It was business of serious importance
which was to bring Captain Palliser’s visit
to a close. He explained it perfectly to Miss
Alicia a day or so after Lady Mallowe and her daughter
left them. He had lately been most amiable in
his manner toward Miss Alicia, and had given her
much valuable information about companies and stocks.
He rather unexpectedly found it imperative that he
should go to London and Berlin to “see people”—dealers
in great financial schemes who were deeply interested
in solid business speculations, such as his own,
which were fundamentally different from all others
in the impeccable firmness of their foundations.
“I suppose he will be very rich
some day,” Miss Alicia remarked the first morning
she and T. Tembarom took their breakfast alone together
after his departure. “It would frighten
me to think of having as much money as he seems likely
to have quite soon.”
“It would scare me to death,”
said Tembarom. She knew he was making a sort
of joke, but she thought the point of it was her tremor
at the thought of great fortune.
“He seemed to think that it
would be an excellent thing for you to invest in—I’m
not sure whether it was the India Rubber Tree Company,
or the mahogany forests or the copper mines that
have so much gold and silver mixed in them that it
will pay for the expense of the digging—
” she went on.
“I guess it was the whole lot,” put in
Tembarom.
“Perhaps it was. They are
all going to make everybody so rich that it is quite
bewildering. He is very clever in business matters.
And so kind. He even said that if I really wished
it he might be able to invest my income for me and
actually treble it in a year. But of course
I told him that my income was your generous gift to
me, and that it was far more than sufficient for
my needs.”
Tembarom put down his coffee-cup so
suddenly to look at her that she was fearful that
she had appeared to do Captain Palliser some vague
injustice.
“I am sure he meant to be most
obliging, dear,” she explained. “I
was really quite touched. He said most sympathetically
and delicately that when women were unmarried, and
unaccustomed to investment, sometimes a business
man could be of use to them. He forgot”—affectionately—
“that I had you.”
Tembarom regarded her with tender
curiosity. She often opened up vistas for him
as he himself opened them for the Duke of Stone.
“If you hadn’t had me,
would you have let him treble your income in a year?”
he asked.
Her expression was that of a soft,
woodland rabbit or a trusting spinster dove.
“Well, of course, if one were
quite alone in the world and had only a small income,
it would be nice to have it wonderfully added to in
such a short time,” she answered. “But
it was his friendly solicitude which touched me.
I have not been accustomed to such interested delicacy
on the part of—of gentlemen.”
Her hesitance before the last word being the result
of training, which had made her feel that it was a
little bold for “ladies” to refer quite
openly to “gentlemen.”
“You sometimes read in the newspapers,”
said Tembarom, buttering his toast, “about
ladies who are all alone in the world with a little
income, but they’re not often left alone with
it long. It’s like you said—you’ve
got me; but if the time ever comes when you haven’t
got me just you make a dead-sure thing of it that
you don’t let any solicitous business gentleman
treble your income in a year. If it’s an
income that comes to more than five cents, don’t
you hand it over to be made into fifteen. Five
cents is a heap better—just plain five.”
“Temple!” gasped Miss
Alicia. “You—you surely cannot
mean that you do not think Captain Palliser is—sincere!”
Tembarom laughed outright, his most
hilarious and comforting laugh. He had no intention
of enlightening her in such a manner as would lead
her at once to behold pictures of him as the possible
victim of appalling catastrophes. He liked her
too well as she was.
“Sincere?” he said.
“He’s sincere down to the ground —in
what he’s reaching after. But he’s
not going to treble your income, nor mine. If
he ever makes that offer again, you just tell him
I’m interested, and that I’ll talk it
over with him.”
“I could not help saying to
him that I didn’t think you could want any
more money when you had so much,” she added,
“but he said one never knew what might happen.
He was greatly interested when I told him you had
once said the very same thing yourself.”
Their breakfast was at an end, and
he got up, laughing again, as he came to her end
of the table and put his arm around her shoulders in
the unconventional young caress she adored him for.
“It’s nice to be by ourselves
again for a while,” he said. “Let
us go for a walk together. Put on the little
bonnet and dress that are the color of a mouse.
