Overhead the clouds cloaked the sky;
a ragged cloak it was, and, here and there, a star
shone through a hole, to be obscured almost instantly
as more cloud tatters were hurled across the rent.
The pines threshed on the hill tops. The bare
branches of the wild-cherry and silverleaf trees scraped
and rattled and tossed. And the wind, the raw,
chilling December wind, driven in, wet and salty,
from the sea, tore over the dunes and brown uplands
and across the frozen salt-meadows, screamed through
the telegraph wires, and made the platform of the dismal
South Harniss railway station the lonesomest, coldest,
darkest and most miserable spot on the face of the
earth.
At least that was the opinion of the
seventeen-year-old boy whom the down train on
time for once and a wonder had just deposited
upon that platform. He would not have discounted
the statement one iota. The South Harniss station
platform was the most miserable spot on earth
and he was the most miserable human being upon it.
And this last was probably true, for there were but
three other humans upon that platform and, judging
by externals, they seemed happy enough. One was
the station agent, who was just entering the building
preparatory to locking up for the night, and the others
were Jim Young, driver of the “depot wagon,”
and Doctor Holliday, the South Harniss “homeopath,”
who had been up to a Boston hospital with a patient
and was returning home. Jim was whistling “Silver
Bells,” a tune much in vogue the previous summer,
and Doctor Holliday was puffing at a cigar and knocking
his feet together to keep them warm while waiting
to get into the depot wagon. These were the only
people in sight and they were paying no attention whatever
to the lonely figure at the other end of the platform.
The boy looked about him. The
station, with its sickly yellow gleam of kerosene
lamp behind its dingy windowpane, was apparently the
only inhabited spot in a barren wilderness. At
the edge of the platform civilization seemed to end
and beyond was nothing but a black earth and a black
sky, tossing trees and howling wind, and cold raw,
damp, penetrating cold. Compared with this even
the stuffy plush seats and smelly warmth of the car
he had just left appeared temptingly homelike and
luxurious. All the way down from the city he had
sneered inwardly at a one-horse railroad which ran
no Pullmans on its Cape branch in winter time.
Now he forgot his longing for mahogany veneer and individual
chairs and would gladly have boarded a freight car,
provided there were in it a lamp and a stove.
The light in the station was extinguished
and the agent came out with a jingling bunch of keys
and locked the door. “Good-night, Jim,”
he shouted, and walked off into the blackness.
Jim responded with a “good-night” of his
own and climbed aboard the wagon, into the dark interior
of which the doctor had preceded him. The boy
at the other end of the platform began to be really
alarmed. It looked as if all living things were
abandoning him and he was to be left marooned, to starve
or freeze, provided he was not blown away first.
He picked up the suitcase an
expensive suitcase it was, elaborately strapped and
buckled, with a telescope back and gold fittings and
hastened toward the wagon. Mr. Young had just
picked up the reins.
“Oh, oh, I say!”
faltered the boy. We have called him “the
boy” all this time, but he did not consider
himself a boy, he esteemed himself a man, if not full-grown
physically, certainly so mentally. A man, with
all a man’s wisdom, and more besides the
great, the all-embracing wisdom of his age, or youth.
“Here, I say! Just a minute!”
he repeated. Jim Young put his head around the
edge of the wagon curtain. “Eh?” he
queried. “Eh? Who’s talkin’?
Oh, was it you, young feller? Did you want me?”
The young fellow replied that he did.
“This is South Harniss, isn’t it?”
he asked.
Mr. Young chuckled. “Darn
sure thing,” he drawled. “I give in
that it looks consider’ble like Boston, or Providence,
R. I., or some of them capitols, but it ain’t,
it’s South Harniss, Cape Cod.”
Doctor Holliday, on the back seat
of the depot wagon, chuckled. Jim did not; he
never laughed at his own jokes. And his questioner
did not chuckle, either.
“Does a does a Mr. Snow live here?”
he asked.
The answer was prompt, if rather indefinite.
“Um-hm,” said the driver. “No
less’n fourteen of him lives here. Which
one do you want?”
“A Mr. Z. Snow.”
“Mr. Z. Snow, eh? Humph!
I don’t seem to recollect any Mr. Z. Snow around
nowadays. There used to be a Ziba Snow, but he’s
dead. ’Twan’t him you wanted, was
it?”
“No. The one I want is is
a Captain Snow. Captain ” he
paused before uttering the name which to his critical
metropolitan ear had seemed so dreadfully countrified
and humiliating; “Captain Zelotes Snow,”
he blurted, desperately.
