet to be written. + +"If I had lost control of my senses before," pursued Roseleaf, "what do +you suppose happened when this information was brought to me? But then I +found an excuse for my beloved one. I considered her the victim of one +of those forms of hypnotism of which there can no longer be any doubt. +She could not have gone there without the demoniac influence of a +stronger personality. He had charmed her from her home by the exercise +of diabolic arts. My fury was entirely for him. I sought him at once, +only to learn that he had left the city a few days before, leaving +absolutely no trace. I could not give over the hunt, however. If he was +on the earth I must find him and be avenged for the wrong he had done. +It occurred to me that an influence so strong as he had exerted would +not be given up. Wherever the Ferns had gone, he would probably be +found. I discovered the whereabouts of the family, after a great deal of +effort, and went to North Carolina. With the patience of a dog and the +cunning of a fox I laid in wait for weeks, and one night I saw and heard +Daisy Fern and Hannibal in conversation!" + +There was no movement on the part of the critic. He sat as still as a +block of stone. + +"When they began to speak I could have sworn that my recent guesses were +correct ones. It was at about the hour of midnight, and she had crept +quietly and alone out of her house to meet this African. But the first +dozen sentences that were uttered gave me a new version of the affair. +It was by no mesmeric power, but by a threat of injury to her father +that this fellow held her under bond. I learned that Mr. Fern had done +something--I could not then tell what--which rendered him liable to +imprisonment. I learned, also, beyond question--for they spoke without +restraint, supposing themselves alone--that, whatever the purpose of +Hannibal when Daisy came to his rooms on the day she was to have been +married, it had not been accomplished. She was afraid of him, but only +for her father's sake. And I discovered beside, though not with perfect +clearness, that a promise of secrecy accounted for her refusal to +explain the cause of that absence which had altered the whole course of +our lives. + +"I have said I had watched with patience. I determined to continue my +watch till I understood the entire situation. About once a week they met +in the way I have described, and as the next date was always arranged in +my hearing there was no difficulty in my keeping the appointment. In the +meantime I learned that Hannibal was born in the vicinity, that he was +living a hermit life, and that nobody knew of the surreptitious visits +he was paying to Oakhurst. Then one day I heard that Archie was at the +hotel, and thinking it time that I let him into the secret I went there, +pretending I had just arrived from the north, when in reality I had been +boarding for months five miles away. The rest you know. I was enabled to +prove to him as well as to myself what had actually happened. Since +then justice has been done to us all." + +Mr. Gouger had to speak at last. + +"To _you_?" he asked. "Do you admit that all this is just to you?" + +"Without doubt," said Roseleaf. "I forfeited every right to the woman I +had insulted by my suspicions. There are certain metals that can only be +tried by fire. I was placed in the crucible, and found wanting." + +The critic shook his head sagely. + +"You are a regular Roman father to your own delinquencies," he answered. +"But tell me another thing. Would you have shot Hannibal if Mr. Weil and +Miss Fern had not made their appearance?" + +"I have not the least doubt of it. He was in my eyes at that moment a +crawling adder, whose fangs were liable to penetrate the flesh of some +one if he was not put out of the way. But I am more than glad I was +spared the infliction of his punishment." + +Gouger wore a strange look. + +"And yet he had one most human quality," said he. + +"Yes, I admit that now," was the reply. "In his passionate, barbaric +way, he certainly loved. When I revise my novel I shall try to deal +fairly with him." + +"And you will finish it very soon now?" + +"As soon as possible." + +A month later Lawrence Gouger received at his office a package marked on +the outside, "From Shirley Roseleaf." He could hardly control his +excitement until he had untied the strings, taken off the wrappings and +disclosed the tin box inside. It was a square box, just the right size +for manuscript paper such as he had seen Roseleaf use, and the heart of +the enthusiast beat high as he took it in his hands. A jewel case filled +with the costliest stones would not have seemed to him more precious. +The fame of a new author would soon resound through the world! Cutt & +Slashem would have the greatest work of fiction of recent years in their +next catalogue! And he, Lawrence Gouger, would be given the credit of +discovering--one might almost say of inventing--this wonder! + +Opening the box, the critic looked at its contents and then dropped it +with an exclamation. It contained nothing but a small sealed envelope +and _a heap of ashes_! + +Ashes! Ashes made from recently burned paper! + +When he recovered enough to open the envelope, this note was found +within: + + "TO LAWRENCE GOUGER, ESQ:--DEAR SIR: Enclosed herewith you + will find the novel for which you have waited so long. I + hope it will please you in all respects, as I certainly + have taken the greatest pains with it. + + "On reading it over I thought it best to more thoroughly + disguise the personality of the characters, lest