The necessary business in London having
been transacted, Tembarom went north to take possession
of the home of his forefathers. It had rained
for two days before he left London, and it rained
steadily all the way to Lancashire, and was raining
steadily when he reached Temple Barholm. He
had never seen such rain before. It was the quiet,
unmoved persistence of it which amazed him.
As he sat in the railroad carriage and watched the
slanting lines of its unabating downpour, he felt that
Mr. Palford must inevitably make some remark upon
it. But Mr. Palford continued to read his newspapers
undisturbedly, as though the condition of atmosphere
surrounding him were entirely accustomed and natural.
It was of course necessary and proper that he should
accompany his client to his destination, but the
circumstances of the case made the whole situation
quite abnormal. Throughout the centuries each
Temple Barholm had succeeded to his estate in a natural
and conventional manner. He had either been
welcomed or resented by his neighbors, his tenants,
and his family, and proper and fitting ceremonies
had been observed. But here was an heir whom nobody
knew, whose very existence nobody had even suspected,
a young man who had been an outcast in the streets
of the huge American city of which lurid descriptions
are given. Even in New York he could have produced
no circle other than Mrs. Bowse’s boarding-house
and the objects of interest to the up-town page,
so he brought no one with him; for Strangeways seemed
to have been mysteriously disposed of after their
arrival in London.
Never had Palford & Grimby on their
hands a client who seemed so entirely alone.
What, Mr. Palford asked himself, would he do in the
enormity of Temple Barholm, which always struck one
as being a place almost without limit. But that,
after all, was neither here nor there. There
he was. You cannot undertake to provide a man
with relatives if he has none, or with acquaintances
if people do not want to know him. His past
having been so extraordinary, the neighborhood would
naturally be rather shy of him. At first, through
mere force of custom and respect for an old name,
punctilious, if somewhat alarmed, politeness would
be shown by most people; but after the first calls
all would depend upon how much people could stand
of the man himself.
The aspect of the country on a wet
winter’s day was not enlivening. The leafless
and dripping hedges looked like bundles of sticks;
the huge trees, which in June would be majestic bowers
of greenery, now held out great skeleton arms, which
seemed to menace both earth and sky. Heavy-faced
laborers tramped along muddy lanes; cottages with
soaked bits of dead gardens looked like hovels; big,
melancholy cart-horses, dragging jolting carts along
the country roads, hung their heads as they splashed
through the mire.
As Tembarom had known few persons
who had ever been out of America, he had not heard
that England was beautiful, and he saw nothing which
led him to suspect its charms. London had impressed
him as gloomy, dirty, and behind the times despite
its pretensions; the country struck him as “the
limit.” Hully gee! was he going to be expected
to spend his life in this! Should he be obliged
to spend his life in it. He’d find that
out pretty quick, and then, if there was no hard-and-fast
law against it, him for little old New York again,
if he had to give up the whole thing and live on
ten per. If he had been a certain kind of youth,
his discontent would have got the better of him, and
he might have talked a good deal to Mr. Palford and
said many disparaging things.
“But the man was born here,”
he reflected. “I guess he doesn’t
know anything else, and thinks it’s all right.
I’ve heard of English fellows who didn’t
like New York. He looks like that kind.”
He had supplied himself with newspapers
and tried to read them. Their contents were
as unexciting as the rain-sodden landscape. There
were no head-lines likely to arrest any man’s
attention. There was a lot about Parliament
and the Court, and one of them had a column or two
about what lords and ladies were doing, a sort of
English up-town or down-town page.
He knew the stuff, but there was no
snap in it, and there were no photographs or descriptions
of dresses. Galton would have turned it down.
He could never have made good if he had done no better
than that. He grinned to himself when he read
that the king had taken a drive and that a baby prince
had the measles.
“I wonder what they’d
think of the Sunday Earth,” he mentally inquired.
He would have been much at sea if
he had discovered what they really would have thought
of it. They passed through smoke-vomiting manufacturing
towns, where he saw many legs seemingly bearing about
umbrellas, but few entire people; they whizzed smoothly
past drenched suburbs, wet woodlands, and endless-looking
brown moors, covered with dead bracken and bare and
prickly gorse. He thought these last great desolate
stretches worse than all the rest.
But the railroad carriage was luxuriously
upholstered and comfortable, though one could not
walk about and stretch his legs. In the afternoon,
Mr. Palford ordered in tea, and plainly expected him
to drink two cups and eat thin bread and butter.
He felt inclined to laugh, though the tea was all
right, and so was the bread and butter, and he did
not fail his companion in any respect. The inclination
to laugh was aroused by the thought of what Jim Bowles
and Julius would say if they could see old T. T.
with nothing to do at 4:30 but put in cream and sugar,
as though he were at a tea-party on Fifth Avenue.
But, gee! this rain did give him the
Willies. If he was going to be sorry for himself,
he might begin right now. But he wasn’t.
He was going to see this thing through.
