Early in February came Arkwright’s
appearance at the Boston Opera House the
first since he had sung there as a student a few years
before. He was an immediate and an unquestioned
success. His portrait adorned the front page
of almost every Boston newspaper the next morning,
and captious critics vied with each other to do him
honor. His full history, from boyhood up, was
featured, with special emphasis on his recent triumphs
in New York and foreign capitals. He was interviewed
as to his opinion on everything from vegetarianism
to woman’s suffrage; and his preferences as
to pies and pastimes were given headline prominence.
There was no doubt of it. Mr. M. J. Arkwright
was a star.
All Arkwright’s old friends,
including Billy, Bertram, Cyril, Marie, Calderwell,
Alice Greggory, Aunt Hannah, and Tommy Dunn, went to
hear him sing; and after the performance he held a
miniature reception, with enough adulation to turn
his head completely around, he declared deprecatingly.
Not until the next evening, however, did he have an
opportunity for what he called a real talk with any
of his friends; then, in Calderwell’s room,
he settled back in his chair with a sigh of content.
For a time his own and Calderwell’s
affairs occupied their attention; then, after a short
pause, the tenor asked abruptly:
“Is there anything wrong with the
Henshaws, Calderwell?”
Calderwell came suddenly erect in his chair.
“Thank you! I hoped you’d
introduce that subject; though, for that matter, if
you hadn’t, I should. Yes, there is and
I’m looking to you, old man, to get them out
of it.”
“I?” Arkwright sat erect now.
“Yes.”
“What do you mean?”
“In a way, the expected has
happened though I know now that I didn’t
really expect it to happen, in spite of my prophecies.
You may remember I was always skeptical on the subject
of Bertram’s settling down to a domestic hearthstone.
I insisted ’twould be the turn of a girl’s
head and the curve of her cheek that he wanted to
paint.”
Arkwright looked up with a quick frown.
“You don’t mean that Henshaw has been
cad enough to find another ”
Calderwell threw up his hand.
“No, no, not that! We haven’t
that to deal with yet, thank goodness!
There’s no woman in it. And, really, when
you come right down to it, if ever a fellow had an
excuse to seek diversion, Bertram Henshaw has poor
chap! It’s just this. Bertram broke
his arm again last October.”
“Yes, so I hear, and I thought he was looking
badly.”
“He is. It’s a bad
business. ’Twas improperly set in the first
place, and it’s not doing well now. In
fact, I’m told on pretty good authority that
the doctor says he probably will never use it again.”
“Oh, by George! Calderwell!”
“Yes. Tough, isn’t
it? ’Specially when you think of his work,
and know as I happen to that
he’s particularly dependent on his right hand
for everything. He doesn’t tell this generally,
and I understand Billy and the family know nothing
of it how hopeless the case is, I mean.
Well, naturally, the poor fellow has been pretty thoroughly
discouraged, and to get away from himself he’s
gone back to his old Bohemian habits, spending much
of his time with some of his old cronies that are none
too good for him Seaver, for instance.”
“Bob Seaver? Yes, I know
him.” Arkwright’s lips snapped together
crisply.
“Yes. He said he knew you.
That’s why I’m counting on your help.”
“What do you mean?”
“I mean I want you to get Henshaw away from
him, and keep him away.”
Arkwright’s face darkened with an angry flush.
“Great Scott, Calderwell!
What are you talking about? Henshaw is no kid
to be toted home, and I’m no nursery governess
to do the toting!”
Calderwell laughed quietly.
“No; I don’t think any
one would take you for a nursery governess, Arkwright,
in spite of the fact that you are still known to some
of your friends as ‘Mary Jane.’ But
you can sing a song, man, which will promptly give
you a through ticket to their innermost sacred circle.
In fact, to my certain knowledge, Seaver is already
planning a jamboree with you at the right hand of
the toastmaster. There’s your chance.
Once in, stay in long enough to get Henshaw
out.”
“But, good heavens, Calderwell,
it’s impossible! What can I do?”
demanded Arkwright, savagely. “I can’t
walk up to the man, take him by the ear, and say:
‘Here, you, sir march home!’
Neither can I come the ‘I-am-holier-than-thou’
act, and hold up to him the mirror of his transgressions.”
“No, but you can get him out
of it some way. You can find a way for
Billy’s sake.”
There was no answer, and, after a
moment, Calderwell went on more quietly.
“I haven’t seen Billy
but two or three times since I came back to Boston but
I don’t need to, to know that she’s breaking
her heart over something. And of course that
something is Bertram.”
There was still no answer. Arkwright
got up suddenly, and walked to the window.
“You see, I’m helpless,”
resumed Calderwell. “I don’t paint
pictures, nor sing songs, nor write stories, nor dance
jigs for a living and you have to do one
or another to be in with that set. And it’s
got to be a Johnny-on-the-spot with Bertram.
All is, something will have to be done to get him
out of the state of mind and body he’s in now,
or ”
Arkwright wheeled sharply.
“When did you say this jamboree was going to
be?” he demanded.
“Next week, some time.
The date is not settled. They were going to consult
you.”
“Hm-m,” commented
Arkwright. And, though his next remark was a complete
change of subject, Calderwell gave a contented sigh.
If, when the proposition was first
made to him, Arkwright was doubtful of his ability
to be a successful “Johnny-on-the-spot,”
he was even more doubtful of it as the days passed,
and he was attempting to carry out the suggestion.
He had known that he was undertaking
a most difficult and delicate task, and he soon began
to fear that it was an impossible one, as well.
With a dogged persistence, however, he adhered to
his purpose, ever on the alert to be more watchful,
more tactful, more efficient in emergencies.
