To employ the figure of Burrill, Tembarom
was indeed “as pleased as Punch.”
He was one of the large number of men who, apart from
all sentimental relations, are made particularly
happy by the kindly society of women; who expand
with quite unconscious rejoicing when a woman begins
to take care of them in one way or another. The
unconsciousness is a touching part of the condition.
The feminine nearness supplies a primeval human need.
The most complete of men, as well as the weaklings,
feel it. It is a survival of days when warm
arms held and protected, warm hands served, and affectionate
voices soothed. An accomplished male servant
may perform every domestic service perfectly, but
the fact that he cannot be a woman leaves a sense
of lack. An accustomed feminine warmth in the
surrounding daily atmosphere has caused many a man
to marry his housekeeper or even his cook, as circumstances
prompted.
Tembarom had known no woman well until
he had met Little Ann. His feeling for Mrs.
Bowse herself had verged on affection, because he
would have been fond of any woman of decent temper
and kindliness, especially if she gave him opportunities
to do friendly service. Little Ann had seemed
the apotheosis of the feminine, the warmly helpful,
the subtly supporting, the kind. She had been
to him an amazement and a revelation. She had
continually surprised him by revealing new characteristics
which seemed to him nicer things than he had ever
known before, but which, if he had been aware of it,
were not really surprising at all. They were
only the characteristics of a very nice young feminine
creature.
The presence of Miss Alicia, with
the long-belated fashion of her ringlets and her
little cap, was delightful to him. He felt as
though he would like to take her in his arms and
hug her. He thought perhaps it was partly because
she was a little like Ann, and kept repeating his
name in Ann’s formal little way. Her delicate
terror of presuming or intruding he felt in its every
shade. Mentally she touched him enormously.
He wanted to make her feel that she need not be afraid
of him in the least, that he liked her, that in his
opinion she had more right in the house than he had.
He was a little frightened lest through ignorance
he should say things the wrong way, as he had said
that thing about wanting to know what she expected
him to do. What he ought to have said was, “You’re
not expecting me to let that sort of thing go on.”
It had made him sick when he saw what a break he’d
made and that she thought he was sort of insulting
her. The room seemed all right now that she
was in it. Small and unassuming as she was, she
seemed to make it less over-sized. He didn’t
so much mind the loftiness of the ceiling, the depth
and size of the windows, and the walls covered with
thousands of books he knew nothing whatever about.
The innumerable books had been an oppressing feature.
If he had been one of those “college guys”
who never could get enough of books, what a “cinch”
the place would have been for him—good as
the Astor Library! He hadn’t a word to
say against books,—good Lord! no;—but
even if he’d had the education and the time
to read, he didn’t believe he was naturally
that kind, anyhow. You had to be “that kind”
to know about books. He didn’t suppose
she— meaning Miss Alicia—was
learned enough to make you throw a fit. She
didn’t look that way, and he was mighty glad
of it, because perhaps she wouldn’t like him
much if she was. It would worry her when she
tried to talk to him and found out he didn’t
know a darned thing he ought to.
They’d get on together easier
if they could just chin about common sort of every-day
things. But though she didn’t look like
the Vassar sort, he guessed that she was not like
himself: she had lived in libraries before,
and books didn’t frighten her. She’d
been born among people who read lots of them and
maybe could talk about them. That was why she
somehow seemed to fit into the room. He was aware
that, timid as she was and shabby as her neat dress
looked, she fitted into the whole place, as he did
not. She’d been a poor relative and had
been afraid to death of old Temple Barholm, but she’d
not been afraid of him because she wasn’t his
sort. She was a lady; that was what was the
matter with her. It was what made things harder
for her, too. It was what made her voice tremble
when she’d tried to seem so contented and polite
when she’d talked about going into one of those
“decayed alms-houses.” As if the
old ladies were vegetables that had gone wrong, by
gee! he thought.
