THE Halidons floated off to Europe
for the summer. In due course their return was
announced in the social chronicle, and walking up
Fifth Avenue one afternoon I saw the back of the Brereton
house sheathed in scaffolding, and realized that they
were adding a wing.
I did not look up Halidon, nor did
I hear from him till the middle of the winter.
Once or twice, meanwhile, I had seen him in the back
of his wife’s opera box; but Mrs. Halidon had
grown so resplendent that she reduced her handsome
husband to a supernumerary. In January the papers
began to talk of the Halidon ball; and in due course
I received a card for it. I was not a frequenter
of balls, and had no intention of going to this one;
but when the day came some obscure impulse moved me
to set aside my rule, and toward midnight I presented
myself at Ned’s illuminated portals.
I shall never forget his look when
I accosted him on the threshold of the big new ballroom.
With celibate egoism I had rather fancied he would
be gratified by my departure from custom; but one glance
showed me my mistake. He smiled warmly, indeed,
and threw into his hand-clasp an artificial energy
of welcome—“You of all people—my
dear fellow! Have you seen Daisy?”—but
the look behind the smile made me feel cold in the
crowded room.
Nor was Mrs. Halidon’s greeting
calculated to restore my circulation. “Have
you come to spy on us?” her frosty smile seemed
to say; and I crept home early, wondering if she had
not found me out.
It was the following week that Halidon
turned up one day in my office. He looked pale
and thinner, and for the first time I noticed a dash
of gray in his hair. I was startled at the change
in him, but I reflected that it was nearly a year
since we had looked at each other by daylight, and
that my shaving-glass had doubtless a similar tale
to tell.
He fidgeted about the office, told
me a funny story about his little boy, and then dropped
into a chair.
“Look here,” he said, “I want to
go into business.”
“Business?” I stared.
“Well, why not? I suppose
men have gone to work, even at my age, and not made
a complete failure of it. The fact is, I want
to make some money.” He paused, and added:
“I’ve heard of an opportunity to pick
up for next to nothing a site for the Academy, and
if I could lay my hands on a little cash—”
“Do you want to speculate?” I interposed.
“Heaven forbid! But don’t
you see that, if I had a fixed job—so much
a quarter—I could borrow the money and pay
it off gradually?”
I meditated upon this astounding proposition.
“Do you really think it’s wise to buy
a site before—”
“Before what?”
“Well—seeing ahead a little?”
His face fell for a moment, but he
rejoined cheerfully: “It’s an exceptional
chance, and after all, I shall see ahead if
I can get regular work. I can put by a little
every month, and by and bye, when our living expenses
diminish, my wife means to come forward—her
idea would be to give the building—”
He broke off and drummed on the table,
waiting nervously for me to speak. He did not
say on what grounds he still counted on a diminution
of his household expenses, and I had not the cruelty
to press this point; but I murmured, after a moment:
“I think you’re right—I should
try to buy the land.”
We discussed his potentialities for
work, which were obviously still an unknown quantity,
and the conference ended in my sending him to a firm
of real-estate brokers who were looking out for a partner
with a little money to invest. Halidon had a
few thousands of his own, which he decided to embark
in the venture; and thereafter, for the remaining
months of the winter, he appeared punctually at a desk
in the brokers’ office, and sketched plans of
the Academy on the back of their business paper.
The site for the future building had meanwhile been
bought, and I rather deplored the publicity which Ned
gave to the fact; but, after all, since this publicity
served to commit him more deeply, to pledge him conspicuously
to the completion of his task, it was perhaps a wise
instinct of self-coercion that had prompted him.
It was a dull winter in realty, and
toward spring, when the market began to revive, one
of the Halidon children showed symptoms of a delicate
throat, and the fashionable doctor who humoured the
family ailments counselled—nay, commanded—a
prompt flight to the Mediterranean.
“He says a New York spring would
be simply criminal—and as for those ghastly
southern places, my wife won’t hear of them;
so we’re off. But I shall be back in July,
and I mean to stick to the office all summer.”
He was true to his word, and reappeared
just as all his friends were deserting town.
For two torrid months he sat at his desk, drawing
fresh plans of the Academy, and waiting for the wind-fall
of a “big deal”; but in September he broke
down from the effect of the unwonted confinement,
and his indignant wife swept him off to the mountains.
“Why Ned should work when we
have the money—I wish he would sell that
wretched piece of land!” And sell it he did one
day: I chanced on a record of the transaction
in the realty column of the morning paper. He
afterward explained the sale to me at length.
