For a few moments the two young men
looked at each other, Pearson’s gaze being
one of respectfulness which hoped to propitiate, if
propitiation was necessary, though Pearson greatly
trusted it was not. Tembarom’s was the
gaze of hasty investigation and inquiry. He
suddenly thought that it would have been “all
to the merry” if somebody had “put him
on to” a sort of idea of what was done to a
fellow when he was “valeted.” A valet,
he had of course gathered, waited on one somehow
and looked after one’s clothes. But were
there by chance other things he expected to do,—manicure
one’s nails or cut one’s hair,—and
how often did he do it, and was this the day?
He was evidently there to do something, or he wouldn’t
have been waiting behind the door to pounce out the
minute he appeared, and when the other two went away,
Burrill wouldn’t have closed the door as solemnly
as though he shut the pair of them in together to
get through some sort of performance.
“Here’s where T. T. begins
to feel like a fool,” he thought. “And
here’s where there’s no way out of looking
like one. I don’t know a thing.”
But personal vanity was not so strong
in him as healthy and normal good temper. Despite
the fact that the neat correctness of Pearson’s
style and the finished expression of his neat face
suggested that he was of a class which knew with
the most finished exactness all that custom and propriety
demanded on any occasion on which “valeting”
in its most occult branches might be done, he was
only “another fellow,” after all, and
must be human. So Tembarom smiled at him.
“Hello, Pearson,” he said. “How
are you?”
Pearson slightly started. It
was the tiniest possible start, quite involuntary,
from which he recovered instantly, to reply in a tone
of respectful gratefulness:
“Thank you, sir, very well; thank you, sir.”
“That’s all right,”
answered Tembarom, a sense of relief because he’d
“got started” increasing the friendliness
of his smile. “I see you got my trunk
open,” he said, glancing at some articles of
clothing neatly arranged upon the bed.
Pearson was slightly alarmed.
It occurred to him suddenly that perhaps it was not
the custom in America to open a gentleman’s box
and lay out his clothes for him. For special
reasons he was desperately anxious to keep his place,
and above all things he felt he must avoid giving
offense by doing things which, by being too English,
might seem to cast shades of doubt on the entire
correctness of the customs of America. He had
known ill feeling to arise between “gentlemen’s
gentlemen” in the servants’ hall in the
case of slight differences in customs, contested
with a bitterness of feeling which had made them
almost an international question. There had naturally
been a great deal of talk about the new Mr. Temple
Barholm and what might be expected of him. When
a gentleman was not a gentleman,—this was
the form of expression in “the hall,”—the
Lord only knew what would happen. And this one,
who had, for all one knew, been born in a workhouse,
and had been a boot-black kicked about in American
streets,—they did not know Tembarom,—and
nearly starved to death, and found at last in a low
lodging-house, what could he know about decent living?
And ten to one he’d be American enough to swagger
and bluster and pretend he knew everything better
than any one else, and lose his temper frightfully
when he made mistakes, and try to make other people
seem to blame. Set a beggar on horseback, and
who didn’t know what he was? There were
chances enough and to spare that not one of them
would be able to stand it, and that in a month’s
time they would all be looking for new places.
So while Tembarom was rather afraid
of Pearson and moved about in an awful state of uncertainty,
Pearson was horribly afraid of Tembarom, and was,
in fact, in such a condition of nervous anxiety that
he was obliged more than once furtively to apply
to his damp, pale young forehead his exceedingly
fresh and spotless pocket-handkerchief.
In the first place, there was the
wardrobe. What could he do? How could
he approach the subject with sufficient delicacy?
Mr. Temple Barholm had brought with him only a steamer
trunk and a Gladstone bag, the latter evidently bought
in London, to be stuffed with hastily purchased handkerchiefs
and shirts, worn as they came out of the shop, and
as evidently bought without the slightest idea of the
kind of linen a gentleman should own. What most
terrified Pearson, who was of a timid and most delicate-minded
nature, was that having the workhouse and the boot-blacking
as a background, the new Mr. Temple Barholm couldn’t
know, as all this had come upon him so suddenly.
