At about the time Tembarom made his
rush to catch the “L” Joseph Hutchinson
was passing through one of his periodical fits of
infuriated discouragement. Little Ann knew they
would occur every two or three days, and she did
not wonder at them. Also she knew that if she
merely sat still and listened as she sewed, she would
be doing exactly what her mother would have done
and what her father would find a sort of irritated
comfort in. There was no use in citing people’s
villainies and calling them names unless you had
an audience who would seem to agree to the justice
of your accusations.
So Mr. Hutchinson charged up and down
the room, his face red, and his hands thrust in his
coat pockets. He was giving his opinions of
America and Americans, and he spoke with his broadest
Manchester accent, and threw in now and then a word
or so of Lancashire dialect to add roughness and
strength, the angrier a Manchester man being, the
broader and therefore the more forcible his accent.
“Tha” is somehow a great deal more bitter
or humorous or affectionate than the mere ordinary
“You” or “Yours.”
“’Merica,” he bellowed
— “dang ‘Merica! I says —
an’ dang ’Mericans. Goin’
about th’ world braggin’ an’ boastin’
about their sharpness an’ their open-’andedness.
’Go to ‘Merica,’ folks’ll tell
you, ’with an invention, and there’s
dozens of millionaires ready to put money in it.’
Fools!”
“Now, Father,” —
Little Ann’s voice was as maternal as her mother’s
had been, — “now, Father, love, don’t
work yourself up into a passion. You know it’s
not good for you.” “I don’t
need to work myself up into one. I’m in
one. A man sells everything he owns to get to
‘Merica, an’ when he gets there what
does he find? He canna’ get near a millionaire.
He’s pushed here an scuffled there, an’
told this chap can’t see him, an’ that
chap isn’t interested, an’ he must wait
his chance to catch this one. An’ he waits
an’ waits, an’ goes up in elevators an’
stands on one leg in lobbies, till he’s broke’
down an’ sick of it, an’ has to go home
to England steerage.”
Little Ann looked up from her sewing.
He had been walking furiously for half an hour, and
had been tired to begin with. She had heard his
voice break roughly as he said the last words.
He threw himself astride a chair and, crossing his
arms on the back of it, dropped his head on them.
Her mother never allowed this. Her idea was that
women were made to tide over such moments for the
weaker sex. Far had it been from the mind of
Mrs. Hutchinson to call it weaker. “But
there’s times, Ann, when just for a bit they’re
just like children. They need comforting without
being let to know they are being comforted. You
know how it is when your back aches, and some one
just slips a pillow under it in the right place without
saying anything. That’s what women can
do if they’ve got heads. It needs a head.”
Little Ann got up and went to the
chair. She began to run her fingers caressingly
through the thick, grizzled hair.
“There, Father, love, there!”
she said. “We are going back to England,
at any rate, aren’t we? And grandmother
will be so glad to have us with her in her cottage.
And America’s only one place.”
“I tried it first, dang it!”
jerked out Hutchinson. “Every one told me
to do it.” He quoted again with derisive
scorn: “’You go to ’Merica.
’Merica’s the place for a chap like you.
’Merica’s the place for inventions.’
Liars!”
Little Ann went on rubbing the grizzled head lovingly.
“Well, now we’re going
back to try England. You never did really try
England. And you know how beautiful it’ll
be in the country, with the primroses in bloom and
the young lambs in the fields.” The caressing
hand grew even softer. “And you’re
not going to forget how mother believed in the invention;
you can’t do that.”
Hutchinson lifted his head and looked at her.
“Eh, Ann,” he said, “you
are a comfortable little body. You’ve got
a way with you just like your poor mother had.
You always say the right thing to help a chap pull
himself together. Your mother did believe in
it, didn’t she?”
She had, indeed, believed in it, though
her faith was founded more upon confidence in “Mr.
Hutchinson” than in any profound knowledge of
the mechanical appliance his inspiration would supply.
She knew it had something important to do with locomotive
engines, and she knew that if railroad magnates would
condescend to consider it, her husband was sure that
fortune would flow in. She had lived with the
“invention,” as it was respectfully called,
for years.
“That she did,” answered
Little Ann. “And before she died she said
to me: ‘Little Ann,’ she said, ’there’s
one thing you must never let your father do.
You must never let him begin not to believe in his
invention. Your father’s a clever man,
and it’s a clever invention, and it’ll
make his fortune yet. You must remind him how
I believed in it and how sure I was.’”
Hutchinson rubbed his hands thoughtfully.
He had heard this before, but it did him good to
hear it again.
“She said that, did she?”
he found vague comfort in saying. “She said
that?”
“Yes, she did, Father.
It was the very day before she died.”
