Mr. and Mrs. Bertram Henshaw were
expected home the first of September. By the
thirty-first of August the old Beacon Street homestead
facing the Public Garden was in spick-and-span order,
with Dong Ling in the basement hovering over a well-stocked
larder, and Pete searching the rest of the house for
a chair awry, or a bit of dust undiscovered.
Twice before had the Strata as
Bertram long ago dubbed the home of his boyhood been
prepared for the coming of Billy, William’s namesake:
once, when it had been decorated with guns and fishing-rods
to welcome the “boy” who turned out to
be a girl; and again when with pink roses and sewing-baskets
the three brothers got joyously ready for a feminine
Billy who did not even come at all.
The house had been very different
then. It had been, indeed, a “strata,”
with its distinctive layers of fads and pursuits as
represented by Bertram and his painting on one floor,
William and his curios on another, and Cyril with
his music on a third. Cyril was gone now.
Only Pete and his humble belongings occupied the top
floor. The floor below, too, was silent now,
and almost empty save for a rug or two, and a few
pieces of heavy furniture that William had not cared
to take with him to his new quarters on top of Beacon
Hill. Below this, however, came Billy’s
old rooms, and on these Pete had lavished all his skill
and devotion.
Freshly laundered curtains were at
the windows, dustless rugs were on the floor.
The old work-basket had been brought down from the
top-floor storeroom, and the long-closed piano stood
invitingly open. In a conspicuous place, also,
sat the little green god, upon whose exquisitely carved
shoulders was supposed to rest the “heap plenty
velly good luckee” of Dong Ling’s prophecy.
On the first floor Bertram’s
old rooms and the drawing-room came in for their share
of the general overhauling. Even Spunkie did not
escape, but had to submit to the ignominy of a bath.
And then dawned fair and clear the first day of September,
bringing at five o’clock the bride and groom.
Respectfully lined up in the hall
to meet them were Pete and Dong Ling: Pete with
his wrinkled old face alight with joy and excitement;
Dong Ling grinning and kotowing, and chanting in a
high-pitched treble:
“Miss Billee, Miss Billee plenty
much welcome, Miss Billee!”
“Yes, welcome home, Mrs. Henshaw!”
bowed Bertram, turning at the door, with an elaborate
flourish that did not in the least hide his tender
pride in his new wife.
Billy laughed and colored a pretty pink.
“Thank you all of
you,” she cried a little unsteadily. “And
how good, good everything does look to me! Why,
where’s Uncle William?” she broke off,
casting hurriedly anxious eyes about her.
“Well, I should say so,”
echoed Bertram. “Where is he, Pete?
He isn’t sick, is he?”
A quick change crossed the old servant’s
face. He shook his head dumbly.
Billy gave a gleeful laugh.
“I know he’s
asleep!” she caroled, skipping to the bottom
of the stairway and looking up.
“Ho, Uncle William! Better
wake up, sir. The folks have come!”
Pete cleared his throat.
“Mr. William isn’t here, Miss ma’am,”
he corrected miserably.
Billy smiled, but she frowned, too.
“Not here! Well, I like
that,” she pouted; “ and when
I’ve brought him the most beautiful pair of
mirror knobs he ever saw, and all the way in my bag,
too, so I could give them to him the very first thing,”
she added, darting over to the small bag she had brought
in with her. “I’m glad I did, too,
for our trunks didn’t come,” she continued
laughingly. “Still, if he isn’t here
to receive them There, Pete, aren’t
they beautiful?” she cried, carefully taking
from their wrappings two exquisitely decorated porcelain
discs mounted on two long spikes. “They’re
Batterseas the real article. I know
enough for that; and they’re finer than anything
he’s got. Won’t he be pleased?”
“Yes, Miss ma’am, I mean,”
stammered the old man.
“These new titles come hard, don’t they,
Pete?” laughed Bertram.
Pete smiled faintly.
“Never mind, Pete,” soothed
his new mistress. “You shall call me ’Miss
Billy’ all your life if you want to. Bertram,”
she added, turning to her husband, “I’m
going to just run up-stairs and put these in Uncle
William’s rooms so they’ll be there when
he comes in. We’ll see how soon he discovers
them!”
Before Pete could stop her she was
half-way up the first flight of stairs. Even
then he tried to speak to his young master, to explain
that Mr. William was not living there; but the words
refused to come. He could only stand dumbly waiting.
In a minute it came Billy’s sharp,
startled cry.
“Bertram! Bertram!”
Bertram sprang for the stairway, but
he had not reached the top when he met his wife coming
down. She was white-faced and trembling.
“Bertram those rooms there’s
not so much as a teapot there! Uncle William’s gone!”
“Gone!” Bertram wheeled
sharply. “Pete, what is the meaning of this?
Where is my brother?” To hear him, one would
think he suspected the old servant of having hidden
his master.
Pete lifted a shaking hand and fumbled with his collar.
“He’s moved, sir.”
“Moved! Oh, you mean to
other rooms to Cyril’s.”
Bertram relaxed visibly. “He’s upstairs,
maybe.”
Pete shook his head.
“No, sir. He’s moved away out
of the house, sir.”
