Outside the restaurant I changed my
plans. I decided not to go to Flynn’s that
afternoon, for I wanted Jerry to understand how little
I was in sympathy with his prize fight. And after
the first day he no longer insisted on my going with
him. But he came to Ballard’s apartment
and we had several talks in which, after one final
and fruitless effort to dissuade him from his fight,
I gave up and we talked of other things.
It was not necessary for me to tell
Jerry that I had overheard his interview with Una
Habberton. And when he spoke of the incident,
I encouraged him to talk until I learned just how
much and how little the meeting
meant to him. The impression, the rather unique
impression she had first made upon the clean, fair
surface of his mind, remained indelibly printed:
the first female creature he had seen and talked with,
a youthful being, like himself, with whom he could
talk as he talked with me, without care or restraint, a
creature of ideals, humor, and a fine feeling for human
companionship which she did not hesitate to share;
a friend like Skookums or me, but of an infinitely
finer grain, with a gentler voice, a smoother skin
and softer eyes, better to look at; in short, more
agreeable, more surprising, more sympathetic, more
appealing. This chance meeting, I think, merely
confirmed the previous impression, reasserting an early
conception of femininity with which the charms of Marcia
Van Wyck could have nothing in common. He must
have compared them, but with different standards of
comparison, for each in Jerry’s mind was sui
generis. The glamour of Marcia, her perfumes,
her artistry, the lure of her voice and eyes, her
absorbing abstractions and sudden enthusiasms how
could Una’s quaint transitions compare with such
as these? And yet I am sure that he judged Una
Habberton not unfavorably in Marcia’s reflected
glamour, for he spoke of the character in her hands
(thinking of Marcia’s rosy nails) and the radiancy
of her smile (thinking of Marcia’s red lips).
And whatever he may have thought of her personal pulchritude
or the quiet magnetism of her friendliness, there
was no room in his mind just now for the merely spiritual.
If Una had a place in his heart, it was where the
ebb and flow were quiet, not in the mid-stream of
hot blood. But Jerry kept his word. His
check for Una’s day nursery went forward on the
day following their meeting and Jerry found time in
the intervals between Marcia, business and the gymnasium
to call upon Una and talk over in a general way the
great project in which their interest was involved.
I heard little of these few meetings, for after a
short visit with Ballard, during which we discussed
Jerry’s plans in despair, I went back to the
Manor to resume my much neglected work.
It was now March. I missed Jerry
as I knew I should miss him always at this season
when it had been our custom to fare forth in search
of woodland adventure and the early signs of spring.
I wondered if Jerry in the city could be feeling the
call of the wanderlust as I did. I managed to
work a few hours of each day, but my habit of concentration
seemed to fail me, and my thoughts kept recurring unpleasantly
to the ruin Jerry was courting both for his reputation
and his spirit. Clean as he was, he couldn’t
play too long with pitch and not be defiled. I
heard one day that Briar Hills had just been opened
and I pricked up my ears. Aha! It couldn’t
be long now before the bird would come homing.
The notice of this home-coming reached
me in the form of a wire.
“Will arrive with party tomorrow.
Have six bedrooms prepared for guests. Will explain
when I see you.”
Six bedrooms! A house party in
the very midst of his training! I couldn’t
understand. A fine hope surged in me. A house
party guests! Could it be that something
had happened to change his plans? Had he given
up his bout with Clancy? I could hardly restrain
my impatience and tried to get Jack Ballard on the
telephone. He had left town. It was very
curious; for somewhere in me vague misgivings stirred.
What if !
The morrow brought the painful solution
of my uncertainties. For toward four o’clock
of the afternoon there was a roaring of automobiles
in the drive which brought me to the study window,
from which vantage point I saw Jerry dismounting from
the car in front with three other men, Flynn, Christopher
and a large colored man, while from the other car,
a hired machine, by the look of it, four other figures
descended all unloading suit-cases upon
the terrace steps a motley crowd in flannel
shirts and sweaters, with cropped heads, thick necks
and red hands, all talking loudly and staring up at
the towers of the house as though they expected them
to fall on them. This then was Jerry’s
house-party ! Thugs, cut-throats, apaches his
pugilist friends from Flynn’s!
Jerry hurried along the terrace and
met me at the hall door, where he burst into unseemly
laughter. I suppose at the expression of dismay
which must have been written upon my countenance.
He seized me by both hands and led me indoors.