He liked her little, modest, delicate
old face and her curls and her little cap with the
ribbons so much that he smiled with a twinkling eye
every time he looked at her. He wanted to suggest
something he thought would be mighty comfortable,
but he was half afraid he might be asking her to
do something which wasn’t “her job,”
and it might hurt her feelings. But he ventured
to hint at it.
“Has Burrill got to come back
and pour that out?” he asked, with an awkward
gesture toward the tea-tray. “Has he just
got to?”
“Oh, no, unless you wish it,”
she answered. “Shall—may I give
it to you?”
“Will you?” he exclaimed
delightedly. “That would be fine. I
shall feel like a regular Clarence.”
She was going to sit at the table
in a straight-backed chair, but he sprang at her.
“This big one is more comfortable,”
he said, and he dragged it forward and made her sit
in it. “You ought to have a footstool,”
he added, and he got one and put it under her feet.
“There, that’s all right.”
A footstool, as though she were a
royal personage and he were a gentleman in waiting,
only probably gentlemen in waiting did not jump about
and look so pleased. The cheerful content of his
boyish face when he himself sat down near the table
was delightful.
“Now,” he said, “we can ring up
for the first act.”
She filled the tea-pot and held it
for a moment, and then set it down as though her
feelings were too much for her.
“I feel as if I were in a dream,”
she quavered happily. “I do indeed.”
“But it’s a nice one,
ain’t it? ” he answered. “I feel as
if I was in two. Sitting here in this big room
with all these fine things about me, and having afternoon
tea with a relation! It just about suits me.
It didn’t feel like this yesterday, you bet
your life!”
“Does it seem—nicer
than yesterday?” she ventured. “Really,
Mr. Temple Barholm?”
“Nicer!” he ejaculated.
“It’s got yesterday beaten to a frazzle.”
It was beyond all belief. He
was speaking as though the advantage, the relief,
the happiness, were all on his side. She longed
to enlighten him.
“But you can’t realize
what it is to me,” she said gratefully, “to
sit here, not terrified and homeless and—a
beggar any more, with your kind face before me.
Do forgive me for saying it. You have such a kind
young face, Mr. Temple Barholm. And to have
an easy-chair and cushions, and actually a buffet
brought for my feet! ” She suddenly recollected herself.
“Oh, I mustn’t let your tea get cold,”
she added, taking up the tea-pot apologetically.
“Do you take cream and sugar, and is it to
be one lump or two?”
“I take everything in sight,”
he replied joyously, “and two lumps, please.”
She prepared the cup of tea with as
delicate a care as though it had been a sacramental
chalice, and when she handed it to him she smiled
wistfully.
“No one but you ever thought
of such a thing as bringing a buffet for my feet—no
one except poor little Jem,” she said, and her
voice was wistful as well as her smile.
She was obviously unaware that she
was introducing an entirely new acquaintance to him.
Poor little Jem was supposed to be some one whose
whole history he knew.
“Jem?” he repeated, carefully
transferring a piece of hot buttered crumpet to his
plate.
“Jem Temple Barholm,”
she answered. “I say little Jem because
I remember him only as a child. I never saw
him after he was eleven years old.”
“Who was he?” he asked.
The tone of her voice, and her manner of speaking
made him feel that he wanted to hear something more.
She looked rather startled by his
ignorance. “Have you— have you
never heard of him?” she inquired.
“No. Is he another distant relation?”
Her hesitation caused him to neglect
his crumpet, to look up at her. He saw at once
that she wore the air of a sensitive and beautifully
mannered elderly lady who was afraid she had made
a mistake and said something awkward.
“I am so sorry,” she apologized.
“Perhaps I ought not to have mentioned him.”
“Why shouldn’t he be mentioned?”
She was embarrassed. She evidently
wished she had not spoken, but breeding demanded
that she should ignore the awkwardness of the situation,
if awkwardness existed.
“Of course—I hope
your tea is quite as you like it—of course
there is no real reason. But—shall
I give you some more cream? No? You see,
if he hadn’t died, he—he would have
inherited Temple Barholm.”
