He could not persuade them to remain
to take lunch with him. The firmness of Hutchinson’s
declination was not unconnected with a private feeling
that “them footmen chaps ’u’d be
on the lookout to see the way you handled every bite
you put in your mouth.” He couldn’t
have stood it, dang their impudence! Little
Ann, on her part, frankly and calmly said, “It
wouldn’t do.” That was all, and
evidently covered everything.
After they had gone, the fog lifted
somewhat, but though it withdrew from the windows,
it remained floating about in masses, like huge ghosts,
among the trees of the park. When Tembarom sat
down alone to prolong his lunch with the aid of Burrill
and the footmen, he was confronted by these unearthly
shapes every time he lifted his eyes to the window
he faced from his place at the table. It was an
outlook which did not inspire to cheerfulness, and
the fact that Ann and her father were going back
to Manchester and later to America left him without
even the simple consolation of a healthy appetite.
Things were bound to get better after a while; they
were bound to. A fellow would be a fool
if he couldn’t fix it somehow so that he could
enjoy himself, with money to burn. If you made
up your mind you couldn’t stand the way things
were, you didn’t have to lie down under them,
with a thousand or so “per” coming in.
You could fix it so that it would be different.
By jinks! there wasn’t any law against your giving
it all to the church but just enough to buy a flat
in Harlem out-right, if you wanted to. But you
weren’t going to run crazy and do a lot of
fool things in a minute, and be sorry the rest of your
life. Money was money. And first and foremost
there was Ann, with her round cheeks flushed and
her voice all sweet and queer, saying, “You
wouldn’t be T. Tembarom; and it was T. Tembarom
that—that was T. Tembarom.”
He couldn’t help knowing what
she had begun to say, and his own face flushed as
he thought of it. He was at that time of life
when there generally happens to be one center about
which the world revolves. The creature who passes
through this period of existence without watching
it revolve about such a center has missed an extraordinary
and singularly developing experience. It is
sometimes happy, often disastrous, but always more
or less developing. Speaking calmly, detachedly,
but not cynically, it is a phase. During its existence
it is the blood in the veins, the sight of the eyes,
the beat of the pulse, the throb of the heart.
It is also the day and the night, the sun, the moon,
and the stars, heaven and hell, the entire universe.
And it doesn’t matter in the least to any one
but the creatures living through it. T. Tembarom
was in the midst of it. There was Ann. There
was this new crazy thing which had happened to him—“this
fool thing,” as he called it. There was
this monstrous, magnificent house,—he knew
it was magnificent, though it wasn’t his kind,—there
was old Palford and his solemn talk about ancestors
and the name of Temple Barholm. It always reminded
him of how ashamed he had been in Brooklyn of the
“Temple Temple” and how he had told lies
to prevent the fellows finding out about it.
And there was seventy thousand pounds a year, and
there was Ann, who looked as soft as a baby,—Good
Lord! how soft she’d feel if you got her in
your arms and squeezed her!—and yet was
somehow strong enough to keep him just where she
wanted him to stay and believed he ought to stay
until “he had found out.” That was
it. She wasn’t doing it for any fool little
idea of making herself seem more important:
she just believed it. She was doing it because
she wanted to let him “have his chance,”
just as if she were his mother instead of the girl
he was clean crazy about. His chance! He
laughed outright—a short, confident laugh
which startled Burrill exceedingly.
When he went back to the library and
lighted his pipe he began to stride up and down as
he continued to think it over.
“I wish she was as sure as I
am,” he said. “I wish she was as sure
of me as I am of myself—and as I am of
her.” He laughed the short, confident
laugh again. “I wish she was as sure as
I am of us both. We’re all right.
I’ve got to get through this, and find out what
it’s best to do, and I’ve got to show
her. When I’ve had my chance good and
plenty, us two for little old New York! Gee! won’t
it be fine!” he exclaimed imaginatively.
“Her going over her bills, looking like a peach
of a baby that’s trying to knit its brows, and
adding up, and thinking she ought to economize.
She’d do it if we had ten million.”
He laughed outright joyfully. “Good Lord!
I should kiss her to death!”
The simplest process of ratiocination
would lead to a realization of the fact that though
he was lonely and uncomfortable, he was not in the
least pathetic or sorry for himself. His normal
mental and physical structure kept him steady on
his feet, and his practical and unsentimental training,
combining itself with a touch of iron which centuries
ago had expressed itself through some fighting Temple
Barholm and a medium of battle-axes, crossbows, and
spears, did the rest.
“It’d take more than this
to get me where I’d be down and out. I’m
feeling fine,” he said. “I believe
I’ll go and ‘take a walk,’ as Palford
says.”
