The accountant was preparing to take
his leave. There had been an informal little
meeting held in the dingy private office of Messrs.
Samuel Weatherley & Company, at which he had presided.
“I really feel,” he said,
as he drew on his gloves thoughtfully, “that
I must repeat my congratulations to you, Mr. Jarvis,
and to your young coadjutor here, Mr. Chetwode.
The results which I have had the pleasure of laying
before you are quite excellent. In fact, so far
as I can remember, the firm has scarcely ever had a
more prosperous half year.”
“Very kind of you, I am sure,”
Mr. Jarvis declared, “and most satisfactory
to us. We’ve worked hard, of course, but
that doesn’t amount to much, after all.
When you’ve been in a business, as I have in
this one, for something like thirty-five years, the
interest you take in it is such that you can’t
help working. This I must say, though,”
he went on, placing his hand on Arnold’s shoulder,
“Mr. Chetwode is almost a newcomer here, and
yet his energy has sometimes astounded me. Most
remarkable and most creditable! For the last two
months, Mr. Neville, he has scarcely slept in London
for a single night. He has been to Bristol and
Cardiff and Liverpool all over the country,
in fact in the interests of the firm, with
results that have sometimes astonished us.”
The accountant nodded approvingly.
He took up the balance sheet which they had been perusing
and placed it in its envelope.
“I shall now,” he said,
“call upon Mr. Weatherley, and I am sure he
will be most gratified. I understand that our
next meeting is to be down here.”
Mr. Jarvis beamed.
“Although I must say,”
he admitted, “that the responsibility has been
a great pleasure, still, we shall be heartily glad
to see Mr. Weatherley back again.”
“I am sure of it,” the
accountant assented. “I understand that
he has made a complete recovery.”
“Absolutely his own self again,
sir,” Mr. Jarvis declared, “and looking
better than ever.”
“Odd thing, though, that loss
of memory,” the accountant remarked. “I
was talking to the doctor about it only the other day.
He seems to have wandered away into some sort of hiding,
under the impression that he had committed a crime,
and now that he is getting better he has absolutely
forgotten all about it. He just thinks that he
has had an ordinary illness and has had to stay away
from business for a time.”
“Queer thing altogether, sir,”
Mr. Jarvis admitted; “a queer business, sir.
However, it’s over and done with, and the less
said about it, the better. We are both very much
obliged to you, Mr. Neville, for your kind offices,
and I am only thankful that the results have been
so satisfactory.”
Mr. Jarvis conducted his visitor to
the door and returned to Arnold with beaming face.
In anticipation of the accountant’s visit he
was wearing a frock-coat, which was already a shade
too small for him. He carefully divested himself
of this garment, put on his linen office-coat and
turned towards his companion.
“Chetwode,” he said, “I
have a proposition to make. The firm shall stand
us a little dinner this evening, which we will take
together. We will go up to the west-end.
You shall choose the proper place and order everything just
the best you can think of. The firm shall pay.
Mr. Weatherley would be quite agreeable, I am sure.”
Arnold forced himself to accept the
suggestion with some appearance of pleasure.
“Delighted!” he agreed.
“We’ll have to finish up the letters and
go through this mail first.”
“Just so,” Mr. Jarvis
replied. “After that, we’ll shut up
shop. This is quite a red-letter day, Chetwode.
I knew that we’d held our own, but I must confess
that I found those figures most exhilarating.
Our little bonus, too, will be worth having.”
Later on, they found their way to
a restaurant in the Strand, where Mr. Jarvis ate and
drank perhaps better than he had ever done in his
life. The evening to him was one of unalloyed
pleasure, and he was genuinely disappointed when Arnold
pleaded an engagement as an excuse for not finishing
up at a music-hall. About nine o’clock the
two men parted, Mr. Jarvis to spend the rest of the
evening alone, with a big cigar in his mouth and an
unaccustomed feeling of levity in his head. Arnold,
after a moment’s hesitation, walked slowly back
to his empty rooms.
So this was success! Without
a friend in the world, without training or any practical
knowledge of life, his feet were firmly planted upon
the ladder. He had stifled all sorts of nameless
ambitions. He had set his teeth and done what
appeared to be his duty. Now it seemed to him
that he had come to a pause. He drew up his sofa
to the window of his sitting-room and looked downward.
Somehow or other, the depression against which he had
struggled all the evening seemed only intensified
by what he saw below. An early autumn had stripped
bare the leaves from the scanty trees; the sky was
gray and starless. Even the lights along the river
front seemed to burn with a dull and uninspiring fire.
He looked around him and his depression became an
almost overmastering sensation. He hated the
sight of his empty room, the phantom thoughts that
would light upon his shoulder, the sofa upon which
he was sitting alone, the memory of the things which
he might have said to Ruth in the days when the opportunity
was his. For a moment he even thought of Mr.
Jarvis at the music-hall alone, the welcoming lights,
the pleasant warmth, the music, the cheerful throngs
of people. Better anything, he told himself,
than this brooding! A sudden almost reckless
impulse called him back again into the streets, only
to pass away the same moment with the vision of Ruth’s
pale face by his side, her eyes alternately gazing
down the lighted way and seeking his, her fingers
grasping his hand. His head sank forward into
his hands. He was alone!
He sat up suddenly with a start.
The inner door of the room had opened and was softly
closed again. A familiar voice addressed him.
“I find your habits, my young
friend, somewhat erratic,” Sabatini remarked.
“Your supply of common necessaries, too, seems
limited. I have been driven to explore, quite
fruitlessly, the whole of your little domain, in the
vain search for a match.”