Now he was interested. This was the other chap.
“Instead of me?” he asked,
to make sure. She endeavored not to show embarrassment
and told herself it didn’t really matter—to
a thoroughly nice person. But—
“He was the next of kin—before
you. I’m so sorry I didn’t know you
hadn’t heard of him. It seemed natural
that Mr. Palford should have mentioned him.”
“He did say that there was a
young fellow who had died, but he didn’t tell
me about him. I guess I didn’t ask.
There were such a lot of other things. I’d
like to hear about him. You say you knew him?”
“Only when he was a little fellow.
Never after he grew up. Something happened which
displeased my father. I’m afraid papa was
very easily displeased. Mr. Temple Barholm disliked
him, too. He would not have him at Temple Barholm.”
“He hadn’t much luck with
his folks, had he?” remarked Tembarom.
“He had no luck with any one.
I seemed to be the only person who was fond of him,
and of course I didn’t count.”
“I bet you counted with him,” said Tembarom.
“I do think I did. Both
his parents died quite soon after he was born, and
people who ought to have cared for him were rather
jealous because he stood so near to Temple Barholm.
If Mr. Temple Barholm had not been so eccentric and
bitter, everything would have been done for him; but
as it was, he seemed to belong to no one. When
he came to the vicarage it used to make me so happy.
He used to call me Aunt Alicia, and he had such pretty
ways.” She hesitated and looked quite tenderly
at the tea-pot, a sort of shyness in her face.
“I am sure,” she burst forth, “I
feel quite sure that you will understand and won’t
think it indelicate; but I had thought so often that
I should like to have a little boy—if
I had married,” she added in hasty tribute to
propriety.
Tembarom’s eyes rested on her
in a thoughtfulness openly touched with affection.
He put out his hand and patted hers two or three times
in encouraging sympathy.
“Say,” he said frankly,
“I just believe every woman that’s the
real thing’d like to have a little boy—or
a little girl—or a little something or
other. That’s why pet cats and dogs have
such a cinch of it. And there’s men that’s
the same way. It’s sort of nature.”
“He had such a high spirit and
such pretty ways,” she said again. “One
of his pretty ways was remembering to do little things
to make one comfortable, like thinking of giving
one a cushion or a buffet for one’s feet.
I noticed it so much because I had never seen boys
or men wait upon women. My own dear papa was
used to having women wait upon him—bring
his slippers, you know, and give him the best chair.
He didn’t like Jem’s ways. He said
he liked a boy who was a boy and not an affected
nincompoop. He wasn’t really quite just.”
She paused regretfully and sighed as she looked back
into a past doubtlessly enriched with many similar
memories of “dear papa.” “Poor
Jem! Poor Jem!” she breathed softly.
Tembarom thought that she must have
felt the boy’s loss very much, almost as much
as though she had really been his mother; perhaps more
pathetically because she had not been his mother
or anybody’s mother. He could see what
a good little mother she would have made, looking
after her children and doing everything on earth to
make them happy and comfortable, just the kind of
mother Ann would make, though she had not Ann’s
steady wonder of a little head or her shrewd farsightedness.
Jem would have been in luck if he had been her son.
It was a darned pity he hadn’t been. If
he had, perhaps he would not have died young.
“Yes,” he answered sympathetically,
“it’s hard for a young fellow to die.
How old was he, anyhow? I don’t know.”
“Not much older than you are
now. It was seven years ago. And if he
had only died, poor dear! There are things so
much worse than death.”
“Worse!”
“Awful disgrace is worse,”
she faltered. She was plainly trying to keep
moisture out of her eyes.
“Did he get into some bad mix-up,
poor fellow?” If there had been anything like
that, no wonder it broke her up to think of him.
It surely did break her up. She flushed emotionally.
“The cruel thing was that he
didn’t really do what he was accused of,”
she said.
“He didn’t?”
“No; but he was a ruined man,
and he went away to the Klondike because he could
not stay in England. And he was killed—killed,
poor boy! And afterward it was found out that
he was innocent—too late.”