And was it to be Pearson’s calamitous duty
to explain to him that he had nothing, that
he apparently knew nothing, and that as he had
no friends who knew, a mere common servant must educate
him, if he did not wish to see him derided and looked
down upon and actually “cut” by gentlemen
that were gentlemen? All this to say nothing
of Pearson’s own well-earned reputation for
knowledge of custom, intelligence, and deftness in
turning out the objects of his care in such form as
to be a reference in themselves when a new place
was wanted. Of course sometimes there were even
real gentlemen who were most careless and indifferent
to appearance, and who, if left to themselves, would
buy garments which made the blood run cold when one
realized that his own character and hopes for the
future often depended upon his latest employer’s
outward aspect. But the ulster in which Mr. Temple
Barholm had presented himself was of a cut and material
such as Pearson’s most discouraged moments
had never forced him to contemplate. The limited
wardrobe in the steamer trunk was all new and all
equally bad. There was no evening dress, no
proper linen,—not what Pearson called
“proper,”— no proper toilet
appurtenances. What was Pearson called upon
by duty to do? If he had only had the initiative
to anticipate this, he might have asked permission
to consult in darkest secrecy with Mr. Palford.
But he had never dreamed of such a situation, and
apparently he would be obliged to send his new charge
down to his first dinner in the majestically decorous
dining-room, “before all the servants,”
in a sort of speckled tweed cutaway, with a brown necktie.
Tembarom, realizing without delay
that Pearson did not expect to be talked to and being
cheered by the sight of the fire, sat down before
it in an easy-chair the like of which for luxurious
comfort he had never known. He was, in fact,
waiting for developments. Pearson would say
or do something shortly which would give him a chance
to “catch on,” or perhaps he’d
go out of the room and leave him to himself, which
would be a thing to thank God for. Then he could
wash his face and hands, brush his hair, and wait
till the dinner-bell rang. They’d be likely
to have one. They’d have to in a place like
this.
But Pearson did not go out of the
room. He moved about behind him for a short
time with footfall so almost entirely soundless that
Tembarom became aware that, if it went on long, he
should be nervous; in fact, he was nervous already.
He wanted to know what he was doing. He could
scarcely resist the temptation to turn his head and
look; but he did not want to give himself away more
entirely than was unavoidable, and, besides, instinct
told him that he might frighten Pearson, who looked
frightened enough, in a neat and well-mannered way,
already. Hully gee! how he wished he would go
out of the room!
But he did not. There were gently
gliding footsteps of Pearson behind him, quiet movements
which would have seemed stealthy if they had been
a burglar’s, soft removals of articles from one
part of the room to another, delicate brushings,
and almost noiseless foldings. Now Pearson was
near the bed, now he had opened a wardrobe, now he
was looking into the steamer trunk, now he had stopped
somewhere behind him, within a few yards of his chair.
Why had he ceased moving? What was he looking
at? What kept him quiet?
Tembarom expected him to begin stirring
mysteriously again; but he did not. Why did
he not? There reigned in the room entire silence;
no soft footfalls, no brushing, no folding.
Was he doing nothing? Had he got hold of something
which had given him a fit? There had been no sound
of a fall; but perhaps even if an English valet had
a fit, he’d have it so quietly and respectfully
that one wouldn’t hear it. Tembarom felt
that he must be looking at the back of his head, and
he wondered what was the matter with it. Was
his hair cut in a way so un-English that it had paralyzed
him? The back of his head began to creep under
an investigation so prolonged. No sound at all,
no movement. Tembarom stealthily took out his
watch—good old Waterbury he wasn’t
going to part with —and began to watch
the minute-hand. If nothing happened in three
minutes he was going to turn round. One—two—
three—and the silence made it seem fifteen.
He returned his Waterbury to his pocket and turned
round.
Pearson was not dead. He was
standing quite still and resigned, waiting.
It was his business to wait, not to intrude or disturb,
and having put everything in order and done all he
could do, he was waiting for further commands—in
some suspense, it must be admitted.
“Hello!” exclaimed Tembarom, involuntarily.
“Shall I get your bath ready,
sir?” inquired Pearson. “Do you like
it hot or cold, sir?”
Tembarom drew a relieved breath.
He hadn’t dropped dead and he hadn’t
had a fit, and here was one of the things a man did
when he valeted you—he got your bath ready.
A hasty recollection of the much-used, paint-smeared
tin bath on the fourth floor of Mrs. Bowse’s
boarding-house sprang up before him. Everybody
had to use it in turn, and you waited hours for the
chance to make a dash into it. No one stood still
and waited fifteen minutes until you got good and
ready to tell him he could go and turn on the water.
Gee whizz!
Being relieved himself, he relieved
Pearson by telling him he might “fix it”
for him, and that he would have hot water.
“Very good, sir. Thank
you, sir,” said Pearson, and silently left the
room.
Then Tembarom got up from his chair
and began to walk about rather restlessly. A
new alarm seized him. Did Pearson expect to wash
him or to stand round and hand him soap and towels
and things while he washed himself?
If it was supposed that you hadn’t
the strength to turn the faucets yourself, it might
be supposed you didn’t have the energy to use
a flesh-brush and towels. Did valeting include
a kind of shampoo all over?
