“I wish you a happy New Year, sir.”
It was the servant, green of livery,
the yellow waistcoat slashed with black, bearing the
coffee and fruit.
“Put it there, please,”
Roland answered. And then, in recognition of the
salutation, he added, “Thanks: the same
to you.”
“H’m,” he mused,
as the man withdrew, “I ought to have tipped
him, I suppose.”
He leaned from the bed, poured some
milk into a cup, and for a second nibbled at a slice
of iced orange. Through the transom came a faint
odor of home-made bread, and with it the rustle of
a gown and a girl’s clear laugh. The room
itself was small. It was furnished in a fashion
which was unsuggestive of an hotel, and yet did not
resemble that of a private house. The curtain
had been already drawn. Beyond was a lake, very
blue in the sunlight, bulwarked by undulant hills.
Below, on the road, a dogcart fronted by a groom was
awaiting somebody’s pleasure.
“It is late,” he reflected,
and raised a napkin to his lips. As he did so
he noticed a package of letters which the napkin must
have concealed. He took up the topmost and eyed
it. It had been addressed to the Athenaeum Club,
Fifth Avenue; but the original direction was erased,
and Tuxedo Park inserted in its stead. On the
upper left-hand corner the impress of a firm of tailors
shone in blue. Opposite was the engraving of
a young woman supported by 2-1/2_d._ He put it down
again and glanced at the others. The superscriptions
were characterless enough; each bore a foreign stamp,
and to one as practised as was he, each bore the token
of the dun.
“If they keep on bothering me
like this,” he muttered, “I shall certainly
place the matter in the hands of my attorney.”
And thereat, with the air of a man who had said something
insultingly original, he laughed aloud, swallowed
some coffee, and dashed his head in the pillow.
In and out of the corners of his mouth a smile still
played; but presently his fancy must have veered,
for the muscles of his lips compressed, and as he
lay there, the arms clasped behind the head, the pink
silk of his sleeves framing and tinting his face, and
in the eyes the expression of one prepared to meet
Fate and outwit it, a possible observer who could
have chanced that way would have sat himself down to
study and risen up perplexed.
Anyone who was at Columbia ten years
ago will remember Roland Mistrial, Roland
Mistrial 3d, if you please, and will recall
the wave of bewilderment which swept the campus when
that young gentleman, on the eve of graduation, popularity
on one side and honors on the other, suddenly, without
so much as a p. p. c., left everything where it was
and betook himself to other shores. The flight
was indeed erratic, and numerous were the rumors which
it excited; but Commencement was at hand, other issues
were to be considered, bewilderment subsided as bewilderment
ever does, the college dispersed, and when it assembled
again the Mistrial mystery, though unelucidated, was
practically forgot.
In the neighborhood of Washington
Square, however, on the northwest corner of Tenth
Street and Fifth Avenue to be exact, there were others
whose memories were more retentive. Among them
was Roland’s grandfather, himself a graduate,
founder of the Mistrial fellowship, and judge of the
appellate court. And there was Roland’s
father, a graduate too, a gentleman widely respected,
all the more so perhaps because he had run for the
governorship and lost it. And again there was
Roland’s aunt, a maiden lady of whom it is recorded
that each day of her life she got down on her knees
and thanked God he had made her a Mistrial. In
addition to these, there were, scattered along the
Hudson, certain maternal relatives the
Algaroths, the Baxters, and the Swifts; Bishop Algaroth
in particular, who possessed such indomitable vigor
that when at the good old age of threescore and ten
he decided to depart this life, the impression prevailed
that he had died very young for him. None of
these people readily forgot. They were a proud
family and an influential one influential
not merely in the social sense, but influential in
political, legal, in church and university circles
as well; a fact which may have had weight with the
Faculty when it was called upon to deal with Roland
Mistrial 3d. But be that as it may, the cause
of the young man’s disappearance was never officially
given. Among the rumors which it created was
one to the effect that his health was affected; in
another his mind was implicated; and in a third it
was his heart. Yet as not one of these rumors
had enough evidential value behind it to concoct an
anonymous letter on, they were suffered to go their
way undetained, very much as Roland had already gone
his own.
That way led him straight to the Golden
Gate and out of it to Japan. Before he reached
Yeddo his grandfather left the planet and a round sum
of money behind. Of that round sum the grandson
came in for a portion. It was not fabulous in
dimensions, but in the East money goes far. In
this case it might have gone on indefinitely had not
the beneficiary seen fit to abandon the languors of
the Orient for the breezier atmosphere of the west.
The Riviera has charms of its own. So, too, have
Paris and Vienna. Roland enjoyed them to the best
of his ability. He even found London attractive,
and became acclimated in Pall Mall. In the latter
region he learned one day that his share of the round
sum had departed and his father as well. The
conjunction of these incidents was of such a character
that he at once took ship for New York.