The fog-wreaths in the park were floating
away, and he went out grinning and whistling, giving
Burrill and the footman a nod as he passed them with
a springing young stride. He got the door open
so quickly that he left them behind him frustrated
and staring at each other.
“It wasn’t our fault,”
said Burrill, gloomily. “He’s never
had a door opened for him in his life. This
won’t do for me.”
He was away for about an hour, and
came back in the best of spirits. He had found
out that there was something in “taking a walk”
if a fellow had nothing else to do. The park
was “fine,” and he had never seen anything
like it. When there were leaves on the trees and
the grass and things were green, it would be better
than Central Park itself. You could have base-ball
matches in it. What a cinch it would be if you
charged gate-money! But he supposed you couldn’t
if it belonged to you and you had three hundred and
fifty thousand a year. You had to get used to
that. But it did seem a fool business to have
all that land and not make a cent out of it.
If it was just outside New York and you cut it up
into lots, you’d just pile it up. He was
quite innocent—calamitously innocent and
commercial and awful in his views. Thoughts
such as these had been crammed into his brain by life
ever since he had gone down the staircase of the
Brooklyn tenement with his twenty-five cents in his
ten-year-old hand.
The stillness of the house seemed
to have accentuated itself when he returned to it.
His sense of it let him down a little as he entered.
The library was like a tomb—a comfortable
luxurious tomb with a bright fire in it. A new
Punch and the morning papers had been laid upon a
table earlier in the day, and he sat down to look at
them.
“I guess about fifty-seven or
eight of the hundred and thirty- six hours have gone
by,” he said. “But, gee! ain’t
it lonesome!”
He sat so still trying to interest
himself in “London Day by Day” in the
morning paper that the combination of his exercise
in the fresh air and the warmth of the fire made
him drowsy. He leaned back in his chair and
closed his eyes without being aware that he did so.
He was on the verge of a doze.
He remained upon the verge for a few
minutes, and then a soft, rustling sound made him
open his eyes.
An elderly little lady had timidly
entered the room. She was neatly dressed in
an old-fashioned and far-from-new black silk dress,
with a darned lace collar and miniature brooch at
her neck. She had also thin, gray side-ringlets
dangling against her cheeks from beneath a small,
black lace cap with pale-purple ribbons on it.
She had most evidently not expected to find any one
in the room, and, having seen Tembarom, gave a half-frightened
cough.
“I—I beg your pardon,”
she faltered. “I really did not mean to
intrude—really.”
Tembarom jumped up, awkward, but good-natured.
Was she a kind of servant who was a lady?
“Oh, that’s all right,” he said.
But she evidently did not feel that
it was all right. She looked as though she felt
that she had been caught doing something wrong, and
must properly propitiate by apology.
“I’m so sorry. I
thought you had gone out—Mr. Temple Barholm.”
“I did go out—to take a walk; but
I came in.”
Having been discovered in her overt
act, she evidently felt that duty demanded some further
ceremony from her. She approached him very timidly,
but with an exquisite, little elderly early-Victorian
manner. She was of the most astonishingly perfect
type, though Tembarom was not aware of the fact.
The manner, a century earlier, would have expressed
itself in a curtsy.
“It is Mr. Temple Barholm, isn’t it? ”
she inquired.
“Yes; it has been for the last
few weeks,” he answered, wondering why she
seemed so in awe of him and wishing she didn’t.
“I ought to apologize for being here,”
she began.
“Say, don’t, please!”
he interrupted. “What I feel is, that it
ought to be up to me to apologize for being here.”
She was really quite flurried and distressed.
“Oh, please, Mr. Temple Barholm!”
she fluttered, proceeding to explain hurriedly, as
though he without doubt understood the situation.
“I should of course have gone away at once
after the late Mr. Temple Barholm died, but—but
I really had nowhere to go—and was kindly
allowed to remain until about two months ago, when
I went to make a visit. I fully intended to
remove my little belongings before you arrived, but
I was detained by illness and could not return until
this morning to pack up. I understood you were
in the park, and I remembered I had left my knitting-bag
here.” She glanced nervously about the
room, and seemed to catch sight of something on a remote
corner table. “Oh, there it is. May
I take it?” she said, looking at him appealingly.
“It was a kind present from a dear lost friend,
and— and—” She paused,
seeing his puzzled and totally non-comprehending
air. It was plainly the first moment it had dawned
upon her that he did not know what she was talking
about. She took a small, alarmed step toward
him.