Disagreeable as was the task, in a
way, in another way it was a great pleasure to him.
He was glad of the opportunity to do anything for
Billy; and then, too, he was glad of something absorbing
enough to take his mind off his own affairs.
He told himself, sometimes, that this helping another
man to fight his tiger skin was assisting himself to
fight his own.
Arkwright was trying very hard not
to think of Alice Greggory these days. He had
come back hoping that he was in a measure “cured”
of his “folly,” as he termed it; but the
first look into Alice Greggory’s blue-gray eyes
had taught him the fallacy of that idea. In that
very first meeting with Alice, he feared that he had
revealed his secret, for she was plainly so nervously
distant and ill at ease with him that he could but
construe her embarrassment and chilly dignity as pity
for him and a desire to show him that she had nothing
but friendship for him. Since then he had seen
but little of her, partly because he did not wish
to see her, and partly because his time was so fully
occupied. Then, too, in a round-about way he
had heard a rumor that Calderwell was engaged to be
married; and, though no feminine name had been mentioned
in connection with the story, Arkwright had not hesitated
to supply in his own mind that of Alice Greggory.
Beginning with the “jamboree,”
which came off quite in accordance with Calderwell’s
prophecies, Arkwright spent the most of such time as
was not given to his professional duties in deliberately
cultivating the society of Bertram and his friends.
To this extent he met with no difficulty, for he found
that M. J. Arkwright, the new star in the operatic
firmament, was obviously a welcome comrade. Beyond
this it was not so easy. Arkwright wondered,
indeed, sometimes, if he were making any progress
at all. But still he persevered.
He walked with Bertram, he talked
with Bertram, unobtrusively he contrived to be near
Bertram almost always, when they were together with
“the boys.” Gradually he won from
him the story of what the surgeon had said to him,
and of how black the future looked in consequence.
This established a new bond between them, so potent
that Arkwright ventured to test it one day by telling
Bertram the story of the tiger skin the
first tiger skin in his uncle’s library years
ago, and of how, since then, any difficulty he had
encountered he had tried to treat as a tiger skin.
In telling the story he was careful to draw no moral
for his listener, and to preach no sermon. He
told the tale, too, with all possible whimsical lightness
of touch, and immediately at its conclusion he changed
the subject. But that he had not failed utterly
in his design was evidenced a few days later when
Bertram grimly declared that he guessed his
tiger skin was a lively beast, all right.
The first time Arkwright went home
with Bertram, his presence was almost a necessity.
Bertram was not quite himself that night. Billy
admitted them. She had plainly been watching
and waiting. Arkwright never forgot the look
on her face as her eyes met his. There was a curious
mixture of terror, hurt pride, relief, and shame,
overtopped by a fierce loyalty which almost seemed
to say aloud the words: “Don’t you
dare to blame him!”
Arkwright’s heart ached with
sympathy and admiration at the proudly courageous
way in which Billy carried off the next few painful
minutes. Even when he bade her good night a little
later, only her eyes said “thank you.”
Her lips were dumb.
Arkwright often went home with Bertram
after that. Not that it was always necessary far
from it. Some time, indeed, elapsed before he
had quite the same excuse again for his presence.
But he had found that occasionally he could get Bertram
home earlier by adroit suggestions of one kind or
another; and more and more frequently he was succeeding
in getting him home for a game of chess.
Bertram liked chess, and was a fine
player. Since breaking his arm he had turned
to games with the feverish eagerness of one who looks
for something absorbing to fill an unrestful mind.
It was Seaver’s skill in chess that had at first
attracted Bertram to the man long ago; but Bertram
could beat him easily too easily for much
pleasure in it now. So they did not play chess
often these days. Bertram had found that, in
spite of his injury, he could still take part in other
games, and some of them, if not so intricate as chess,
were at least more apt to take his mind off himself,
especially if there were a bit of money up to add
zest and interest.
As it happened, however, Bertram learned
one day that Arkwright could play chess and
play well, too, as he discovered after their first
game together. This fact contributed not a little
to such success as Arkwright was having in his efforts
to wean Bertram from his undesirable companions; for
Bertram soon found out that Arkwright was more than
a match for himself, and the occasional games he did
succeed in winning only whetted his appetite for more.
Many an evening now, therefore, was spent by the two
men in Bertram’s den, with Billy anxiously hovering
near, her eyes longingly watching either her husband’s
absorbed face or the pretty little red and white ivory
figures, which seemed to possess so wonderful a power
to hold his attention. In spite of her joy at
the chessmen’s efficacy in keeping Bertram at
home, however, she was almost jealous of them.
“Mr. Arkwright, couldn’t
you show me how to play, sometime?” she
said wistfully, one evening, when the momentary absence
of Bertram had left the two alone together. “I
used to watch Bertram and Marie play years ago; but
I never knew how to play myself. Not that I can
see where the fun is in just sitting staring at a
chessboard for half an hour at a time, though!
But Bertram likes it, and so I I want to
learn to stare with him. Will you teach me?”
“I should be glad to,” smiled Arkwright.
“Then will you come, maybe,
sometimes when Bertram is at the doctor’s?
He goes every Tuesday and Friday at three o’clock
for treatment. I’d rather you came then
for two reasons: first, because I don’t
want Bertram to know I’m learning, till I can
play some; and, secondly, because because
I don’t want to take you away from
him.”
The last words were spoken very low,
and were accompanied by a painful blush. It was
the first time Billy had ever hinted to Arkwright,
in words, that she understood what he was trying to
do.
“I’ll come next Tuesday,”
promised Arkwright, with a cheerfully unobservant
air. Then Bertram came in, bringing the book of
Chess Problems, for which he had gone up-stairs.