AT SHANDY’S
On a late-summer evening in New York
the atmosphere surrounding a certain corner table
at Shandy’s cheap restaurant in Fourteenth Street
was stirred by a sense of excitement.
The corner table in question was the
favourite meeting place of a group of young men of
the G. Selden type, who usually took possession of
it at dinner time—having decided that Shandy’s
supplied more decent food for fifty cents, or even
for twenty-five, than was to be found at other places
of its order. Shandy’s was “about
all right,” they said to each other, and patronised
it accordingly, three or four of them generally dining
together, with a friendly and adroit manipulation of
“portions” and “half portions”
which enabled them to add variety to their bill of
fare.
The street outside was lighted, the
tide of passers-by was less full and more leisurely
in its movements than it was during the seething, working
hours of daylight, but the electric cars swung past
each other with whiz and clang of bell almost unceasingly,
their sound being swelled, at short intervals, by
the roar and rumbling rattle of the trains dashing
by on the elevated railroad. This, however, to
the frequenters of Shandy’s, was the usual accompaniment
of every-day New York life and was regarded as a rather
cheerful sort of thing.
This evening the four claimants of
the favourite corner table had met together earlier
than usual. Jem Belter, who “hammered”
a typewriter at Schwab’s Brewery, Tom Wetherbee,
who was “in a downtown office,” Bert Johnson,
who was “out for the Delkoff,” and Nick
Baumgarten, who having for some time “beaten”
certain streets as assistant salesman for the same
illustrious machine, had been recently elevated to
a “territory” of his own, and was therefore
in high spirits.
“Say!” he said. “Let’s
give him a fine dinner. We can make it between
us. Beefsteak and mushrooms, and potatoes hashed
brown. He likes them. Good old G. S. I shall
be right glad to see him. Hope foreign travel
has not given him the swell head.”
“Don’t believe it’s
hurt him a bit. His letter didn’t sound
like it. Little Georgie ain’t a fool,”
said Jem Belter.
Tom Wetherbee was looking over the
letter referred to. It had been written to the
four conjointly, towards the termination of Selden’s
visit to Mr. Penzance. The young man was not an
ardent or fluent correspondent; but Tom Wetherbee
was chuckling as he read the epistle.
“Say, boys,” he said,
“this big thing he’s keeping back to tell
us when he sees us is all right, but what takes me
is old George paying a visit to a parson. He
ain’t no Young Men’s Christian Association.”
Bert Johnson leaned forward, and looked
at the address on the letter paper.
“Mount Dunstan Vicarage,”
he read aloud. “That looks pretty swell,
doesn’t it?” with a laugh. “Say,
fellows, you know Jepson at the office, the chap that
prides himself on reading such a lot? He said
it reminded him of the names of places in English
novels. That Johnny’s the biggest snob
you ever set your tooth into. When I told him
about the lord fellow that owns the castle, and that
George seemed to have seen him, he nearly fell over
himself. Never had any use for George before,
but just you watch him make up to him when he sees
him next.”
People were dropping in and taking
seats at the tables. They were all of one class.
Young men who lived in hall bedrooms. Young women
who worked in shops or offices, a couple here and
there, who, living far uptown, had come to Shandy’s
to dinner, that they might go to cheap seats in some
theatre afterwards. In the latter case, the girls
wore their best hats, had bright eyes, and cheeks
lightly flushed by their sense of festivity.
Two or three were very pretty in their thin summer
dresses and flowered or feathered head gear, tilted
at picturesque angles over their thick hair.
When each one entered the eyes of the young men at
the corner table followed her with curiosity and interest,
but the glances at her escort were always of a disparaging
nature.
“There’s a beaut!”
said Nick Baumgarten. “Get onto that pink
stuff on her hat, will you. She done it because
it’s just the colour of her cheeks.”
They all looked, and the girl was
aware of it, and began to laugh and talk coquettishly
to the young man who was her companion.
“I wonder where she got Clarence?”
said Jem Belter in sarcastic allusion to her escort.
“The things those lookers have fastened on to
them gets me.”
“If it was one of us, now,”
said Bert Johnson. Upon which they broke into
simultaneous good-natured laughter.
“It’s queer, isn’t
it,” young Baumgarten put in, “how a fellow
always feels sore when he sees another fellow with
a peach like that? It’s just straight human
nature, I guess.”
The door swung open to admit a newcomer,
at the sight of whom Jem Belter exclaimed joyously:
“Good old Georgie! Here he is, fellows!
Get on to his glad rags.”
“Glad rags” is supposed
to buoyantly describe such attire as, by its freshness
or elegance of style, is rendered a suitable adornment
for festive occasions or loftier leisure moments.
“Glad rags” may mean evening dress, when
a young gentleman’s wardrobe can aspire to splendour
so marked, but it also applies to one’s best
and latest-purchased garb, in contradistinction to
the less ornamental habiliments worn every day, and
designated as “office clothes.”
G. Selden’s economies had not
enabled him to give himself into the hands of a Bond
Street tailor, but a careful study of cut and material,
as spread before the eye in elegant coloured illustrations
in the windows of respectable shops in less ambitious
quarters, had resulted in the purchase of a well-made
suit of smart English cut. He had a nice young
figure, and looked extremely neat and tremendously
new and clean, so much so, indeed, that several persons
glanced at him a little admiringly as he was met half
way to the corner table by his friends.