For a brief moment Bertram stared
as if he could not believe what his ears had heard.
Then, step by step, he began to descend the stairs.
“Do you mean to say that
my brother has moved-gone away left his
home?” he demanded.
“Yes, sir.”
Billy gave a low cry.
“But why why?”
she choked, almost stumbling headlong down the stairway
in her effort to reach the two men at the bottom.
“Pete, why did he go?”
There was no answer.
“Pete,” Bertram’s
voice was very sharp “what is the
meaning of this? Do you know why my brother left
his home?”
The old man wet his lips and swallowed chokingly,
but he did not speak.
“I’m waiting, Pete.”
Billy laid one hand on the old servant’s
arm in the other hand she still tightly
clutched the mirror knobs.
“Pete, if you do know, won’t you tell
us, please?” she begged.
Pete looked down at the hand, then
up at the troubled young face with the beseeching
eyes. His own features worked convulsively.
With a visible effort he cleared his throat.
“I know what he said,” he stammered,
his eyes averted.
“What was it?”
There was no answer.
“Look here, Pete, you’ll
have to tell us, you know,” cut in Bertram,
decisively, “so you might as well do it now as
ever.”
Once more Pete cleared his throat.
This time the words came in a burst of desperation.
“Yes, sir. I understand,
sir. It was only that he said he said
as how young folks didn’t need any one
else around. So he was goin’.”
“Didn’t need any
one else!” exclaimed Bertram, plainly not comprehending.
“Yes, sir. You two bein’
married so, now.” Pete’s eyes were
still averted.
Billy gave a low cry.
“You mean because I came?”
she demanded.
“Why, yes, Miss no that
is ” Pete stopped with an appealing
glance at Bertram.
“Then it was it was on
account of me,” choked Billy.
Pete looked still more distressed
“No, no!” he faltered.
“It was only that he thought you wouldn’t
want him here now.”
“Want him here!” ejaculated Bertram.
“Want him here!” echoed Billy, with a
sob.
“Pete, where is he?” As
she asked the question she dropped the mirror knobs
into her open bag, and reached for her coat and gloves she
had not removed her hat.
Pete gave the address.
“It’s just down the street
a bit and up the hill,” he added excitedly,
divining her purpose. “It’s a sort
of a boarding-house, I reckon.”
“A boarding-house for
Uncle William!” scorned Billy, her eyes ablaze.
“Come, Bertram, we’ll see about that.”
Bertram reached out a detaining hand.
“But, dearest, you’re
so tired,” he demurred. “Hadn’t
we better wait till after dinner, or till to-morrow?”
“After dinner! To-morrow!”
Billy’s eyes blazed anew. “Why, Bertram
Henshaw, do you think I’d leave that dear man
even one minute longer, if I could help it, with a
notion in his blessed old head that we didn’t
want him?”
“But you said a little while
ago you had a headache, dear,” still objected
Bertram. “If you’d just eat your dinner!”
“Dinner!” choked Billy.
“I wonder if you think I could eat any dinner
with Uncle William turned out of his home! I’m
going to find Uncle William.” And she stumbled
blindly toward the door.
Bertram reached for his hat.
He threw a despairing glance into Pete’s eyes.
“We’ll be back when we can,”
he said, with a frown.
“Yes, sir,” answered Pete,
respectfully. Then, as if impelled by some hidden
force, he touched his master’s arm. “It
was that way she looked, sir, when she came to you that
night last July with her eyes all shining,”
he whispered.
A tender smile curved Bertram’s
lips. The frown vanished from his face.
“Bless you, Pete and
bless her, too!” he whispered back. The
next moment he had hurried after his wife.
The house that bore the number Pete
had given proved to have a pretentious doorway, and
a landlady who, in response to the summons of the
neat maid, appeared with a most impressive rustle of
black silk and jet bugles.
No, Mr. William Henshaw was not in
his rooms. In fact, he was very seldom there.
His business, she believed, called him to State Street
through the day. Outside of that, she had been
told, he spent much time sitting on a bench in the
Common. Doubtless, if they cared to search, they
could find him there now.
“A bench in the Common, indeed!”
stormed Billy, as she and Bertram hurried down the
wide stone steps. “Uncle William on
a bench!”
“But surely now, dear,”
ventured her husband, “you’ll come home
and get your dinner!”
Billy turned indignantly.
“And leave Uncle William on
a bench in the Common? Indeed, no! Why,
Bertram, you wouldn’t, either,” she cried,
as she turned resolutely toward one of the entrances
to the Common.
And Bertram, with the “eyes
all shining” still before him, could only murmur:
“No, of course not, dear!” and follow obediently
where she led.
Under ordinary circumstances it would
have been a delightful hour for a walk. The sun
had almost set, and the shadows lay long across the
grass. The air was cool and unusually bracing
for a day so early in September. But all this
was lost on Bertram. Bertram did not wish to take
a walk. He was hungry. He wanted his dinner;
and he wanted, too, his old home with his new wife
flitting about the rooms as he had pictured this first
evening together. He wanted William, of course.