“Gee!” Tembarom gasped,
feeling hot and cold. “Could you beat that
for rotten luck! What was he accused of?”
Miss Alicia leaned forward and spoke
in a whisper. It was too dreadful to speak of
aloud.
“Cheating at cards—a
gentleman playing with gentlemen. You know what
that means.”
Tembarom grew hotter and colder.
No wonder she looked that way, poor little thing!
“But,”—he hesitated
before he spoke,—“but he wasn’t
that kind, was he? Of course he wasn’t.”
“No, no. But, you see,”—she
hesitated herself here,—“everything
looked so much against him. He had been rather
wild.” She dropped her voice even lower
in making the admission.
Tembarom wondered how much she meant by that.
“He was so much in debt.
He knew he was to be rich in the future, and he was
poor just in those reckless young days when it seemed
unfair. And he had played a great deal and had
been very lucky. He was so lucky that sometimes
his luck seemed uncanny. Men who had played with
him were horrible about it afterward.”
“They would be,” put in
Tembarom. ” They’d be sore about it, and bring
it up.”
They both forgot their tea. Miss
Alicia forgot everything as she poured forth her
story in the manner of a woman who had been forced
to keep silent and was glad to put her case into
words. It was her case. To tell the truth
of this forgotten wrong was again to offer justification
of poor handsome Jem whom everybody seemed to have
dropped talk of, and even preferred not to hear mentioned.
“There were such piteously cruel
things about it,” she went on. “He
had fallen very much in love, and he meant to marry
and settle down. Though we had not seen each
other for years, he actually wrote to me and told
me about it. His letter made me cry. He said
I would understand and care about the thing which
seemed to have changed everything and made him a
new man. He was so sorry that he had not been
better and more careful. He was going to try all
over again. He was not going to play at all
after this one evening when he was obliged to keep
an engagement he had made months before to give his
revenge to a man he had won a great deal of money
from. The very night the awful thing happened
he had told Lady Joan, before he went into the card-room,
that this was to be his last game.”
Tembarom had looked deeply interested
from the first, but at her last words a new alertness
added itself.
“Did you say Lady Joan? ” he
asked. ” Who was Lady Joan?”
“She was the girl he was so
much in love with. Her name was Lady Joan Fayre.”
“Was she the daughter of the Countess of Mallowe?”
“Yes. Have you heard of her?”
He recalled Ann’s reflective
consideration of him before she had said, “She’ll
come after you.” He replied now: “Some
one spoke of her to me this morning. They say
she’s a beauty and as proud as Lucifer.”
“She was, and she is yet, I
believe. Poor Lady Joan—as well as
poor Jem!”
“She didn’t believe it,
did she?” he put in hastily. “She
didn’t throw him down?”
“No one knew what happened between
them afterward. She was in the card-room, looking
on, when the awful thing took place.”
She stopped, as though to go on was
almost unbearable. She had been so overwhelmed
by the past shame of it that even after the passing
of years the anguish was a living thing. Her
small hands clung hard together as they rested on
the edge of the table. Tembarom waited in thrilled
suspense. She spoke in a whisper again:
“He won a great deal of money—a
great deal. He had that uncanny luck again,
and of course people in the other rooms heard what
was going on, and a number drifted in to look on.
The man he had promised to give his revenge to almost
showed signs of having to make an effort to conceal
his irritation and disappointment. Of course,
as he was a gentleman, he was as cool as possible;
but just at the most exciting moment, the height
of the game, Jem made a quick movement, and—and
something fell out of his sleeve.”
“Something,” gasped Tembarom, “fell
out of his sleeve!”
Miss Alicia’s eyes overflowed as she nodded
her beribboned little cap.
“It”—her voice
was a sob of woe—“it was a marked
card. The man he was playing against snatched
it and held it up. And he laughed out loud.”
