On the day after his dinner with Mr.
and Mrs. Bertram Henshaw, Hugh Calderwell left Boston
and did not return until more than a month had passed.
One of his first acts, when he did come, was to look
up Mr. M. J. Arkwright at the address which Billy
had given him.
Calderwell had not seen Arkwright
since they parted in Paris some two years before,
after a six-months tramp through Europe together.
Calderwell liked Arkwright then, greatly, and he lost
no time now in renewing the acquaintance.
The address, as given by Billy, proved
to be an attractive but modest apartment hotel near
the Conservatory of Music; and Calderwell was delighted
to find Arkwright at home in his comfortable little
bachelor suite.
Arkwright greeted him most cordially.
“Well, well,” he cried,
“if it isn’t Calderwell! And how’s
Mont Blanc? Or is it the Killarney Lakes this
time, or maybe the Sphinx that I should inquire for,
eh?”
“Guess again,” laughed
Calderwell, throwing off his heavy coat and settling
himself comfortably in the inviting-looking morris
chair his friend pulled forward.
“Sha’n’t do it,”
retorted Arkwright, with a smile. “I never
gamble on palpable uncertainties, except for a chance
throw or two, as I gave a minute ago. Your movements
are altogether too erratic, and too far-reaching,
for ordinary mortals to keep track of.”
“Well, maybe you’re right,”
grinned Calderwell, appreciatively. “Anyhow,
you would have lost this time, sure thing, for I’ve
been working.”
“Seen the doctor yet?”
queried Arkwright, coolly, pushing the cigars across
the table.
“Thanks for both,”
sniffed Calderwell, with a reproachful glance, helping
himself. “Your good judgment in some matters
is still unimpaired, I see,” he observed, tapping
the little gilded band which had told him the cigar
was an old favorite. “As to other matters,
however, you’re wrong again, my friend,
in your surmise. I am not sick, and I have been
working.”
“So? Well, I’m told
they have very good specialists here. Some one
of them ought to hit your case. Still how
long has it been running?” Arkwright’s
face showed only grave concern.
“Oh, come, let up, Arkwright,”
snapped Calderwell, striking his match alight with
a vigorous jerk. “I’ll admit I haven’t
ever given any special indication of an absorbing
passion for work. But what can you expect of
a fellow born with a whole dozen silver spoons in his
mouth? And that’s what I was, according
to Bertram Henshaw. According to him again, it’s
a wonder I ever tried to feed myself; and perhaps he’s
right with my mouth already so full.”
“I should say so,” laughed Arkwright.
“Well, be that as it may.
I’m going to feed myself, and I’m going
to earn my feed, too. I haven’t climbed
a mountain or paddled a canoe, for a year. I’ve
been in Chicago cultivating the acquaintance of John
Doe and Richard Roe.”
“You mean law?”
“Sure. I studied it here
for a while, before that bout of ours a couple of
years ago. Billy drove me away, then.”
“Billy! er Mrs. Henshaw?”
“Yes. I thought I told
you. She turned down my tenth-dozen proposal so
emphatically that I lost all interest in Boston and
took to the tall timber again. But I’ve
come back. A friend of my father’s wrote
me to come on and consider a good opening there was
in his law office. I came on a month ago, and
considered. Then I went back to pack up.
Now I’ve come for good, and here I am.
You have my history to date. Now tell me of yourself.
You’re looking as fit as a penny from the mint,
even though you have discarded that ‘lovely’
brown beard. Was that a concession to er Mary
Jane?”
Arkwright lifted a quick hand of protest.
“‘Michael Jeremiah,’
please. There is no ‘Mary Jane,’ now,”
he said a bit stiffly.
The other stared a little. Then he gave a low
chuckle.
“‘Michael Jeremiah,’”
he repeated musingly, eyeing the glowing tip of his
cigar. “And to think how that mysterious
‘M. J.’ used to tantalize me!
Do you mean,” he added, turning slowly, “that
no one calls you ’Mary Jane’ now?”
“Not if they know what is best for them.”
“Oh!” Calderwell noted
the smouldering fire in the other’s eyes a little
curiously. “Very well. I’ll take
the hint Michael Jeremiah.”
“Thanks.” Arkwright
relaxed a little. “To tell the truth, I’ve
had quite enough now of Mary Jane.”
“Very good. So be it,”
nodded the other, still regarding his friend thoughtfully.
“But tell me what of yourself?”
Arkwright shrugged his shoulders.
“There’s nothing to tell. You’ve
seen. I’m here.”
