It was a little after half-past three
o’clock that afternoon when Bertram Henshaw
hurried up Beacon Street toward his home. He had
been delayed, and he feared that Miss Winthrop would
already have reached the house. Mindful of what
Billy had said that morning, he knew how his wife
would fret if he were not there when the guest arrived.
The sight of what he surmised to be Miss Winthrop’s
limousine before his door hastened his steps still
more. But as he reached the house, he was surprised
to find Miss Winthrop herself turning away from the
door.
“Why, Miss Winthrop,”
he cried, “you’re not going now!
You can’t have been here any yet!”
“Well, no, I I haven’t,”
retorted the lady, with heightened color and a somewhat
peculiar emphasis. “My ring wasn’t
answered.”
“Wasn’t answered!”
Bertram reddened angrily. “Why, what can
that mean? Where’s the maid? Where’s
my wife? Mrs. Henshaw must be here! She was
expecting you.”
Bertram, in his annoyed amazement,
spoke loudly, vehemently. Hence he was quite
plainly heard by the group of small boys and girls
who had been improving the mild weather for a frolic
on the sidewalk, and who had been attracted to his
door a moment before by the shining magnet of the
Winthrop limousine with its resplendently liveried
chauffeur. As Bertram spoke, one of the small
girls, Bessie Bailey, stepped forward and piped up
a shrill reply.
“She ain’t, Mr. Henshaw!
She ain’t here. I saw her go away just a
little while ago.”
Bertram turned sharply.
“You saw her go away! What do you mean?”
Small Bessie swelled with importance.
Bessie was thirteen, in spite of her diminutive height.
Bessie’s mother was dead, and Bessie’s
caretakers were gossiping nurses and servants, who
frequently left in her way books that were much too
old for Bessie to read but she read them.
“I mean she ain’t here your
wife, Mr. Henshaw. She went away. I saw
her. I guess likely she’s eloped, sir.”
“Eloped!”
Bessie swelled still more importantly.
To her experienced eyes the situation contained all
the necessary elements for the customary flight of
the heroine in her story-books, as here, now, was the
irate, deserted husband.
“Sure! And ’twas
just before you came quite a while before.
A big shiny black automobile like this drove up only
it wasn’t quite such a nice one an’
Mrs. Henshaw an’ a man came out of your house
an’ got in, an’ drove right away quick!
They just ran to get into it, too didn’t
they?” She appealed to her young mates grouped
about her.
A chorus of shrill exclamations brought
Mr. Bertram Henshaw suddenly to his senses. By
a desperate effort he hid his angry annoyance as he
turned to the manifestly embarrassed young woman who
was already descending the steps.
“My dear Miss Winthrop,”
he apologized contritely, “I’m sure you’ll
forgive this seeming great rudeness on the part of
my wife. Notwithstanding the lurid tales of our
young friends here, I suspect nothing more serious
has happened than that my wife has been hastily summoned
to Aunt Hannah, perhaps. Or, of course, she may
not have understood that you were coming to-day at
half-past three though I thought she did.
But I’m so sorry when you were so
kind as to come ” Miss Winthrop interrupted
with a quick gesture.
“Say no more, I beg of you,”
she entreated. “Mrs. Henshaw is quite excusable,
I’m sure. Please don’t give it another
thought,” she finished, as with a hurried direction
to the man who was holding open the door of her car,
she stepped inside and bowed her good-byes.
Bertram, with stern self-control,
forced himself to walk nonchalantly up his steps,
leisurely take out his key, and open his door, under
the interested eyes of Bessie Bailey and her friends;
but once beyond their hateful stare, his demeanor
underwent a complete change. Throwing aside his
hat and coat, he strode to the telephone.
“Oh, is that you, Aunt Hannah?”
he called crisply, a moment later. “Well,
if Billy’s there will you tell her I want to
speak to her, please?”
“Billy?” answered Aunt
Hannah’s slow, gentle tones. “Why,
my dear boy, Billy isn’t here!”
“She isn’t? Well,
when did she leave? She’s been there, hasn’t
she?”
“Why, I don’t think so,
but I’ll see, if you like. Mrs. Greggory
and I have just this minute come in from an automobile
ride. We would have stayed longer, but it began
to get chilly, and I forgot to take one of the shawls
that I’d laid out.”