“Holy cats! ” burst from Tembarom;
but the remarkable exclamation was one of genuine
horror, and he turned pale, got up from his seat, and
took two or three strides across the room, as though
he could not sit still.
“Yes, he laughed—quite
loudly,” repeated Miss Alicia, “as if he
had guessed it all the time. Papa heard the
whole story from some one who was present.”
Tembarom came back to her rather breathless.
“What in thunder did he do—Jem?”
he asked.
She actually wrung her poor little hands.
“What could he do? There
was a dead silence. People moved just a little
nearer to the table and stood and stared, merely waiting.
They say it was awful to see his face—awful.
He sprang up and stood still, and slowly became as
white as if he were dying before their eyes. Some
one thought Lady Joan Fayre took a step toward him,
but no one was quite sure. He never uttered
one word, but walked out of the room and down the
stairs and out of the house.”
“But didn’t he speak to the girl?”
“He didn’t even look at her. He passed
her by as if she were stone.”
“What happened next?”
“He disappeared. No one
knew where at first, and then there was a rumor that
he had gone to the Klondike and had been killed there.
And a year later—only a year! Oh,
if he had only waited in England!—a worthless
villain of a valet he had discharged for stealing met
with an accident, and because he thought he was going
to die, got horribly frightened, and confessed to
the clergyman that he had tucked the card in poor
Jem’s sleeve himself just to pay him off.
He said he did it on the chance that it would drop
out where some one would see it, and a marked card
dropping out of a man’s sleeve anywhere would
look black enough, whether he was playing or not.
But poor Jem was in his grave, and no one seemed
to care, though every one had been interested enough
in the scandal. People talked about that for
weeks.”
Tembarom pulled at his collar excitedly.
“It makes me sort of strangle,”
he said. “You’ve got to stand your
own bad luck, but to hear of a chap that’s
had to lie down and take the worst that could come
to him and know it wasn’t his—just
know it! And die before he’s cleared!
That knocks me out.”
Almost every sentence he uttered had
a mystical sound to Miss Alicia, but she knew how
he was taking it, with what hot, young human sympathy
and indignation. She loved the way he took it,
and she loved the feeling in his next words
“And the girl—good Lord!—the
girl?”
“I never met her, and I know
very little of her; but she has never married.”
“I’m glad of that,”
he said. “I’m darned glad of it.
How could she?” Ann wouldn’t, he knew.
Ann would have gone to her grave unmarried. But
she would have done things first to clear her man’s
name. Somehow she would have cleared him, if
she’d had to fight tooth and nail till she
was eighty.
“They say she has grown very
bitter and haughty in her manner. I’m
afraid Lady Mallowe is a very worldly woman. One
hears they don’t get on together, and that
she is bitterly disappointed because her daughter
has not made a good match. It appears that she
might have made several, but she is so hard and cynical
that men are afraid of her. I wish I had known
her a little—if she really loved Jem.”
Tembarom had thrust his hands into
his pockets, and was standing deep in thought, looking
at the huge bank of red coals in the fire-grate.
Miss Alicia hastily wiped her eyes.
“Do excuse me,” she said.
“I’ll excuse you all right,”
he replied, still looking into the coals. “I
guess I shouldn’t excuse you as much if you didn’t”
He let her cry in her gentle way while he stared,
lost in reflection.
“And if he hadn’t fired
that valet chap, he would be here with you now—instead
of me. Instead of me,” he repeated.
And Miss Alicia did not know what
to say in reply. There seemed to be nothing
which, with propriety and natural feeling, one could
say.
“It makes me feel just fine
to know I’m not going to have my dinner all
by myself,” he said to her before she left the
library.
She had a way of blushing about things
he noticed, when she was shy or moved or didn’t
know exactly what to say. Though she must have
been sixty, she did it as though she were sixteen.
And she did it when he said this, and looked as though
suddenly she was in some sort of trouble.
“You are going to have dinner
with me,” he said, seeing that she hesitated—“dinner
and breakfast and lunch and tea and supper and every
old thing that goes. You can’t turn me down
after me staking out that claim.”