“There wasn’t any use
wiring you the truth, Roger. I didn’t want
to make you unhappy any sooner than I had to.
Are you upset?”
“Nothing can ever upset me again,”
I said with dignity. “It’s your house.
I can move out.”
“But you won’t, Roger,”
he clapped an arm around my shoulders and walked me
into the study. “We’re not going to
bother you. But we just had to get away from
town for some road work and it’s devilish
conspicuous anywhere near the city, people watching,
reporters and all that sort of thing.”
He turned, for the dismayed servants
had come out and stood in a row in the hall aghast
at the appearance of the visitors who stood awkwardly
shifting their feet in the main doorway, their suit-cases
and bundles in their arms, awaiting directions.
“Take those things upstairs show
’em, Christopher,” says Jerry. “You
show ’em to their rooms, Poole. And when
you’re washed up, Flynn, come down here again.”
Over his shoulder I watched the hulking
devils go past in sheepish single file with furtive
glances at me. When they had passed out of sight,
Jerry explained rapidly.
“You see, Roger, we had to do
it. There was no other way. I needed some
running badly and there wasn’t a chance for it without
the whole thing coming out in the papers.”
I smiled ironically. “And
you think you’ve chosen a way to avoid publicity
by bringing these” I restrained myself
with difficulty “these gentlemen
here? Don’t you know that every paper in
New York will have a man here writing the thing up?”
“No, they won’t.
They can’t get in. I stopped at the Lodge
as I came by and gave my orders.”
“But they’ll know that
Jim Robinson and Jerry Benham are the same.”
Jerry winked an eye and laid a finger along his nose.
“No, they won’t, old Dry-as-dust,
for the very simple reason that he isn’t.”
“I don’t understand.”
“Well, you see, I’m Jim Robinson and you
are Jerry Benham.”
“I!” I gasped.
“Precisely. You are Jerry
Benham, patron of the manly art Maecenas,
friend and backer of Robinson aforesaid, whom you’ve
invited to Horsham Manor to complete his training.”
“Preposterous! These these
bruisers” (I let go now) “think I’m
you?”
“No, dear Roger, not I, who
am Robinson, but Jerry Benham, multi-millionaire and
king of good fellows. Flynn knows the truth, of
course, but he’s shut as tight as a clam.
He won’t talk, for his own interests are involved.”
“You expect me to play the part
of good fellow,” I broke out when I had sufficiently
recovered from the shock of his information. “You
expect me to entertain this motley aggregation of assorted
criminals as Jerry Benham! Well, I won’t,
and that’s flat.”
“Now, Roger, don’t be
unreasonable,” he said with a cajoling smile.
“They’re a pretty decent lot, really.
Sagorski the big chap with the fuzzy hair,
he’s not half bad when you know him; and Carty,
the one with the cauliflower ear, his fight comes
off inside of a week. We’re helping him
out, too, you see good food, clean air bully
fellow a little too finely drawn just now
and a bit irritable ”
“I see. A bit irritable so am
I ”
“And then,” he went on,
“the other big fellow is Tim O’Halloran,
my chopping block, has a nasty left and
is a demon for punishment. The little fellow
is Kid Spatola, an Italian, one of my handlers,
the bootblack champion. Oh, they’re a fine
lot, Roger You’ll get to like ’em.
Nothing like being thrown with chaps a lot to know
what they’re like inside of ’em,
I mean.”
“Quite true,” I remarked
with desperate calmness. “And who, if I
may ask, is the colored gentleman in the yellow sweater?”
“Oh!” said Jerry pleasantly.
“That’s Danny Monroe, my rubber. He’s
the best masseur outside of Sweden, knows all the
tricks; wait until you see him rubbing me down.”
“I shall try to possess my soul
in patience until then,” I said. “Have
you designated which of the spare rooms these gentlemen
are to occupy?”
“Ah, don’t be stodgy,
Roger,” he said. “They’ll all
be in the wing. They won’t bother you.
I’m counting on you to help. Just try, won’t
you? It will only be for about three weeks.”
I gasped and sank into the nearest
chair. Three weeks in which this gang of hoodlums
must be fed, looked after and entertained. I was
helpless. Radford, the superintendent, had gone
for a lengthy visit to relatives in California.
“I hope you have their criminal
records also a private detective to watch
the silver,” I murmured weakly.