any of + them might be injured by its publication. There was the + happiness of a newly-made bride to be considered; her + husband's ease of mind; her father's serene old age; her + sister's feelings. There was even a black man who had + perhaps suffered enough, and a critic employed by a large + publishing firm who would not like his true character made + manifest in type. In order to protect these people I have + applied a match to the pages. You can best tell whether I + have performed the work too well. + + "If this novel does not bring me the fame you anticipate I + shall not much care; I have lost some of my ambitions. If + it fails to add to my fortune, never mind; a single man has + no great need of wealth. + + "I go to-night on board a steamer which sails for Europe at + daybreak. When you read this I shall be on the sea. I have + secured a position as resident correspondent abroad for one + of the great newspapers. Perhaps I never shall return. + Truly your friend, S. R." + +"_The idiot!_" cried the reader, as he finished perusing this letter. +"_The imbecile!_ Was there ever such a fool born on this earth!" + +Then he apostrophised the heap of ashes that lay in the box before him. + +"There never was and never will be so great a work of fiction as you +were yesterday! And yet a little touch of flame, and all was +extinguished! How like you were to man! Let him have the brain of a +Shakespeare, and a pound weight falling on his skull ends everything. + +"There was a flood in Hungary last week, in which a thousand people were +drowned. There was an earthquake in Peru where five hundred perished. A +vessel went down off the Caroline Islands. Taken all together, they did +not equal to this world your loss. + +"The poet knew what he was saying: 'Great wits are sure to madness near +allied.' Oh, to think that a mind that could execute your thrilling +pages knew no more than to destroy them! + +"I will not cast you, sublime ashes, to the winds of heaven! I will keep +you reverently, as one preserves the cloak of a great man, or the bones +of a mastodon. Behold, I close you again in your covers, where the eye +of no mortal shall henceforth behold you." + +With the words the disappointed critic performed the action. And to this +day visitors to his room read with wonder the inscription he has placed +on the box: + +"_The greatest novel that ever was written._" + + +THE END. + + + + + * * * * * + + + + +Transcriber's note: + +Every effort has been made to replicate this text as faithfully +as possible, including obsolete and variant spellings. Obvious +typographical errors in punctuation (misplaced quotes and the +like) have been fixed. Corrections [in brackets] in the text are +noted below: + +Table of Contents: typographical error corrected + + I. A Rejected Manuscript 1[9] + +page 41: possible typographical error queried (not changed in + the text) + + would[wouldn't] touch the mooney, maundering mess. It makes + my flesh creep, sometimes, to read it." v + +page 106: duplicate word removed + + playing at love with each other, might afterwards find that + [that] they were experimenting with fire. + +page 108: possible typographical error queried (not changed in + the text) + + arm around her again, checking himself with difficulty from + completeing[completing] the movement) "and dull, and wanting + in manners, but you are the only young + +page 116: typographical errors corrected + + about this matter. She shought[thought] the innocent man at + her side had not quite guaged[gauged] the interest that Mr. + +page 118: typographical error corrected + + caught her passionately in his arms, and knew no better way + to bring her to consiousness[consciousness] than to rain + kisses on her cheeks. As might be expected this + +page 126: typographical error corrected + + abilities of Mr. Weil, and he had no idea of + dispuing[disputing] the conclusions of that wise guide. + +page 133: typographical error corrected + + "To me? He would not dare?[!] What angers me is the way he + speaks to the rest of you. He + +page 149: typographical errors corrected + + called the Good side nothing stronger that[than] wines were + found on the bill of fare. On the Wicked side every decoction + know[known] to the modern drinker was to + +page 155: typographical error corrected + + sexes. He half believed that Jennie Pelham and Mrs. + Delevan[Delavan] were sitting by his bed, more brazen + +page 194: typographical error corrected + + young novelist. More than this, she would have + sufficent[sufficient] on hand to send the future amounts that + +page 251: typographical error corrected + + Roseleaf waved him back with a sweeep[sweep] of his arm. + +page 278: typographical error corrected + + countenance, the utter hopelessness had in a measure + diappeared[disappeared]. When Daisy came into the parlor, she + +page 297: typographical error corrected + + came with him. Mr. Fern upraided[upbraided] Weil for using so + much ceremony, remarking that although he was + + + +***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A BLACK ADONIS*** + + +******* This file should be named 26599.txt or 26599.zip ******* + + +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: +http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/2/6/5/9/26599 + + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules, +set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to +copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to +protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. 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