Those little duds just get me. You look so pretty
in them.”
The sixteen-year-old blush ran up
to the roots of her gray side-ringlets. Just
imagine his remembering the color of her dress and
bonnet, and thinking that anything could make her
look pretty! She was overwhelmed with innocent
and grateful confusion. There really was no
one else in the least like him.
“You do look well, ma’am,”
Rose said, when she helped her to dress. “You’ve
got such a nice color, and that tiny bit of old rose
Mrs. Mellish put in the bonnet does bring it out.”
“I wonder if it is wrong of
me to be so pleased,” Miss Alicia thought.
“I must make it a subject of prayer, and ask
to be aided to conquer a haughty and vain-glorious
spirit.”
She was pathetically serious, having
been trained to a view of the Great First Cause as
figuratively embodied in the image of a gigantic,
irascible, omnipotent old gentleman, especially wrought
to fury by feminine follies connected with becoming
headgear.
“It has sometimes even seemed
to me that our Heavenly Father has a special objection
to ladies,” she had once timorously confessed
to Tembarom. “I suppose it is because
we are so much weaker than men, and so much more
given to vanity and petty vices.”
He had caught her in his arms and
actually hugged her that time. Their intimacy
had reached the point where the affectionate outburst
did not alarm her.
“Say!” he had laughed.
“It’s not the men who are going to have
the biggest pull with the authorities when folks
try to get into the place where things are evened
up. What I’m going to work my passage with
is a list of the few ‘ladies’ I’ve
known. You and Ann will be at the head of it.
I shall just slide it in at the box-office window and
say, ’Just look over this, will you? These
were friends of mine, and they were mighty good to
me. I guess if they didn’t turn me down,
you needn’t. I know they’re in here.
Reserved seats. I’m not expecting to be
put with them but if I’m allowed to hang around
where they are that’ll be heaven enough for
me.’”
“I know you don’t mean
to be irreverent, dear Temple,” she gasped.
“I am quite sure you don’t! It is—it
is only your American way of expressing your kind
thoughts. And of course”—quite
hastily—“the Almighty must understand
Americans—as he made so many.”
And half frightened though she was, she patted his
arm with the warmth of comfort in her soul and moisture
in her eyes. Somehow or other, he was always
so comforting.
He held her arm as they took their
walk. She had become used to that also, and
no longer thought it odd. It was only one of the
ways he had of making her feel that she was being
taken care of. They had not been able to have
many walks together since the arrival of the visitors,
and this occasion was at once a cause of relief and
inward rejoicing. The entire truth was that
she had not been altogether happy about him of late.
Sometimes, when he was not talking and saying amusing
New York things which made people laugh, he seemed
almost to forget where he was and to be thinking
of something which baffled and tried him. The
way in which he pulled himself together when he realized
that any one was looking at him was, to her mind,
the most disturbing feature of his fits of abstraction.
It suggested that if he really had a trouble it was
a private one on which he would not like her to intrude.
Naturally, her adoring eyes watched him oftener than
he knew, and she tried to find plausible and not
too painful reasons for his mood. He always
made light of his unaccustomedness to his new life;
but perhaps it made him feel more unrestful than
he would admit.
As they walked through the park and
the village, her heart was greatly warmed by the
way in which each person they met greeted him.
They greeted no one else in the same way, and yet
it was difficult to explain what the difference was.
They liked him— really liked him, though
how he had overcome their natural distrust of his newsboy
and bootblack record no one but himself knew.
In fact, she had reason to believe that even he himself
did not know—had indeed never asked himself.
They had gradually begun to like him, though none of
them had ever accused him of being a gentleman according
to their own acceptance of the word. Every man
touched his cap or forehead with a friendly grin
which spread itself the instant he caught sight of
him. Grin and salute were synchronous.
It was as if there were some extremely human joke
between them. Miss Alicia had delightedly remembered
a remark the Duke of Stone had made to her on his return
from one of their long drives.
“He is the most popular man
in the county,” he had chuckled. “If
war broke out and he were in the army, he could raise
a regiment at his own gates which would follow him
wheresoever he chose to lead it—if it
were into hottest Hades.”
