It was clear that the sleigh from
Weymore had not come; and the shivering young traveller
from Boston, who had counted on jumping into it when
he left the train at Northridge Junction, found himself
standing alone on the open platform, exposed to the
full assault of night-fall and winter.
The blast that swept him came off
New Hampshire snow-fields and ice-hung forests.
It seemed to have traversed interminable leagues of
frozen silence, filling them with the same cold roar
and sharpening its edge against the same bitter black-and-white
landscape. Dark, searching and sword-like, it
alternately muffled and harried its victim, like a
bull-fighter now whirling his cloak and now planting
his darts. This analogy brought home to the young
man the fact that he himself had no cloak, and that
the overcoat in which he had faced the relatively
temperate air of Boston seemed no thicker than a sheet
of paper on the bleak heights of Northridge.
George Faxon said to himself that the place was uncommonly
well-named. It clung to an exposed ledge over
the valley from which the train had lifted him, and
the wind combed it with teeth of steel that he seemed
actually to hear scraping against the wooden sides
of the station. Other building there was none:
the village lay far down the road, and thither since
the Weymore sleigh had not come Faxon saw
himself under the necessity of plodding through several
feet of snow.
He understood well enough what had
happened: his hostess had forgotten that he was
coming. Young as Faxon was, this sad lucidity
of soul had been acquired as the result of long experience,
and he knew that the visitors who can least afford
to hire a carriage are almost always those whom their
hosts forget to send for. Yet to say that Mrs.
Culme had forgotten him was too crude a way of putting
it Similar incidents led him to think that she had
probably told her maid to tell the butler to telephone
the coachman to tell one of the grooms (if no one else
needed him) to drive over to Northridge to fetch the
new secretary; but on a night like this, what groom
who respected his rights would fail to forget the
order?
Faxon’s obvious course was to
struggle through the drifts to the village, and there
rout out a sleigh to convey him to Weymore; but what
if, on his arrival at Mrs. Culme’s, no one remembered
to ask him what this devotion to duty had cost?
That, again, was one of the contingencies he had expensively
learned to look out for, and the perspicacity so acquired
told him it would be cheaper to spend the night at
the Northridge inn, and advise Mrs. Culme of his presence
there by telephone. He had reached this decision,
and was about to entrust his luggage to a vague man
with a lantern, when his hopes were raised by the
sound of bells.
Two sleighs were just dashing up to
the station, and from the foremost there sprang a
young man muffled in furs.
“Weymore? No, these are not the Weymore
sleighs.”
The voice was that of the youth who
had jumped to the platform a voice so agreeable
that, in spite of the words, it fell consolingly on
Faxon’s ears. At the same moment the wandering
station-lantern, casting a transient light on the
speaker, showed his features to be in the pleasantest
harmony with his voice. He was very fair and very
young hardly in the twenties, Faxon thought but
his face, though full of a morning freshness, was
a trifle too thin and fine-drawn, as though a vivid
spirit contended in him with a strain of physical weakness.
Faxon was perhaps the quicker to notice such delicacies
of balance because his own temperament hung on lightly
quivering nerves, which yet, as he believed, would
never quite swing him beyond a normal sensibility.
“You expected a sleigh from
Weymore?” the newcomer continued, standing beside
Faxon like a slender column of fur.
Mrs. Culme’s secretary explained
his difficulty, and the other brushed it aside with
a contemptuous “Oh, Mrs. Culme!”
that carried both speakers a long way toward reciprocal
understanding.
“But then you must be ”
The youth broke off with a smile of interrogation.
“The new secretary? Yes.
But apparently there are no notes to be answered this
evening.” Faxon’s laugh deepened the
sense of solidarity which had so promptly established
itself between the two.
His friend laughed also. “Mrs.
Culme,” he explained, “was lunching at
my uncle’s to-day, and she said you were due
this evening. But seven hours is a long time
for Mrs. Culme to remember anything.”
“Well,” said Faxon philosophically,
“I suppose that’s one of the reasons why
she needs a secretary. And I’ve always the
inn at Northridge,” he concluded.
“Oh, but you haven’t, though! It
burned down last week.”
“The deuce it did!” said
Faxon; but the humour of the situation struck him
before its inconvenience. His life, for years
past, had been mainly a succession of resigned adaptations,
and he had learned, before dealing practically with
his embarrassments, to extract from most of them a
small tribute of amusement.
“Oh, well, there’s sure
to be somebody in the place who can put me up.”
“No one you could put
up with. Besides, Northridge is three miles off,
and our place in the opposite direction is
a little nearer.” Through the darkness,
Faxon saw his friend sketch a gesture of self-introduction.
“My name’s Frank Rainer, and I’m
staying with my uncle at Overdale. I’ve
driven over to meet two friends of his, who are due
in a few minutes from New York. If you don’t
mind waiting till they arrive I’m sure Overdale
can do you better than Northridge. We’re
only down from town for a few days, but the house
is always ready for a lot of people.”
“But your uncle ?”
Faxon could only object, with the odd sense, through
his embarrassment, that it would be magically dispelled
by his invisible friend’s next words.
“Oh, my uncle you’ll
see! I answer for him! I daresay you’ve
heard of him John Lavington?”
John Lavington! There was a certain
irony in asking if one had heard of John Lavington!
Even from a post of observation as obscure as that
of Mrs. Culme’s secretary the rumour of John
Lavington’s money, of his pictures, his politics,
his charities and his hospitality, was as difficult
to escape as the roar of a cataract in a mountain solitude.
It might almost have been said that the one place in
which one would not have expected to come upon him
was in just such a solitude as now surrounded the
speakers at least in this deepest hour of
its desertedness. But it was just like Lavington’s
brilliant ubiquity to put one in the wrong even there.
