His was the opening incident of the
series of extraordinary and altogether incongruous
events which took place afterwards, as it appeared
to T. Tembarom, like scenes in a play in which he had
become involved in a manner which one might be inclined
to regard humorously and make jokes about, because
it was a thousand miles away from anything like real
life. That was the way it struck him. The
events referred to, it was true, were things one
now and then read about in newspapers, but while
the world realized that they were actual occurrences,
one rather regarded them, when their parallels were
reproduced in books and plays, as belonging alone
to the world of pure and highly romantic fiction.
“I guess the reason why it seems
that way,” he summed it up to Hutchinson and
Little Ann, after the worst had come to the worst,
“is because we’ve not only never known
any one it’s happened to, but we’ve never
known any one that’s known any one it’s
happened to. I’ve got to own up that it
makes me feel as if the fellows’d just yell right
out laughing when they heard it.”
The stranger’s money had been
safely deposited in a bank, and the stranger himself
still occupied Tembarom’s bedroom. He slept
a great deal and was very quiet. With great
difficulty Little Ann had persuaded him to let a
doctor see him, and the doctor had been much interested
in his case. He had expected to find some signs
of his having received accidentally or otherwise
a blow upon the head, but on examination he found
no scar or wound. The condition he was in was
frequently the result of concussion of the brain,
sometimes of prolonged nervous strain or harrowing
mental shock. Such cases occurred not infrequently.
Quiet and entire freedom from excitement would do
more for such a condition than anything else.
If he was afraid of strangers, by all means keep
them from him. Tembarom had been quite right
in letting him think he would help him to remember,
and that somehow he would in the end reach the place
he had evidently set out to go to. Nothing must
be allowed to excite him. It was well he had
had money on his person and that he had fallen into
friendly hands. A city hospital would not have
been likely to help him greatly. The restraint
of its necessary discipline might have alarmed him.
So long as he was persuaded that Tembarom
was not going to desert him, he was comparatively
calm, though sunk in a piteous and tormented melancholy.
His worst hours were when he sat alone in the hall
bedroom, with his face buried in his hands.
He would so sit without moving or speaking, and Little
Ann discovered that at these times he was trying
to remember. Sometimes he would suddenly rise
and walk about the little room, muttering, with woe
in his eyes. Ann, who saw how hard this was
for him, found also that to attempt to check or distract
him was even worse. When, sitting in her father’s
room, which was on the other side of the wall, she
heard his fretted, hurried pacing feet, her face
lost its dimpled cheerfulness. She wondered if
her mother would not have discovered some way of
clearing the black cloud distracting his brain.
Nothing would induce him to go down to the boarders’
dining-room for his meals, and the sight of a servant
alarmed him so that it was Ann who took him the scant
food he would eat. As the time of her return
to England with her father drew near, she wondered
what Mr. Tembarom would do without her services.
It was she who suggested that they must have a name
for him, and the name of a part of Manchester had
provided one. There was a place called Strangeways,
and one night when, in talking to her father, she
referred to it in Tembarom’s presence, he suddenly
seized upon it.
“Strangeways,” he said.
“That’d make a good-enough name for him.
Let’s call him Mr. Strangeways. I don’t
like the way the fellows have of calling him ‘the
Freak.’”
So the name had been adopted, and
soon became an established fact.
“The way I feel about him,”
Tembarom said, “is that the fellow’s not
a bit of a joke. What I see is that he’s
up against about the toughest proposition I’ve
ever known. Gee! that fellow’s not crazy.
He’s worse. If he was out-and-out dippy
and didn’t know it, he’d be all right.
Likely as not he’d be thinking he was the Pope
of Rome or Anna Held. What knocks him out is
that he’s just right enough to know he’s
wrong, and to be trying to get back. He reminds
me of one of those chaps the papers tell about sometimes—fellows
that go to work in livery-stables for ten years and
call themselves Bill Jones, and then wake up some
morning and remember they’re some high-browed
minister of the gospel named the Rev. James Cadwallader.”
When the curtain drew up on Tembarom’s
amazing drama, Strangeways had been occupying his
bed nearly three weeks, and he himself had been sleeping
on a cot Mrs. Bowse had put up for him in his room.
The Hutchinsons were on the point of sailing for
England—steerage—on the steamship
Transatlantic, and Tembarom was secretly torn into
fragments, though he had done well with the page
and he was daring to believe that at the end of the
month Galton would tell him he had “made good”
and the work would continue indefinitely.
If that happened, he would be raised
to “twenty-five per” and would be a man
of means. If the Hutchinsons had not been going
away, he would have been floating in clouds of rose
color. If he could persuade Little Ann to take
him in hand when she’d had time to “try
him out,” even Hutchinson could not utterly
flout a fellow who was making his steady twenty-five
per on a big paper, and was on such terms with his
boss that he might get other chances. Gee! but
he was a fellow that luck just seemed to chase, anyhow!
