“Then gently scan your brother man,
Still gentler sister woman;
Tho’ they may gang a kennin wrang,
To step aside is human.”—BURNS.
When, a few days later, Harley came
to the reconstruction of his story, he began to appreciate
the fact that what had seemed at first to be his misfortune
was, on the whole, a matter for congratulation; and
as he thought over the people he had sent to sea, he
came to rejoice that Marguerite was not one of the
party.
“Osborne wasn’t her sort,
after all,” he mused to himself that night over
his coffee. “He hadn’t much mind.
I’m afraid I banked too much on his good looks,
and too little upon what I might call her independence;
for of all the heroines I ever had, she is the most
sufficient unto herself. Had she gone along I’m
half afraid I couldn’t have got rid of Balderstone
so easily either, for he’s a determined devil
as I see him; and his intellectual qualities were so
vastly superior to those of Osborne that by mere contrast
they would most certainly have appealed to her strongly.
The baleful influence might have affected her seriously,
and Osborne was never the man to overcome it, and
strict realism would have forced her into an undesirable
marriage. Yes, I’m glad it turned out the
way it did; she’s too good for either of them.
I couldn’t have done the tale as I intended
without a certain amount of compulsion, which would
never have worked out well. She’d have
been miserable with Osborne for a husband anyhow,
even if he did succeed in outwitting Balderstone.”
Then Harley went into a trance for
a moment. From this he emerged almost immediately
with a laugh. The travellers on the sea had come
to his mind.
“Poor Mrs. Corwin,” he
said, “she’s awfully upset. I shall
have to give her some diversion. Let’s
see, what shall it be? She’s a widow,
young and fascinating. H’m—not
a bad foundation for a romance. There must be
a man on the ship who’d like her; but, hang
it all! there are those twins. Not much romance
for her with those twins along, unless the man’s
a fool; and she’s too fine a woman for a fool.
Men don’t fall in love with whole families that
way. Now if they had only been left on the pier
with Miss Andrews, it would have worked up well.
Mrs. Corwin could have fascinated some fellow-traveller,
won his heart, accepted him at Southampton, and told
him about the twins afterwards. As a test of
his affection that would be a strong situation; but
with the twins along, making the remarks they are
likely to make, and all that—no, there is
no hope for Mrs. Corwin, except in a juvenile story—something
like ’Two Twins in a Boat, not to Mention the
Widow,’ or something of that sort. Poor
woman! I’ll let her rest in peace, for
the present. She’ll enjoy her trip, anyhow;
and as for Osborne and Balderstone, I’ll let
them fight it out for that dark-eyed little woman
from Chicago I saw on board, and when the best man
wins I’ll put the whole thing into a short story.”
Then began a new quest for characters
to go with Marguerite Andrews.
“She must have a chaperon, to
begin with,” thought Harley. “That
is indispensable. Herring, Beemer, & Chadwick
regard themselves as conservators of public morals,
in their ‘Blue and Silver Series,’ so
a girl unmarried and without a chaperon would never
do for this book. If they were to publish it
in their ‘Yellow Prism Series’ I could
fling all such considerations to the winds, for there
they cater to stronger palates, palates cultivated
by French literary cooks, and morals need not be considered,
provided the story is well told and likely to sell;
but this is for the other series, and a chaperon is
a sine qua non. Marguerite doesn’t need
one half as much as the girls in the ‘Yellow
Prism’ books, but she’s got to have one
just the same, or the American girl will not read
about her: and who is better than Dorothy Willard,
who has charge of her now?”
Harley slapped his knee with delight.
“How fortunate I’d provided
her!” he said. “I’ve got my
start already, and without having to think very hard
over it either.”
The trance began again, and lasted
several hours, during which time Kelly and the Professor
stole softly into Harley’s rooms, and, perceiving
his condition, respected it.
“He’s either asleep or
imagining,” said the Professor, in a whisper.
“He can’t imagine,”
returned the Doctor. “Call it—realizing.
Whatever it is he’s up to, we mustn’t interfere.
There isn’t any use waking him anyhow.
I know where he keeps his cigars. Let’s
sit down and have a smoke.”
This the intruders did, hoping that
sooner or later their host would observe their presence;
but Harley lay in blissful unconsciousness of their
coming, and they finally grew weary of waiting.
“He must be at work on a ten-volume
novel,” said the Doctor. “Let’s
go.”
And with that they departed.
Night came on, and with it darkness, but Harley never
moved. The fact was he was going through an
examination of the human race to find a man good enough
for Marguerite Andrews, and it speaks volumes for
the interest she had suddenly inspired in his breast
that it took him so long to find what he wanted.