“Oh, I beg your pardon,”
she exclaimed in delicate anguish. “I’m
afraid you don’t know who I am. Perhaps
Mr. Palford forgot to mention me. Indeed, why
should he mention me? There were so many more
important things. I am a sort of distant—very
distant relation of yours. My name is Alicia
Temple Barholm.”
Tembarom was relieved. But she
actually hadn’t made a move toward the knitting-bag.
She seemed afraid to do it until he gave her permission.
He walked over to the corner table and brought it
to her, smiling broadly.
“Here it is,” he said.
“I’m glad you left it. I’m very
happy to be acquainted with you, Miss Alicia.”
He was glad just to see her looking
up at him with her timid, refined, intensely feminine
appeal. Why she vaguely brought back something
that reminded him of Ann he could not have told.
He knew nothing whatever of types early-Victorian
or late.
He took her hand, evidently to her
greatest possible amazement, and shook it heartily.
She knew nothing whatever of the New York street
type, and it made her gasp for breath, but naturally
with an allayed terror.
“Gee!” he exclaimed whole-heartedly,
“I’m glad to find out I’ve got a
relation. I thought I hadn’t one in the
world. Won’t you sit down?” He was
drawing her toward his own easy-chair. But he
really didn’t know, she was agitatedly thinking.
She really must tell him. He seemed so good
tempered and—and different. She
herself was not aware of the enormous significance
which lay in that word “different.”
There must be no risk of her seeming to presume upon
his lack of knowledge.
“It is most kind of you,”
she said with grateful emphasis, “but I mustn’t
sit down and detain you. I can explain in a few
words—if I may.”
He positively still held her hand
in the oddest, natural, boyish way, and before she
knew what she was doing he had made her take the chair—quite
made her.
“Well, just sit down and explain,”
he said. “I wish to thunder you would
detain me. Take all the time you like. I
want to hear all about it—honest Injun.”
There was a cushion in the chair,
and as he talked, he pulled it out and began to arrange
it behind her, still in the most natural and matter-of-fact
way—so natural and matter-of-fact, indeed,
that its very natural matter-of-factedness took her
breath away.
“Is that fixed all right?” he asked.
Being a little lady, she could only
accept his extraordinary friendliness with grateful
appreciation, though she could not help fluttering
a little in her bewilderment.
“Oh, thank you, thank you, Mr.
Temple Barholm,” she said.
He sat down on the square ottoman
facing her, and leaned forward with an air of making
a frank confession.
“Guess what I was thinking to
myself two minutes before you came in? I was
thinking, `Lord, I’m lonesome—just
sick lonesome!’ And then I opened my eyes and
looked— and there was a relation! Hully
gee! I call that luck!”
“Dear me!” she said, shyly
delighted. “Do you, Mr. Temple Barholm—
really?”
Her formal little way of saying his name was like
Ann’s.
“Do I? I’m tickled
to death. My mother died when I was ten, and I’ve
never had any women kin-folks.”
“Poor bo—”
She had nearly said “Poor boy!” and only
checked the familiarity just in time—”
Poor Mr. Temple Barholm!”
“Say, what are we two to each
other, anyhow?” He put it to her with great
interest.
“It is a very distant relationship,
if it is one at all,” she answered. “You
see, I was only a second cousin to the late Mr. Temple
Barholm, and I had not really the slightest
claim upon him.” She placed pathetic emphasis
on the fact. “It was most generous of him
to be so kind to me. When my poor father died
and I was left quite penniless, he gave me a—a
sort of home here.”
“A sort of home?” Tembarom repeated.
“My father was a clergyman in
very straitened circumstances. We had barely
enough to live upon—barely. He could
leave me nothing. It actually seemed as if I
should have to starve —it did, indeed.”
There was a delicate quiver in her voice. “And
though the late Mr. Temple Barholm had a great antipathy
to ladies, he was so—so noble as to send
word to me that there were a hundred and fifty rooms
in his house, and that if I would keep out of his
way I might live in one of them.”
“That was noble,” commented her distant
relative.
“Oh, yes, indeed, especially
when one considers how he disliked the opposite sex
and what a recluse he was. He could not endure
ladies. I scarcely ever saw him. My room
was in quite a remote wing of the house, and I never
went out if I knew he was in the park. I was most
careful. And when he died of course I knew I
must go away.”
Tembarom was watching her almost tenderly.
“Where did you go?”
“To a kind clergyman in Shropshire who thought
he might help me.”
“How was he going to do it?”
She answered with an effort to steady
a somewhat lowered and hesitating voice.
“There was near his parish a
very nice—charity,”—her
breath caught itself pathetically,—“some
most comfortable almshouses for decayed gentlewomen.