“Hello, old chap! Glad
to see you. What sort of a voyage? How did
you leave the royal family? Glad to get back?”
They all greeted him at once, shaking
hands and slapping him on the back, as they hustled
him gleefully back to the corner table and made him
sit down.
“Say, garsong,” said Nick
Baumgarten to their favourite waiter, who came at
once in answer to his summons, “let’s have
a porterhouse steak, half the size of this table,
and with plenty of mushrooms and potatoes hashed brown.
Here’s Mr. Selden just returned from visiting
at Windsor Castle, and if we don’t treat him
well, he’ll look down on us.”
G. Selden grinned. “How
have you been getting on, Sam?” he said, nodding
cheerfully to the man. They were old and tried
friends. Sam knew all about the days when a fellow
could not come into Shandy’s at all, or must
satisfy his strong young hunger with a bowl of soup,
or coffee and a roll. Sam did his best for them
in the matter of the size of portions, and they did
their good-natured utmost for him in the affair of
the pooled tip.
“Been getting on as well as
can be expected,” Sam grinned back. “Hope
you had a fine time, Mr. Selden?”
“Fine! I should smile!
Fine wasn’t in it,” answered Selden.
“But I’m looking forward to a Shandy porterhouse
steak, all the same.”
“Did they give you a better
one in the Strawnd?” asked Baumgarten, in what
he believed to be a correct Cockney accent.
“You bet they didn’t,”
said Selden. “Shandy’s takes a lot
of beating.” That last is English.
The people at the other tables cast
involuntary glances at them. Their eager, hearty
young pleasure in the festivity of the occasion was
a healthy thing to see. As they sat round the
corner table, they produced the effect of gathering
close about G. Selden. They concentrated their
combined attention upon him, Belter and Johnson leaning
forward on their folded arms, to watch him as he talked.
“Billy Page came back in August,
looking pretty bum,” Nick Baumgarten began.
“He’d been painting gay Paree brick red,
and he’d spent more money than he’d meant
to, and that wasn’t half enough. Landed
dead broke. He said he’d had a great time,
but he’d come home with rather a dark brown
taste in his mouth, that he’d like to get rid
of.”
“He thought you were a fool
to go off cycling into the country,” put in
Wetherbee, “but I told him I guessed that was
where he was ’way off. I believed you’d
had the best time of the two of you.”
“Boys,” said Selden, “I
had the time of my life.” He said it almost
solemnly, and laid his hand on the table. “It
was like one of those yarns Bert tells us. Half
the time I didn’t believe it, and half the time
I was ashamed of myself to think it was all happening
to me and none of your fellows were in it.”
“Oh, well,” said Jem Belter,
“luck chases some fellows, anyhow. Look
at Nick, there.”
“Well,” Selden summed
the whole thing up, “I just fell into it
where it was so deep that I had to strike out all
I knew how to keep from drowning.”
“Tell us the whole thing,”
Nick Baumgarten put in; “from beginning to end.
Your letter didn’t give anything away.”
“A letter would have spoiled
it. I can’t write letters anyhow. I
wanted to wait till I got right here with you fellows
round where I could answer questions. First off,”
with the deliberation befitting such an opening, “I’ve
sold machines enough to pay my expenses, and leave
some over.”
“You have? Gee whiz!
Say, give us your prescription. Glad I know you,
Georgy!”
“And who do you suppose bought
the first three?” At this point, it was he who
leaned forward upon the table—his climax
being a thing to concentrate upon. “Reuben
S. Vanderpoel’s daughter—Miss Bettina!
And, boys, she gave me a letter to Reuben S., himself,
and here it is.”
He produced a flat leather pocketbook
and took an envelope from an inner flap, laying it
before them on the tablecloth. His knowledge that
they would not have believed him if he had not brought
his proof was founded on everyday facts. They
would not have doubted his veracity, but the possibility
of such delirious good fortune. What they would
have believed would have been that he was playing
a hilarious joke on them. Jokes of this kind,
but not of this proportion, were common entertainments.
Their first impulse had been towards
an outburst of laughter, but even before he produced
his letter a certain truthful seriousness in his look
had startled them. When he laid the envelope down
each man caught his breath. It could not be denied
that Jem Belter turned pale with emotion. Jem
had never been one of the lucky ones.
“She let me read it,”
said G. Selden, taking the letter from its envelope
with great care. “And I said to her:
’Miss Vanderpoel, would you let me just show
that to the boys the first night I go to Shandy’s?’
I knew she’d tell me if it wasn’t all right
to do it. She’d know I’d want to
be told. And she just laughed and said: ’I
don’t mind at all. I like “the boys.”
Here is a message to them. “Good luck to
you all.”’”
“She said that?” from Nick Baumgarten.
“Yes, she did, and she meant it. Look at
this.”
This was the letter. It was quite
short, and written in a clear, definite hand.
“Dear father:
This will be brought to you by Mr. G. Selden, of whom
I have written to you. Please be good to him.
“Affectionately,
“Betty.”
Each young man read it in turn.