Jim Young laughed aloud. “Good
land, Doc!” he cried, turning toward his passenger;
“I swan I clean forgot that Cap’n Lote’s
name begun with a Z. Cap’n Lote Snow? Why,
darn sure! I . . . Eh?” He stopped
short, evidently struck by a new idea. “Sho!”
he drawled, slowly. “Why, I declare I believe
you’re . . . Yes, of course! I heard
they was expectin’ you. Doc, you know who
’tis, don’t you? Cap’n Lote’s
grandson; Janie’s boy.”
He took the lighted lantern from under
the wagon seat and held it up so that its glow shone
upon the face of the youth standing by the wheel.
“Hum,” he mused.
“Don’t seem to favor Janie much, does he,
Doc. Kind of got her mouth and chin, though.
Remember that sort of good-lookin’ set to her
mouth she had? And she got it from old Cap’n
Lo himself. This boy’s face must be more
like his pa’s, I cal’late. Don’t
you cal’late so, Doc?”
Whether Doctor Holliday cal’lated
so or not he did not say. It may be that he thought
this cool inspection of and discussion concerning a
stranger, even a juvenile stranger, somewhat embarrassing
to its object. Or the lantern light may have
shown him an ominous pucker between the boy’s
black brows and a flash of temper in the big black
eyes beneath them. At any rate, instead of replying
to Mr. Young, he said, kindly:
“Yes, Captain Snow lives in
the village. If you are going to his house get
right in here. I live close by, myself.”
“Darned sure!” agreed
Mr. Young, with enthusiasm. “Hop right in,
sonny.”
But the boy hesitated. Then,
haughtily ignoring the driver, he said: “I
thought Captain Snow would be here to meet me.
He wrote that he would.”
The irrepressible Jim had no idea
of remaining ignored. “Did Cap’n Lote
write you that he’d be here to the depot?”
he demanded. “All right, then he’ll
be here, don’t you fret. I presume likely
that everlastin’ mare of his has eat herself
sick again; eh, Doc? By godfreys domino, the way
they pet and stuff that fool horse is a sin and a shame.
It ain’t Lote’s fault so much as ’tis
his wife’s she’s responsible.
Don’t you fret, Bub, the cap’n’ll
be here for you some time to-night. If he said
he’ll come he’ll come, even if he has
to hire one of them limmysines. He, he, he!
All you’ve got to do is wait, and . . .
Hey! . . . Hold on a minute! . . . Bub!”
The boy was walking away. And
to hail him as “Bub” was, although Jim
Young did not know it, the one way least likely to
bring him back.
“Bub!” shouted Jim again.
Receiving no reply he added what he had intended saying.
“If I run afoul of Cap’n Lote anywheres
on the road,” he called, “I’ll tell
him you’re here a-waitin’. So long,
Bub. Git dap, Chain Lightnin’.”
The horse, thus complimented, pricked
up one ear, lifted a foot, and jogged off. The
depot wagon became merely a shadowy smudge against
the darkness of the night. For a few minutes
the “chock, chock” of the hoofs upon the
frozen road and the rattle of wheels gave audible evidence
of its progress. Then these died away and upon
the windswept platform of the South Harniss station
descended the black gloom of lonesomeness so complete
as to make that which had been before seem, by comparison,
almost cheerful.
The youth upon that platform turned
up his coat collar, thrust his gloved hands into his
pockets, and shivered. Then, still shivering,
he took a brisk walk up and down beside the suitcase
and, finally, circumnavigated the little station.
The voyage of discovery was unprofitable; there was
nothing to discover. So far as he could see which
was by no means far upon each side of the
building was nothing but bare fields and tossing pines,
and wind and cold and blackness. He came to anchor
once more by the suitcase and drew a long, hopeless
breath.
He thought of the cheery dining room
at the school he had left the day before. Dinner
would be nearly over by now. The fellows were
having dessert, or, probably, were filing out into
the corridors, the younger chaps to go to the study
hall and the older ones the lordly seniors,
of whom he had been one on the way to their
rooms. The picture of his own cheerful, gay room
in the senior corridor was before his mind; of that
room as it was before the telegram came, before the
lawyer came with the letter, before the end of everything
as he knew it and the beginning of this.
He had not always loved and longed for that school
as he loved and longed for it now. There had
been times when he referred to it as “the old
jail,” and professed to hate it. But it
had been the only real home he had known since he
was eight years old and now he looked back upon it
as a fallen angel might have looked back upon Paradise.
He sighed again, choked and hastily drew his gloved
hand across his eyes. At the age of seventeen
it is very unmanly to cry, but, at that age also,
manhood and boyhood are closely intermingled.
He choked again and then, squaring his shoulders,
reached into his coat pocket for the silver cigarette
case which, as a recent acquisition, was the pride
of his soul. He had just succeeded in lighting
a cigarette when, borne upon the wind, he heard once
more the sound of hoofs and wheels and saw in the
distance a speck of light advancing toward the station.