“I’m afraid—”
she said. “You see, I have lived such a
secluded life. I scarcely ever left my rooms
except to take a walk. I’m sure you understand.
It would not have been necessary even if I could have
afforded it, which I really couldn’t—I’m
afraid I have nothing— quite suitable—for
evening wear.”
“You haven’t!” he
exclaimed gleefully. “I don’t know
what is suitable for evening wear, but I haven’t
got it either. Pearson told me so with tears
in his eyes. It never was necessary for me either.
I’ve got to get some things to quiet Pearson
down, but until I do I’ve got to eat my dinner
in a tweed cutaway; and what I’ve caught on to
is that it’s unsuitable enough to throw a man
into jail. That little black dress you’ve
got on and that little cap are just ’way out
of sight, they’re so becoming. Come down
just like you are.”
She felt a little as Pearson had felt
when confronting his new employer’s entire
cheerfulness in face of a situation as exotically
hopeless as the tweed cutaway, and nothing else by
way of resource. But there was something so
nice about him, something which was almost as though
he was actually a gentleman, something which absolutely,
if one could go so far, stood in the place of his
being a gentleman. It was impossible to help
liking him more and more at every queer speech he
made. Still, there were of course things he did
not realize, and perhaps one ought in kindness to
give him a delicate hint.
“I’m afraid,” she
began quite apologetically. “I’m afraid
that the servants, Burrill and the footmen, you know,
will be—will think—”
“Say,” he took her up,
” let’s give Burrill and the footmen the Willies
out and out. If they can’t stand it, they
can write home to their mothers and tell ’em
they’ve got to take ’em away. Burrill
and the footmen needn’t worry. They’re
suitable enough, and it’s none of their funeral,
anyhow.”
He wasn’t upset in the least.
Miss Alicia, who, as a timid dependent either upon
“poor dear papa” or Mr. Temple Barholm,
had been secretly, in her sensitive, ladylike little
way, afraid of superior servants all her life, knowing
that they realized her utterly insignificant helplessness,
and resented giving her attention because she was not
able to show her appreciation of their services in
the proper manner— Miss Alicia saw that
it had not occurred to him to endeavor to propitiate
them in the least, because somehow it all seemed a
joke to him, and he didn’t care. After
the first moment of being startled, she regarded
him with a novel feeling, almost a kind of admiration.
Tentatively she dared to wonder if there was not
something even rather—rather aristocratic
in his utter indifference.
If be had been a duke, he would not
have regarded the servants’ point of view;
it wouldn’t have mattered what they thought.
Perhaps, she hastily decided, he was like this because,
though he was not a duke, boot-blacking in New York
notwithstanding he was a Temple Barholm. There
were few dukes as old of blood as a Temple Barholm.
That must be it. She was relieved.
Whatsoever lay at the root of his
being what he was and as he was, he somehow changed
the aspect of things for her, and without doing anything
but be himself, cleared the atmosphere of her dread
of the surprise and mental reservations of the footmen
and Burrill when she came down to dinner in her high-necked,
much-cleaned, and much-repaired black silk, and with
no more distinguishing change in her toilet than
a white lace cap instead of a black one, and with “poor
dear mamma’s” hair bracelet with the
gold clasp on her wrist, and a weeping-willow made
of “poor dear papa’s” hair in a brooch
at her collar.
It was so curious, though still “nice,”
but he did not offer her his arm when they were going
into the dining-room, and he took hold of hers with
his hand and affectionately half led, half pushed,
her along with him as they went. And he himself
drew back her chair for her at the end of the table
opposite his own. He did not let a footman do
it, and he stood behind it, talking in his cheerful
way all the time, and he moved it to exactly the
right place, and then actually bent down and looked
under the table.
“Here,” he said to the
nearest man-servant, “where’s there a
footstool? Get one, please,” in that odd,
simple, almost aristocratic way. It was not
a rude dictatorial way, but a casual way, as though
he knew the man was there to do things, and he didn’t
expect any time to be wasted.