“Humph! Very pretty,”
scoffed Calderwell. “Then if you
won’t tell, I will. I saw Billy
a month ago, you see. It seems you’ve hit
the trail for Grand Opera, as you threatened to that
night in Paris; but you haven’t brought
up in vaudeville, as you prophesied you would do though,
for that matter, judging from the plums some of the
stars are picking on the vaudeville stage, nowadays,
that isn’t to be sneezed at. But Billy
says you’ve made two or three appearances already
on the sacred boards themselves one of
them a subscription performance and that
you created no end of a sensation.”
“Nonsense! I’m merely
a student at the Opera School here,” scowled
Arkwright.
“Oh, yes, Billy said you were
that, but she also said you wouldn’t be, long.
That you’d already had one good offer I’m
not speaking of marriage and that you were
going abroad next summer, and that they were all insufferably
proud of you.”
“Nonsense!” scowled Arkwright,
again, coloring like a girl. “That is only
some of of Mrs. Henshaw’s kind flattery.”
Calderwell jerked the cigar from between
his lips, and sat suddenly forward in his chair.
“Arkwright, tell me about them.
How are they making it go?”
Arkwright frowned.
“Who? Make what go?” he asked.
“The Henshaws. Is she happy? Is he on
the square?”
Arkwright’s face darkened.
“Well, really,” he began; but Calderwell
interrupted.
“Oh, come; don’t be squeamish.
You think I’m butting into what doesn’t
concern me; but I’m not. What concerns Billy
does concern me. And if he doesn’t make
her happy, I’ll I’ll kill him.”
In spite of himself Arkwright laughed.
The vehemence of the other’s words, and the
fierceness with which he puffed at his cigar as he
fell back in his chair were most expressive.
“Well, I don’t think you
need to load revolvers nor sharpen daggers, just yet,”
he observed grimly.
Calderwell laughed this time, though without much
mirth.
“Oh, I’m not in love with
Billy, now,” he explained. “Please
don’t think I am. I shouldn’t see
her if I was, of course.”
Arkwright changed his position suddenly,
bringing his face into the shadow. Calderwell
talked on without pausing.
“No, I’m not in love with
Billy. But Billy’s a trump. You know
that.”
“I do.” The words were low, but steadily
spoken.
“Of course you do! We all
do. And we want her happy. But as for her
marrying Bertram you could have bowled me
over with a soap bubble when I heard she’d done
it. Now understand: Bertram is a good fellow,
and I like him. I’ve known him all his
life, and he’s all right. Oh, six or eight
years ago, to be sure, he got in with a set of fellows Bob
Seaver and his clique that were no good.
Went in for Bohemianism, and all that rot. It
wasn’t good for Bertram. He’s got
the confounded temperament that goes with his talent,
I suppose though why a man can’t paint
a picture, or sing a song, and keep his temper and
a level head I don’t see!”
“He can,” cut in Arkwright, with curt
emphasis.
“Humph! Well, that’s
what I think. But, about this marriage business.
Bertram admires a pretty face wherever he sees it to
paint, and always has. Not but that he’s
straight as a string with women I don’t
mean that; but girls are always just so many pictures
to be picked up on his brushes and transferred to
his canvases. And as for his settling down and
marrying anybody for keeps, right along Great
Scott! imagine Bertram Henshaw as a domestic
man!”
Arkwright stirred restlessly as he
spoke up in quick defense:
“Oh, but he is, I assure you.
I I’ve seen them in their home together many
times. I think they are very happy.”
Arkwright spoke with decision, though still a little
diffidently.
Calderwell was silent. He had
picked up the little gilt band he had torn from his
cigar and was fingering it musingly.
“Yes; I’ve seen them once,”
he said, after a minute. “I took dinner
with them when I was on, a month ago.”
“I heard you did.”
At something in Arkwright’s voice, Calderwell
turned quickly.
“What do you mean? Why do you say it like
that?”
Arkwright laughed. The constraint fled from his
manner.
“Well, I may as well tell you.
You’ll hear of it. It’s no secret.
Mrs. Henshaw herself tells of it everywhere. It
was her friend, Alice Greggory, who told me of it
first, however. It seems the cook was gone, and
the mistress had to get the dinner herself.”
“Yes, I know that.”
“But you should hear Mrs. Henshaw
tell the story now, or Bertram. It seems she
knew nothing whatever about cooking, and her trials
and tribulations in getting that dinner on to the
table were only one degree worse than the dinner itself,
according to her story. Didn’t you er notice
anything?”