“Yes; well, if you will see,
please, if Billy has been there, and when she left,”
said Bertram, with grim self-control.
“All right. I’ll
see,” murmured Aunt Hannah. In a few moments
her voice again sounded across the wires. “Why,
no, Bertram, Rosa says she hasn’t been here
since yesterday. Isn’t she there somewhere
about the house? Didn’t you know where
she was going?”
“Well, no, I didn’t else
I shouldn’t have been asking you,” snapped
the irate Bertram and hung up the receiver with most
rude haste, thereby cutting off an astounded “Oh,
my grief and conscience!” in the middle of it.
The next ten minutes Bertram spent
in going through the whole house, from garret to basement.
Needless to say, he found nothing to enlighten him,
or to soothe his temper. Four o’clock came,
then half-past, and five. At five Bertram began
to look for Eliza, but in vain. At half-past
five he watched for William; but William, too, did
not come.
Bertram was pacing the floor now,
nervously. He was a little frightened, but more
mortified and angry. That Billy should have allowed
Miss Winthrop to call by appointment only to find
no hostess, no message, no maid, even, to answer her
ring it was inexcusable! Impulsiveness,
unconventionality, and girlish irresponsibility were
all very delightful, of course at times;
but not now, certainly. Billy was not a girl
any longer. She was a married woman. Something
was due to him, her husband! A pretty picture
he must have made on those steps, trying to apologize
for a truant wife, and to laugh off that absurd Bessie
Bailey’s preposterous assertion at the same time!
What would Miss Winthrop think? What could she
think? Bertram fairly ground his teeth with chagrin,
at the situation in which he found himself.
Nor were matters helped any by the
fact that Bertram was hungry. Bertram’s
luncheon had been meager and unsatisfying. That
the kitchen down-stairs still remained in silent,
spotless order instead of being astir with the sounds
and smells of a good dinner (as it should have been)
did not improve his temper. Where Billy was he
could not imagine. He thought, once or twice,
of calling up some of her friends; but something held
him back from that though he did try to
get Marie, knowing very well that she was probably
over to the new house and would not answer. He
was not surprised, therefore, when he received no reply
to his ring.
That there was the slightest truth
in Bessie Bailey’s absurd “elopement”
idea, Bertram did not, of course, for an instant believe.
The only thing that rankled about that was the fact
that she had suggested such a thing, and that Miss
Winthrop and those silly children had heard her.
He recognized half of Bessie’s friends as neighborhood
youngsters, and he knew very well that there would
be many a quiet laugh at his expense around various
Beacon Street dinner-tables that night. At the
thought of those dinner-tables, he scowled again.
He had no dinner-table at least,
he had no dinner on it!
Who the man might be Bertram thought
he could easily guess. It was either Arkwright
or Calderwell, of course; and probably that tiresome
Alice Greggory was mixed up in it somehow. He
did wish Billy
Six o’clock came, then half-past.
Bertram was indeed frightened now, but he was more
angry, and still more hungry. He had, in fact,
reached that state of blind unreasonableness said
to be peculiar to hungry males from time immemorial.
At ten minutes of seven a key clicked
in the lock of the outer door, and William and Billy
entered the hall.
It was almost dark. Bertram could
not see their faces. He had not lighted the hall
at all.
“Well,” he began sharply,
“is this the way you receive your callers, Billy?
I came home and found Miss Winthrop just leaving no
one here to receive her! Where’ve you been?
Where’s Eliza? Where’s my dinner?
Of course I don’t mean to scold, Billy, but there
is a limit to even my patience and it’s
reached now. I can’t help suggesting that
if you would tend to your husband and your home a
little more, and go gallivanting off with Calderwell
and Arkwright and Alice Greggory a little less, that Where
is Eliza, anyway?” he finished irritably, switching
on the lights with a snap.
There was a moment of dead silence.
At Bertram’s first words Billy and William had
stopped short. Neither had moved since. Now
William turned and began to speak, but Billy interrupted.
She met her husband’s gaze steadily.
“I will be down at once to get
your dinner,” she said quietly. “Eliza
will not come to-night. Pete is dead.”
Bertram started forward with a quick cry.
“Dead! Oh, Billy! Then you were there!
Billy!”
But his wife did not apparently hear
him. She passed him without turning her head,
and went on up the stairs, leaving him to meet the
sorrowful, accusing eyes of William.