Look at the other chaps, lots of ’em, who knew
twice as much as he did, and had lived in decent homes
and gone to school and done their darned best, too,
and then hadn’t been able to get there!
It didn’t seem fair somehow that he should run
into such pure luck.
The day arrived when Galton was to
give his decision. Tembarom was going to hand
in his page, and while he was naturally a trifle
nervous, his nervousness would have been a hopeful
and not unpleasant thing but that the Transatlantic
sailed in two days, and in the Hutchinson’s
rooms Little Ann was packing her small trunk and her
father’s bigger one, which held more models
and drawings than clothing. Hutchinson was redder
in the face than usual, and indignant condemnation
of America and American millionaires possessed his
soul. Everybody was rather depressed. One
boarder after another had wakened to a realization
that, with the passing of Little Ann, Mrs. Bowse’s
establishment, even with the parlor, the cozy-corner,
and the second-hand pianola to support it, would
be a deserted-seeming thing. Mrs. Bowse felt
the tone of low spirits about the table, and even had
a horrible secret fear that certain of her best boarders
might decide to go elsewhere, merely to change surroundings
from which they missed something. Her eyes were
a little red, and she made great efforts to keep
things going.
“I can only keep the place up
when I’ve no empty rooms, “she had said
to Mrs. Peck, “but I’d have boarded her
free if her father would have let her stay.
But he wouldn’t, and, anyway, she’d no
more let him go off alone than she’d jump off
Brooklyn Bridge.”
It had been arranged that partly as
a farewell banquet and partly to celebrate Galton’s
decision about the page, there was to be an oyster
stew that night in Mr. Hutchinson’s room, which
was distinguished as a bed-sitting-room. Tembarom
had diplomatically suggested it to Mr. Hutchinson.
It was to be Tembarom’s oyster supper, and somehow
he managed to convey that it was only a proper and
modest tribute to Mr. Hutchinson himself. First-class
oyster stew and pale ale were not so bad when properly
suggested, therefore Mr. Hutchinson consented.
Jim Bowles and Julius Steinberger were to come in
to share the feast, and Mrs. Bowse had promised to
prepare.
It was not an inspiring day for Little
Ann. New York had seemed a bewildering and far
too noisy place for her when she had come to it directly
from her grandmother’s cottage in the English
village, where she had spent her last three months
before leaving England. The dark rooms of the
five-storied boarding-house had seemed gloomy enough
to her, and she had found it much more difficult
to adjust herself to her surroundings than she could
have been induced to admit to her father. At
first his temper and the open contempt for American
habits and institutions which he called “speaking
his mind” had given her a great deal of careful
steering through shoals to do. At the outset the
boarders had resented him, and sometimes had snapped
back their own views of England and courts.
Violent and disparaging argument had occasionally
been imminent, and Mrs. Bowse had worn an ominous look.
Their rooms had in fact been “wanted”
before their first week had come to an end, and Little
Ann herself scarcely knew how she had tided over
that situation. But tide it over she did, and
by supernatural effort and watchfulness she contrived
to soothe Mrs. Bowse until she had been in the house
long enough to make friends with people and aid her
father to realize that, if they went elsewhere, they
might find only the same class of boarders, and there
would be the cost of moving to consider. She
had beguiled an armchair from Mrs. Bowse, and had re-covered
it herself with a remnant of crimson stuff secured
from a miscellaneous heap at a marked-down sale at
a department store. She had arranged his books
and papers adroitly and had kept them in their places
so that he never felt himself obliged to search for
any one of them. With many little contrivances
she had given his bed-sitting-room a look of comfort
and established homeliness, and he had even begun to
like it.
“Tha’t just like tha mother,
Ann,” he had said. “She’d make
a railway station look as if it had been lived in.”
Then Tembarom had appeared, heralded
by Mrs. Bowse and the G. Destroyer, and the first
time their eyes had met across the table she had
liked him. The liking had increased. There
was that in his boyish cheer and his not-too-well-fed-looking
face which called forth maternal interest. As
she gradually learned what his life had been, she
felt a thrilled anxiety to hear day by day how he was
getting on. She listened for details, and felt
it necessary to gather herself together in the face
of a slight depression when hopes of Galton were
less high than usual. His mending was mysteriously
done, and in time he knew with amazed gratitude that
he was being “looked after.” His
first thanks were so awkward, but so full of appreciation
of unaccustomed luxury, that they almost brought
tears to her eyes, since they so clearly illuminated
the entire novelty of any attention whatever.
“I just don’t know what
to say,” he said, shuffling from one foot to
another, though his nice grin was at its best.
“I’ve never had a woman do anything for
me since I was ten. I guess women do lots of things
for most fellows; but, then, they’re mothers
and sisters and aunts. I appreciate it like—like
thunder. I feel as if I was Rockefeller, Miss
Ann.”