The train had been continuing its
smooth whir through fields, wooded lands, and queer,
dead-and-alive little villages for some time before
it drew up at last at a small station. Bereft
by the season of its garden bloom and green creepers,
it looked a bare and uninviting little place.
On the two benches against the wall of the platform
a number of women sat huddled together in the dampness.
Several of them held children in their laps and all
stared very hard, nudging one another as he descended
from the train. A number of rustics stood about
the platform, giving it a somewhat crowded air.
It struck Tembarom that, for an out- of-the-way place,
there seemed to be a good many travelers, and he
wondered if they could all be going away. He
did not know that they were the curious element among
such as lived in the immediate neighborhood of the
station and had come out merely to see him on his
first appearance. Several of them touched their
hats as he went by, and he supposed they knew Palford
and were saluting him. Each of them was curious,
but no one was in a particularly welcoming mood.
There was, indeed, no reason for anticipating enthusiasm.
It was, however, but human nature that the bucolic
mind should bestir itself a little in the desire
to obtain a view of a Temple Barholm who had earned
his living by blacking boots and selling newspapers,
unknowing that he was “one o’ th’
gentry.”
When he stepped from his first-class
carriage, Tembarom found himself confronted by a
very straight, clean-faced, and well-built young man,
who wore a long, fawn-colored livery coat with claret
facings and silver buttons. He touched his cockaded
hat, and at once took up the Gladstone bags.
Tembarom knew that he was a footman because he had
seen something like him outside restaurants, theaters,
and shops in New York, but he was not sure whether
he ought to touch his own hat or not. He slightly
lifted it from his head to show there was no ill
feeling, and then followed him and Mr. Palford to the
carriage waiting for them. It was a severe but
sumptuous equipage, and the coachman was as well
dressed and well built as the footman. Tembarom
took his place in it with many mental reservations.
“What are the illustrations on the doors?”
he inquired.
“The Temple Barholm coat of
arms,” Mr. Palford answered. “The
people at the station are your tenants. Members
of the family of the stout man with the broad hat
have lived as yeoman farmers on your land for three
hundred years.”
They went on their way, with more
rain, more rain, more dripping hedges, more soaked
fields, and more bare, huge-armed trees. CLOP,
CLOP, CLOP, sounded the horses’ hoofs along
the road, and from his corner of the carriage Mr.
Palford tried to make polite conversation. Faces
peered out of the windows of the cottages, sometimes
a whole family group of faces, all crowded together,
eager to look, from the mother with a baby in her
arms to the old man or woman, plainly grandfather
or grandmother—sharp, childishly round,
or bleared old eyes, all excited and anxious to catch
glimpses.
“They are very curious to see
you,” said Mr. Palford. “Those two
laborers are touching their hats to you. It
will be as well to recognize their salute.”
At a number of the cottage doors the
group stood upon the threshold and touched foreheads
or curtsied. Tembarom saluted again and again,
and more than once his friendly grin showed itself.
It made him feel queer to drive along, turning from
side to side to acknowledge obeisances, as he had
seen a well-known military hero acknowledge them
as he drove down Broadway.
The chief street of the village of
Temple Barholm wandered almost within hailing distance
of the great entrance to the park. The gates
were supported by massive pillars, on which crouched
huge stone griffins. Tembarom felt that they
stared savagely over his head as he was driven toward
them as for inspection, and in disdainful silence
allowed to pass between them as they stood on guard,
apparently with the haughtiest mental reservations.
The park through which the long avenue
rolled concealed its beauty to the unaccustomed eye,
showing only more bare trees and sodden stretches
of brown grass. The house itself, as it loomed
up out of the thickening rain-mist, appalled Tembarom
by its size and gloomily gray massiveness. Before
it was spread a broad terrace of stone, guarded by
more griffins of even more disdainful aspect than
those watching over the gates. The stone noses
held themselves rigidly in the air as the reporter
of the up-town society page passed with Mr. Palford
up a flight of steps broad enough to make him feel
as though he were going to church. Footmen with
powdered heads received him at the carriage door,
seemed to assist him to move, to put one foot before
the other for him, to stand in rows as though they
were a military guard ready to take him into custody.
Then he was inside, standing in an
enormous hall filled with furnishings such as he
had never seen or heard of before. Carved oak,
suits of armor, stone urns, portraits, another flight
of church steps mounting upward to surrounding galleries,
stained-glass windows, tigers’ and lions’
heads, horns of tremendous size, strange and beautiful
weapons, suggested to him that the dream he had been
living in for weeks had never before been so much
a dream. He had walked about as in a vision,
but among familiar surroundings. Mrs. Bowse’s
boarders and his hall bedroom had helped him to retain
some hold over actual existence. But here the
reverently saluting villagers staring at him through
windows as though he were General Grant, the huge,
stone entrance, the drive of what seemed to be ten
miles through the park, the gloomy mass of architecture
looming up, the regiment of liveried men-servants,
with respectfully lowered but excitedly curious eyes,
the dark and solemn richness inclosing and claiming
him—all this created an atmosphere wholly
unreal. As he had not known books, its parallel
had not been suggested to him by literature. He
had literally not heard that such things existed.