Tembarom was rather silent during
the first part of their walk, and when he spoke it
was of Captain Palliser.
“He’s a fellow that’s
got lots of curiosity. I guess he’s asked
you more questions than he’s asked me,”
he began at last, and he looked at her interestedly,
though she was not aware of it.
“I thought—”
she hesitated slightly because she did not wish to
be critical—“I sometimes thought
he asked me too many.”
“What was he trying to get on to mostly?”
“He asked so many things about
you and your life in New York—but more,
I think, about you and Mr. Strangeways. He was
really quite persistent once or twice about poor
Mr. Strangeways.”
“What did he ask?”
“He asked if I had seen him,
and if you had preferred that I should not.
He calls him your Mystery, and thinks your keeping
him here is so extraordinary.”
“I guess it is—the
way he’d look at it,” Tembarom dropped
in.
“He was so anxious to find out
what he looked like. He asked how old he was
and how tall, and whether he was quite mad or only
a little, and where you picked him up, and when,
and what reason you gave for not putting him in some
respectable asylum. I could only say that I
really knew nothing about him, and that I hadn’t
seen him because he had a dread of strangers and
I was a little timid.”
She hesitated again.
“I wonder,” she said,
still hesitating even after her pause, “I wonder
if I ought to mention a rather rude thing I saw him
do twice?”
“Yes, you ought,” Tembarom
answered promptly; “I’ve a reason for
wanting to know.”
“It was such a singular thing
to do—in the circumstances,” she went
on obediently. “He knew, as we all know,
that Mr. Strangeways must not be disturbed.
One afternoon I saw him walk slowly backward and forward
before the west room window. He had something
in his hand and kept looking up. That was what
first attracted my attention—his queer way
of looking up. Quite suddenly he threw something
which rattled on the panes of glass—it
sounded like gravel or small pebbles. I couldn’t
help believing he thought Mr. Strangeways would be
startled into coming to the window.”
Tembarom cleared his throat.
“He did that twice,” he
said. “Pearson caught him at it, though
Palliser didn’t know he did. He’d
have done it three times, or more than that, perhaps,
but I casually mentioned in the smoking-room one
night that some curious fool of a gardener boy had
thrown some stones and frightened Strangeways, and
that Pearson and I were watching for him, and that
if I caught him I was going to knock his block off—
bing! He didn’t do it again. Darned
fool! What does he think he’s after?”
“I am afraid he is rather—I
hope it is not wrong to say so —but he
is rather given to gossip. And I dare say that
the temptation to find something quite new to talk
about was a great one. So few new things happen
in the neighborhood, and, as the duke says, people
are so bored—and he is bored himself.”
“He’ll be more bored if
he tries it again when he comes back,” remarked
Tembarom.
Miss Alicia’s surprised expression made him
laugh.
“Do you think he will come back?”
she exclaimed. “After such a long visit?”
“Oh, yes, he’ll come back.
He’ll come back as often as he can until he’s
got a chunk of my income to treble—or until
I’ve done with him.”
“Until you’ve done with him, dear?”
inquiringly.
“Oh! well,”—casually—“I’ve
a sort of idea that he may tell me something I’d
like to know. I’m not sure; I’m only
guessing. But even if he knows it he won’t
tell me until he gets good and ready and thinks I
don’t want to hear it. What he thinks he’s
going to get at by prowling around is something he
can get me in the crack of the door with.”
“Temple”—imploringly—“are
you afraid he wishes to do you an injury?”
“No, I’m not afraid.
I’m just waiting to see him take a chance on
it,” and he gave her arm an affectionate squeeze
against his side. He was always immensely moved
by her little alarms for him. They reminded
him, in a remote way, of Little Ann coming down Mrs.
Bowse’s staircase bearing with her the tartan
comforter.
How could any one—how could
any one want to do him an injury? she began to protest
pathetically. But he would not let her go on.