In a short time she had become “Little
Ann” to him, as to the rest, and they began
to know each other very well. Jim Bowles and Julius
Steinberger had not been able to restrain themselves
at first from making slangy, yearning love to her,
but Tembarom had been different. He had kept
himself well in hand. Yes, she had liked T. Tembarom,
and as she packed the trunks she realized that the
Atlantic Ocean was three thousand miles across, and
when two people who had no money were separated by
it, they were likely to remain so. Rich people
could travel, poor people couldn’t. You
just stayed where things took you, and you mustn’t
be silly enough to expect things to happen in your
class of life—things like seeing people
again. Your life just went on. She kept
herself very busy, and did not allow her thoughts any
latitude. It would vex her father very much
if he thought she had really grown fond of America
and was rather sorry to go away. She had finished
her packing before evening, and the trunks were labeled
and set aside, some in the outside hall and some
in the corner of the room. She had sat down
with some mending on her lap, and Hutchinson was
walking about the room with the restlessness of the
traveler whose approaching journey will not let him
settle himself anywhere.
“I’ll lay a shilling you’ve
got everything packed and ready, and put just where
a chap can lay his hands on it,” he said.
“Yes, Father. Your tweed
cap’s in the big pocket of your thick top-coat,
and there’s an extra pair of spectacles and your
pipe and tobacco in the small one.”
“And off we go back to England
same as we came!” He rubbed his head, and drew
a big, worried sigh. “Where’s them
going?” he asked, pointing to some newly laundered
clothing on a side table. “You haven’t
forgotten ’em, have you?”
“No, Father. It’s
just some of the young men’s washing. I
thought I’d take time to mend them up a bit
before I went to bed.”
“That’s like tha mother,
too—taking care of everybody. What
did these chaps do before you came?”
“Sometimes they tried to sew
on a button or so themselves, but oftener they went
without. Men make poor work of sewing. It
oughtn’t to be expected of them.”
Hutchinson stopped and looked her
and her mending over with a touch of curiosity.
“Some of them’s Tembarom’s?”
he asked.
Little Ann held up a pair of socks.
“These are. He does wear
them out, poor fellow. It’s tramping up
and down the streets to save car-fare does it.
He’s never got a heel to his name. But
he’s going to be able to buy some new ones next
week.”
Hutchinson began his tramp again.
“He’ll miss thee, Little
Ann; but so’ll the other lads, for that matter.”
“He’ll know to-night whether
Mr. Galton’s going to let him keep his work.
I do hope he will. I believe he’d begin
to get on.”
“Well,”—Hutchinson
was just a little grudging even at this comparatively
lenient moment,—“I believe the chap’ll
get on myself. He’s got pluck and he’s
sharp. I never saw him make a poor mouth yet.”
“Neither did I,” answered Ann.
A door leading into Tembarom’s
hall bedroom opened on to Hutchinson’s.
They both heard some one inside the room knock at
it. Hutchinson turned and listened, jerking
his head toward the sound.
“There’s that poor chap
again,” he said. “He’s wakened
and got restless. What’s Tembarom going
to do with him, I’d like to know? The
money won’t last forever.”
“Shall I let him in, Father?
I dare say he’s got restless because Mr. Tembarom’s
not come in.”
“Aye, we’ll let him in.
He won’t have thee long. He can’t
do no harm so long as I’m here.”
Little Ann went to the door and opened
it. She spoke quietly.
“Do you want to come in here, Mr. Strangeways?”
The man came in. He was clean,
but still unshaven, and his clothes looked as though
he had been lying down. He looked round the room
anxiously.
“Where has he gone?” he
demanded in an overstrung voice. “Where
is he?” He caught at Ann’s sleeve in
a sudden access of nervous fear. “What
shall I do if he’s gone?”
Hutchinson moved toward him.
“’Ere, ‘ere,”
he said, “don’t you go catchin’ hold
of ladies. What do you want?”
I’ve forgotten his name now.
What shall I do if I can’t remember?”
faltered Strangeways.
Little Ann patted his arm comfortingly.
“There, there, now! You’ve
not really forgotten it. It’s just slipped
your memory. You want Mr. Tembarom—Mr.
T. Tembarom.”
“Oh, thank you, thank you.
That’s it. Yes, Tembarom. He said T.
Tembarom. He said he wouldn’t throw me
over.”
Little Ann led him to a seat and made
him sit down. She answered him with quiet decision.
“Well, if he said he wouldn’t,
he won’t. Will he, Father?”
“No, he won’t.”
There was rough good nature in Hutchinson’s admission.
He paused after it to glance at Ann. “You
think a lot of that lad, don’t you, Ann?”
“Yes, I do, Father,” she
replied undisturbedly. “He’s one you
can trust, too. He’s up-town at his work,”
she explained to Strangeways. “He’ll
be back before long. He’s giving us a bit
of a supper in here because we’re going away.”
Strangeways grew nervous again.