Along about nine o’clock he
gave a deep sigh and returned to earth.
“I guess I’ve got him,”
he said, wearily, rubbing his forehead, which began
to ache a trifle. “I’ll model him
after the Professor. He’s a good fellow,
moderately good-looking, has position, and certainly
knows something, as professors go. I doubt if
he is imposing enough for the American girl generally,
but he’s the best I can get in the time at my
disposal.”
So the Professor was unconsciously
slated for the office of hero; Mrs. Willard was cast
for chaperon, and the Doctor, in spite of Harley’s
previous resolve not to use him, was to be introduced
for the comedy element. The villain selected
was the usual poverty-stricken foreigner with a title
and a passion for wealth, which a closer study of
his heroine showed Harley that Miss Andrews possessed;
for on her way home from the pier she took Mrs. Willard
to the Amsterdam and treated her to a luncheon which
nothing short of a ten-dollar bill would pay for,
after which the two went shopping, replenishing Miss
Andrews’s wardrobe—most of which lay
snugly stored in the hold of the New York, and momentarily
getting farther and farther away from its fair owner—in
the course of which tour Miss Andrews expended a sum
which, had Harley possessed it, would have made it
unnecessary for him to write the book he had in mind
at all.
“It’s good she’s
rich,” sighed Harley. “That will
make it all the easier to have her go to Newport and
attract the Count.”
At the moment that Harley spoke these
words to himself Mrs. Willard and Marguerite, accompanied
by Mr. Willard, entered the mansion of the latter
on Fifth Avenue. They had spent the afternoon
and evening at the Andrews apartment, arranging for
its closing until the return of Mrs. Corwin.
Marguerite meanwhile was to be the guest of the Willards.
“Next week we’ll run up
to Newport,” said Dorothy. “The house
is ready, and Bob is going for his cruise.”
Marguerite looked at her curiously for a moment.
“Did you intend to go there all along?”
she asked.
“Yes—of course. Why do you
ask?” returned Mrs. Willard.
“Why, that very idea came into
my mind at the moment,” replied Marguerite.
“I thought this afternoon I’d run up to
Riverdale and stay with the Hallidays next week, when
all of a sudden Newport came into my mind, and it
has been struggling there with Riverdale for two hours—until
I almost began to believe somebody was trying to compel
me to go to Newport. If it is your idea, and
has been all along, I’ll go; but if Stuart Harley
is trying to get me down there for literary purposes,
I simply shall not do it.”
“You had better dismiss that
idea from your mind at once, my dear,” said
Mrs. Willard. “Mr. Harley never compels.
No compulsion is the corner-stone of his literary
structure; free will is his creed: you may count
on that. If he means to make you his heroine
still, it will be at Newport if you are at Newport,
at Riverdale if you happen to be at Riverdale.
Do come with me, even if he does impress you as endeavoring
to force you; for at Newport I shall be your chaperon,
and I should dearly love to be put in a book—with
you. Bob has asked Jack Perkins down, and Mrs.
Howlett writes me that Count Bonetti, of Naples, is
there, and is a really delightful fellow. We
shall have—”
“You simply confirm my fears,”
interrupted Marguerite. “You are to be
Harley’s chaperon, Professor Perkins is his hero,
and Count Bonetti is the villain—”
“Why, Marguerite, how you talk!”
cried Mrs. Willard. “Do you exist merely
in Stuart Harley’s brain? Do I? Are
we none of us living creatures to do as we will?
Are we nothing more than materials pigeon-holed for
Mr. Harley’s future use? Has Count Bonetti
crossed the ocean just to please Mr. Harley?”
“I don’t know what I believe,”
said Miss Andrews, “and I don’t care much
either way, as long as I have independence of action.
I’ll go with you, Dorothy; but if it turns
out, as I fear, that we are expected to act our parts
in a Harley romance, that romance will receive a shock
from which it will never recover.”
“Why do you object so to Mr.
Harley, anyhow? I thought you liked his books,”
said Mrs. Willard.
“I do; some of them,”
Marguerite answered; “and I like him; but he
does not understand me, and until he does he shall
not put me in his stories. I’ll rout him
at every point, until he—”
Marguerite paused. Her face
flushed. Tears came into her eyes.
“Until he what, dearest?”
asked Mrs. Willard, sympathetically.
“I don’t know,”
said Marguerite, with a quiver in her voice, as she
rose and left the room.
“I fancy we’d better go
at once, Bob,” said Mrs. Willard to her husband,
later on. “Marguerite is quite upset by
the experiences of the day, and New York is fearfully
hot.”