The sounds drew nearer, so did the
light. Then an old-fashioned buggy, drawn by
a plump little sorrel, pulled up by the platform and
a hand held a lantern aloft.
“Hello!” hailed a voice. “Where
are you?”
The hail did not have to be repeated.
Before the vehicle reached the station the boy had
tossed away the cigarette, picked up the suitcase,
and was waiting. Now he strode into the lantern
light.
“Here I am,” he answered,
trying hard not to appear too eager. “Were
you looking for me?”
The holder of the lantern tucked the
reins between the whip-socket and the dash and climbed
out of the buggy. He was a little man, perhaps
about forty-eight or fifty, with a smooth-shaven face
wrinkled at the corners of the mouth and eyes.
His voice was the most curious thing about him; it
was high and piping, more like a woman’s than
a man’s. Yet his words and manner were
masculine enough, and he moved and spoke with a nervous,
jerky quickness.
He answered the question promptly.
“Guess I be, guess I be,” he said briskly.
“Anyhow, I’m lookin’ for a boy name
of name of My soul to heavens,
I’ve forgot it again, I do believe! What
did you say your name was?”
“Speranza. Albert Speranza.”
“Sartin, sartin! Sper er um yes,
yes. Knew it just as well as I did my own.
Well, well, well! Ye-es, yes, yes. Get
right aboard, Alfred. Let me take your satchel.”
He picked up the suitcase. The
boy, his foot upon the buggy step, still hesitated.
“Then you’re you’re not
my grandfather?” he faltered.
“Eh? Who? Your grandfather?
Me? He, he, he!” He chuckled shrilly.
“No, no! No such luck. If I was Cap’n
Lote Snow, I’d be some older’n I be now
and a dum sight richer. Yes, yes. No,
I’m Cap’n Lote’s bookkeeper over
at the lumber consarn. He’s got a cold,
and Olive that’s his wife she
said he shouldn’t come out to-night. He
said he should, and while they was Katy-didin’
back and forth about it, Rachel Mrs. Ellis she’s
the hired housekeeper there she telephoned
me to harness up and come meet you up here to the
depot. Er er little mite
late, wan’t I?”
“Why, yes, just a little.
The other man, the one who drives the mail cart I
think that was what it was said perhaps
the horse was sick, or something like that.”
“No-o, no, that wan’t
it this time. I er All tucked
in and warm enough, be you? Ye-es, yes,
yes. No, I’m to blame, I shouldn’t
wonder. I stopped at the at the store
a minute and met one or two of the fellers, and that
kind of held me up. All right now? Ye-es,
yes, yes. G’long, gal.”
The buggy moved away from the platform.
Its passenger, his chilly feet and legs tightly wrapped
in the robes, drew a breath of relief between his
chattering teeth. He was actually going somewhere
at last; whatever happened, morning would not find
him propped frozen stiff against the scarred and mangy
clapboards of the South Harniss station.
“Warm enough, be you?” inquired his driver
cheerfully.
“Yes, thank you.”
“That’s good, that’s good, that’s
good. Ye-es, yes, yes.
Well er Frederick, how do you
think you’re goin’ to like South
Harniss?”
The answer was rather non-committal.
The boy replied that he had not seen very much of
it as yet. His companion seemed to find the statement
highly amusing. He chuckled and slapped his knee.
“Ain’t seen much of it,
eh? No-o, no, no. I guess you ain’t,
guess you ain’t. He, he, he . . .
Um . . . Let’s see, what was I talkin’
about?”
“Why, nothing in particular, I think, Mr. Mr. ”
“Didn’t I tell you my
name? Sho, sho! That’s funny.
My name’s Keeler Laban B. Keeler.
That’s my name and bookkeeper is my station.
South Harniss is my dwellin’ place and
I guess likely you’ll have to see the minister
about the rest of it. He, he, he!”
His passenger, to whom the old schoolbook
quatrain was entirely unknown, wondered what on earth
the man was talking about. However, he smiled
politely and sniffed with a dawning suspicion.
It seemed to him there was an unusual scent in the
air, a spirituous scent, a
“Have a peppermint lozenger,”
suggested Mr. Keeler, with sudden enthusiasm.
“Peppermint is good for what ails you, so they
tell me. Ye-es, yes, yes. Have one.
Have two, have a lot.”
He proceeded to have a lot himself,
and the buggy was straightway reflavored, so to speak.
The boy, his suspicions by no means dispelled, leaned
back in the corner behind the curtains and awaited
developments. He was warmer, that was a real
physical and consequently a slight mental comfort,
but the feeling of lonesomeness was still acute.