“But he won’t go with you? T. Tembarom
won’t go?”
“No, no; he’s not going.
He’ll stay here,” she said soothingly.
He had evidently not observed the packed and labeled
trunks when he came in. He seemed suddenly to
see them now, and rose in distress.
“Whose are these? You said he wasn’t
going?”
Ann took hold of his arm and led him to the corner.
“They are not Mr. Tembarom’s
trunks,” she explained. “They are
father’s and mine. Look on the labels.
Joseph Hutchinson, Liverpool. Ann Hutchinson,
Liverpool.”
He looked at them closely in a puzzled
way. He read a label aloud in a dragging voice.
“Ann Hutchinson, Liverpool. What’s—what’s
Liverpool?
“Oh, come,” encouraged
Little Ann, “you know that. It’s a
place in England. We’re going back to
England.”
He stood and gazed fixedly before
him. Then he began to rub his fingers across
his forehead. Ann knew the straining look in his
eyes. He was making that horrible struggle to
get back somewhere through the darkness which shut
him in. It was so painful a thing to see that
even Hutchinson turned slightly away.
“Don’t!” said Little
Ann, softly, and tried to draw him away.
He caught his breath convulsively
once or twice, and his voice dragged out words again,
as though he were dragging them from bottomless depths.
“Going—back—to—England—back
to England—to England.”
He dropped into a chair near by, his
arms thrown over its back, and broke, as his face
fell upon them, into heavy, deadly sobbing—the
kind of sobbing Tembarom had found it impossible
to stand up against. Hutchinson whirled about
testily.
“Dang it!” he broke out,
“I wish Tembarom’d turn up. What are
we to do?” He didn’t like it himself.
It struck him as unseemly.
But Ann went to the chair, and put
her hands on the shuddering shoulder, bending over
the soul-wrung creature, the wisdom of centuries
in the soft, expostulatory voice which seemed to reach
the very darkness he was lost in. It was a wisdom
of which she was wholly unaware, but it had been
born with her, and was the building of her being.
“’Sh! ’S-h-h!”
she said. “You mustn’t do that.
Mr. Tembarom wouldn’t like you to do it.
He’ll be in directly. ’Sh! ’Sh,
now!” And simple as the words were, their soothing
reached him. The wildness of his sobs grew less.
“See here,” Hutchinson
protested, “this won’t do, my man.
I won’t have it, Ann. I’m upset
myself, what with this going back and everything.
I can’t have a chap coming and crying like
that there. It upsets me worse than ever.
And you hangin’ over him! It won’t
do.”
Strangeways lifted his head from his
arms and looked at him.
“Aye, I mean what I say,” Hutchinson added
fretfully.
Strangeways got up from the chair.
When he was not bowed or slouching it was to be seen
that he was a tall man with square shoulders.
Despite his unshaven, haggard face, he had a sort
of presence.
“I’ll go back to my room,”
he said. “I forgot. I ought not to
be here.”
Neither Hutchinson nor Little Ann
had ever seen any one do the thing he did next.
When Ann went with him to the door of the hall bedroom,
he took her hand, and bowing low before her, lifted
it gently to his lips.
Hutchinson stared at him as he turned
into the room and closed the door behind him.
“Well, I’ve read of lords
and ladies doin’ that in books,” he said,
“but I never thought I should see a chap do
it myself.”
Little Ann went back to her mending,
looking very thoughtful.
“Father,” she said, after
a few moments, “England made him come near
to remembering something.”
“New York’ll come near
making me remember a lot of things when I’m out
of it,” said Mr. Hutchinson, sitting down heavily
in his chair and rubbing his head. “Eh,
dang it! dang it!”
“Don’t you let it, Father,”
advised Little Ann. “There’s never
any good in thinking things over.”
“You’re not as cheerful
yourself as you let on,” he said. “You’ve
not got much color to-day, my lass.”
She rubbed one cheek a little, trying to laugh.
“I shall get it back when we
go and stay with grandmother. It’s just
staying indoors so much. Mr. Tembarom won’t
be long now; I’ll get up and set the table.
The things are on a tray outside.”
As she was going out of the room,
Jim Bowles and Julius Steinberger appeared at the
door.
“May we come in?” Jim
asked eagerly. “We’re invited to the
oyster stew, and it’s time old T. T. was here.
Julius and me are just getting dippy waiting up-stairs
to hear if he’s made good with Galton.”
“Well, now, you sit down and
be quiet a bit, or you’ll be losing your appetites,”
advised Ann.
“You can’t lose a thing
the size of mine,” answered Jim, “any more
than you could lose the Metropolitan Opera-house.”
Ann turned her head and paused as
though she were listening. She heard footsteps
in the lower hall.
“He’s coming now,”
she announced. “I know his step. He’s
tired. Don’t go yet, you two,” she
added as the pair prepared to rush to meet him.
“When any one’s that tired he wants to
wash his face, and talk when he’s ready.