He would not talk any more of Captain Palliser or
allow her to talk of him. Indeed, her secret
fear was that he really knew something he did not
wish her to be troubled by, and perhaps thought he
had said too much. He began to make jokes and
led her to other subjects. He asked her to go
to the Hibblethwaites’ cottage and pay a visit
to Tummas. He had learned to understand his
accepted privileges in making of cottage visits by
this time; and when he clicked any wicket-gate the
door was open before he had time to pass up the wicket-path.
They called at several cottages, and he nodded at
the windows of others where faces appeared as he
passed by.
They had a happy morning together,
and he took her back to Temple Barholm beaming, and
forgetting Captain Palliser’s existence, for
the time, at least. In the afternoon they drove
out together, and after dining they read the last
copy of the Sunday Earth, which had arrived that
day. He found quite an interesting paragraph about
Mr. Hutchinson and the invention. Little Miss
Hutchinson was referred to most flatteringly by the
writer, who almost inferred that she was responsible
not only for the inventor but for the invention itself.
Miss Alicia felt quite proud of knowing so prominent
a character, and wondered what it could be like to
read about oneself in a newspaper.
About nine o’clock he laid his
sheet of the Earth down and spoke to her.
“I’m going to ask you
to do me a favor,” he said. “I couldn’t
ask it if we weren’t alone like this.
I know you won’t mind.”
Of course she wouldn’t mind.
She was made happier by the mere idea of doing something
for him.
“I’m going to ask you
to go to your room rather early,” he explained.
“I want to try a sort of stunt on Strangeways.
I’m going to bring him downstairs if he’ll
come. I’m not sure I can get him to do it;
but he’s been a heap better lately, and perhaps
I can.”
“Is he so much better as that?”
she said. “Will it be safe?”
He looked as serious as she had ever
seen him look—even a trifle more serious.
“I don’t know how much
better he is,” was his answer. “Sometimes
you’d think he was almost all right. And
then—! The doctor says that if he could
get over being afraid of leaving his room it would
be a big thing for him. He wants him to go to
his place in London so that he can watch him.”
“Do you think you could persuade him to go?”
“I’ve tried my level best, but so far—nothing
doing.”
He got up and stood before the mantel,
his back against it, his hands in his pockets.
“I’ve found out one thing,”
he said. “He’s used to houses like
this. Every now and again he lets something
out quite natural. He knew that the furniture
in his room was Jacobean — that’s what
he called it — and he knew it was fine stuff.
He wouldn’t have known that if he’d been
a piker. I’m going to try if he won’t
let out something else when he sees things here —
if he’ll come.”
“You have such a wonderfully
reasoning mind, dear,” said Miss Alicia, as
she rose. “You would have made a great detective,
I’m sure.”
“If Ann had been with him,”
he said, rather gloomily, “she’d have
caught on to a lot more than I have. I don’t
feel very chesty about the way I’ve managed
it.”
Miss Alicia went up-stairs shortly
afterward, and half an hour later Tembarom told the
footmen in the hall that they might go to bed.
The experiment he was going to make demanded that
the place should be cleared of any disturbing presence.
He had been thinking it over for sometime past.
He had sat in the private room of the great nerve
specialist in London and had talked it over with him.
He had talked of it with the duke on the lawn at
Stone Hover. There had been a flush of color
in the older man’s cheek-bones, and his eyes
had been alight as he took his part in the discussion.
He had added the touch of his own personality to
it, as always happened.
“We are having some fine moments,
my good fellow,” he had said, rubbing his hands.
“This is extremely like the fourth act.
I’d like to be sure what comes next.”
“I’d like to be sure myself,”
Tembarom answered. “It’s as if a flash
of lightning came sometimes, and then things clouded
up. And sometimes when I am trying something
out he’ll get so excited that I daren’t
go on until I’ve talked to the doctor.”
It was the excitement he was dubious
about to-night. It was not possible to be quite
certain as to the entire safety of the plan; but
there might be a chance — even a big chance —
of wakening some cell from its deadened sleep.
Sir Ormsby way had talked to him a good deal about
brain cells, and he had listened faithfully and learned
more than he could put into scientific English.
Gradually, during the past months, he had been coming
upon strangely exciting hints of curious possibilities.