Certainly he wanted William; but if William would
insist on running away and sitting on park benches
in this ridiculous fashion, he ought to take the consequences until
to-morrow.
Five, ten, fifteen minutes passed.
Up one path and down another trudged the anxious-eyed
Billy and her increasingly impatient husband.
Then when the fifteen weary minutes had become a still
more weary half-hour, the bonds Bertram had set on
his temper snapped.
“Billy,” he remonstrated
despairingly, “do, please, come home! Don’t
you see how highly improbable it is that we should
happen on William if we walked like this all night?
He might move change his seat go
home, even. He probably has gone home. And
surely never before did a bride insist on spending
the first evening after her return tramping up and
down a public park for hour after hour like this, looking
for any man. Won’t you come home?”
But Billy had not even heard.
With a glad little cry she had darted to the side
of the humped-up figure of a man alone on a park bench
just ahead of them.
“Uncle William! Oh, Uncle
William, how could you?” she cried, dropping
herself on to one end of the seat and catching the
man’s arm in both her hands.
“Yes, how could you?”
demanded Bertram, with just a touch of irritation,
dropping himself on to the other end of the seat, and
catching the man’s other arm in his one usable
hand.
The bent shoulders and bowed head
straightened up with a jerk.
“Well, well, bless my soul!
If it isn’t our little bride,” cried Uncle
William, fondly. “And the happy bridegroom,
too. When did you get home?”
“We haven’t got home,”
retorted Bertram, promptly, before his wife could
speak. “Oh, we looked in at the door an
hour or so back; but we didn’t stay. We’ve
been hunting for you ever since.”
“Nonsense, children!”
Uncle William spoke with gay cheeriness; but he refused
to meet either Billy’s or Bertram’s eyes.
“Uncle William, how could you
do it?” reproached Billy, again.
“Do what?” Uncle William was plainly fencing
for time.
“Leave the house like that?”
“Ho! I wanted a change.”
“As if we’d believe that!” scoffed
Billy.
“All right; let’s call
it you’ve had the change, then,” laughed
Bertram, “and we’ll send over for your
things to-morrow. Come now let’s
go home to dinner.”
William shook his head. He essayed a gay smile.
“Why, I’ve only just begun.
I’m going to stay oh, I don’t
know how long I’m going to stay,” he finished
blithely.
Billy lifted her chin a little.
“Uncle William, you aren’t
playing square. Pete told us what you said when
you left.”
“Eh? What?” William looked up with
startled eyes.
“About about our
not needing you. So we know, now, why you
left; and we sha’n’t stand it.”
“Pete? That? Oh, that that’s
nonsense I I’ll settle with Pete.”
Billy laughed softly.
“Poor Pete! Don’t.
We simply dragged it out of him. And now we’re
here to tell you that we do want you, and that
you must come back.”
Again William shook his head. A swift shadow
crossed his face.
“Thank you, no, children,” he said dully.
“You’re very kind, but
you don’t need me. I should be just an interfering
elder brother. I should spoil your young married
life.” (William’s voice now sounded as
if he were reciting a well-learned lesson.) “If
I went away and stayed two months, you’d never
forget the utter freedom and joy of those two whole
months with the house all to yourselves.”
“Uncle William,” gasped Billy, “what
are you talking about?”
“About about my not going back, of
course.”
“But you are coming back,”
cut in Bertram, almost angrily. “Oh, come,
Will, this is utter nonsense, and you know it!
Come, let’s go home to dinner.”
A stern look came to the corners of
William’s mouth a look that Bertram
understood well.
“All right, I’ll go to
dinner, of course; but I sha’n’t stay,”
said William, firmly. “I’ve thought
it all out. I know I’m right. Come,
we’ll go to dinner now, and say no more about
it,” he finished with a cheery smile, as he
rose to his feet. Then, to the bride, he added:
“Did you have a nice trip, little girl?”
Billy, too, had risen, now, but she
did not seem to have heard his question. In the
fast falling twilight her face looked a little white.
“Uncle William,” she began
very quietly, “do you think for a minute that
just because I married your brother I am going to live
in that house and turn you out of the home you’ve
lived in all your life?”
“Nonsense, dear! I’m
not turned out. I just go,” corrected Uncle
William, gayly.
With superb disdain Billy brushed this aside.
“Oh, no, you won’t,” she declared;
“but I shall.”
“Billy!” gasped Bertram.
“My my dear!” expostulated
William, faintly.
“Uncle William! Bertram!
Listen,” panted Billy. “I never told
you much before, but I’m going to, now.
Long ago, when I went away with Aunt Hannah, your
sister Kate showed me how dear the old home was to
you how much you thought of it. And
she said she said that I had upset everything.”
(Bertram interjected a sharp word, but Billy paid
no attention.) “That’s why I went; and
I shall go again if you don’t
come home to-morrow to stay, Uncle William. Come,
now let’s go to dinner, please. Bertram’s
hungry,” she finished, with a bright smile.
There was a tense moment of silence.
William glanced at Bertram; Bertram returned the glance with
interest.
“Er ah yes;
well, we might go to dinner,” stammered William,
after a minute.
“Er yes,” agreed
Bertram. And the three fell into step together.