If you’ll just go back to your room I’ll
call you when I’ve set the table.”
She felt that she wanted a little
more quiet during the next few minutes than she could
have if they remained and talked at the top of elated
voices. She had not quite realized how anxiously
she had been waiting all day for the hour when she
would hear exactly what had happened. If he
was all right, it would be a nice thing to remember
when she was in England. In this moderate form
she expressed herself mentally. “It would
be a nice thing to remember.” She spread
the cloth on the table and began to lay out the plates.
Involuntarily she found herself stopping to glance
at the hall bedroom door and listen rather intently.
“I hope he’s got it.
I do that. I’m sure he has. He ought
to.”
Hutchinson looked over at her.
She was that like her mother, that lass!
“You’re excited, Ann,” he said.
“Yes, Father, I am—a
bit. He’s—he’s washing
his face now.” Sounds of splashing water
could be heard through the intervening door.
Hutchinson watched her with some uneasiness.
“You care a lot for that lad,” he said.
She did not look fluttered. Her answer was quite
candid.
“I said I did, Father. He’s taking
off his boots.”
“You know every sound he makes,
and you’re going away Saturday, and you’ll
never see him again.”
“That needn’t stop me
caring. It never did any one any harm to care
for one of his sort.”
“But it can’t come to
anything,” Hutchinson began to bluster.
“It won’t do—”
“He’s coming to the door,
he’s turning the handle,” said Little Ann.
Tembarom came in. He was fresh
with recent face-washing, and his hair was damp,
so that a short lock curled and stood up. He had
been up-town making frantic efforts for hours, but
he had been making them in a spirit of victorious
relief, and he did not look tired at all.
“I’ve got it!” he
cried out the moment he entered. “I’ve
got it, by jingo! The job’s mine for keeps.”
“Galton’s give it to you
out and out?” Hutchinson was slightly excited
himself.
“He’s in the bulliest
humor you ever saw. He says I’ve done first-rate,
and if I go on, he’ll run me up to thirty.”
“Well, I’m danged glad
of it, lad, that I am!” Hutchinson gave in
handsomely. “You put backbone into it.”
Little Ann stood near, smiling.
Her smile met Tembarom’s.
“I know you’re glad, Little
Ann,” he said. “I’d never have
got there but for you. It was up to me, after
the way you started me.”
“You know I’m glad without
me telling you,” she answered. “I’m
RIGHTDOWN glad.”
And it was at this moment that Mrs.
Bowse came into the room.
“It’s too bad it’s
happened just now,” she said, much flustered.
“That’s the way with things. The
stew’ll spoil, but he says it’s real
important.”
Tembarom caught at both her hands and shook them.
“I’ve got it, Mrs. Bowse.
Here’s your society reporter! The best-looking
boarder you’ve got is going to be able to pay
his board steady.”
“I’m as glad as can be,
and so will everybody be. I knew you’d get
it. But this gentleman’s been here twice
to-day. He says he really must see you.”
“Let him wait,” Hutchinson
ordered. “What’s the chap want?
The stew won’t be fit to eat.”
“No, it won’t,”
answered Mrs. Bowse; “but he seems to think he’s
not the kind to be put off. He says it’s
more Mr. Tembarom’s business than his.
He looked real mad when I showed him into the parlor,
where they were playing the pianola. He asked
wasn’t there a private room where you could
talk.”
A certain flurried interest in the
manner of Mrs. Bowse, a something not usually awakened
by inopportune callers, an actual suggestion of the
possible fact that she was not as indifferent as she
was nervous, somewhat awakened Mr. Hutchinson’s
curiosity.
“Look here,” he volunteered,”
if he’s got any real business, he can’t
talk over to the tune of the pianola you can bring
him up here, Tembarom. I’ll see he don’t
stay long if his business isn’t worth talkin’
about. He’ll see the table set for supper,
and that’ll hurry him.”
“Oh, gee I wish he hadn’t
come!” said Tembarom. “I’ll
just go down and see what he wants. No one’s
got any swell private business with me.”
“You bring him up if he has,”
said Hutchinson. “We’d like to hear
about it.”
Tembarom ran down the stairs quickly.
No one had ever wanted to see him
on business before. There was something important-sounding
about it; perhaps things were starting up for him
in real earnest. It might be a message from Galton,
though he could not believe that he had at this early
stage reached such a distinction. A ghastly
thought shot a bolt at him, but he shook himself
free of it.
“He’s not a fellow to
go back on his word, anyhow,” he insisted.
There were more boarders than usual
in the parlor. The young woman from the notion
counter had company; and one of her guests was playing
“He sut’nly was Good to Me” on
the pianola with loud and steady tread of pedal.