“No, I haven’t,”
Jerry retorted. “I’m not afraid of
any of them. It’s rather narrow, Roger,
to think, just because a chap goes into pugilism as
a business, that he isn’t straight. You’ve
taught me that one man is as good as another and now
you’re you’re crawling.
That’s what you’re doing crawling.”
I was indeed, crawling, groveling.
I strove upward, but remained prostrate.
“How could you do such a thing,
Jerry?” I remonstrated feebly.
He patted me on the back much,
I think, as he would have patted Skookums in encouragement.
“Oh, be a good sport, Roger.
You can be when you want to, you know.
We won’t bother you. We’ll be in the
gym or on the road most of the day, and in bed at
nine sharp.”
“What do you want me to do?”
I stammered at last.
“Why nothing,” he said,
his face brightening. “Just to be Jerry
Benham for awhile. It isn’t such a lot
to ask, is it? Just make believe you’re
pleased as punch to have ’em around come
and watch me work” (he had the jargon at his
tongue’s tip) “and show some interest in
the proceedings. You are interested, Roger.”
“I’m not.”
“You don’t want to see me licked, do you?”
I sighed. The affair was out of my hands.
“What shall you want to eat?” I asked
meekly.
“Oh, beefsteak, lots of it and
other things. Flynn will tell you.”
He folded his arms and gazed down at me contentedly.
“Thanks, old man,” he said gratefully.
“I knew you would. It’s fine of you.
I won’t forget it.”
“Nor will I,” I said.
Jerry only laughed. D n the boy.
It was rank tyranny.
Flynn and Sagorski were already down
the stairs. I eyed them malevolently, but rose
and went to the kitchen to give the necessary orders.
There I found the force of servants in executive session
and my appearance was the signal for immediate notice
from the entire lot. I hadn’t foreseen
this difficulty which immediately assumed the proportions
of a calamity. They stated their objections, which
may well be imagined, most respectfully but in no
uncertain terms. They could have endured Mr.
Flynn, Mr. Carty and Mr. Sagorski, but they balked
at Mr. Danny Monroe. I had balked at him, too,
but I didn’t tell them so. The upstairs
maids (we had chambermaids now) absolutely refused
to consider any of my arguments in rebuttal and were
already pinning on their hats, when Jerry, who had
gotten wind of the mutiny from Christopher (poor Christopher!),
came running and planting himself in their very midst,
demolished their objections with a laugh and an offer
of double wages. They smiled at a joke he made,
weakened, finally unpinned their hats and took up
their aprons. I have never in my experience seen
such an example of the blandishment of wealth.
Peace restored and the orders given,
which included a pledge of secrecy as to Jerry’s
real identity and mine, I made my way to the gymnasium
with Jerry in a valiant effort to “be a good
sport” and to appear as “pleased as punch”
at the invasion of my sanctuary by Jerry’s Huns.
Carty and Flynn were having a fast “go”
of it on the floor, with Monroe, the Swedish negro,
keeping time, while from beyond came sounds of howling
where “Kid” Spatola and Tim O’Halloran
were sporting like healthy grampuses in Jerry’s my marble
pool. Jerry made the introductions gayly and
O’Halloran splashed a greeting, while Spatola
eyed my rusty black serge critically (Spatola
was the Beau Brummel of the party as I discovered
later) nodded, and then did a back flip-flap from
the diving board.
But unwelcome as they were to me,
they were not nearly so unpleasant in a state of nature
as they had been in their clothing, for when considered
as sentient beings they left much to be desired; as
healthy human animals, I had to admit that they were
a success, and having conceded the fact that they
were animals and Horsham Manor was for the present
a zoo, the rest was merely a matter of mental adjustment.
I played my part of host, I fear, with a bad grace,
but as manners held no high place in their code of
being, my deficiencies passed unnoticed.
Was this triumph of matter over mind
nature’s cynical reply to my years of care and
study in bringing Jerry to perfect manhood? Had
I erred in giving importance to the growth and development
of Jerry’s body? Or was it, as Jack Ballard
had said, merely that the nice adjustment of mind
and matter had been suddenly disarranged? How
far was this muscular orgy to carry him? And
where would it end? After Madison Square Garden what?