None of them said anything just at first. A kind
of awe had descended upon them—not in the
least awe of Vanderpoel, who, with other multi-millionaires,
were served up each week with cheerful neighbourly
comment or equally neighbourly disrespect, in huge
Sunday papers read throughout the land—but
awe of the unearthly luck which had fallen without
warning to good old G. S., who lived like the rest
of them in a hall bedroom on ten per, earned by tramping
the streets for the Delkoff.
“That girl,” said G. Selden
gravely, “that girl is a winner from Winnersville.
I take off my hat to her. If it’s the scheme
that some people’s got to have millions, and
others have got to sell Delkoffs, that girl’s
one of those that’s entitled to the millions.
It’s all right she should have ’em.
There’s no kick coming from me.”
Nick Baumgarten was the first to resume
wholly normal condition of mind.
“Well, I guess after you’ve
told us about her there’ll be no kick coming
from any of us. Of course there’s something
about you that royal families cry for, and they won’t
be happy till they get. All of us boys knows
that. But what we want to find out is how you
worked it so that they saw the kind of pearl-studded
hairpin you were.”
“Worked it!” Selden answered.
“I didn’t work it. I’ve got
a good bit of nerve, but I never should have had enough
to invent what happened—just happened.
I broke my leg falling off my bike, and fell right
into a whole bunch of them—earls and countesses
and viscounts and Vanderpoels. And it was Miss
Vanderpoel who saw me first lying on the ground.
And I was in Stornham Court where Lady Anstruthers
lives—and she used to be Miss Rosalie Vanderpoel.”
“Boys,” said Bert Johnson,
with friendly disgust, “he’s been up to
his neck in ’em.”
“Cheer up. The worst is
yet to come,” chaffed Tom Wetherbee.
Never had such a dinner taken place
at the corner table, or, in fact, at any other table
at Shandy’s. Sam brought beefsteaks, which
were princely, mushrooms, and hashed brown potatoes
in portions whose generosity reached the heart.
Sam was on good terms with Shandy’s carver,
and had worked upon his nobler feelings. Steins
of lager beer were ventured upon. There was hearty
satisfying of fine hungers. Two of the party
had eaten nothing but one “Quick Lunch”
throughout the day, one of them because he was short
of time, the other for economy’s sake, because
he was short of money. The meal was a splendid
thing. The telling of the story could not be
wholly checked by the eating of food. It advanced
between mouthfuls, questions being asked and details
given in answers. Shandy’s became more
crowded, as the hour advanced. People all over
the room cast interested looks at the party at the
corner table, enjoying itself so hugely. Groups
sitting at the tables nearest to it found themselves
excited by the things they heard.
“That young fellow in the new
suit has just come back from Europe,” said a
man to his wife and daughter. “He seems
to have had a good time.”
“Papa,” the daughter leaned
forward, and spoke in a low voice, “I heard
him say ’Lord Mount Dunstan said Lady Anstruthers
and Miss Vanderpoel were at the garden party.’
Who do you suppose he is?”
“Well, he’s a nice young
fellow, and he has English clothes on, but he doesn’t
look like one of the Four Hundred. Will you have
pie or vanilla ice cream, Bessy?”
Bessy—who chose vanilla
ice cream—lost all knowledge of its flavour
in her absorption in the conversation at the next table,
which she could not have avoided hearing, even if
she had wished.
“She bent over the bed and laughed—just
like any other nice girl—and she said,
’You are at Stornham Court, which belongs to
Sir Nigel Anstruthers. Lady Anstruthers is my
sister. I am Miss Vanderpoel.’ And,
boys, she used to come and talk to me every day.”
“George,” said Nick Baumgarten,
“you take about seventy-five bottles of Warner’s
Safe Cure, and rub yourself all over with St. Jacob’s
Oil. Luck like that ain’t healthy!”
. . . . .
Mr. Vanderpoel, sitting in his study,
wore the interestedly grave look of a man thinking
of absorbing things. He had just given orders
that a young man who would call in the course of the
evening should be brought to him at once, and he was
incidentally considering this young man, as he reflected
upon matters recalled to his mind by his impending
arrival. They were matters he had thought of with
gradually increasing seriousness for some months,
and they had, at first, been the result of the letters
from Stornham, which each “steamer day”
brought. They had been of immense interest to
him—these letters. He would have found
them absorbing as a study, even if he had not deeply
loved Betty. He read in them things she did not
state in words, and they set him thinking.
He was not suspected by men like himself
of concealing an imagination beneath the trained steadiness
of his exterior, but he possessed more than the world
knew, and it singularly combined itself with powers
of logical deduction.
If he had been with his daughter,
he would have seen, day by day, where her thoughts
were leading her, and in what direction she was developing,
but, at a distance of three thousand miles, he found
himself asking questions, and endeavouring to reach
conclusions. His affection for Betty was the
central emotion of his existence. He had never
told himself that he had outgrown the kind and pretty
creature he had married in his early youth, and certainly
his tender care for her and pleasure in her simple
goodness had never wavered, but Betty had given him
a companionship which had counted greatly in the sum
of his happiness. Because imagination was not
suspected in him, no one knew what she stood for in
his life. He had no son; he stood at the head
of a great house, so to speak—the American
parallel of what a great house is in non-republican
countries. The power of it counted for great things,
not in America alone, but throughout the world.