Owing to some spasmodic effort at municipal improvement,
there had been an unforeseen rise in the adjoining
property, and it would have been foolish—yes,
I agreed that it would have been foolish. He had
made $10,000 on the sale, and that would go toward
paying off what he had borrowed for the original purchase.
Meanwhile he could be looking about for another site.
Later in the winter he told me it
was a bad time to look. His position in the real-estate
business enabled him to follow the trend of the market,
and that trend was obstinately upward. But of
course there would be a reaction—and he
was keeping his eyes open.
As the resuscitated Academy scheme
once more fell into abeyance, I saw Halidon less and
less frequently; and we had not met for several months,
when one day of June, my morning paper startled me
with the announcement that the President had appointed
Edward Halidon of New York to be Civil Commissioner
of our newly acquired Eastern possession, the Manana
Islands. “The unhealthy climate of the
islands, and the defective sanitation of the towns,
make it necessary that vigorous measures should be
taken to protect the health of the American citizens
established there, and it is believed that Mr. Halidon’s
large experience of Eastern life and well-known energy
of character—” I read the paragraph
twice; then I dropped the paper, and projected myself
through the subway to Halidon’s office.
But he was not there; he had not been there for a
month. One of the clerks believed he was in Washington.
“It’s true, then!”
I said to myself. “But Mrs. Halidon in the
Mananas—?”
A day or two later Ned appeared in
my office. He looked better than when we had
last met, and there was a determined line about his
lips.
“My wife? Heaven forbid!
You don’t suppose I should think of taking her?
But the job is a tremendously interesting one, and
it’s the kind of work I believe I can do—the
only kind,” he added, smiling rather ruefully.
“But my dear Ned—”
He faced me with a look of quiet resolution.
“I think I’ve been through all the buts.
It’s an infernal climate, of course, but then
I am used to the East—I know what precautions
to take. And it would be a big thing to clean
up that Augean stable.”
“But consider your wife and children—”
He met this with deliberation.
“I have considered my children—that’s
the point. I don’t want them to be able
to say, when they look back: ’He was content
to go on living on that money—’”
“My dear Ned—”
“That’s the one thing
they shan’t say of me,” he pressed
on vehemently. “I’ve tried other
ways—but I’m no good at business.
I see now that I shall never make money enough to
carry out the scheme myself; but at least I can clear
out, and not go on being his pensioner—seeing
his dreams turned into horses and carpets and clothes—”
He broke off, and leaning on my desk
hid his face in his hands. When he looked up
again his flush of wrath had subsided.
“Just understand me—it’s
not her fault. Don’t fancy I’m
trying for an instant to shift the blame. A woman
with children simply obeys the instinct of her sex;
she puts them first—and I wouldn’t
have it otherwise. As far as she’s concerned
there were no conditions attached—there’s
no reason why she should make any sacrifice.”
He paused, and added painfully: “The trouble
is, I can’t make her see that I am differently
situated.”
“But, Ned, the climate—what
are you going to gain by chucking yourself away?”
He lifted his brows. “That’s
a queer argument from you. And, besides,
I’m up to the tricks of all those ague-holes.
And I’ve got to live, you see: I’ve
got something to put through.” He saw my
look of enquiry, and added with a shy, poignant laugh—how
I hear it still!—: “I don’t
mean only the job in hand, though that’s enough
in itself; but Paul’s work—you understand.—It
won’t come in my day, of course—I’ve
got to accept that—but my boy’s a
splendid chap” (the boy was three), “and
I tell you what it is, old man, I believe when he
grows up he’ll put it through.”
Halidon went to the Mananas, and for
two years the journals brought me incidental reports
of the work he was accomplishing. He certainly
had found a job to his hand: official words of
commendation rang through the country, and there were
lengthy newspaper leaders on the efficiency with which
our representative was prosecuting his task in that
lost corner of our colonies. Then one day a brief
paragraph announced his death—“one
of the last victims of the pestilence he had so successfully
combated.”
That evening, at my club, I heard
men talking of him. One said: “What’s
the use of a fellow wasting himself on a lot of savages?”
and another wiseacre opined: “Oh, he went
off because there was friction at home. A fellow
like that, who knew the East, would have got through
all right if he’d taken the proper precautions.
I saw him before he left, and I never saw a man look
less as if he wanted to live.”
I turned on the last speaker, and
my voice made him drop his lighted cigar on his complacent
knuckles.
“I never knew a man,”
I exclaimed, “who had better reasons for wanting
to live!”
A handsome youth mused: “Yes,
his wife is very beautiful—but it doesn’t
follow—”
And then some one nudged him, for
they knew I was Halidon’s friend.