“Oh, yes, I’ve heard of your uncle.”
“Then you will come,
won’t you? We’ve only five minutes
to wait.” young Rainer urged, in the tone that
dispels scruples by ignoring them; and Faxon found
himself accepting the invitation as simply as it was
offered.
A delay in the arrival of the New
York train lengthened their five minutes to fifteen;
and as they paced the icy platform Faxon began to
see why it had seemed the most natural thing in the
world to accede to his new acquaintance’s suggestion.
It was because Frank Rainer was one of the privileged
beings who simplify human intercourse by the atmosphere
of confidence and good humour they diffuse. He
produced this effect, Faxon noted, by the exercise
of no gift but his youth, and of no art but his sincerity;
and these qualities were revealed in a smile of such
sweetness that Faxon felt, as never before, what Nature
can achieve when she deigns to match the face with
the mind.
He learned that the young man was
the ward, and the only nephew, of John Lavington,
with whom he had made his home since the death of his
mother, the great man’s sister. Mr. Lavington,
Rainer said, had been “a regular brick”
to him “But then he is to every one,
you know” and the young fellow’s
situation seemed in fact to be perfectly in keeping
with his person. Apparently the only shade that
had ever rested on him was cast by the physical weakness
which Faxon had already detected. Young Rainer
had been threatened with tuberculosis, and the disease
was so far advanced that, according to the highest
authorities, banishment to Arizona or New Mexico was
inevitable. “But luckily my uncle didn’t
pack me off, as most people would have done, without
getting another opinion. Whose? Oh, an awfully
clever chap, a young doctor with a lot of new ideas,
who simply laughed at my being sent away, and said
I’d do perfectly well in New York if I didn’t
dine out too much, and if I dashed off occasionally
to Northridge for a little fresh air. So it’s
really my uncle’s doing that I’m not in
exile and I feel no end better since the
new chap told me I needn’t bother.”
Young Rainer went on to confess that he was extremely
fond of dining out, dancing and similar distractions;
and Faxon, listening to him, was inclined to think
that the physician who had refused to cut him off
altogether from these pleasures was probably a better
psychologist than his seniors.
“All the same you ought to be
careful, you know.” The sense of elder-brotherly
concern that forced the words from Faxon made him,
as he spoke, slip his arm through Frank Rainer ’s.
The latter met the movement with a
responsive pressure. “Oh, I am:
awfully, awfully. And then my uncle has such an
eye on me!”
“But if your uncle has such
an eye on you, what does he say to your swallowing
knives out here in this Siberian wild?”
Rainer raised his fur collar with
a careless gesture. “It’s not that
that does it the cold’s good for me.”
“And it’s not the dinners
and dances? What is it, then?” Faxon good-humouredly
insisted; to which his companion answered with a laugh:
“Well, my uncle says it’s being bored;
and I rather think he’s right!”
His laugh ended in a spasm of coughing
and a struggle for breath that made Faxon, still holding
his arm, guide him hastily into the shelter of the
fireless waitingroom.
Young Rainer had dropped down on the
bench against the wall and pulled off one of his fur
gloves to grope for a handkerchief. He tossed
aside his cap and drew the handkerchief across his
forehead, which was intensely white, and beaded with
moisture, though his face retained a healthy glow.
But Faxon’s gaze remained fastened to the hand
he had uncovered: it was so long, so colourless,
so wasted, so much older than the brow he passed it
over.
“It’s queer a
healthy face but dying hands,” the secretary
mused: he somehow wished young Rainer had kept
on his glove.
The whistle of the express drew the
young men to their feet, and the next moment two heavily-furred
gentlemen had descended to the platform and were breasting
the rigour of the night. Frank Rainer introduced
them as Mr. Grisben and Mr. Balch, and Faxon, while
their luggage was being lifted into the second sleigh,
discerned them, by the roving lantern-gleam, to be
an elderly greyheaded pair, of the average prosperous
business cut.
They saluted their host’s nephew
with friendly familiarity, and Mr. Grisben, who seemed
the spokesman of the two, ended his greeting with a
genial “and many many more of them,
dear boy!” which suggested to Faxon that their
arrival coincided with an anniversary. But he
could not press the enquiry, for the seat allotted
him was at the coachman’s side, while Frank
Rainer joined his uncle’s guests inside the sleigh.
A swift flight (behind such horses
as one could be sure of John Lavington’s having)
brought them to tall gateposts, an illuminated lodge,
and an avenue on which the snow had been levelled to
the smoothness of marble. At the end of the avenue
the long house loomed up, its principal bulk dark,
but one wing sending out a ray of welcome; and the
next moment Faxon was receiving a violent impression
of warmth and light, of hot-house plants, hurrying
servants, a vast spectacular oak hall like a stage-setting,
and, in its unreal middle distance, a small figure,
correctly dressed, conventionally featured, and utterly
unlike his rather florid conception of the great John
Lavington.
The surprise of the contrast remained
with him through his hurried dressing in the large
luxurious bedroom to which he had been shown.
“I don’t see where he comes in,”
was the only way he could put it, so difficult was
it to fit the exuberance of Lavington’s public
personality into his host’s contracted frame
and manner. Mr. Laving ton, to whom Faxon’s
case had been rapidly explained by young Rainer, had
welcomed him with a sort of dry and stilted cordiality
that exactly matched his narrow face, his stiff hand,
and the whiff of scent on his evening handkerchief.
“Make yourself at home at home!”
he had repeated, in a tone that suggested, on his
own part, a complete inability to perform the feat
he urged on his visitor. “Any friend of
Frank’s... delighted... make yourself thoroughly
at home!”