“Notice anything!” exploded
Calderwell. “I noticed that Billy was so
brilliant she fairly radiated sparks; and I noticed
that Bertram was so glum he he almost radiated
thunderclaps. Then I saw that Billy’s high
spirits were all assumed to cover a threatened burst
of tears, and I laid it all to him. I thought
he’d said something to hurt her; and I could
have punched him. Great Scott! Was that
what ailed them?”
“I reckon it was. Alice
says that since then Mrs. Henshaw has fairly haunted
the kitchen, begging Eliza to teach her everything,
every single thing she knows!”
Calderwell chuckled.
“If that isn’t just like
Billy! She never does anything by halves.
By George, but she was game over that dinner!
I can see it all now.”
“Alice says she’s really
learning to cook, in spite of old Pete’s horror,
and Eliza’s pleadings not to spoil her pretty
hands.”
“Then Pete is back all right?
What a faithful old soul he is!”
Arkwright frowned slightly.
“Yes, he’s faithful, but
he isn’t all right, by any means. I think
he’s a sick man, myself.”
“What makes Billy let him work, then?”
“Let him!” sniffed Arkwright.
“I’d like to see you try to stop him!
Mrs. Henshaw begs and pleads with him to stop, but
he scouts the idea. Pete is thoroughly and unalterably
convinced that the family would starve to death if
it weren’t for him; and Mrs. Henshaw says that
she’ll admit he has some grounds for his opinion
when one remembers the condition of the kitchen and
dining-room the night she presided over them.”
“Poor Billy!” chuckled
Calderwell. “I’d have gone down into
the kitchen myself if I’d suspected what was
going on.”
Arkwright raised his eyebrows.
“Perhaps it’s well you
didn’t if Bertram’s picture
of what he found there when he went down is a true
one. Mrs. Henshaw acknowledges that even the
cat sought refuge under the stove.”
“As if the veriest worm that
crawls ever needed to seek refuge from Billy!”
scoffed Calderwell. “By the way, what’s
this Annex I hear of? Bertram mentioned it, but
I couldn’t get either of them to tell what it
was. Billy wouldn’t, and Bertram said he
couldn’t not with Billy shaking her
head at him like that. So I had my suspicions.
One of Billy’s pet charities?”
“She doesn’t call it that.”
Arkwright’s face and voice softened. “It
is Hillside. She still keeps it open. She
calls it the Annex to her home. She’s filled
it with a crippled woman, a poor little music teacher,
a lame boy, and Aunt Hannah.”
“But how extraordinary!”
“She doesn’t think so.
She says it’s just an overflow house for the
extra happiness she can’t use.”
There was a moment’s silence.
Calderwell laid down his cigar, pulled out his handkerchief,
and blew his nose furiously. Then he got to his
feet and walked to the fireplace. After a minute
he turned.
“Well, if she isn’t the
beat ’em!” he spluttered. “And
I had the gall to ask you if Henshaw made her happy!
Overflow house, indeed!”
“The best of it is, the way
she does it,” smiled Arkwright. “They’re
all the sort of people ordinary charity could never
reach; and the only way she got them there at all
was to make each one think that he or she was absolutely
necessary to the rest of them. Even as it is,
they all pay a little something toward the running
expenses of the house. They insisted on that,
and Mrs. Henshaw had to let them. I believe her
chief difficulty now is that she has not less than
six people whom she wishes to put into the two extra
rooms still unoccupied, and she can’t make up
her mind which to take. Her husband says he expects
to hear any day of an Annexette to the Annex.”
“Humph!” grunted Calderwell,
as he turned and began to walk up and down the room.
“Bertram is still painting, I suppose.”
“Oh, yes.”
“What’s he doing now?”
“Several things. He’s
up to his eyes in work. As you probably have
heard, he met with a severe accident last summer, and
lost the use of his right arm for many months.
I believe they thought at one time he had lost it
forever. But it’s all right now, and he
has several commissions for portraits. Alice
says he’s doing ideal heads again, too.”
“Same old ’Face of a Girl’?”
“I suppose so, though Alice
didn’t say. Of course his special work just
now is painting the portrait of Miss Marguerite Winthrop.
You may have heard that he tried it last year and and
didn’t make quite a success of it.”
“Yes. My sister Belle told
me. She hears from Billy once in a while.
Will it be a go, this time?”
“We’ll hope so for
everybody’s sake. I imagine no one has seen
it yet it’s not finished; but Alice
says ”
Calderwell turned abruptly, a quizzical
smile on his face.
“See here, my son,” he
interposed, “it strikes me that this Alice is
saying a good deal to you! Who is she?”
Arkwright gave a light laugh.