They had been mere hints at first, and had seemed
almost absurd in their unbelievableness. But each
one had linked itself with another, and led him on
to further wondering and exploration. When Miss
Alicia and Palliser had seen that he looked absorbed
and baffled, it had been because he had frequently
found himself, to use his own figures of speech,
“mixed up to beat the band.” He
had not known which way to turn; but he had gone on
turning because he could not escape from his own
excited interest, and the inevitable emotion roused
by being caught in the whirl of a melodrama.
That was what he’d dropped into—a
whacking big play. It had begun for him when
Palford butted in that night and told him he was a
lost heir, with a fortune and an estate in England;
and the curtain had been jerking up and down ever
since. But there had been thrills in it, queer
as it was. Something doing all the time, by gee!
He sat and smoked his pipe and wished
Ann were with him because he knew he was not as cool
as he had meant to be. He felt a certain tingling
of excitement in his body; and this was not the time
to be excited. He waited for some minutes before
he went up-stairs. It was true that Strangeways
had been much better lately. He had seemed to
find it easier to follow conversation. During
the past few days, Tembarom had talked to him in
a matter-of-fact way about the house and its various
belongings. He had at last seemed to waken to
an interest in the picture-gallery. Evidently
he knew something of picture-galleries and portraits,
and found himself relieved by his own clearness of
thought when he talked of them.
“I feel better,” he said,
two or three times. “Things seem clearer—
nearer.”
“Good business!” exclaimed
Tembarom. “I told you it’d be that
way. Let’s hold on to pictures. It
won’t be any time before you’ll be remembering
where you’ve seen some.”
He had been secretly rather strung
up; but he had been very gradual in approaching his
final suggestion that some night, when everything was
quiet, they might go and look at the gallery together.
“What you need is to get out
of the way of wanting to stay in one place,”
he argued. “The doctor says you’ve
got to have a change, and even going from one room
to another is a fine thing.”
Strangeways had looked at him anxiously
for a few moments, even suspiciously, but his face
had cleared after the look. He drew himself
up and passed his hand over his forehead.
“I believe — perhaps he is right,”
he murmured.
“Sure he’s right!”
said Tembarom. “He’s the sort of chap
who ought to know. He’s been made into
a baronet for knowing. Sir Ormsby Galloway,
by jings! That’s no slouch of a name Oh,
he knows, you bet your life!”
This morning when he had seen him
he had spoken of the plan again. The visitors
had gone away; the servants could be sent out of sight
and hearing; they could go into the library and smoke
and he could look at the books. And then they
could take a look at the picture-gallery if he wasn’t
too tired. It would be a change anyhow.
To-night, as he went up the huge staircase,
Tembarom’s calmness of being had not increased.
He was aware of a quickened pulse and of a slight
dampness on his forehead. The dead silence of
the house added to the unusualness of things.
He could not remember ever having been so anxious
before, except on the occasion when he had taken his
first day’s “stuff” to Galton,
and had stood watching him as he read it. His
forehead had grown damp then. But he showed
no outward signs of excitement when he entered the
room and found Strangeways standing, perfectly attired
in evening dress.
Pearson, setting things in order at
the other side of the room, was taking note of him
furtively over his shoulder. Quite in the casual
manner of the ordinary man, he had expressed his
intention of dressing for the evening, and Pearson
had thanked his stars for the fact that the necessary
garments were at hand. From the first, he had
not infrequently asked for articles such as only
the resources of a complete masculine wardrobe could
supply; and on one occasion he had suddenly wished
to dress for dinner, and the lame excuses it had been
necessary to make had disturbed him horribly instead
of pacifying him. To explain that his condition
precluded the necessity of the usual appurtenances
would have been out of the question. He had been
angry. What did Pearson mean? What was
the matter? He had said it over and over again,
and then had sunk into a hopelessly bewildered mood,
and had sat huddled in his dressing-gown staring
at the fire. Pearson had been so harrowed by
the situation that it had been his own idea to suggest
to his master that all possible requirements should
be provided. There were occasions when it appeared
that the cloud over him lifted for a passing moment,
and a gleam of light recalled to him some familiar
usage of his past. When he had finished dressing,
Pearson had been almost startled by the amount of
effect produced by the straight, correctly cut lines
of black and white. The mere change of clothes
had suddenly changed the man himself—had
“done something to him,” Pearson put
it. After his first glance at the mirror he had
straightened himself, as if recognizing the fault
of his own carriage. When he crossed the room
it was with the action of a man who has been trained
to move well. The good looks, which had been almost
hidden behind a veil of uncertainty of expression
and strained fearfulness, became obvious. He
was tall, and his lean limbs were splendidly hung
together. His head was perfectly set, and the
bearing of his square shoulders was a soldierly thing.