As international intimacies increased, the influence
of such houses might end in aiding in the making of
history. Enormous constantly increasing wealth
and huge financial schemes could not confine their
influence, but must reach far. The man whose
hand held the lever controlling them was doing well
when he thought of them gravely. Such a man had
to do with more than his own mere life and living.
This man had confronted many problems as the years
had passed. He had seen men like himself die,
leaving behind them the force they had controlled,
and he had seen this force—controlled no
longer—let loose upon the world, sometimes
a power of evil, sometimes scattering itself aimlessly
into nothingness and folly, which wrought harm.
He was not an ambitious man, but—perhaps
because he was not only a man of thought, but a Vanderpoel
of the blood of the first Reuben—these
were things he did not contemplate without restlessness.
When Rosy had gone away and seemed lost to them, he
had been glad when he had seen Betty growing, day
by day, into a strong thing. Feminine though
she was, she sometimes suggested to him the son who
might have been his, but was not. As the closeness
of their companionship increased with her years, his
admiration for her grew with his love. Power left
in her hands must work for the advancement of things,
and would not be idly disseminated—if no
antagonistic influence wrought against her. He
had found himself reflecting that, after all was said,
the marriage of such a girl had a sort of parallel
in that of some young royal creature, whose union
might make or mar things, which must be considered.
The man who must inevitably strongly colour her whole
being, and vitally mark her life, would, in a sense,
lay his hand upon the lever also. If he brought
sorrow and disorder with him, the lever would not move
steadily. Fortunes such as his grow rapidly,
and he was a richer man by millions than he had been
when Rosalie had married Nigel Anstruthers. The
memory of that marriage had been a painful thing to
him, even before he had known the whole truth of its
results. The man had been a common adventurer
and scoundrel, despite the facts of good birth and
the air of decent breeding. If a man who was
as much a scoundrel, but cleverer—it would
be necessary that he should be much cleverer—made
the best of himself to Betty——!
It was folly to think one could guess what a woman—or
a man, either, for that matter—would love.
He knew Betty, but no man knows the thing which comes,
as it were, in the dark and claims its own—whether
for good or evil. He had lived long enough to
see beautiful, strong-spirited creatures do strange
things, follow strange gods, swept away into seas
of pain by strange waves.
“Even Betty,” he had said
to himself, now and then. “Even my Betty.
Good God—who knows!”
Because of this, he had read each
letter with keen eyes. They were long letters,
full of detail and colour, because she knew he enjoyed
them. She had a delightful touch. He sometimes
felt as if they walked the English lanes together.
His intimacy with her neighbours, and her neighbourhood,
was one of his relaxations. He found himself thinking
of old Doby and Mrs. Welden, as a sort of soporific
measure, when he lay awake at night. She had
sent photographs of Stornham, of Dunholm Castle, and
of Dole, and had even found an old engraving of Lady
Alanby in her youth. Her evident liking for the
Dunholms had pleased him. They were people whose
dignity and admirableness were part of general knowledge.
Lord Westholt was plainly a young man of many attractions.
If the two were drawn to each other—and
what more natural—all would be well.
He wondered if it would be Westholt. But his love
quickened a sagacity which needed no stimulus.
He said to himself in time that, though she liked
and admired Westholt, she went no farther. That
others paid court to her he could guess without being
told. He had seen the effect she had produced
when she had been at home, and also an unexpected letter
to his wife from Milly Bowen had revealed many things.
Milly, having noted Mrs. Vanderpoel’s eager
anxiety to hear direct news of Lady Anstruthers, was
not the person to let fall from her hand a useful thread
of connection. She had written quite at length,
managing adroitly to convey all that she had seen,
and all that she had heard. She had been making
a visit within driving distance of Stornham, and had
had the pleasure of meeting both Lady Anstruthers
and Miss Vanderpoel at various parties. She was
so sure that Mrs. Vanderpoel would like to hear how
well Lady Anstruthers was looking, that she ventured
to write. Betty’s effect upon the county
was made quite clear, as also was the interested expectation
of her appearance in town next season. Mr. Vanderpoel,
perhaps, gathered more from the letter than his wife
did. In her mind, relieved happiness and consternation
were mingled.
“Do you think, Reuben, that
Betty will marry that Lord Westholt?” she rather
faltered. “He seems very nice, but I would
rather she married an American. I should feel
as if I had no girls at all, if they both lived in
England.”
“Lady Bowen gives him a good
character,” her husband said, smiling. “But
if anything untoward happens, Annie, you shall have
a house of your own half way between Dunholm Castle
and Stornham Court.”
When he had begun to decide that Lord
Westholt did not seem to be the man Fate was veering
towards, he not unnaturally cast a mental eye over
such other persons as the letters mentioned. At
exactly what period his thought first dwelt a shade
anxiously on Mount Dunstan he could not have told,
but he at length became conscious that it so dwelt.
He had begun by feeling an interest in his story,
and had asked questions about him, because a situation
such as his suggested query to a man of affairs.