Selling newspapers and giving every moment to the
struggle for life or living, one did not come within
the range of splendors. He had indeed awakened
in that other world of which he had spoken.
And though he had heard that there was another world,
he had had neither time nor opportunity to make mental
pictures of it. His life so far had expressed
itself in another language of figures. The fact
that he had in his veins the blood of the Norman
lords and Saxon kings may or may not have had something
to do with the fact that he was not abashed, but
bewildered. The same factor may or may not have
aided him to preserve a certain stoic, outward composure.
Who knows what remote influences express themselves
in common acts of modern common life? As Cassivellaunus
observed his surroundings as he followed in captive
chains his conqueror’s triumphal car through
the streets of Rome, so the keen-eyed product of
New York pavement life “took in” all about
him. Existence had forced upon him the habit
of sharp observance. The fundamental working law
of things had expressed itself in the simple colloquialism,
“Keep your eye skinned, and don’t give
yourself away.” In what phrases the parallel
of this concise advice formulated itself in 55 B.C.
no classic has yet exactly informed us, but doubtless
something like it was said in ancient Rome.
Tembarom did not give himself away, and he took rapid,
if uncertain, inventory of people and things.
He remarked, for instance, that Palford’s manner
of speaking to a servant was totally different from
the manner he used in addressing himself. It
was courteous, but remote, as though he spoke across
an accepted chasm to beings of another race.
There was no hint of incivility in it, but also no
hint of any possibility that it could occur to the
person addressed to hesitate or resent. It was
a subtle thing, and Tembarom wondered how he did
it.
They were shown into a room the walls
of which seemed built of books; the furniture was
rich and grave and luxuriously comfortable. A
fire blazed as well as glowed in a fine chimney,
and a table near it was set with a glitter of splendid
silver urn and equipage for tea.
“Mrs. Butterworth was afraid
you might not have been able to get tea, sir,”
said the man-servant, who did not wear livery, but
whose butler’s air of established authority
was more impressive than any fawn color and claret
enriched with silver could have encompassed.
Tea again? Perhaps one was obliged
to drink it at regular intervals. Tembarom for
a moment did not awaken to the fact that the man was
speaking to him, as the master from whom orders came.
He glanced at Mr. Palford.
“Mr. Temple Barholm had tea
after we left Crowly,” Mr. Palford said.
“He will no doubt wish to go to his room at
once, Burrill.”
“Yes, sir,” said Burrill,
with that note of entire absence of comment with
which Tembarom later became familiar. “Pearson
is waiting.”
It was not unnatural to wonder who
Pearson was and why he was waiting, but Tembarom
knew he would find out. There was a slight relief
on realizing that tea was not imperative. He
and Mr. Palford were led through the hall again.
The carriage had rolled away, and two footmen, who
were talking confidentially together, at once stood
at attention. The staircase was more imposing
as one mounted it than it appeared as one looked
at it from below. Its breadth made Tembarom wish
to lay a hand on a balustrade, which seemed a mile
away. He had never particularly wished to touch
balustrades before. At the head of the first
flight hung an enormous piece of tapestry, its forest
and hunters and falconers awakening Tembarom’s
curiosity, as it looked wholly unlike any picture
he had ever seen in a shop-window. There were
pictures everywhere, and none of them looked like chromos.
Most of the people in the portraits were in fancy
dress. Rumors of a New York millionaire ball
had given him some vague idea of fancy dress.
A lot of them looked like freaks. He caught
glimpses of corridors lighted by curious, high, deep
windows with leaded panes. It struck him that
there was no end to the place, and that there must
be rooms enough in it for a hotel.
“The tapestry chamber, of course,
Burrill,” he heard Mr. Palford say in a low
tone.
“Yes, sir. Mr. Temple Barholm always used
it.”
A few yards farther on a door stood
open, revealing an immense room, rich and gloomy
with tapestry-covered walls and dark oak furniture.
A bed which looked to Tembarom incredibly big, with
its carved oak canopy and massive posts, had a presiding
personality of its own. It was mounted by steps,
and its hangings and coverlid were of embossed velvet,
time-softened to the perfection of purples and blues.
A fire enriched the color of everything, and did
its best to drive the shadows away. Deep windows
opened either into the leafless boughs of close-growing
trees or upon outspread spaces of heavily timbered
park, where gaunt, though magnificent, bare branches
menaced and defied. A slim, neat young man,
with a rather pale face and a touch of anxiety in
his expression, came forward at once.
“This is Pearson, who will valet
you,” exclaimed Mr. Palford.
“Thank you, sir,” said
Pearson in a low, respectful voice. His manner
was correctness itself.
There seemed to Mr. Palford to be
really nothing else to say. He wanted, in fact,
to get to his own apartment and have a hot bath and
a rest before dinner.
“Where am I, Burrill?”
he inquired as he turned to go down the corridor.
“The crimson room, sir,”
answered Burrill, and he closed the door of the tapestry
chamber and shut Tembarom in alone with Pearson.