“Why, I told you. She is
Miss Alice Greggory, Mrs. Henshaw’s friend and
mine. I have known her for years.”
“Hm-m; what is she like?”
“Like? Why, she’s
like like herself, of course. You’ll
have to know Alice. She’s the salt of the
earth Alice is,” smiled Arkwright,
rising to his feet with a remonstrative gesture, as
he saw Calderwell pick up his coat. “What’s
your hurry?”
“Hm-m,” commented
Calderwell again, ignoring the question. “And
when, may I ask, do you intend to appropriate this er salt to er ah,
season your own life with, as I might say eh?”
Arkwright laughed. There was
not the slightest trace of embarrassment in his face.
“Never. You’re
on the wrong track, this time. Alice and I are
good friends always have been, and always
will be, I hope.”
“Nothing more?”
“Nothing more. I see her
frequently. She is musical, and the Henshaws
are good enough to ask us there often together.
You will meet her, doubtless, now, yourself.
She is frequently at the Henshaw home.”
“Hm-m.” Calderwell
still eyed his host shrewdly. “Then you’ll
give me a clear field, eh?”
“Certainly.” Arkwright’s
eyes met his friend’s gaze without swerving.
“All right. However, I
suppose you’ll tell me, as I did you, once, that
a right of way in such a case doesn’t mean a
thoroughfare for the party interested. If my
memory serves me, I gave you right of way in Paris
to win the affections of a certain elusive Miss Billy
here in Boston, if you could. But I see you didn’t
seem to improve your opportunities,” he finished
teasingly.
Arkwright stooped, of a sudden, to
pick up a bit of paper from the floor.
“No,” he said quietly.
“I didn’t seem to improve my opportunities.”
This time he did not meet Calderwell’s eyes.
The good-byes had been said when Calderwell
turned abruptly at the door.
“Oh, I say, I suppose you’re
going to that devil’s carnival at Jordan Hall
to-morrow night.”
“Devil’s carnival!
You don’t mean Cyril Henshaw’s
piano recital!”
“Sure I do,” grinned Calderwell,
unabashed. “And I’ll warrant it’ll
be a devil’s carnival, too. Isn’t
Mr. Cyril Henshaw going to play his own music?
Oh, I know I’m hopeless, from your standpoint,
but I can’t help it. I like mine with some
go in it, and a tune that you can find without hunting
for it. And I don’t like lost spirits gone
mad that wail and shriek through ten perfectly good
minutes, and then die with a gasping moan whose home
is the tombs. However, you’re going, I take
it.”
“Of course I am,” laughed
the other. “You couldn’t hire Alice
to miss one shriek of those spirits. Besides,
I rather like them myself, you know.”
“Yes, I suppose you do.
You’re brought up on it in your business.
But me for the ‘Merry Widow’ and even
the hoary ‘Jingle Bells’ every time!
However, I’m going to be there out
of respect to the poor fellow’s family.
And, by the way, that’s another thing that bowled
me over Cyril’s marriage. Why,
Cyril hates women!”
“Not all women we’ll
hope,” smiled Arkwright. “Do you know
his wife?”
“Not much. I used to see
her a little at Billy’s. Music teacher,
wasn’t she? Then she’s the same sort,
I suppose.”
“But she isn’t,”
laughed Arkwright. “Oh, she taught music,
but that was only because of necessity, I take it.
She’s domestic through and through, with an
overwhelming passion for making puddings and darning
socks, I hear. Alice says she believes Mrs. Cyril
knows every dish and spoon by its Christian name,
and that there’s never so much as a spool of
thread out of order in the house.”
“But how does Cyril stand it the
trials and tribulations of domestic life? Bertram
used to declare that the whole Strata was aquiver with
fear when Cyril was composing, and I remember him as
a perfect bear if anybody so much as whispered when
he was in one of his moods. I never forgot the
night Bertram and I were up in William’s room
trying to sing ‘When Johnnie comes marching
home,’ to the accompaniment of a banjo in Bertram’s
hands, and a guitar in mine. Gorry! it was Hugh
that went marching home that night.”
“Oh, well, from reports I reckon
Mrs. Cyril doesn’t play either a banjo or a
guitar,” smiled Arkwright. “Alice
says she wears rubber heels on her shoes, and has
put hushers on all the chair-legs, and felt-mats between
all the plates and saucers. Anyhow, Cyril is building
a new house, and he looks as if he were in a pretty
healthy condition, as you’ll see to-morrow night.”
“Humph! I wish he’d
make his music healthy, then,” grumbled Calderwell,
as he opened the door.