“I couldn’t stand for
that,” he said. “I’d have to
tell him there’d been no Turkish baths in mine,
and I’m not trained up to them. When I’ve
got on to this kind of thing a bit more, I’ll
make him understand what I’m not in for;
but I don’t want to scare the life out of him
right off. He looks like a good little fellow.”
But Pearson’s duties as valet
did not apparently include giving him his bath by
sheer physical force. He was deft, calm, amenable.
He led Tembarom down the corridor to the bath-room,
revealed to him stores of sumptuous bath-robes and
towels, hot- and cold-water faucets, sprays, and
tonic essences. He forgot nothing and, having
prepared all, mutely vanished, and returned to the
bedroom to wait—and gaze in troubled wonder
at the speckled tweed cutaway. There was an appalling
possibility—he was aware that he was entirely
ignorant of American customs—that tweed
was the fashionable home evening wear in the States.
Tembarom, returning from his bath much refreshed after
a warm plunge and a cold shower, evidently felt that
as a costume it was all that could be desired.
“Will you wear—these,
sir,—this evening?” Pearson suggested.
It was suggestive of more than actual
inquiry. If he had dared to hope that his manner
might suggest a number of things! For instance,
that in England gentlemen really didn’t wear
tweed in the evening even in private. That through
some unforeseen circumstances his employer’s
evening-dress suit had been delayed, but would of
course arrive to-morrow!
But Tembarom, physically stimulated
by hot and cold water, and relief at being left alone,
was beginning to recover his natural buoyancy.
“Yes, I’ll wear ’em,”
he answered, snatching at his hairbrush and beginning
to brush his damp hair. It was a wooden-backed
brush that Pearson had found in his Gladstone bag
and shudderingly laid in readiness on the dressing-table.
“I guess they’re all right, ain’t
they?”
“Oh, quite right, sir, quite,”
Pearson ventured—“for morning wear.”
“Morning?” said Tembarom,
brushing vigorously. “Not night?”
“Black, sir,” most delicately
hinted Pearson, “is—more usual—in
the evening—in England.” After
which he added, “So to speak,” with a
vague hope that the mollifying phrase might counteract
the effect of any apparently implied aspersion on
colors preferred in America.
Tembarom ceased brushing his hair,
and looked at him in good-natured desire for information.
“Frock-coats or claw-hammer?”
he asked. Despite his natural anxiety, and in
the midst of it, Pearson could not but admit that he
had an uncondemnatory voice and a sort of young way
with him which gave one courage. But he was
not quite sure of “claw-hammer.”
“Frock-coats for morning dress
and afternoon wear, sir,” he ventured.
“The evening cut, as you know, is—”
“Claw-hammer. Swallow-tail,
I guess you say here,” Tembarom ended for him,
quite without hint of rancor, he was rejoiced to see.
“Yes, sir,” said Pearson.
The ceremony of dressing proved a
fearsome thing as it went on. Pearson moved
about deftly and essayed to do things for the new Mr.
Temple Barholm which the new Mr. Temple Barholm had
never heard of a man not doing for himself.
He reached for things Pearson was about to hand to
him or hold for him. He unceremoniously achieved
services for himself which it was part of Pearson’s
manifest duty to perform. They got into each
other’s way; there was even danger sometimes
of their seeming to snatch things from each other,
to Pearson’s unbounded horror. Mr. Temple
Barholm did not express any irritation whatsoever
misunderstandings took place, but he held his mouth
rather close-shut, and Pearson, not aware that he
did this as a precaution against open grinning or
shouts of laughter as he found himself unable to adjust
himself to his attendant’s movements, thought
it possible that he was secretly annoyed and regarded
the whole matter with disfavor. But when the
dressing was at an end and he stood ready to go down
in all his innocent ignoring of speckled tweed and
brown necktie, he looked neither flurried nor out
of humor, and he asked a question in a voice which
was actually friendly. It was a question dealing
with an incident which had aroused much interest
in the servants’ hall as suggesting a touch
of mystery.
“Mr. Strangeways came yesterday
all right, didn’t he?” he inquired.
“Yes, sir,” Pearson answered.
“Mr. Hutchinson and his daughter came with
him. They call her `Little Ann Hutchinson.’
She’s a sensible little thing, sir, and she
seemed to know exactly what you’d want done
to make him comfortable. Mrs. Butterworth put
him in the west room, sir, and I valeted him.
He was not very well when he came, but he seems better
to-day, sir, only he’s very anxious to see you.”
“That’s all right,”
said Tembarom. “You show me his room.
I’ll go and see him now.”
And being led by Pearson, he went without delay.