It was an extraordinarily handsome man Tembarom and
Pearson found themselves gazing at. Each glanced
involuntarily at the other.
“Now that’s first-rate!
I’m glad you feel like coming,” Tembarom
plunged in. He didn’t intend to give him
too much time to think.
“Thank you. It will be
a change, as you said,” Strangeways answered.
“One needs change.”
His deep eyes looked somewhat deeper
than usual, but his manner was that of any well-bred
man doing an accustomed thing. If he had been
an ordinary guest in the house, and his host had
dropped into his room, he would have comported himself
in exactly the same way.
They went together down the corridor
as if they had passed down it together a dozen times
before. On the stairway Strangeways looked at
the tapestries with the interest of a familiarized
intelligence.
“It is a beautiful old place,”
he said, as they crossed the hall. “That
armor was worn by a crusader.” He hesitated
a moment when they entered the library, but it was
only for a moment. He went to the hearth and
took the chair his host offered him, and, lighting
a cigar, sat smoking it. If T. Tembarom had
chanced to be a man of an analytical or metaphysical
order of intellect he would have found, during the
past month, many things to lead him far in mental argument
concerning the weird wonder of the human mind—of
its power where its possessor, the body, is concerned,
its sometime closeness to the surface of sentient
being, its sometime remoteness. He would have
known—awed, marveling at the blackness
of the pit into which it can descend—the
unknown shades that may enfold it and imprison its
gropings. The old Duke of Stone had sat and
pondered many an hour over stories his favorite companion
had related to him. What curious and subtle
processes had the queer fellow not been watching in
the closely guarded quiet of the room where the stranger
had spent his days; the strange thing cowering in
its darkness; the ray of light piercing the cloud
one day and seeming lost again the next; the struggles
the imprisoned thing made to come forth—
to cry out that it was but immured, not wholly conquered,
and that some hour would arrive when it would fight
its way through at last. Tembarom had not entered
into psychological research. He had been entirely
uncomplex in his attitude, sitting down before his
problem as a besieger might have sat down before
a castle. The duke had sometimes wondered whether
it was not a good enough thing that he had been so
simple about it, merely continuing to believe the
best with an unswerving obstinacy and lending a hand
when he could. A never flagging sympathy had kept
him singularly alive to every chance, and now and
then he had illuminations which would have done credit
to a cleverer man, and which the duke had rubbed
his hands over in half-amused, half- touched elation.
How he had kept his head level and held to his purpose!
T. Tembarom talked but little as he
sat in his big chair and smoked. Best let him
alone and give him time to get used to the newness,
he thought. Nothing must happen that could give
him a jolt. Let things sort of sink into him,
and perhaps they’d set him to thinking and lead
him somewhere. Strangeways himself evidently
did not want talk. He never wanted it unless
he was excited. He was not excited now, and had
settled down as if he was comfortable. Having
finished one cigar he took another, and began to
smoke it much more slowly than he had smoked his
first. The slowness began to arrest Tembarom’s
attention. This was the smoking of a man who
was either growing sleepy or sinking into deep thought,
becoming oblivious to what he was doing. Sometimes
he held the cigar absently between his strong, fine
fingers, seeming to forget it. Tembarom watched
him do this until he saw it go out, and its white
ash drop on the rug at his feet. He did not notice
it, but sat sinking deeper and deeper into his own
being, growing more remote. What was going on
under his absorbed stillness? Tembarom would not
have moved or spoken “for a block of Fifth
Avenue,” he said internally. The dark
eyes seemed to become darker until there was only
a pin’s point of light to be seen in their pupils.