The new arrival had evidently not
thought it worth his while to commit himself to permanency
by taking a seat. He was standing not far from
the door with a businesslike-looking envelop in one
hand and a pince-nez in the other, with which Tembarom
saw he was rather fretfully tapping the envelop as
he looked about him. He was plainly taking in
the characteristics of the room, and was not leniently
disposed toward them. His tailor was clearly
an excellent one, with entirely correct ideas as
to the cut and material which exactly befitted an elderly
gentleman of some impressiveness in the position,
whatsoever it happened to be, which he held.
His face was not of a friendly type, and his eyes
held cold irritation discreetly restrained by businesslike
civility. Tembarom vaguely felt the genialities
of the oyster supper assume a rather fourth-rate
air.
The caller advanced and spoke first.
“Mr. Tembarom?” he inquired.
“Yes,” Tembarom answered, “I’m
T. Tembarom.”
“T.,” repeated the stranger,
with a slightly puzzled expression. “Ah,
yes; I see. I beg pardon.”
In that moment Tembarom felt that
he was looked over, taken in, summed up, and without
favor. The sharp, steady eye, however, did not
seem to have moved from his face. At the same
time it had aided him to realize that he was, to
this well-dressed person at least, a too exhilarated
young man wearing a ten-dollar “hand-me-down.”
“My name is Palford,”
he said concisely. “That will convey nothing
to you. I am of the firm of Palford & Grimby
of Lincoln’s Inn. This is my card.”
Tembarom took the card and read that
Palford & Grimby were “solicitors,” and
he was not sure that he knew exactly what “solicitors”
were.
“Lincoln’s Inn?”
he hesitated. “That’s not in New York,
is it?”
“No, Mr. Tembarom; in London. I come from
England.”
“You must have had bad weather
crossing,” said Tembarom, with amiable intent.
Somehow Mr. Palford presented a more unyielding surface
than he was accustomed to. And yet his hard
courtesy was quite perfect.
“I have been here some weeks.”
“I hope you like New York. Won’t
you have a seat?”
The young lady from the notion counter
and her friends began to sing the chorus of “He
sut’nly was Good to Me” with quite professional
negro accent.
“That’s just the way May Irwin done it,”
one of them laughed.
Mr. Palford glanced at the performers.
He did not say whether he liked New York or not.
“I asked your landlady if we
could not see each other in a private room,”
he said. “It would not be possible to talk
quietly here.”
“We shouldn’t have much
of a show,” answered Tembarom, inwardly wishing
he knew what was going to happen. “But there
are no private rooms in the house. We can be
quieter than this, though, if we go up stairs to
Mr. Hutchinson’s room. He said I could bring
you.”
“That would be much better,” replied Mr.
Palford.
Tembarom led him out of the room,
up the first steep and narrow flight of stairs, along
the narrow hall to the second, up that, down another
hall to the third, up the third, and on to the fourth.
As he led the way he realized again that the worn
carpets, the steep narrowness, and the pieces of
paper unfortunately stripped off the wall at intervals,
were being rather counted against him. This
man had probably never been in a place like this
before in his life, and he didn’t take to it.
At the Hutchinsons’ door he stopped and explained:
“We were going to have an oyster
stew here because the Hutchinsons are going away;
but Mr. Hutchinson said we could come up.”
“Very kind of Mr. Hutchinson, I’m sure.”
Despite his stiffly collected bearing,
Mr. Palford looked perhaps slightly nervous when
he was handed into the bed-sitting-room, and found
himself confronting Hutchinson and Little Ann and the
table set for the oyster stew. It is true that
he had never been in such a place in his life, that
for many reasons he was appalled, and that he was
beset by a fear that he might be grotesquely compelled
by existing circumstances to accept these people’s
invitation, if they insisted upon his sitting down
with them and sharing their oyster stew. One
could not calculate on what would happen among these
unknown quantities. It might be their idea of
boarding-house politeness. And how could one
offend them? God forbid that the situation should
intensify itself in such an absurdly trying manner!
What a bounder the unfortunate young man was!
His own experience had not been such as to assist
him to any realistic enlightenment regarding him, even
when he had seen the society page and had learned
that he had charge of it.
“Let me make you acquainted
with Mr. and Miss Hutchinson,” Tembarom introduced.
“This is Mr. Palford, Mr. Hutchinson.”
Hutchinson, half hidden behind his
newspaper, jerked his head and grunted:
“Glad to see you, sir.”
Mr. Palford bowed, and took the chair Tembarom presented.
“I am much obliged to you, Mr.
Hutchinson, for allowing me to come to your room.
I have business to discuss with Mr. Tembarom, and the
pianola was being played down-stairs—rather
loudly.”
“They do it every night, dang
’em! Right under my bed,” growled
Hutchinson. “You’re an Englishman,
aren’t you?”
“Yes.”
“So am I, thank God! ” Hutchinson devoutly gave
forth.
Little Ann rose from her chair, sewing in hand.
“Father’ll come and sit with me in my
room,” she said.