And it was he himself who arranged
the footstool, making it comfortable for her, and
then he went to his own chair at the head of the
table and sat down, smiling at her joyfully across
the glass and silver and flowers.
“Push that thing in the middle
on one side, Burrill,” he said. “It’s
too high. I can’t see Miss Alicia.”
Burrill found it difficult to believe
the evidence of his hearing.
“The epergne, sir? ” he inquired.
“Is that what it’s called,
an apern? That’s a new one on me. Yes,
that’s what I mean. Push the apern over.”
“Shall I remove it from the
table, sir?” Burrill steeled himself to exact
civility. Of what use to behave otherwise?
There always remained the liberty to give notice
if the worst came to the worst, though what the worst
might eventually prove to be it required a lurid imagination
to depict. The epergne was a beautiful thing
of crystal and gold, a celebrated work of art, regarded
as an exquisite possession. It was almost remarkable
that Mr. Temple Barholm had not said, “Shove
it on one side,” but Burrill had been spared
the poignant indignity of being required to “shove.”
“Yes, suppose you do. It’s
a fine enough thing when it isn’t in the way,
but I’ve got to see you while I talk, Miss Alicia,”
said Mr. Temple Barholm. The episode of the
epergne— Burrill’s expression, and
the rigidly restrained mouths of Henry and James
as the decoration was removed, leaving a painfully
blank space of table-cloth until Burrill silently
filled it with flowers in a low bowl—these
things temporarily flurried Miss Alicia somewhat,
but the pleased smile at the head of the table calmed
even that trying moment.
Then what a delightful meal it was,
to be sure! How entertaining and cheerful and
full of interesting conversation! Miss Alicia
had always admired what she reverently termed “conversation.”
She had read of the houses of brilliant people where
they had it at table, at dinner and supper parties,
and in drawing-rooms. The French, especially the
French ladies, were brilliant conversationalists.
They held “salons” in which the conversation
was wonderful—Mme. de Stael and Mme.
Roland, for instance; and in England, Lady Mary Wortley
Montague, Sydney Smith, and Horace Walpole, and surely
Miss Fanny Burney, and no doubt L. E. L., whose real
name was Miss Letitia Elizabeth Landon—
what conversation they must have delighted their friends
with and how instructive it must have been even to
sit in the most obscure corner and listen!
Such gifted persons seemed to have
been chosen by Providence to delight and inspire
every one privileged to hear them. Such privileges
had been omitted from the scheme of Miss Alicia’s
existence. She did not know, she would have
felt it sacrilegious to admit it even if the fact
had dawned upon her, that “dear papa” had
been a heartlessly arrogant, utterly selfish, and
tyrannical old blackguard of the most pronounced
type. He had been of an absolute morality as far
as social laws were concerned. He had written
and delivered a denunciatory sermon a week, and had
made unbearable by his ministrations the suffering
hours and the last moments of his parishioners during
the long years of his pastorate. When Miss Alicia,
in reading records of the helpful relationship of
the male progenitors of the Brontes, Jane Austen,
Fanny Burney, and Mrs. Browning, was frequently reminded
of him, she revealed a perception of which she was
not aware. He had combined the virile qualities
of all of them. Consequently, brilliancy of
conversation at table had not been the attractive habit
of the household; “poor dear papa” had
confined himself to scathing criticism of the incompetence
of females who could not teach their menials to “cook
a dinner which was not a disgrace to any decent household.”
When not virulently aspersing the mutton, he was
expressing his opinion of muddle-headed weakness
which would permit household bills to mount in a
manner which could only bring ruin and disaster upon
a minister of the gospel who throughout a protracted
career of usefulness had sapped his intellectual
manhood in the useless effort to support in silly
idleness a family of brainless and maddening fools.
Miss Alicia had heard her character, her unsuccessful
physical appearance, her mind, and her pitiful efforts
at table-talk, described in detail with a choice
of adjective and adverb which had broken into terrified
fragments every atom of courage and will with which
she had been sparsely dowered.