It was as if he were looking at something at a distance—at
a strangely long distance. Twice he turned his
head and appeared to look slowly round the room,
but not as normal people look— as if it
also was at the strange, long distance from him,
and he were somewhere outside its walls. It was
an uncanny thing to be a spectator to.
“How dead still the room is!”
Tembarom found himself thinking.
It was “dead still.”
And it was a queer deal sitting, not daring to move—just
watching. Something was bound to happen, sure!
What was it going to be?
Strangeways’ cigar dropped from
his fingers and appeared to rouse him. He looked
puzzled for a moment, and then stooped quite naturally
to pick it up.
“I forgot it altogether. It’s gone
out,” he remarked.
“Have another,” suggested Tembarom, moving
the box nearer to him.
“No, thank you.”
He rose and crossed the room to the wall of book-shelves.
And Tembarom’s eye was caught again by the fineness
of movement and line the evening clothes made manifest.
“What a swell he looked when he moved about
like that! What a swell, by jings!”
He looked along the line of shelves
and presently took a book down and opened it.
He turned over its leaves until something arrested
his attention, and then he fell to reading.
He read several minutes, while Tembarom watched him.
The silence was broken by his laughing a little.
“Listen to this,” he said,
and began to read something in a language totally
unknown to his hearer. “A man who writes
that sort of thing about a woman is an old bounder,
whether he’s a poet or not. There’s
a small, biting spitefulness about it that’s
cattish.”
“Who did it?” Tembarom
inquired softly. It might be a good idea to
lead him on.
“Horace. In spite of his
genius, he sometimes makes you feel he was rather
a blackguard.”
“Horace!” For the moment
T. Tembarom forgot himself. “I always heard
he was a sort of Y.M.C.A. old guy—old
Horace Greeley. The Tribune was no yellow journal
when he had it.”
He was sorry he had spoken the next
moment. Strangeways looked puzzled.
“The Tribune,” he hesitated. “The
Roman Tribune?”
“No, New York. He started
it—old Horace did. But perhaps we’re
not talking of the same man.”
Strangeways hesitated again.
“No, I think we’re not,” he answered
politely.
“I’ve made a break,”
thought Tembarom. “I ought to have kept
my mouth shut. I must try to switch him back.”
Strangeways was looking down at the
back of the book he held in his hand.
“This one was the Latin poet,
Quintus Horatius Flaccus, 65 B. C. You know him,”
he said.
“Oh, that one!” exclaimed
Tembarom, as if with an air of immense relief.
“What a fool I was to forget! I’m
glad it’s him. Will you go on reading
and let me hear some more? He’s a winner
from Winnersville—that Horace is.”
Perhaps it was a sort of miracle,
accomplished by his great desire to help the right
thing to happen, to stave off any shadow of the wrong
thing. Whatsoever the reason, Strangeways waited
only a moment before turning to his book again.
It seemed to be a link in some chain slowly forming
itself to drag him back from his wanderings. And
T. Tembarom, lightly sweating as a frightened horse
will, sat smoking another pipe and listening intently
to “Satires” and “Lampoons,”
read aloud in the Latin of 65 B. C.
“By gee!” he said faithfully,
at intervals, when he saw on the reader’s face
that the moment was ripe. “He knew it all—
old Horace— didn’t he?”
He had steered his charge back.
Things were coming along the line to him. He’d
learned Latin at one of these big English schools.
Boys always learned Latin, the duke had told him.
They just had to. Most of them hated it like
thunder, and they used to be caned when they didn’t
recite it right. Perhaps if he went on he’d
begin to remember the school. A queer part of
it was that he did not seem to notice that he was
not reading his own language.
He did not, in fact, seem to remember
anything in particular, but went on quite naturally
for some minutes. He had replaced Horace on the
shelf and was on the point of taking down another
volume when he paused, as if recalling something
else.
“Weren’t we going to see
the picture-gallery?” he inquired. “Isn’t
it getting late? I should like to see the portraits.”