Thus, it had been natural that the letters should speak
of him. What she had written had recalled to
him certain rumours of the disgraceful old scandal.
Yes, they had been a bad lot. He arranged to put
a casual-sounding question or so to certain persons
who knew English society well. What he gathered
was not encouraging. The present Lord Mount Dunstan
was considered rather a surly brute, and lived a mysterious
sort of life which might cover many things. It
was bad blood, and people were naturally shy of it.
Of course, the man was a pauper, and his place a barrack
falling to ruin. There had been something rather
shady in his going to America or Australia a few years
ago.
Good looking? Well, so few people
had seen him. The lady, who was speaking, had
heard that he was one of those big, rather lumpy men,
and had an ill-tempered expression. She always
gave a wide berth to a man who looked nasty-tempered.
One or two other persons who had spoken of him had
conveyed to Mr. Vanderpoel about the same amount of
vaguely unpromising information. The episode
of G. Selden had been interesting enough, with its
suggestions of picturesque contrasts and combinations.
Betty’s touch had made the junior salesman attracting.
It was a good type this, of a young fellow who, battling
with the discouragements of a hard life, still did
not lose his amazing good cheer and patience, and
found healthy sleep and honest waking, even in the
hall bedroom. He had consented to Betty’s
request that he would see him, partly because he was
inclined to like what he had heard, and partly for
a reason which Betty did not suspect. By extraordinary
chance G. Selden had seen Mount Dunstan and his surroundings
at close range. Mr. Vanderpoel had liked what
he had gathered of Mount Dunstan’s attitude towards
a personality so singularly exotic to himself.
Crude, uneducated, and slangy, the junior salesman
was not in any degree a fool. To an American father
with a daughter like Betty, the summing-up of a normal,
nice-natured, common young denizen of the United States,
fresh from contact with the effete, might be subtly
instructive, and well worth hearing, if it was unconsciously
expressed. Mr. Vanderpoel thought he knew how,
after he had overcome his visitor’s first awkwardness—if
he chanced to be self-conscious—he could
lead him to talk. What he hoped to do was to
make him forget himself and begin to talk to him as
he had talked to Betty, to ingenuously reveal impressions
and points of view. Young men of his clean, rudimentary
type were very definite about the things they liked
and disliked, and could be trusted to reveal admiration,
or lack of it, without absolute intention or actual
statement. Being elemental and undismayed, they
saw things cleared of the mists of social prejudice
and modification. Yes, he felt he should be glad
to hear of Lord Mount Dunstan and the Mount Dunstan
estate from G. Selden in a happy moment of unawareness.
Why was it that it happened to be
Mount Dunstan he was desirous to hear of? Well,
the absolute reason for that he could not have explained,
either. He had asked himself questions on the
subject more than once. There was no well-founded
reason, perhaps. If Betty’s letters had
spoken of Mount Dunstan and his home, they had also
described Lord Westholt and Dunholm Castle. Of
these two men she had certainly spoken more fully
than of others. Of Mount Dunstan she had had more
to relate through the incident of G. Selden.
He smiled as he realised the importance of the figure
of G. Selden. It was Selden and his broken leg
the two men had ridden over from Mount Dunstan to
visit. But for Selden, Betty might not have met
Mount Dunstan again. He was reason enough for
all she had said. And yet——!
Perhaps, between Betty and himself there existed the
thing which impresses and communicates without words.
Perhaps, because their affection was unusual, they
realised each other’s emotions. The half-defined
anxiety he felt now was not a new thing, but he confessed
to himself that it had been spurred a little by the
letter the last steamer had brought him. It was
not Lord Westholt, it definitely appeared.
He had asked her to be his wife, and she had declined
his proposal.
“I could not have liked
a man any more without being in love with him,”
she wrote. “I like him more than I
can say—so much, indeed, that I feel a
little depressed by my certainty that I do not love
him.”
If she had loved him, the whole matter
would have been simplified. If the other man
had drawn her, the thing would not be simple.
Her father foresaw all the complications—and
he did not want complications for Betty. Yet
emotions were perverse and irresistible things, and
the stronger the creature swayed by them, the more
enormous their power. But, as he sat in his easy
chair and thought over it all, the one feeling predominant
in his mind was that nothing mattered but Betty—nothing
really mattered but Betty.
In the meantime G. Selden was walking
up Fifth Avenue, at once touched and exhilarated by
the stir about him and his sense of home-coming.
It was pretty good to be in little old New York again.
The hurried pace of the life about him stimulated
his young blood. There were no street cars in
Fifth Avenue, but there were carriages, waggons, carts,
motors, all pantingly hurried, and fretting and struggling
when the crowded state of the thoroughfare held them
back. The beautifully dressed women in the carriages
wore no light air of being at leisure. It was
evident that they were going to keep engagements,
to do things, to achieve objects.
“Something doing. Something
doing,” was his cheerful self-congratulatory
thought. He had spent his life in the midst of
it, he liked it, and it welcomed him back.
The appointment he was on his way
to keep thrilled him into an uplifted mood. Once
or twice a half-nervous chuckle broke from him as he
tried to realise that he had been given the chance
which a year ago had seemed so impossible that its
mere incredibleness had made it a natural subject
for jokes. He was going to call on Reuben S. Vanderpoel,
and he was going because Reuben S. had made an appointment
with him.
