Mr. Samuel Weatherley, sole proprietor
of the firm of Samuel Weatherley & Co., wholesale
provision merchants, of Tooley Street, London, paused
suddenly on his way from his private office to the
street. There was something which until that second
had entirely slipped his memory. It was not his
umbrella, for that, neatly tucked up, was already
under his arm. Nor was it the Times, for
that, together with the supplement, was sticking out
of his overcoat pocket, the shape of which it completely
ruined. As a matter of fact, it was more important
than either of these it was a commission
from his wife.
Very slowly he retraced his steps
until he stood outside the glass-enclosed cage where
twelve of the hardest-worked clerks in London bent
over their ledgers and invoicing. With his forefinger a
fat, pudgy forefinger he tapped upon a pane
of glass, and an anxious errand boy bolted through
the doorway.
“Tell Mr. Jarvis to step this
way,” his employer ordered.
Mr. Jarvis heard the message and came
hurrying out. He was an undersized man, with
somewhat prominent eyes concealed by gold-rimmed spectacles.
He was possessed of extraordinary talents with regard
to the details of the business, and was withal an expert
and careful financier. Hence his hold upon the
confidence of his employer.
The latter addressed him with a curious
and altogether unusual hesitation in his manner.
“Mr. Jarvis,” he began,
“there is a matter a little matter upon
which I er wish to consult you.”
“Those American invoices ”
“Nothing to do with business
at all,” Mr. Weatherley interrupted, ruthlessly.
“A little private matter.”
“Indeed, sir?” Mr. Jarvis interjected.
“The fact is,” Mr. Weatherley
blundered on, with considerable awkwardness, for he
hated the whole affair, “my wife Mrs.
Weatherley, you know is giving a party this
evening having some friends to dinner first,
and then some other people coming to bridge.
We are a man short for dinner. Mrs. Weatherley
told me to get some one at the club telephoned
down here just an hour ago.”
Mr. Weatherley paused. Mr. Jarvis
did his best to grasp the situation, but failed.
All that he could do was to maintain his attitude
of intelligent interest.
“I don’t know any one
at the club,” continued his employer, irritably.
“I feel like a fish out of water there, and that’s
the truth, Mr. Jarvis. It’s a good club.
I got elected there well, never mind how but
it’s one thing to be a member of a club, and
quite another to get to know the men there. You
understand that, Mr. Jarvis.”
Mr. Jarvis, however, did not understand
it. He could conceive of no spot in the city
of London, or its immediate neighborhood, where Mr.
Samuel Weatherley, head of the firm of Messrs. Weatherley
& Co., could find himself among his social superiors.
He knew the capital of the firm, and its status.
He was ignorant of the other things which counted as
ignorant as his master had been until he had paid
a business visit a few years ago, in search of certain
edibles, to an island in the Mediterranean Sea.
He was to have returned in triumph to Tooley Street
and launched upon the provision-buying world a new
cheese of astounding quality and infinitesimal price instead
of which he brought home a wife.
“Anything I can do, sir,”
began Mr. Jarvis, a little vaguely,
“My idea was,” Mr. Weatherley
proceeded, “that one of my own young men there
are twelve of them in there, aren’t there?”
he added, jerking his head in the direction of the
office “might do. What do you
think?”
Mr. Jarvis nodded thoughtfully.
“It would be a great honor,
sir,” he declared, “a very great honor
indeed.”
Mr. Weatherley did not contradict
him. As a matter of fact, he was of the same
opinion.
“The question is which,” he continued.
Mr. Jarvis began to understand why
he had been consulted. His fingers involuntarily
straightened his tie.
“If I could be of any use personally, sir, ”
His employer shook his head.
“My wife would expect me to
bring a single man, Jarvis,” he said, “and
besides, I don’t suppose you play bridge.”
“Cards are not much in my line,”
Mr. Jarvis admitted, “not having, as a rule,
the time to spare, but I can take a hand at loo, if
desired.”