“Well, she never said anything
she hadn’t thought out,” he said in slow
retrospection. “And she had a good head
of her own. Eh, she was a wonderful woman, she
was, for sticking to things. That was th’
Lancashire in her. Lancashire folks knows their
own minds.”
“Mother knew hers,” said
Ann. “And she always said you knew yours.
Come and sit in your own chair, Father, and have
your paper.”
She had tided him past the worst currents
without letting him slip into them.
“I like folks that knows their
own minds,” he said as he sat down and took
his paper from her. “You know yours, Ann;
and there’s that Tembarom chap. He knows
his. I’ve been noticing that chap.”
There was a certain pleasure in using a tone of amiable
patronage. “He’s got a way with
him that’s worth money to him in business, if
he only knew it.”
“I don’t think he knows
he’s got a way,” Little Ann said.
“His way is just him.”
“He just gets over people with
it, like he got over me. I was ready to knock
his head off first time he spoke to me. I was
ready to knock anybody’s head off that day.
I’d just had that letter from Hadman. He
made me sick wi’ the way he pottered an’
played the fool about the invention. He believed
in it right enough, but he hadn’t the courage
of a mouse. He wasn’t goin’ to be
the first one to risk his money. Him, with all
he has! He’s the very chap to be able to
set it goin’. If I could have got some
one else to put up brass, it’d have started
him. It’s want o’ backbone, that’s
the matter wi’ Hadman an’ his lot.”
“Some of these days some of
them ’re going to get their eyes open,”
said Little Ann, “and then the others will
be sorry. Mr. Tembarom says they’ll fall
over themselves to get in on the ground floor.”
Hutchinson chuckled.
“That’s New York,”
he said. “He’s a rum chap. But
he thinks a good bit of the invention. I’ve
talked it over with him, because I’ve wanted
to talk, and the one thing I’ve noticed about
Tembarom is that he can keep his mouth shut.”
“But he talks a good deal,” said Ann.
“That’s the best of it.
You’d think he was telling all he knows, and
he’s not by a fat lot. He tells you what
you’ll like to hear, and he’s not sly;
but he can keep a shut mouth. That’s Lancashire.
Some folks can’t do it even when they want
to.”
“His father came from England.”
“That’s where the lad’s
sense comes from. Perhaps he’s Lancashire.
He had a lot of good ideas about the way to get at
Hadman.”
A knock at the door broke in upon
them. Mrs. Bowse presented herself, wearing
a novel expression on her face. It was at once
puzzled and not altogether disagreeably excited.
“I wish you would come down
into the dining-room, Little Ann.” She
hesitated. ” Mr. Tembaron’s brought home such
a queer man. He picked him up ill in the street.
He wants me to let him stay with him for the night,
anyhow. I don’t think he’s crazy,
but I guess he’s lost his memory. Queerest
thing I ever saw. He doesn’t know his name
or anything.”
“See here,” broke out
Hutchinson, dropping his hands and his paper on his
knee, “I’m not going to have Ann goin’
down stairs to quiet lunatics.”
“He’s as quiet as a child,”
Mrs. Bowse protested. “There’s something
pitiful about him, he seems so frightened. He’s
drenched to the skin.”
“Call an ambulance and send
him to the hospital,” advised Hutchinson.
“That’s what Mr. Tembarom
says he can’t do. It frightens him to death
to speak of it. He just clings to Mr. Tembarom
sort of awful, as if he thinks he’ll save his
life. But that isn’t all,” she added
in an amazed tone; “he’s given Mr. Tembarom
more than two thousand dollars.”
“What!” shouted Hutchinson,
bounding to his feet quite unconsciously.
“What!” exclaimed Little Ann.
“Just you come and look at it,”
answered Mrs. Bowse, nodding her head. “There’s
over two thousand dollars in bills spread out on the
table in the dining-room this minute. He had
it in a belt pocket, and he dragged it out in the
street and would make Mr. Tembarom take it. Do
come and tell us what to do.”
“I’d get him to take off
his wet clothes and get into bed, and drink some
hot spirits and water first,” said Little Ann.
“Wouldn’t you, Mrs. Bowse?”
Hutchinson got up, newspaper in hand.
“I say, I’d like to go
down and have a look at that chap myself,” he
announced.
“If he’s so frightened, perhaps—”
Little Ann hesitated.
“That’s it,” put
in Mrs. Bowse. “He’s so nervous it’d
make him worse to see another man. You’d
better wait, Mr. Hutchinson.”
Hutchinson sat down rather grumpily,
and Mrs. Bowse and Little Ann went down the stairs
together.
“I feel real nervous myself,”
said Mrs. Bowse, “it’s so queer. But
he’s not crazy. He’s quiet enough.”