So, not having herself been gifted
with conversational powers to begin with, and never
having enjoyed the exhibition of such powers in others,
her ideals had been high. She was not sure that
Mr. Temple Barholm’s fluent and cheerful talk
could be with exactness termed “conversation.”
It was perhaps not sufficiently lofty and intellectual,
and did not confine itself rigorously to one exalted
subject. But how it did raise one’s spirits
and open up curious vistas! And how good tempered
and humorous it was, even though sometimes the humor
was a little bewildering! During the whole dinner
there never occurred even one of those dreadful pauses
in which dead silence fell, and one tried, like a
frightened hen flying from side to side of a coop,
to think of something to say which would not sound
silly, but perhaps might divert attention from dangerous
topics. She had often thought it would be so
interesting to hear a Spaniard or a native Hindu
talk about himself and his own country in English.
Tembarom talked about New York and its people and
atmosphere, and he did not know how foreign it all
was. He described the streets—Fifth
Avenue and Broadway and Sixth Avenue—and
the street-cars and the elevated railroad, and the
way “fellows” had to “hustle”
“to put it over.” He spoke of a
boarding-house kept by a certain Mrs. Bowse, and
a presidential campaign, and the election of a mayor,
and a quick-lunch counter, and when President Garfield
had been assassinated, and a department store; and
the electric lights, and the way he had of making
a sort of picture of everything was really instructive
and, well, fascinating. She felt as though she
had been taken about the city in one of the vehicles
the conductor of which described things through a
megaphone.
Not that Mr. Temple Barholm suggested
a megaphone, whatsoever that might be, but he merely
made you feel as if you had seen things. Never
had she been so entertained and enlightened.
If she had been a beautiful girl, he could not have
seemed more as though in amusing her he was also
really pleasing himself. He was so very funny
sometimes that she could not help laughing in a way
which was almost unladylike, because she could not
stop, and was obliged to put her handkerchief up
to her face and wipe away actual tears of mirth.
Fancy laughing until you cried, and
the servants looking on!
Once Burrill himself was obliged to
turn hastily away, and twice she heard him severely
reprove an overpowered young footman in a rapid undertone.
Tembarom at least felt that the unlifting
heaviness of atmosphere which had surrounded him
while enjoying the companionship of Mr. Palford was
a thing of the past.
The thrilled interest, the surprise
and delight of Miss Alicia would have stimulated
a man in a comatose condition, it seemed to him.
The little thing just loved every bit of it—she
just “eat it up.” She asked question
after question, sometimes questions which would have
made him shout with laughter if he had not been afraid
of hurting her feelings. She knew as little
of New York as he knew of Temple Barholm, and was,
it made him grin to see, allured by it as by some illicit
fascination. She did not know what to make of
it, and sometimes she was obliged hastily to conceal
a fear that it was a sort of Sodom and Gomorrah;
but she wanted to hear more about it, and still more.
And she brightened up until she actually
did not look frightened, and ate her dinner with
an excellent appetite.
“I really never enjoyed a dinner
so much in my life,” she said when they went
into the drawing-room to have their coffee. “It
was the conversation which made it so delightful.
Conversation is such a stimulating thing!”
She had almost decided that it was
“conversation,” or at least a wonderful
substitute.
When she said good night to him and
went beaming to bed, looking forward immensely to
breakfast next morning, he watched her go up the
staircase, feeling wonderfully normal and happy.
“Some of these nights, when
she’s used to me,” he said as he stuffed
tobacco into his last pipe in the library—“some
of these nights I’m darned if I sha’n’t
catch hold of the sweet, little old thing and hug
her in spite of myself. I sha’n’t
be able to help it.” He lit his pipe,
and puffed it even excitedly. “Lord!”
he said, “there’s some blame’ fool
going about the world right now that might have married
her. And he’ll never know what a break
he made when he didn’t.”