Hutchinson looked grumpy. He
did not intend to leave the field clear and the stew
to its fate if he could help it. He gave Ann a
protesting frown.
“I dare say Mr. Palford doesn’t
mind us,” he said. “We’re not
strangers.”
“Not in the least,” Palford
protested. “Certainly not. If you are
old friends, you may be able to assist us.”
“Well, I don’t know about
that,” Hutchinson answered, “We’ve
not known him long, but we know him pretty well.
You come from London, don’t you? “
“Yes. From Lincoln’s Inn Fields.”
“Law?” grunted Hutchinson.
“Yes. Of the firm of Palford & Grimby.”
Hutchinson moved in his chair involuntarily.
There was stimulation to curiosity in this.
This chap was a regular top sawyer—clothes,
way of pronouncing his words, manners, everything.
No mistaking him—old family solicitor
sort of chap. What on earth could he have to say
to Tembarom? Tembarom himself had sat down and
could not be said to look at his ease.
“I do not intrude without the
excuse of serious business,” Palford explained
to him. “A great deal of careful research
and inquiry has finally led me here. I am compelled
to believe I have followed the right clue, but I
must ask you a few questions. Your name is not
really Tembarom, is it?”
Hutchinson looked at Tembarom sharply.
“Not Tembarom? What does he mean, lad?”
Tembarom’s grin was at once boyish and ashamed.
“Well, it is in one way,”
he answered, “and it isn’t in another.
The fellows at school got into the way of calling
me that way,—to save time, I guess,—and
I got to like it. They’d have guyed my real
name. Most of them never knew it. I can’t
see why any one ever called a child by such a fool
name, anyhow.”
“What was it exactly?”
Tembarom looked almost sheepish.
“It sounds like a thing in a
novel. It was Temple Temple Barholm. Two
Temples, by gee! As if one wasn’t enough!”
Joseph Hutchinson dropped his paper
and almost started from his chair. His red face
suddenly became so much redder that he looked a trifle
apoplectic.
“Temple Barholm does tha say?” he cried
out.
Mr. Palford raised his hand and checked
him, but with a suggestion of stiff apology.
“If you will kindly allow me.
Did you ever hear your father refer to a place called
Temple Barholm?” he inquired.
Tembarom reflected as though sending
his thoughts backward into a pretty thoroughly forgotten
and ignored past. There had been no reason connected
with filial affection which should have caused him
to recall memories of his father. They had not
liked each other. He had known that he had been
resented and looked down upon as a characteristically
American product. His father had more than once
said he was a “common American lad,”
and he had known he was.
“Seems to me,” he said
at last, “that once when he was pretty mad at
his luck I heard him grumbling about English laws,
and he said some of his distant relations were swell
people who would never think of speaking to him,—perhaps
didn’t know he was alive,—and they
lived in a big way in a place that was named after
the family. He never saw it or them, and he
said that was the way in England—one fellow
got everything and the rest were paupers like himself.
He’d always been poor.”
“Yes, the relation was a distant
one. Until this investigation began the family
knew nothing of him. The inquiry has been a tiresome
one. I trust I am reaching the end of it.
We have given nearly two years to following this
clue.”
“What for?” burst forth Tembarom, sitting
upright.
“Because it was necessary to
find either George Temple Barholm or his son, if
he had one.”
“I’m his son, all right,
but he died when I was eight years old,” Tembarom
volunteered. “I don’t remember much
about him.”
“You remember that he was not an American?”
“He was English. Hated it; but he wasn’t
fond of America.”
“Have you any papers belonging to him?”
Tembarom hesitated again.
“There’s a few old letters—oh,
and one of those glass photographs in a case.
I believe it’s my grandfather and grandmother,
taken when they were married. Him on a chair,
you know, and her standing with her hand on his shoulder.”
“Can you show them to me?” Palford suggested.
“Sure,” Tembarom answered,
getting up from his seat “They’re in my
room. I turned them up yesterday among some
other things.”
When he left them, Mr. Palford sat
gently rubbing his chin. Hutchinson wanted to
burst forth with questions, but he looked so remote
and acidly dignified that there was a suggestion
of boldness in the idea of intruding on his reflections.
Hutchinson stared at him and breathed hard and short
in his suspense. The stiff old chap was thinking
things over and putting things together in his lawyer’s
way. He was entirely oblivious to his surroundings.
Little Ann went on with her mending, but she wore
her absorbed look, and it was not a result of her work.
Tembarom came back with some papers
in his hand. They were yellowed old letters,
and on the top of the package there was a worn daguerreotype-case
with broken clasp.
“Here they are,” he said,
giving them to Palford. “I guess they’d
just been married,” opening the case.
“Get on to her embroidered collar and big breast-pin
with his picture in it. That’s English enough,
isn’t it? He’d given it to her for
a wedding-present. There’s something in
one of the letters about it.”
It was the letters to which Mr. Palford
gave the most attention. He read them and examined
post-marks and dates. When he had finished, he
rose from his chair with a slightly portentous touch
of professional ceremony.