He thought he might be able to use his influence to
get me into one.” She paused and smiled,
but her small, wrinkled hands held each other closely.
Tembarom looked away. He spoke
as though to himself, and without knowing that he
was thinking aloud.
“Almshouses!” he said.
“Wouldn’t that jolt you!” He turned
on her again with a change to cheerful concern.
“Say, that cushion of yours ain’t comfortable.
I ’m going to get you another one.”
He jumped up and, taking one from a sofa, began to
arrange it behind her dexterously.
“But I mustn’t trouble
you any longer. I must go, really,” she
said, half rising nervously. He put a hand on
her shoulder and made her sit again.
“Go where?” he said.
“Just lean back on that cushion, Miss Alicia.
For the next few minutes this is going to be my
funeral.”
She was at once startled and uncomprehending.
What an extraordinary expression! What could
it mean?
“F—funeral?” she stammered.
Suddenly he seemed somehow to have
changed. He looked as serious as though he was
beginning to think out something all at once.
What was he going to say?
“That’s New York slang,”
he answered. “It means that I want to explain
myself to you and ask a few questions.”
“Certainly, certainly, Mr. Temple Barholm.”
He leaned his back against the mantel,
and went into the matter practically.
“First off, haven’t you
any folks?” Then, answering her puzzled
look, added, “I mean relations.”
Miss Alicia gently shook her head.
“No sisters or brothers or uncles or aunts or
cousins?”
She shook her head again.
He hesitated a moment, putting his
hands in his pockets and taking them out again awkwardly
as he looked down at her.
“Now here’s where I’m
up against it,” he went on. “I don’t
want to be too fresh or to butt in, but—didn’t
old Temple Barholm leave you any money?”
“Oh, no!” she exclaimed.
“Dear me! no! I couldn’t possibly
expect such a thing.”
He gazed at her as though considering
the situation. “Couldn’t you?”
he said.
There was an odd reflection in his
eyes, and he seemed to consider her and the situation
again.
“Well,” he began after
his pause, “what I want to know is what you
expect me to do.”
There was no unkindness in his manner,
in fact, quite the contrary, even when he uttered
what seemed to Miss Alicia these awful, unwarranted
words. As though she had forced herself into his
presence to make demands upon his charity! They
made her tremble and turn pale as she got up quickly,
shocked and alarmed.
“Oh, nothing! nothing! nothing
whatever, Mr. Temple Barholm!” she exclaimed,
her agitation doing its best to hide itself behind
a fine little dignity. He saw in an instant
that his style of putting it had been “’way
off,” that his ignorance had betrayed him, that
she had misunderstood him altogether. He almost
jumped at her.
“Oh, say, I didn’t mean
that!” he cried out. “For the
Lord’s sake! don’t think I’m such
a Tenderloin tough as to make a break like that!
Not on your life!”
Never since her birth had a male creature
looked at Miss Alicia with the appeal which showed
itself in his eyes as he actually put his arm half
around her shoulders, like a boy begging a favor from
his mother or his aunt.
“What I meant was—”
He broke off and began again quite anxiously, “say,
just as a favor, will you sit down again and let me
tell you what I did mean?”
It was that natural, warm, boyish
way which overcame her utterly. It reminded
her of the only boy she had ever really known, the
one male creature who had allowed her to be fond
of him. There was moisture in her eyes as she
let him put her back into her chair. When he had
done it, he sat down on the ottoman again and poured
himself forth.
“You know what kind of a chap
I am. No, you don’t, either. You mayn’t
know a thing about me; and I want to tell you.
I’m so different from everything you’ve
ever known that I scare you. And no wonder.
It’s the way I’ve lived. If you
knew, you’d understand what I was thinking of
when I spoke just now. I’ve been cold,
I’ve been hungry, I’ve walked the wet
streets on my uppers. I know all about going
without. And do you expect that I am going
to let a—a little thing like you—go
away from here without friends and without money
on the chance of getting into an almshouse that isn’t
vacant? Do you expect that of me? Not on
your life! That was what I meant.”
Miss Alicia quivered; the pale-purple
ribbons on her little lace cap quivered.
“I haven’t,” she
said, and the fine little dignity was piteous, “a
shadow of a claim upon you.” It was
necessary for her to produce a pocket- handkerchief.
He took it from her, and touched her eyes as softly
as though she were a baby.
“Claim nothing!” he said.
“I’ve got a claim on you. I’m
going to stake one out right now.” He
got up and gesticulated, taking in the big room and
its big furniture. “Look at all this!