He pointed to the unlit cigarette
between his fingers. Arnold, who was a little
dazed, rose and produced a box of matches.
“But I don’t understand
how it is that you are here!” he exclaimed.
“I thought that you were at Brighton. And
how did you get in?”
Sabatini seated himself comfortably
at the end of the sofa and placed a cushion behind
his head.
“We came up from Brighton this
afternoon,” he explained, puffing contentedly
at his cigarette. “I am now pronounced convalescent.
Ruth, too, could throw away her stick any moment she
wanted to, only I fancy that she thinks its use becoming.”
“But,” Arnold persisted,
“I don’t understand how you got in!
You know that I am glad to see you.”
“I got in with Ruth’s
key, of course,” Sabatini replied.
Arnold leaned against the back of the sofa.
“I had forgotten,” he
said. “Of course, if I had known that you
had been coming, I would have been here. The
accountant brought in the result of our last six months’
work this afternoon, and Mr. Jarvis insisted upon
a little celebration. We had dinner together.”
Sabatini nodded.
“So you have been successful,”
he remarked, thoughtfully. “You kept your
feet along the narrow way and you have done well.
I am glad. Sit down here by my side.”
Arnold sat down on the end of the
sofa. The curtain was pulled up as far as it
would go. Below them, the curving arc of lights
stretched away to the dim distance. Sabatini
followed them with his eyes, for a moment, as though
he, too, found something inspiring in that lighted
way. Then he turned to Arnold with a queer little
twinkle in his eyes.
“By the bye,” he asked,
“you haven’t heard Fenella hasn’t
told you of the last turn in fortune’s wheel?”
“I have seen little of Mrs.
Weatherley lately,” Arnold murmured.
Sabatini leaned back in his place.
His hollow eyes were lit now with laughter, his mouth
twitched. The marks of his illness seemed almost
to pass.
“It is delicious,” he
declared. “Listen. You remember that
one day when you dined with me I told you of my uncle
the Cardinal?”
“The uncle from whom you borrowed
money?” Arnold remarked, dryly.
“Precisely,” Sabatini
agreed; “I borrowed money from him! It was
only a trifle but I chose my own methods. Heavens,
but it is droll!”
Sabatini began to laugh softly.
His whole face now was alight with enjoyment.
“Last month,” he continued,
“His Eminence died. He had fourteen nephews,
three brothers, two sisters, and no end of nieces.
To whom do you think he has left his entire fortune,
my dear Arnold three hundred thousand pounds
they say it is?”
“To you!” Arnold gasped.
“To me, indeed,” Sabatini
assented. “I did not even go to the funeral.
I read of his death in the newspapers and I shrugged
my shoulders. It was nothing to me. Yet
those fourteen nephews were left not so much as would
buy their mourning clothes. This is the chief
sentence in the will, ’To the only
one of my relatives whose method of seeking my favors
has really appealed to me, I leave the whole of my
fortune, without partition or reserve.’ And
then my name. I was that one. Almost,”
Sabatini concluded, with a little sigh, “I am
sorry that he is dead. I should have liked once
more to have shaken him by the hand.”
Arnold was speechless. The realization
of what it all meant was beginning to dawn upon him.
Sabatini was wealthy Ruth was a great heiress.
Her treasure ship had come in, indeed and
his was passing him by.
“I am glad,” he said slowly,
“glad for your sake and for Ruth’s.”
Sabatini nodded.
“My shadowy means,” he
remarked, “have kept me in comfort. Perhaps,
even, they have been a trifle more than I have let
people imagine. Still, this is all very different.
Ruth and I are going to wander about the Riviera for
a time. Afterwards, we are going to sail to Sabatini
and patch up my old castle. I have some tenants
there who certainly deserve a little consideration
from me old friends, who would sooner live
without a roof over their heads than seek a new master.
I shall grow vines again, my young friend, and make
cheeses. You shall come from the illustrious
firm of Samuel Weatherley & Company and be my most
favored customer. But let me give you just a
word of advice while I am in the humor. Buy our
cheeses, if you will, but never touch our wine.
Leave that for the peasants who make it. Somehow
or other, they thrive, they even become,
at times, merry upon it, but the Lord have
mercy upon those others, not born upon the island
of Sabatini, who raise it to their lips!”
“I will leave the wine alone,”
Arnold promised. “But shan’t I be
able to say good-bye to Ruth?”
Sabatini leaned towards him.
His expression was once more grave, yet there was
the dawn of a smile upon his sensitive lips.
“You can say to her what you
will,” he murmured, “for she is here.
She had a fancy to look at her old room. I was
there with her when you arrived. I have a fancy
now to give an order to my chauffeur. A bientôt!”
Arnold rose slowly to his feet.
His heart was beginning to beat fiercely. He
was looking across the room with straining eyes.
It was not possible that clothes and health could
make so great a difference as this! She was standing
upon the threshold of her room. She was coming
now slowly towards him, leaning ever so slightly upon
her stick. Her cheeks were touched with pink,
her eyes were lit with so soft and wonderful a brilliance
that they shone like stars. He forgot her fashionable
hat, the quiet elegance of her clothes. It was
Ruth who came towards him Ruth, radiantly
beautiful, transformed yet Ruth! He
held out his arms and with a little sob she glided
into them.
Side by side they took their accustomed
places upon the horse-hair sofa. Her head sank
upon his shoulder, her hands clasped his, her eyes
were wet with tears. A siren blew from the river.
A little tug, with two barges lashed alongside, was
coming valiantly along. The dark coil of water
seemed suddenly agleam with quivering lights.
“Our ships,” she whispered, “together,
dear!”