ARTHUR BERNALD could never afterward
recall just when the first conjecture flashed on him:
oddly enough, there was no record of it in the agitated
jottings of his diary. But, as it seemed to him
in retrospect, he had always felt that the queer man
at the Wades’ must be John Pellerin, if only
for the negative reason that he couldn’t imaginably
be any one else. It was impossible, in the confused
pattern of the century’s intellectual life, to
fit the stranger in anywhere, save in the big gap
which, some five and twenty years earlier, had been
left by Pellerin’s unaccountable disappearance;
and conversely, such a man as the Wades’ visitor
couldn’t have lived for sixty years without
filling, somewhere in space, a nearly equivalent void.
At all events, it was certainly not
to Doctor Wade or to his mother that Bernald owed
the hint: the good unconscious Wades, one of whose
chief charms in the young man’s eyes was that
they remained so robustly untainted by Pellerinism,
in spite of the fact that Doctor Wade’s younger
brother, Howland, was among its most impudently flourishing
high-priests.
The incident had begun by Bernald’s
running across Doctor Robert Wade one hot summer night
at the University Club, and by Wade’s saying,
in the tone of unprofessional laxity which the shadowy
stillness of the place invited: “I got hold
of a queer fish at St. Martin’s the other day—case
of heat-prostration picked up in Central Park.
When we’d patched him up I found he had nowhere
to go, and not a dollar in his pocket, and I sent
him down to our place at Portchester to re-build.”
The opening roused his hearer’s
attention. Bob Wade had an odd unformulated sense
of values that Bernald had learned to trust.
“What sort of chap? Young or old?”
“Oh, every age—full
of years, and yet with a lot left. He called
himself sixty on the books.”
“Sixty’s a good age for
some kinds of living. And age is of course purely
subjective. How has he used his sixty years?”
“Well—part of them
in educating himself, apparently. He’s a
scholar—humanities, languages, and so forth.”
“Oh—decayed gentleman,”
Bernald murmured, disappointed.
“Decayed? Not much!”
cried the doctor with his accustomed literalness.
“I only mentioned that side of Winterman—his
name’s Winterman—because it was the
side my mother noticed first. I suppose women
generally do. But it’s only a part—a
small part. The man’s the big thing.”
“Really big?”
“Well—there again.
... When I took him down to the country, looking
rather like a tramp from a ‘Shelter,’ with
an untrimmed beard, and a suit of reach-me-downs he’d
slept round the Park in for a week, I felt sure my
mother’d carry the silver up to her room, and
send for the gardener’s dog to sleep in the hall
the first night. But she didn’t.”
“I see. ‘Women and
children love him.’ Oh, Wade!” Bernald
groaned.
“Not a bit of it! You’re
out again. We don’t love him, either of
us. But we feel him—the air’s
charged with him. You’ll see.”
And Bernald agreed that he would
see, the following Sunday. Wade’s inarticulate
attempts to characterize the stranger had struck his
friend. The human revelation had for Bernald a
poignant and ever-renewed interest, which his trade,
as the dramatic critic of a daily paper, had hitherto
failed to discourage. And he knew that Bob Wade,
simple and undefiled by literature—Bernald’s
specific affliction—had a free and personal
way of judging men, and the diviner’s knack
of reaching their hidden springs. During the days
that followed, the young doctor gave Bernald farther
details about John Winterman: details not of
fact—for in that respect his visitor’s
reticence was baffling—but of impression.
It appeared that Winterman, while lying insensible
in the Park, had been robbed of the few dollars he
possessed; and on leaving the hospital, still weak
and half-blind, he had quite simply and unprotestingly
accepted the Wades’ offer to give him shelter
till such time as he should be strong enough to go
to work.
“But what’s his work?”
Bernald interjected. “Hasn’t he at
least told you that?”
“Well, writing. Some kind
of writing.” Doctor Bob always became vague
and clumsy when he approached the confines of literature.
“He means to take it up again as soon as his
eyes get right.”
Bernald groaned. “Oh, Lord—that
finishes him; and me! He’s looking for
a publisher, of course—he wants a ‘favourable
notice.’ I won’t come!”
“He hasn’t written a line for twenty years.”
“A line of what? What
kind of literature can one keep corked up for twenty
years?”
Wade surprised him. “The
real kind, I should say. But I don’t know
Winterman’s line,” the doctor added.
“He speaks of the things he used to write merely
as ‘stuff that wouldn’t sell.’
He has a wonderfully confidential way of not
telling one things. But he says he’ll have
to do something for his living as soon as his eyes
are patched up, and that writing is the only trade
he knows. The queer thing is that he seems pretty
sure of selling now. He even talked of
buying the bungalow of us, with an acre or two about
it.”
“The bungalow? What’s that?”
“The studio down by the shore
that we built for Howland when he thought he meant
to paint.” (Howland Wade, as Bernald knew, had
experienced various “calls.”) “Since
he’s taken to writing nobody’s been near
it. I offered it to Winterman, and he camps there—cooks
his meals, does his own house-keeping, and never comes
up to the house except in the evenings, when he joins
us on the verandah, in the dark, and smokes while
my mother knits.”
“A discreet visitor, eh?”
“More than he need be.
My mother actually wanted him to stay on in the house—in
her pink chintz room. Think of it! But he
says houses smother him. I take it he’s
lived for years in the open.”
“In the open where?”
“I can’t make out, except
that it was somewhere in the East. ’East
of everything—beyond the day-spring.
In places not on the map.’ That’s
the way he put it; and when I said: ’You’ve
been an explorer, then?’ he smiled in his beard,
and answered: ’Yes; that’s it—an
explorer.’ Yet he doesn’t strike me
as a man of action: hasn’t the hands or
the eyes.”
“What sort of hands and eyes has he?”
Wade reflected. His range of
observation was not large, but within its limits it
was exact and could give an account of itself.
“He’s worked a lot with
his hands, but that’s not what they were made
for. I should say they were extraordinarily delicate
conductors of sensation. And his eye—his
eye too. He hasn’t used it to dominate
people: he didn’t care to. He simply
looks through ’em all like windows. Makes
me feel like the fellows who think they’re made
of glass. The mitigating circumstance is that
he seems to see such a glorious landscape through
me.” Wade grinned at the thought of serving
such a purpose.
“I see. I’ll come
on Sunday and be looked through!” Bernald cried.