He wore his London suit of clothes
and he felt that he looked pretty decent. He
could only do his best in the matter of bearing.
He always thought that, so long as a fellow didn’t
get “chesty” and kept his head from swelling,
he was all right. Of course he had never been
in one of these swell Fifth Avenue houses, and he
felt a bit nervous—but Miss Vanderpoel
would have told her father what sort of fellow he was,
and her father was likely to be something like herself.
The house, which had been built since Lady Anstruthers’
marriage, was well “up-town,” and was
big and imposing. When a manservant opened the
front door, the square hall looked very splendid to
Selden. It was full of light, and of rich furniture,
which was like the stuff he had seen in one or two
special shop windows in Fifth Avenue—places
where they sold magnificent gilded or carven coffers
and vases, pieces of tapestry and marvellous embroideries,
antiquities from foreign palaces. Though it was
quite different, it was as swell in its way as the
house at Mount Dunstan, and there were gleams of pictures
on the walls that looked fine, and no mistake.
He was expected. The man led
him across the hall to Mr. Vanderpoel’s room.
After he had announced his name he closed the door
quietly and went away. Mr. Vanderpoel rose from
an armchair to come forward to meet his visitor.
He was tall and straight—Betty had inherited
her slender height from him. His well-balanced
face suggested the relationship between them.
He had a steady mouth, and eyes which looked as if
they saw much and far.
“I am glad to see you, Mr. Selden,”
he said, shaking hands with him. “You have
seen my daughters, and can tell me how they are.
Miss Vanderpoel has written to me of you several times.”
He asked him to sit down, and as he
took his chair Selden felt that he had been right
in telling himself that Reuben S. Vanderpoel would
be somehow like his girl. She was a girl, and
he was an elderly man of business, but they were like
each other. There was the same kind of straight
way of doing things, and the same straight-seeing look
in both of them.
It was queer how natural things seemed,
when they really happened to a fellow. Here he
was sitting in a big leather chair and opposite to
him in its fellow sat Reuben S. Vanderpoel, looking
at him with friendly eyes. And it seemed all
right, too—not as if he had managed to “butt
in,” and would find himself politely fired out
directly. He might have been one of the Four
Hundred making a call. Reuben S. knew how to make
a man feel easy, and no mistake. This G. Selden
observed at once, though he had, in fact, no knowledge
of the practical tact which dealt with him. He
found himself answering questions about Lady Anstruthers
and her sister, which led to the opening up of other
subjects. He did not realise that he began to
express ingenuous opinions and describe things.
His listener’s interest led him on, a question
here, a rather pleased laugh there, were encouraging.
He had enjoyed himself so much during his stay in
England, and had felt his experiences so greatly to
be rejoiced over, that they were easy to talk of at
any time—in fact, it was even a trifle
difficult not to talk of them—but, stimulated
by the look which rested on him, by the deft word
and ready smile, words flowed readily and without
the restraint of self-consciousness.
“When you think that all of
it sort of began with a robin, it’s queer enough,”
he said. “But for that robin I shouldn’t
be here, sir,” with a boyish laugh. “And
he was an English robin—a little fellow
not half the size of the kind that hops about Central
Park.”
“Let me hear about that,” said Mr. Vanderpoel.
It was a good story, and he told it
well, though in his own junior salesman phrasing.
He began with his bicycle ride into the green country,
his spin over the fine roads, his rest under the hedge
during the shower, and then the song of the robin
perched among the fresh wet leafage, his feathers
puffed out, his red young satin-glossed breast pulsating
and swelling. His words were colloquial enough,
but they called up the picture.
“Everything sort of glittering
with the sunshine on the wet drops, and things smelling
good, like they do after rain—leaves, and
grass, and good earth. I tell you it made a fellow
feel as if the whole world was his brother. And
when Mr. Rob. lit on that twig and swelled his red
breast as if he knew the whole thing was his, and began
to let them notes out, calling for his lady friend
to come and go halves with him, I just had to laugh
and speak to him, and that was when Lord Mount Dunstan
heard me and jumped over the hedge. He’d
been listening, too.”
The expression Reuben S. Vanderpoel
wore made it an agreeable thing to talk—to
go on. He evidently cared to hear. So Selden
did his best, and enjoyed himself in doing it.
His style made for realism and brought things clearly
before one. The big-built man in the rough and
shabby shooting clothes, his way when he dropped into
the grass to sit beside the stranger and talk, certain
meanings in his words which conveyed to Vanderpoel
what had not been conveyed to G. Selden. Yes,
the man carried a heaviness about with him and hated
the burden. Selden quite unconsciously brought
him out strongly.
“I don’t know whether
I’m the kind of fellow who is always making
breaks,” he said, with his boy’s laugh
again, “but if I am, I never made a worse one
than when I asked him straight if he was out of a job,
and on the tramp. It showed what a nice fellow
he was that he didn’t get hot about it.
Some fellows would. He only laughed—sort
of short—and said his job had been more
than he could handle, and he was afraid he was down
and out.”
Mr. Vanderpoel was conscious that
so far he was somewhat attracted by this central figure.