It fell on me like a thunderbolt. It’s
nearly knocked the life out of me. I’m like
a lost cat on Broadway. You can’t go away
and leave me, Miss Alicia; it’s your duty to
stay. You’ve just got to stay to take
care of me.” He came over to her with
a wheedling smile. “I never was taken care
of in my life. Just be as noble to me as old
Temple Barholm was to you: give me a sort of
home.”
If a little gentlewoman could stare,
it might be said that Miss Alicia stared at him.
She trembled with amazed emotion.
“Do you mean—”
Despite all he had said, she scarcely dared to utter
the words lest, after all, she might be taking for
granted more than it was credible could be true.
“Can you mean that if I stayed here with you
it would make Temple Barholm seem more like home?
Is it possible you—you mean that?”
“I mean just that very thing.”
It was too much for her. Finely
restrained little elderly gentlewoman as she was,
she openly broke down under it.
“It can’t be true!”
she ejaculated shakily. “It isn’t
possible. It is too—too beautiful
and kind. Do forgive me! I c-a-n’t
help it.” She burst into tears.
She knew it was most stupidly wrong.
She knew gentlemen did not like tears. Her father
had told her that men never really forgave women who
cried at them. And here, when her fate hung
in the balance, she was not able to behave herself
with feminine decorum.
Yet the new Mr. Temple Barholm took
it in as matter-of- fact a manner as he seemed to
take everything. He stood by her chair and soothed
her in his dear New York voice.
“That’s all right, Miss
Alicia,” he commented. “You cry as
much as you want to, just so that you don’t
say no. You’ve been worried and you’re
tired. I’ll tell you there’s been
two or three times lately when I should like to have
cried myself if I’d known how. Say,”
he added with a sudden outburst of imagination, “I
bet anything it’s about time you had tea.”
The suggestion was so entirely within
the normal order of things that it made her feel
steadier, and she was able to glance at the clock.
“A cup of tea would be refreshing,”
she said. “They will bring it in very
soon, but before the servants come I must try to express—”
But before she could express anything
further the tea appeared. Burrill and a footman
brought it on splendid salvers, in massive urn and
tea-pot, with chaste, sacrificial flame flickering,
and wonderful, hot buttered and toasted things and
wafers of bread and butter attendant. As they
crossed the threshold, the sight of Miss Alicia’s
small form enthroned in their employer’s chair
was one so obviously unanticipated that Burrill made
a step backward and the footman almost lost the firmness
of his hold on the smaller tray. Each recovered
himself in time, however, and not until the tea was
arranged upon the table near the fire was any outward
recognition of Miss Alicia’s presence made.
Then Burrill, pausing, made an announcement entirely
without prejudice:
“I beg pardon, sir, but Higgins’s
cart has come for Miss Temple Barholm’s box;
he is asking when she wants the trap.”
“She doesn’t want it at
all,” answered Tembarom. “Carry her
trunk up-stairs again. She’s not going
away.”
The lack of proper knowledge contained
in the suggestion that Burrill should carry trunks
upstairs caused Miss Alicia to quail in secret, but
she spoke with outward calm.
“No, Burrill,” she said. “I
am not going away.”
“Very good, Miss,” Burrill
replied, and with impressive civility he prepared
to leave the room. Tembarom glanced at the tea-things.
“There’s only one cup
here,” he said. “Bring one for me.”
Burrill’s expression might perhaps
have been said to start slightly.
“Very good, sir,” he said,
and made his exit. Miss Alicia was fluttering
again.
“That cup was really for you,
Mr. Temple Barholm,” she ventured.
“Well, now it’s for you,
and I’ve let him know it,” replied Tembarom.
“Oh, please,” she
said in an outburst of feeling—“Please
let me tell you how grateful—how
grateful I am!”
But he would not let her.
“If you do,” he said,
“I’ll tell you how grateful I am,
and that’ll be worse. No, that’s
all fixed up between us. It goes. We won’t
say any more about it.”
He took the whole situation in that
way, as though he was assuming no responsibility
which was not the simple, inevitable result of their
drifting across each other—as though it
was only what any man would have done, even as though
she was a sort of delightful, unexpected happening.
He turned to the tray.
“Say, that looks all right,
doesn’t it?” he said. “Now you
are here, I like the way it looks. I didn’t
yesterday.”
Burrill himself brought the extra
cup and saucer and plate. He wished to make
sure that his senses had not deceived him. But
there she sat who through years had existed discreetly
in the most unconsidered rooms in an uninhabited
wing, knowing better than to presume upon her privileges—there
she sat with an awed and rapt face gazing up at this
new outbreak into Temple Barholm’s and “him
joking and grinning as though he was as pleased as
Punch.”