“I agree with you,” returned
Willard. “Jerrold sent word this afternoon
that the boat will be ready Friday, instead of Thursday
of next week; so if you’ll pack up to-morrow
we can board her Friday, and go up the Sound by water
instead of by rail. It will be pleasanter for
all hands.”
Which was just what Harley wanted.
The Willards were of course not conscious of the
fact, though Mrs. Willard’s sympathy with Marguerite
led her to suspect that such was the case; for that
such was the case was what Marguerite feared.
“We are being forced, Dorothy,”
she said, as she stepped on the yacht two days later.
“Well, what if we are?
It’s pleasanter going this way than by rail,
isn’t it?” Mrs. Willard replied, with some
impatience. “If we owe all this to Stuart
Harley, we ought to thank him for his kindness.
According to your theory he could have sent us up on
a hot, dusty train, and had a collision ready for
us at New London, in order to kill off a few undesirable
characters and give his hero a chance to distinguish
himself. I think that even from your own point
of view Mr. Harley is behaving in a very considerate
fashion.”
“No doubt you think so,”
returned Marguerite, spiritedly. “But it’s
different with you. You are settled in life.
Your husband is the man of your choice; you are happy,
with everything you want. You will do nothing
extraordinary in the book. If you did do something
extraordinary you would cease to be a good chaperon,
and from that moment would be cast aside; but I—I
am in a different position altogether. I am
a single woman, unsettled as yet, for whom this author
in his infinite wisdom deems it necessary to provide
a lover and husband; and in order that his narrative
of how I get this person he has selected—without
consulting my tastes—may interest a lot
of other girls, who are expected to buy and read his
book, he makes me the object of an intriguing fortune-hunter
from Italy. I am to believe he is a real nobleman,
and all that; and a stupid wiseacre from the York
University, who can’t dance, and who thinks of
nothing but his books and his club, is to come in
at the right moment and expose the Count, and all
such trash as that. I know at the outset how
it all is to be. You couldn’t deceive a
sensible girl five minutes with Count Bonetti, any
more than that Balderstone man, who is now making
a useless trip across the Atlantic with my aunt and
her twins, could have exerted a ‘baleful influence’
over me with his diluted spiritualism. I’m
not an idiot, my dear Dorothy.”
“You are a heroine, love,” returned Mrs.
Willard.
“Perhaps—but I am
the kind of heroine who would stop a play five minutes
after the curtain had risen on the first act if the
remaining four acts depended on her failing to see
something that was plain to the veriest dolt in the
audience,” Marguerite replied, with spirit.
“Nobody shall ever write me up save as I am.”
“Well—perhaps you
are wrong this time. Perhaps Mr. Harley isn’t
going to make a book of you,” said Mrs. Willard.
“Very likely he isn’t,”
said Marguerite; “but he’s trying it—I
know that much.”
“And how, pray?” asked Mrs. Willard.
“That,” said Marguerite,
her frown vanishing and a smile taking its place—“that
is for the present my secret. I’ll tell
you some day, but not until I have baffled Mr. Harley
in his ill-advised purpose of marrying me off to a
man I don’t want, and wouldn’t have under
any circumstances. Even if I had caught the
New York the other day his plans would have miscarried.
I’d never have married that Osborne man; I’d
have snubbed Balderstone the moment he spoke to me;
and if Stuart Harley had got a book out of my trip
to Europe at all, it would have been a series of papers
on some such topic as ’The Spinster Abroad,
or How to be Happy though Single.’ No more
shall I take the part he intends me to in this Newport
romance, unless he removes Count Bonetti from the
scene entirely, and provides me with a different style
of hero from his Professor, the original of whom, by-the-way,
as I happen to know, is already married and has two
children. I went to school with his wife, and
I know just how much of a hero he is.”
And so they went to Newport, and Harley’s
novel opened swimmingly. His description of the
yacht was perfect; his narration of the incidents
of the embarkation could not be improved upon in any
way. They were absolutely true to the life.
But his account of what Marguerite
Andrews said and did and thought while on the Willards’
yacht was not realism at all—it was imagination
of the wildest kind, for she said, did, and thought
nothing of the sort.
Harley did his best, but his heroine
was obdurate, and the poor fellow did not know that
he was writing untruths, for he verily believed that
he heard and saw all that he attributed to her exactly
as he put it down.
So the story began well, and Harley
for a time was quite happy. At the end of a
week, however, he had a fearful set-back. Count
Bonetti was ready to be presented to Marguerite according
to the plan, but there the schedule broke down.
Harley’s heroine took a new
and entirely unexpected tack.