“My wife’s friends all
play bridge,” Mr. Weatherley declared, a little
brusquely. “There’s only one young
man in the office, Jarvis, who, from his appearance,
struck me as being likely.”
“Mr. Stephen Tidey, of course,
sir,” the confidential clerk agreed. “Most
suitable thing, sir, and I’m sure his father
would accept it as a high compliment. Mr. Stephen
Tidey Senior, sir, as you may be aware, is next on
the list for the shrievalty. Shall I call him
out, sir?”
Mr. Weatherley looked through the
glass and met the glance, instantly lowered, of the
young man in question. Mr. Stephen Tidey Junior
was short and stout, reflecting in his physique his
aldermanic father. His complexion was poor, however,
his neck thick, and he wore a necktie of red silk
drawn through a diamond ring. There was nothing
in his appearance which grated particularly upon Mr.
Weatherley’s sense of seemliness. Nevertheless,
he shook his head. He was beginning to recognize
his wife’s point of view, even though it still
seemed strange to him.
“I wasn’t thinking of
young Tidey at all,” he declared, bluntly.
“I was thinking of that young fellow at the
end of the desk there chap with a queer
name Chetwode, I think you call him.”
Mr. Jarvis, human automaton though
he was, permitted himself an exclamation of surprise.
“Young Chetwode! Surely you’re not
in earnest, sir!”
“Why not?” Mr. Weatherley
demanded. “There’s nothing against
him, is there?”
“Nothing against him, precisely,”
Mr. Jarvis confessed, “but he’s at the
lowest desk in the office, bar Smithers. His salary
is only twenty-eight shillings a week, and we know
nothing whatever about him except that his references
were satisfactory. It isn’t to be supposed
that he would feel at home in your house, sir.
Now, with Mr. Tidey, sir, it’s quite different.
They live in a very beautiful house at Sydenham now quite
a small palace, in its way, I’ve been told.”
Mr. Weatherley was getting a little impatient.
“Send Chetwode out for a moment,
anyway,” he directed. “I’ll
speak to him here.”
Mr. Jarvis obeyed in silence.
He entered the office and touched the young man in
question upon the shoulder.
“Mr. Weatherley wishes to speak
to you outside, Chetwode,” he announced.
“Make haste, please.”
Arnold Chetwode put down his pen and
rose to his feet. There was nothing flurried
about his manner, nothing whatever to indicate on
his part any knowledge of the fact that this was the
voice of Fate beating upon his ear. He did not
even show the ordinary interest of a youthful employee
summoned for the first time to an audience with his
chief. Standing for a moment by the side of the
senior clerk in the middle of the office, tall and
straight, with deep brown hair, excellent features,
and the remnants of a healthy tan still visible on
his forehead and neck, he looked curiously out of place
in this unwholesome, gaslit building with its atmosphere
of cheese and bacon. He would have been noticeably
good-looking upon the cricket field or in any gathering
of people belonging to the other side of life.
Here he seemed almost a curiously incongruous figure.
He passed through the glass-paned door and stood respectfully
before his employer. Mr. Weatherley it
was absurd, but he scarcely knew how to make his suggestion fidgetted
for a moment and coughed. The young man, who,
among many other quite unusual qualities, was possessed
of a considerable amount of tact, looked down upon
his employer with a little well-assumed anxiety.
As a matter of fact, he really was exceedingly anxious
not to lose his place.
“I understood from Mr. Jarvis
that you wished to speak to me, sir,” he remarked.
“I hope that my work has given satisfaction?
I know that I am quite inexperienced but I don’t
think that I have made any mistakes.”
Mr. Weatherley was, to tell the truth,
thankful for the opening.
“I have had no complaints, Chetwode,”
he admitted, struggling for that note of condescension
which he felt to be in order. “No complaints
at all. I was wondering if you you
happened to play bridge?”