“No hurry,” answered T.
Tembarom. “I was just waiting till you were
ready. But we’ll go right away, if you
like.”
They went without further ceremony.
As they walked through the hall and down the corridors
side by side, an imaginative person might have felt
that perhaps the eyes of an ancient darkling portrait
or so looked down at the pair curiously: the
long, loosely built New Yorker rather slouching along
by the soldierly, almost romantic figure which, in
a measure, suggested that others not unlike it might
have trod the same oaken floor, wearing ruff and
doublet, or lace jabot and sword. There was
a far cry between the two, but they walked closely
in friendly union. When they entered the picture-gallery
Strangeways paused a moment again, and stood peering
down its length.
“It is very dimly lighted. How can we see?”
he said.
“I told Pearson to leave it
dim,” Tembarom answered. “I wanted
it just that way at first.”
He tried—and succeeded
tolerably well—to say it casually, as he
led the way ahead of them. He and the duke had
not talked the scheme over for nothing. As his
grace had said, they had “worked the thing up.”
As they moved down the gallery, the men and women
in their frames looked like ghosts staring out to
see what was about to happen.
“We’ll turn up the lights
after a while,” T. Tembarom explained, still
casually. “There’s a picture here
I think a good deal of. I’ve stood and
looked at it pretty often. It reminded me of some
one the first day I set eyes on it; but it was quite
a time before I made up my mind who it was.
It used to drive me half dotty trying to think it out.”
“Which one was it?” asked Strangeways.
“We’re coming to it.
I want to see if it reminds you of any one. And
I want you to see it sudden.” “It’s
got to be sudden,” he had said to the duke.
“If it’s going to pan out, I believe it’s
got to be sudden.” “That’s
why I had the rest of ’em left dim. I told
Pearson to leave a lamp I could turn up quick,”
he said to Strangeways.
The lamp was on a table near by and
was shaded by a screen. He took it from the
shadow and lifted it suddenly, so that its full gleam
fell upon the portrait of the handsome youth with
the lace collar and the dark, drooping eyes.
It was done in a second, with a dramatically unexpected
swiftness. His heart jumped up and down.
“Who’s that?” he
demanded, with abruptness so sharp-pitched that the
gallery echoed with the sound. “Who’s
that?”
He heard a hard, quick gasp, a sound
which was momentarily a little horrible, as if the
man’s soul was being jerked out of his body’s
depths.
“Who is he?” he cried again. “Tell
me.”
After the gasp, Strangeways stood
still and stared. His eyes were glued to the
canvas, drops of sweat came out on his forehead, and
he was shuddering. He began to back away with
a look of gruesome struggle. He backed and backed,
and stared and stared. The gasp came twice again,
and then his voice seemed to tear itself loose from
some power that was holding it back.
“Th—at!” he cried. “It
is—it—is Miles Hugo!”
The last words were almost a shout,
and he shook as if he would have fallen. But
T. Tembarom put his hand on his shoulder and held him,
breathing fast himself. Gee! if it wasn’t
like a thing in a play!
“Page at the court of Charles
the Second,” he rattled off. “Died
of smallpox when he was nineteen. Miles Hugo!
Miles Hugo! You hold on to that for all your
worth. And hold on to me. I’ll keep
you steady. Say it again.”
“Miles Hugo.” The
poor majestic-looking fellow almost sobbed it.
“Where am I? What is the name of this
place?”
“It’s Temple Barholm in
the county of Lancashire, England. Hold on to
that, too—like thunder!”
Strangeways held the young man’s
arm with hands that clutched. He dragged at
him. His nightmare held him yet; Tembarom saw
it, but flashes of light were blinding him.
“Who”—he pleaded
in a shaking and hollow whisper—“are
you?”
Here was a stumper! By jings!
By jings! And not a minute to think it out.
But the answer came all right—all right!
“My name’s Tembarom.
T. Tembarom.” And he grinned his splendid
grin from sheer sense of relief. “I’m
a New Yorker—Brooklyn. I was just
forked in here anyhow. Don’t you waste time
thinking over me. You sit down here and do your
durndest with Miles Hugo.”