G. Selden was also proving satisfactory in the matter
of revealing his excellently simple views of persons
and things.
“The only time he got mad was
when I wouldn’t believe him when he told me
who he was. I was a bit hot in the collar myself.
I’d felt sorry for him, because I thought he
was a chap like myself, and he was up against it.
I know what that is, and I’d wanted to jolly
him along a bit. When he said his name was Mount
Dunstan, and the place belonged to him, I guessed
he thought he was making a joke. So I got on my
wheel and started off, and then he got mad for keeps.
He said he wasn’t such a damned fool as he looked,
and what he’d said was true, and I could go
and be hanged.”
Reuben S. Vanderpoel laughed.
He liked that. It sounded like decent British
hot temper, which he had often found accompanied honest
British decencies.
He liked other things, as the story
proceeded. The picture of the huge house with
the shut windows, made him slightly restless.
The concealed imagination, combined with the financier’s
resentment of dormant interests, disturbed him.
That which had attracted Selden in the Reverend Lewis
Penzance strongly attracted himself. Also, a man
was a good deal to be judged by his friends.
The man who lived alone in the midst of stately desolateness
and held as his chief intimate a high-bred and gentle-minded
scholar of ripe years, gave, in doing this, certain
evidence which did not tell against him. The whole
situation meant something a splendid, vivid-minded
young creature might be moved by—might
be allured by, even despite herself.
There was something fantastic in the
odd linking of incidents—Selden’s
chance view of Betty as she rode by, his next day’s
sudden resolve to turn back and go to Stornham, his
accident, all that followed seemed, if one were fanciful—part
of a scheme prearranged
“When I came to myself,”
G. Selden said, “I felt like that fellow in the
Shakespeare play that they dress up and put to bed
in the palace when he’s drunk. I thought
I’d gone off my head. And then Miss Vanderpoel
came.” He paused a moment and looked down
on the carpet, thinking. “Gee whiz!
It was queer,” he said.
Betty Vanderpoel’s father could
almost hear her voice as the rest was told. He
knew how her laugh had sounded, and what her presence
must have been to the young fellow. His delightful,
human, always satisfying Betty!
Through this odd trick of fortune,
Mount Dunstan had begun to see her. Since, through
the unfair endowment of Nature—that it was
not wholly fair he had often told himself—she
was all the things that desire could yearn for, there
were many chances that when a man saw her he must long
to see her again, and there were the same chances that
such an one as Mount Dunstan might long also, and,
if Fate was against him, long with a bitter strength.
Selden was not aware that he had spoken more fully
of Mount Dunstan and his place than of other things.
That this had been the case, had been because Mr.
Vanderpoel had intended it should be so. He had
subtly drawn out and encouraged a detailed account
of the time spent at Mount Dunstan vicarage.
It was easily encouraged. Selden’s affectionate
admiration for the vicar led him on to enthusiasm.
The quiet house and garden, the old books, the afternoon
tea under the copper beech, and the long talks of
old things, which had been so new to the young New
Yorker, had plainly made a mark upon his life, not
likely to be erased even by the rush of after years.
“The way he knew history was
what got me,” he said. “And the way
you got interested in it, when he talked. It
wasn’t just history, like you learn at
school, and forget, and never see the use of, anyhow.
It was things about men, just like yourself—hustling
for a living in their way, just as we’re hustling
in Broadway. Most of it was fighting, and there
are mounds scattered about that are the remains of
their forts and camps. Roman camps, some of them.
He took me to see them. He had a little old pony
chaise we trundled about in, and he’d draw up
and we’d sit and talk. ‘There were
men here on this very spot,’ he’d say,
’looking out for attack, eating, drinking, cooking
their food, polishing their weapons, laughing, and
shouting—men—Selden, fifty-five
years before Christ was born—and sometimes
the New Testament times seem to us so far away that
they are half a dream.’ That was the kind
of thing he’d say, and I’d sometimes feel
as if I heard the Romans shouting. The country
about there was full of queer places, and both he and
Lord Dunstan knew more about them than I know about
Twenty-third Street.”
“You saw Lord Mount Dunstan
often?” Mr. Vanderpoel suggested.
“Every day, sir. And the
more I saw him, the more I got to like him. He’s
all right. But it’s hard luck to be fixed
as he is—that’s stone-cold truth.
What’s a man to do? The money he ought to
have to keep up his place was spent before he was
born. His father and his eldest brother were
a bum lot, and his grandfather and great-grandfather
were fools. He can’t sell the place, and
he wouldn’t if he could. Mr. Penzance was
so fond of him that sometimes he’d say things.
But,” hastily, “perhaps I’m talking
too much.”
“You happen to be talking about
questions I have been greatly interested in.
I have thought a good deal at times of the position
of the holders of large estates they cannot afford
to keep up. This special instance is a case in
point.”
G. Selden felt himself in luck again.
Reuben S., quite evidently, found his subject worthy
of undivided attention. Selden had not heartily
liked Lord Mount Dunstan, and lived in the atmosphere
surrounding him, looking about him with sharp young
New York eyes, without learning a good deal.
He had seen the practical hardship
of the situation, and laid it bare.