Once more this extraordinary young
man showed himself to be possessed of gifts quite
unusual at his age. Not by the flicker of an
eyelid did he show the least surprise or amusement.
“Bridge, sir,” he repeated.
“Yes, I have played at I have played
occasionally.”
“My wife is giving a small dinner-party
this evening,” Mr. Weatherley continued, moving
his umbrella from one hand to the other and speaking
very rapidly, “bridge afterwards. We happen
to be a man short. I was to have called at the
club to try and pick up some one find I
sha’n’t have time meeting at
the Cannon Street Hotel to attend. Would you er fill
the vacant place? Save me the trouble of looking
about.”
It was out at last and Mr. Weatherley
felt unaccountably relieved. He felt at the same
time a certain measure of annoyance with his junior
clerk for his unaltered composure.
“I shall be very much pleased,
sir,” he answered, without hesitation.
“About eight, I suppose?”
Again Mr. Weatherley’s relief
was tempered with a certain amount of annoyance.
This young man’s savoir faire was out
of place. He should have imagined a sort of high-tea
supper at seven o’clock, and been gently corrected
by his courteous employer. As it was, Mr. Weatherley
felt dimly confident that this junior clerk of his
was more accustomed to eight o’clock dinners
than he was himself.
“A quarter to, to-night,”
he replied. “People coming for bridge afterwards,
you see. I live up Hampstead way Pelham
Lodge quite close to the tube station.”
Mr. Weatherley omitted the directions
he had been about to give respecting toilet, and turned
away. His youthful employee’s manners,
to the last, were all that could be desired.
“I am much obliged to you, sir,”
he said. “I will take care to be punctual.”
Mr. Weatherley grunted and walked
out into the street. Here his behavior was a
little singular. He walked up toward London Bridge,
exchanging greetings with a good many acquaintances
on the way. Opposite the London & Westminster
Bank he paused for a moment and looked searchingly
around. Satisfied that he was unobserved, he
stepped quickly into a very handsome motor car which
was drawn up close to the curb, and with a sigh of
relief sat as far back among the cushions as possible
and held the tube to his mouth.
“Get along home,” he ordered, tersely.
Arnold Chetwode, after his interview
with his employer, returned unruffled to his place.
Mr. Jarvis bustled in after him. He was annoyed,
but he wished to conceal the fact. Besides, he
still had an arrow in his quiver. He came and
stood over his subordinate.
“Congratulate you, I’m
sure, Chetwode,” he said smoothly. “First
time any one except myself has been to the house since
Mr. Weatherley’s marriage.”
Mr. Jarvis had taken the letters there
one morning when his employer had been unwell, and
had waited in the hall. He did not, however,
mention that fact.
“Indeed?” Chetwode murmured,
with his eye upon his work.
“You understand, of course,”
Mr. Jarvis continued, “that it will be an evening-dress
affair. Mrs. Weatherley has the name of being
very particular.”
He glanced covertly at the young man,
who was already immersed in his work.
“Evening dress,” Chetwode
remarked, with a becoming show of interest. “Well,
I dare say I can manage something. If I wear a
black coat and a white silk bow, and stick a red handkerchief
in underneath my waistcoat, I dare say I shall be
all right. Mr. Weatherley can’t expect
much from me in that way, can he?”
The senior clerk was secretly delighted.
It was not for him to acquaint this young countryman
with the necessities of London life. He turned
away and took up a bundle of letters.
“Can’t say, I’m
sure, what the governor expects,” he replied,
falsely. “You’ll have to do the best
you can, I suppose. Better get on with those
invoices now.”
Once more the office resounded to
the hum of its varied labors. Mr. Jarvis, dictating
letters to a typist, smiled occasionally as he pictured
the arrival of this over-favored young man in the
drawing-room of Mrs. Weatherley, attired in the nondescript
fashion which his words had suggested. One or
two of the clerks ventured upon a chaffing remark.
To all appearance, the person most absorbed in his
work was the young man who had been singled out for
such especial favor.