As they neared the bottom of the staircase
Little Ann could see over the balustrade into the
dining-room. The strange man was sitting by
the table, his disordered, black-haired head on his
arm. He looked like an exhausted thing.
Tembarom was sitting by him, and was talking in an
encouraging voice. He had laid a hand on one of
the stranger’s. On the table beside them
was spread a number of bills which had evidently
just been counted.
“Here’s the ladies,” said Tembarom.
The stranger lifted his head and,
having looked, rose and stood upright, waiting.
It was the involuntary, mechanical action of a man
who had been trained among gentlemen.
“It’s Mrs. Bowse again,
and she’s brought Miss Hutchinson down with
her. Miss Hutchinson always knows what to do,”
explained Tembarom in his friendly voice.
The man bowed, and his bewildered
eyes fixed themselves on Little Ann.
“Thank you,” he said.
“It’s very kind of you. I—I
am— in great trouble.”
Little Ann went to him and smiled
her motherly smile at him.
“You’re very wet,”
she said. “You’ll take a bad cold
if you’re not careful. Mrs. Bowse thinks
you ought to go right to bed and have something hot
to drink.”
“It seems a long time since
I was in bed,” he answered her.
“I’m very tired.
Thank you.” He drew a weary, sighing breath,
but he didn’t move his eyes from the girl’s
face. Perhaps the cessation of action in certain
cells of his brain had increased action in others.
He looked as though he were seeing something in Little
Ann’s face which might not have revealed itself
so clearly to the more normal gaze.
He moved slightly nearer to her.
He was a tall man, and had to look down at her.
“What is your name?” he
asked anxiously. “Names trouble me.”
It was Ann who drew a little nearer
to him now. She had to look up, and the soft,
absorbed kindness in her eyes might, Tembarom thought,
have soothed a raging lion, it was so intent on its
purpose.
“My name is Ann Hutchinson;
but never you mind about it now,” she said.
“I’ll tell it to you again. Let Mr.
Tembarom take you up-stairs to bed. You’ll
be better in the morning.” And because his
hollow eyes rested on her so fixedly she put her
hand on his wet sleeve.
“You’re wet through,” she said.
“That won’t do.”
He looked down at her hand and then at her face again.
“Help me,” he pleaded,
“just help me. I don’t know what’s
happened. Have I gone mad? “
“No,” she answered; “not
a bit. It’ll all come right after a while;
you’ll see.”
“Will it, will it?” he
begged, and then suddenly his eyes were full of tears.
It was a strange thing to see him in his bewildered
misery try to pull himself together, and bite his
shaking lips as though he vaguely remembered that
he was a man. “I beg pardon,” he faltered:
“I suppose I’m ill.”
“I don’t know where to
put him,” Mrs. Bowse was saying half aside;
“I’ve not got a room empty.”
“Put him in my bed and give
me a shake-down on the floor,” said Tembarom.
“That’ll be all right. He doesn’t
want me to leave him, anyhow.”
He turned to the money on the table.
“Say,” he said to his
guest, “there’s two thousand five hundred
dollars here. We’ve counted it to make
sure. That’s quite some money. And
it’s yours—”
The stranger looked disturbed and
made a nervous gesture.
“Don’t, don’t!”
he broke in. “Keep it. Some one took
the rest. This was hidden. It will pay.”
“You see he isn’t real’
out of his mind,” Mrs. Bowse murmured feelingly.
“No, not real’ out of
it,” said Tembarom. “Say,”—as
an inspiration occurred to him, —“I
guess maybe Miss Hutchinson will keep it. Will
you, Little Ann? You can give it to him when
he wants it.”
“It’s a good bit of money,”
said Little Ann, soberly; “but I can put it
in a bank and pay Mrs. Bowse his board every week.
Yes, I’ll take it. Now he must go to bed.
It’s a comfortable little room,” she said
to the stranger, “and Mrs. Bowse will make
you a hot milk-punch. That’ll be nourishing.”
“Thank you,” murmured
the man, still keeping his yearning eyes on her.
“Thank you.”
So he was taken up to the fourth floor
and put into Tembarom’s bed. The hot milk-punch
seemed to take the chill out of him, and when, by
lying on his pillow and gazing at the shakedown on
the floor as long as he could keep his eyes open,
he had convinced himself that Tembarom was going
to stay with him, he fell asleep.
Little Ann went back to her father
carrying a roll of bills in her hands. It was
a roll of such size that Hutchinson started up in his
chair and stared at the sight of it.
“Is that the money?” he
exclaimed. “What are you going to do with
it? What have you found out, lass?”
“Yes, this is it,” she
answered. “Mr. Tembarom asked me to take
care of it. I’m going to put it in the
bank. But we haven’t found out anything.”