Dinner found me no nearer a solution
and I sighed as my glance passed the length of the
table, along the row of villainous faces to where
opposite me Jim Robinson grinned cheerfully over his
plate. It was quite wonderful to see these Vandals
eat beefsteak, bread, vegetables, eggs,
milk everything put before them vanished
as if by magic, while Poole and Christopher with set
and scornful faces hurried to the pantry, bearing
in their empty dishes the mute evidence of the gastronomic
miracles that were being performed beneath their very
eyes. For my part I confess that I was so fascinated
in watching the way in which Sagorski used his knife
and fork and the dexterous manner in which he dispatched
his food in spite of such a handicap that I ate nothing.
They talked in mono-syllables and grunts for the most
part, and when really conversing used language which
I found it most difficult to understand. Their
dinner finished, they rose, stretching and eructating
in true Rabelaisian fashion.
“A stroll in the Park, byes,
now. And then the feathers,”
said Flynn, passing the chewing gum.
“A fine lot, ain’t they,
Mr. Benham?” said Jerry to me as they filed
out.
“Extraordinary,” I replied,
with a fictitious smile, “most extraordinary.”
He grinned at me and followed them.
It was not until the next day in the
hour between road and gym work that I managed to get
Flynn aside. He had thus far succeeded in avoiding
me, but I caught him by the arm as he was passing,
dragged him into my study and shut the door.
“See here, Flynn,” I said
with some warmth, “it’s not my affair to
interfere with any of Mr. Benham’s plans.
He’s his own master now and can do what he pleases,
but you and I have always been good enough friends,
and I should like to know just how much or how little
you’ve had to do with getting the boy into this
match at the Garden ”
He looked at me quizzically for a
moment and then grinned.
“Ye’ve got a right to
ask me that, Mr. Canby. An’ I’ll give
ye a fair answer. I had nothin’ to do wid
it, sor honor bright ”
He paused and grinned again. “Mind ye,
I’m not sayin’ I’m sorry he’s
doin’ it, for I won’t lie to ye.
I’d like to see him lick Sailor Clancy an’
I’m doin’ my best to help him to it.
But for havin’ a hand in puttin’ Masther
Jerry up to the game ye can count me out. ’Twas
Masther Jerry himself, sor. He got it into
his head someway an’ there was no gettin’
rid of it. I made the match for the bye because
he wanted it an’ that’s a fact nothin’
else.”
He looked me in the eye and I knew
that he told the truth.
“What chance has Jerry of winning, Flynn?”
I asked.
“Ah, there ye’ve got me,
sor. Jerry’s a rare one, he is, and
plucky and quick as any man of his weight
in the wor-rld but Clancy is a good ‘un,
too young, strong as a bull an’ expayrienced.
Fought steady for three years, an’ winning,
sor. He’ll have the confidence but
Masther Jerry is a wonder. He’ll have a
chanct, sor, more than an even chanct, I’d
say, if he don’t waste nothin’.”
“Waste nothing?”
“He’s got to land, sor every
time and waste no whiffs on nothin’.”
“I see.”
Flynn was eyeing the door impatiently.
He was a busy man and had no time to answer foolish
questions.
“There’s no chance of getting out of it?”
I asked.
“None, sor. He couldn’t
quit now. Ye wouldn’t want him to, would
you, sor?” he finished in a reproachful
tone, which just missed being disagreeable.
I opened the door and he lost no time in getting to
the gymnasium.
That next afternoon in the midst of
the work out, I had another surprise, for a wagon
arrived from the station and in it were Marcia Van
Wyck and Miss Gore, the latter dragged against her
will to play a part she little cared for. I happened
to meet them in the hall, where, since none of the
pugilists were present, Marcia put aside subterfuge,
nodded coolly and asked for Jerry. She wore the
badly fitting suit her maid had procured for her and
chewed gum incessantly. I looked anxiously at
Miss Gore, but it seems that even her martyrdom stopped
at that. I led the way to the gymnasium where
Jerry and the irritable Carty were resting between
rounds. The girl nodded to Jerry, who waved his
glove, and took one of the chairs by the ring-side,
the obedient Miss Gore next her.
“What round?” she asked masticating leisurely.
“Third,” said Flynn with his gaze on his
watch, “Time!”
And they went at it hammer and tongs.
From my chair beside Miss Gore I watched the girl.
Her hands were clasped over her knees as she leaned
forward, her eyes glowing, watching the swift motions
of the two men as they moved backward and forward.