“What Mr. Penzance says is that
he’s like the men that built things in the beginning—fought
for them—fought Romans and Saxons and Normans—perhaps
the whole lot at different times. I used to like
to get Mr. Penzance to tell stories about the Mount
Dunstans. They were splendid. It must be
pretty fine to look back about a thousand years and
know your folks have been something. All the same
its pretty fierce to have to stand alone at the end
of it, not able to help yourself, because some of
your relations were crazy fools. I don’t
wonder he feels mad.”
“Does he?” Mr. Vanderpoel inquired.
“He’s straight,”
said G. Selden sympathetically. “He’s
all right. But only money can help him, and he’s
got none, so he has to stand and stare at things falling
to pieces. And—well, I tell you, Mr.
Vanderpoel, he loves that place—he’s
crazy about it. And he’s proud—I
don’t mean he’s got the swell-head, because
he hasn’t—but he’s just proud.
Now, for instance, he hasn’t any use for men
like himself that marry just for money. He’s
seen a lot of it, and it’s made him sick.
He’s not that kind.”
He had been asked and had answered
a good many questions before he went away, but each
had dropped into the talk so incidentally that he had
not recognised them as queries. He did not know
that Lord Mount Dunstan stood out a clearly defined
figure in Mr. Vanderpoel’s mind, a figure to
be reflected upon, and one not without its attraction.
“Miss Vanderpoel tells me,”
Mr. Vanderpoel said, when the interview was drawing
to a close, “that you are an agent for the Delkoff
typewriter.”
G. Selden flushed slightly.
“Yes, sir,” he answered, “but I
didn’t——”
“I hear that three machines
are in use on the Stornham estate, and that they have
proved satisfactory.”
“It’s a good machine,” said G. Selden,
his flush a little deeper.
Mr. Vanderpoel smiled.
“You are a business-like young
man,” he said, “and I have no doubt you
have a catalogue in your pocket.”
G. Selden was a business-like young
man. He gave Mr. Vanderpoel one serious look,
and the catalogue was drawn forth.
“It wouldn’t be business,
sir, for me to be caught out without it,” he
said. “I shouldn’t leave it behind
if I went to a funeral. A man’s got to
run no risks.”
“I should like to look at it.”
The thing had happened. It was
not a dream. Reuben S. Vanderpoel, clothed and
in his right mind, had, without pressure being exerted
upon him, expressed his desire to look at the catalogue—to
examine it—to have it explained to him
at length.
He listened attentively, while G.
Selden did his best. He asked a question now
and then, or made a comment. His manner was that
of a thoroughly composed man of business, but he was
remembering what Betty had told him of the “ten
per,” and a number of other things. He saw
the flush come and go under the still boyish skin,
he observed that G. Selden’s hand was not wholly
steady, though he was making an effort not to seem
excited. But he was excited. This actually
meant—this thing so unimportant to multi-millionaires—that
he was having his “chance,” and his young
fortunes were, perhaps, in the balance.
“Yes,” said Reuben S.,
when he had finished, “it seems a good, up-to-date
machine.”
“It’s the best on the
market,” said G. Selden, “out and out,
the best.”
“I understand you are only junior salesman?”
“Yes, sir. Ten per and
five dollars on every machine I sell. If I had
a territory, I should get ten.”
“Then,” reflectively,
“the first thing is to get a territory.”
“Perhaps I shall get one in
time, if I keep at it,” said Selden courageously.
“It is a good machine.
I like it,” said Mr. Vanderpoel. “I
can see a good many places where it could be used.
Perhaps, if you make it known at your office that
when you are given a good territory, I shall give
preference to the Delkoff over other typewriting machines,
it might—eh?”
A light broke out upon G. Selden’s
countenance—a light radiant and magnificent.
He caught his breath. A desire to shout—to
yell—to whoop, as when in the society of
“the boys,” was barely conquered in time.
“Mr. Vanderpoel,” he said,
standing up, “I—Mr. Vanderpoel—sir—I
feel as if I was having a pipe dream. I’m
not, am I?”
“No,” answered Mr. Vanderpoel,
“you are not. I like you, Mr. Selden.
My daughter liked you. I do not mean to lose
sight of you. We will begin, however, with the
territory, and the Delkoff. I don’t think
there will be any difficulty about it.”
. . . . .
Ten minutes later G. Selden was walking
down Fifth Avenue, wondering if there was any chance
of his being arrested by a policeman upon the charge
that he was reeling, instead of walking steadily.
He hoped he should get back to the hall bedroom safely.
Nick Baumgarten and Jem Bolter both “roomed”
in the house with him. He could tell them both.
It was Jem who had made up the yarn about one of them
saving Reuben S. Vanderpoel’s life. There
had been no life-saving, but the thing had come true.
“But, if it hadn’t been
for Lord Mount Dunstan,” he said, thinking it
over excitedly, “I should never have seen Miss
Vanderpoel, and, if it hadn’t been for Miss
Vanderpoel, I should never have got next to Reuben
S. in my life. Both sides of the Atlantic Ocean
got busy to do a good turn to Little Willie.
Hully gee!”
In his study Mr. Vanderpoel was rereading
Betty’s letters. He felt that he had gained
a certain knowledge of Lord Mount Dunstan.