“Yes, those are sufficiently
convincing. You are a very fortunate young man.
Allow me to congratulate you.”
He did not look particularly pleased,
though he extended his hand and shook Tembarom’s
politely. He was rigorously endeavoring to conceal
that he found himself called upon to make the best
of an extremely bad job. Hutchinson started
forward, resting his hands on his knees and glaring
with ill-suppressed excitement.
“What’s that for?”
Tembarom said. He felt rather like a fool.
He laughed half nervously. It seemed to be up
to him to understand, and he didn’t understand
in the least.
“You have, through your father’s
distant relationship, inherited a very magnificent
property—the estate of Temple Barholm in
Lancashire,” Palford began to explain, but
Mr. Hutchinson sprang from his chair outright, crushing
his paper in his hand.
“Temple Barholm!” he almost
shouted, “I dunnot believe thee! Why, it’s
one of th’ oldest places in England and one
of th’ biggest. Th’ Temple Barholms
as didn’t come over with th’ Conqueror
was there before him. Some of them was Saxon
kings! And him—” pointing a stumpy,
red finger disparagingly at Tembarom, aghast and
incredulous—“that New York lad that’s
sold newspapers in the streets—you say he’s
come into it?”
“Precisely.” Mr.
Palford spoke with some crispness of diction.
Noise and bluster annoyed him. “That is
my business here. Mr. Tembarom is, in fact,
Mr. Temple Temple Barholm of Temple Barholm, which
you seem to have heard of.”
“Heard of it! My mother
was born in the village an’ lives there yet.
Art tha struck dumb, lad!” he said almost fiercely
to Tembarom. “By Judd! Tha well may
be!”
Tembarom was standing holding the
back of a chair. He was pale, and had once opened
his mouth, and then gulped and shut it. Little
Ann had dropped her sewing. His first look had
leaped to her, and she had looked back straight into
his eyes.
“I’m struck something,”
he said, his half-laugh slightly unsteady. “Who’d
blame me?”
“You’d better sit down,”
said Little Ann. “Sudden things are upsetting.”
He did sit down. He felt rather
shaky. He touched himself on his chest and laughed
again.
“Me!” he said. “T.
T.! Hully gee! It’s like a turn at
a vaudeville.”
The sentiment prevailing in Hutchinson’s
mind seemed to verge on indignation.
“Thee th’ master of Temple
Barholm! ” he ejaculated. “Why, it stood
for seventy thousand pound’ a year!”
“It did and it does,”
said Mr. Palford, curtly. He had less and less
taste for the situation. There was neither dignity
nor proper sentiment in it. The young man was
utterly incapable of comprehending the meaning and
proportions of the extraordinary event which had
befallen him. It appeared to present to him the
aspect of a somewhat slangy New York joke.
“You do not seem much impressed,
Mr. Temple Barholm,” he said.
“Oh, I’m impressed, all
right,” answered Tembarom, “but, say, this
thing can’t be true! You couldn’t
make it true if you sat up all night to do it.”
“When I go into the business
details of the matter tomorrow morning you will realize
the truth of it,” said Mr. Palford. “Seventy
thousand pounds a year—and Temple Barholm—are
not unsubstantial facts.”
“Three hundred and fifty thousand
dollars, my lad—that’s what it stands
for!” put in Mr. Hutchinson.
“Well,” said Tembarom,
“I guess I can worry along on that if I try
hard enough. I mayn’t be able to keep myself
in the way I’ve been used to, but I’ve
got to make it do.”
Mr. Palford stiffened. He did
not know that the garish, flippant-sounding joking
was the kind of defense the streets of New York had
provided Mr. Temple Barholm with in many an hour
when he had been a half-clad newsboy with an empty
stomach, and a bundle of unsold newspapers under
his arm.
“You are jocular,” he
said. “I find the New Yorkers are given
to being jocular—continuously.”
Tembarom looked at him rather searchingly.
Palford wouldn’t have found it possible to
believe that the young man knew all about his distaste
and its near approach to disgust, that he knew quite
well what he thought of his ten-dollar suit, his
ex-newsboy’s diction, and his entire incongruousness
as a factor in any circumstances connected with dignity
and splendor. He would certainly not have credited
the fact that though he had not the remotest idea
what sort of a place Temple Barholm was, and what
sort of men its long line of possessors had been,
he had gained a curious knowledge of their significance
through the mental attitude of their legal representative
when he for a moment failed to conceal his sense
of actual revolt.
“It seems sort of like a joke
till you get on to it,” he said. “But
I guess it ain’t such a merry jest as it seems.”
And then Mr. Palford did begin to
observe that he had lost his color entirely; also
that he had a rather decent, sharp-cut face, and
extremely white and good young teeth, which he showed
not unattractively when he smiled. And he smiled
frequently, but he was not smiling now.