Miss Gore wore the fixed smile of the perpetually
bored. She watched Jerry and Carty exchanging
their blows, with a sphinxlike air as though inspecting
half-naked men dancing around each other was her usual
afternoon’s employment. She was admirable,
accepting her lot in life with a philosophy which had
in it something of the stoic. Only when Carty
landed on Jerry’s lip and the blood showed did
she wince.
“You approve of this?” she
whispered, then to me.
“No. I’m helpless,” I returned.
“You know?”
“Yes. It’s madness. She made
him do ”
“Sh ” she warned,
for the round had ended, and Marcia turned toward
her. But I knew that she understood.
“You’re a good sport,
Mr. Benham,” said Marcia to me, assuming her
rôle with an air of enjoyment, “havin’
the boys up here to train. Jim’s comin’
fast, ain’t he?”
I nodded uncomfortably.
Her eyes twinkled mischievously.
“You might of sent your honk-honk to the train
for us though. Cost us a dollar from the station.
What d’ye think of that? Don’t like
the ladies, do you, Mr. Benham?” she laughed.
“I’ll be glad to send you back,”
I said quickly enough.
“Oh, there ain’t a doubt
of that, I’m sure. Nice house you’ve
got gym an’ all. You might ask
us to stay awhile. Won’t you, Mr. Benham?”
She was very much amused at the awkwardness of the
situation.
“I’m afraid I haven’t
any more room,” I replied stiffly. How I
hated that girl! The sight of blood had inflamed
me. I believe I could have throttled her where
she sat, but fortunately Flynn called “Time”
and the bout went on.
It was to be war between us two from
this moment. I knew what she meant. She
had accepted my challenge and was defying me.
Since I had not been able to dissuade Jerry from his
fight, she was sure of her power. He was her
creature now, to do with as she chose, I watched her
furtively during the next round. She was silent,
her gaze fixed upon Jerry, her eyes gleaming.
There was something morbid in her suppressed excitement something
strange and unnatural in the fascination of her attention.
She chewed gum constantly and was utterly absorbed,
driven, it seemed to me, by some inner fire which
she made no effort to control. She was primitive,
savage. When Jerry’s blows landed, her
lips parted and she breathed hard. I think at
this moment he was the only man for her, her mate
in savagery, the finest human beast in the world.
When the round ended I moved away. I had seen
enough.
Later, while the men were being rubbed
down, Miss Gore, leaving Marcia with Flynn, came out
to me on the terrace, where I had gone alone for a
breath of clean air. I was utterly absorbed in
my misery and I did not hear her step. Her deep
voice just at my ear startled me.
“Well, Mr. Canby,” she
said softly. “Your dream-castle totters.”
I glanced up at her quickly, but she still smiled.
“It has fallen,” I groaned.
“No not yet,”
still cheerfully. She paused a moment, and, leaning
her elbows on the balustrade, looked out down the
valley.
“All will be well,” she said at last slowly.
Our glances met. “I have that presentiment,”
she added.
“Based on what?” I said
bitterly. “A man who can inspire such a
passion as this is no more than a beast ”
“Or no less than a man,”
she muttered quickly. “You forget that Jerry
is what you’ve made him ”
“Not this the body the servant not
the mind ”
“The mind will survive,”
she put in evenly. “It must. The whole
thing is hypnotic. He will pass out of it soon.”
“And she ?”
She shrugged lightly. “I
don’t know. I’ve never seen her like
this before. I think if Jerry were to seize her
by force and carry her away today now she
couldn’t resist him.”
“Ah !”
“But he won’t. He
treats her as though she were a flower, caresses her
with his eyes, touches her petals timidly ”
“Bah! I could crush her ”
She smiled indulgently.
“She is a strange creature.
Love is an enigma to her. That’s why she
follows this mad whim for Jerry she doesn’t
mistake it for love, she knows too much but
it’s a fair imitation.”
“It is morbid, unhealthy.”
“Perhaps, but like other diseases, will pass.”
“Leaving Jerry sick?”
“He will recover.”
A calm fell upon me. Was she
right after all? What reason had I to lose faith
in Jerry when this woman, almost a stranger to me,
believed in him? I turned and laid my hands quietly
over hers.
“Thanks,” I stammered.
“You’re very kind.” And then
realizing the silly impulsiveness of my action, straightened
for fear that she might misunderstand. Without
moving from her position, she turned her head and
smiled at me quizzically. If her eyes hadn’t
been kind I would have thought she was laughing at
me.