It was not that he was impatient to
revisit the misgoverned city which he had deserted
ten years before. He had left it willingly enough,
and he had seldom regretted it since. The pins
and needles on which he sat were those of another
make. He was uninformed of the disposition of
his father’s property, and he felt that, were
not every penny of it bequeathed to him, he would
be in a tight box indeed.
He was at that time just entering
his thirtieth year that age in which a
man who has led a certain life begins to be particular
about the quality of his red pepper, and anxious too
that the supply of it shall not tarry. Though
meagre of late, the supply had been sufficient.
But at present the palate was a trifle impaired.
Where a ten-pound note had sufficed for its excitement,
a hundred now were none too strong. Roland Mistrial 3d
no longer wanted money, and he wanted plenty
of it. He had exact ideas as to its usefulness,
and none at all regarding its manufacture. He
held, as many have done and will continue to do, that
the royal road to it leads through a testament; and
it was in view of the opening vistas which that road
displayed that he set sail for New York.
And now, six weeks later, on this
fair noonday of a newer year, as he lay outstretched
in bed, you would have likened him to one well qualified
to keep a mother awake and bring her daughter dreams.
Our canons of beauty may be relative, but, such as
they are, his features accorded with them disquietingly
even; for they conveyed the irritating charm of things
we have hoped for, striven for, failed to get, and
then renounced with thanksgiving. They made you
anxious about their possessor, and fearful too lest
the one dearly-beloved might chance to see them, and
so be subjugated by their spell. They were features
that represented good stock, good breeding, good taste,
good looks every form of goodness, in fact,
save, it may be, the proper one. But the possible
lack of that particular characteristic was a matter
over which hesitation well might be. We have
all of us a trick of flattering ourselves with the
fancy that, however obtuse our neighbor is, we at
least are gifted with the insight of a detective a
faculty so rare and enviable that the blunders we
make must be committed with a view to its concealment;
yet, despite presumable shrewdness, now and then a
face will appear that eludes cataloguing, and leaves
the observer perplexed. Roland Mistrial’s
was one of these.
And now, as the pink silk of his shirt-sleeves
tinted it, the expression altered, and behind his
contracted brows hurried processions of shifting scenes.
There was that initial catastrophe which awaited him
almost on the wharf the discovery that
his father had left him nothing, and that for no other
reason in the world than because he had nothing whatever
to leave nothing, in fact, save the hereditary
decoration of and right of enrolment in the Society
of the Cincinnati, the which, handed down since Washingtonian
days from one Mistrial to another, he held, as his
forefathers had before him, in trust for the Mistrials
to be.
No, he could not have disposed of
that, even had he so desired; but everything else,
the house on Tenth Street, built originally
for a country-seat, in times when the Astor House
was considered rather far uptown, bonds,
scrip, and stocks, disappeared as utterly as had they
never been; for Roland’s father, stricken with
that form of dementia which, to the complete discouragement
of virtue, battens on men that have led the chastest
lives, had, at that age in which the typical rake
is forced to haul his standard down, surrendered himself
to senile debauchery, and in the lap of a female of
uncertain attractions of whose mere existence
no one had been previously aware placed
title-deeds and certificates of stock. In a case
such as this the appeal of the rightful heir is listened
to with such patience that judge and jury too have
been known to pass away and leave the tale unended.
And Roland, when the earliest dismay had in a measure
subsided, saw himself closeted with lawyers who offered
modicums of hope in return for proportionate fees.
Then came a run up the Hudson, the welcomeless greeting
which waited him there, and the enervating imbecility
of his great aunt, whose fingers, mummified by gout,
were tenacious enough on the strings of her purse.
That episode flitted by, leaving on memory’s
camera only the degrading tableau of coin burrowed
for and unobtained. And through it all filtered
torturesome uncertainties, the knowledge of his entire
inability to make money, the sense of strength misspent,
the perplexities that declined to take themselves
away, forebodings of the morrow, nay of the day even
as well, the unbanishable dread of want.
But that for the moment had gone.
He turned on his elbow and glanced over at a card-case
which lay among the silver-backed brushes beyond,
and at once the shock he had resummoned fled.
Ah, yes! it had gone indeed, but at the moment it
had been appalling enough. The morrow at least
was secure; and as he pondered over its possibilities
they faded before certain episodes of the previous
day that chance encounter with Alphabet
Jones, who had insisted he should pack a valise and
go down with Trement Yarde and himself to Tuxedo;
and at once the incidents succeeding the arrival paraded
through his thoughts. There had been the late
dinner to begin with; then the dance; the girl to whom
some one had presented him, and with whom he had sat
it out; the escape of the year, the health that was
drunk to the new one, and afterwards the green baize
in the card-room; the bank which Trement Yarde had
held, and finally the successful operation that followed,
and which consisted in cutting that cherub’s
throat to the tune of three thousand dollars.
It was all there now in the card-case; and though,
as sums of money go, it was hardly quotable, yet in
the abstract, forethought and economy aiding, it represented
several months of horizons solid and real. The
day was secure; as for the future, who knew what it
might contain? A grave perhaps, and in it his
aunt.