So far his acquaintanceship with the citizens of South
Harniss had not filled him with enthusiasm. They
were what he, in his former and very recent state
of existence, would have called “Rubes.”
Were the grandparents whom he had never met this sort
of people? It seemed probable. What sort
of a place was this to which Fate had consigned him?
The sense of utter helplessness which had had him
in its clutches since the day when he received the
news of his father’s death was as dreadfully
real as ever. He had not been consulted at all.
No one had asked him what he wished to do, or where
he wished to go. The letter had come from these
people, the Cape Cod grandparents of whom, up to that
time, he had never even heard, and he had been shipped
to them as though he were a piece of merchandise.
And what was to become of him now, after he reached
his destination? What would they expect him to
do? Or be? How would he be treated?
In his extensive reading he
had been an omnivorous reader there were
numerous examples of youths left, like him, to the
care of distant relatives, or step-parents, or utter
strangers. Their experiences, generally speaking,
had not been cheerful ones. Most of them had run
away. He might run away; but somehow the idea
of running away, with no money, to face hardship and
poverty and all the rest, did not make an alluring
appeal. He had been used to comfort and luxury
ever since he could remember, and his imagination,
an unusually active one, visualized much more keenly
than the average the tribulations and struggles of
a runaway. David Copperfield, he remembered,
had run away, but he did it when a kid, not a man
like himself. Nicholas Nickleby no,
Nicholas had not run away exactly, but his father
had died and he had been left to an uncle. It
would be dreadful if his grandfather should turn out
to be a man like Ralph Nickleby. Yet Nicholas
had gotten on well in spite of his wicked relative.
Yes, and how gloriously he had defied the old rascal,
too! He wondered if he would ever be called upon
to defy his grandfather. He saw himself doing
it quietly, a perfect gentleman always,
but with the noble determination of one performing
a disagreeable duty. His chin lifted and his
shoulders squared against the back of the buggy.
Mr. Keeler, who had apparently forgotten
his passenger altogether, broke into song,
“She’s my
darlin’ hanky-panky
And
she wears a number two,
Her father keeps
a barber shop
Way
out in Kalamazoo.”
He sang the foregoing twice over and
then added a chorus, plainly improvised, made up of
“Di doos” and “Di dums”
ad lib. And the buggy rolled up and over the
slope of a little hill and, in the face of a screaming
sea wind, descended a long, gentle slope to where,
scattered along a two-mile water frontage, the lights
of South Harniss twinkled sparsely.
“Did doo dum,
dee dum, doo dum
Di
doo dum, doo dum dee.”
So sang Mr. Keeler. Then he broke
off his solo as the little mare turned in between
a pair of high wooden posts bordering a drive, jogged
along that drive for perhaps fifty feet, and stopped
beside the stone step of a white front door.
Through the arched window above that door shone lamplight
warm and yellow.
“Whoa!” commanded Mr.
Keeler, most unnecessarily. Then, as if himself
a bit uncertain as to his exact whereabouts, he peered
out at the door and the house of which it was a part,
afterward settling back to announce triumphantly:
“And here we be! Yes, sir, here we be!”
Then the door opened. A flood
of lamplight poured upon the buggy and its occupants.
And the boy saw two people standing in the doorway,
a man and a woman.
It was the woman who spoke first.
It was she who had opened the door. The man was
standing behind her looking over her shoulder over
her head really, for he was tall and broad and she
short and slender.
“Is it ?” she faltered.
Mr. Keeler answered. “Yes,
ma’am,” he declared emphatically, “that’s
who ’tis. Here we be er er what’s-your-name Edward.
Jump right out.”
His passenger alighted from the buggy.
The woman bent forward to look at him, her hands clasped.
“It it’s Albert, isn’t
it?” she asked.
The boy nodded. “Yes,” he said.
The hands unclasped and she held them
out toward him. “Oh, Albert,” she
cried, “I’m your grandmother. I ”
The man interrupted. “Wait
till we get him inside, Olive,” he said.
“Come in, son.” Then, addressing the
driver, he ordered: “Labe, take the horse
and team out to the barn and unharness for me, will
you?”
“Ye-es, yes, yes,”
replied Mr. Keeler. “Yes indeed, Cap’n.
Take her right along right off. Yes
indeedy. Git dap!”
He drove off toward the end of the
yard, where a large building, presumably a barn, loomed
black against the dark sky. He sang as he drove
and the big man on the step looked after him and sniffed
suspiciously.
Meanwhile the boy had followed the
little woman into the house through a small front
hall, from which a narrow flight of stairs shot aloft
with almost unbelievable steepness, and into a large
room. Albert had a swift impression of big windows
full of plants, of pictures of ships and schooners
on the walls, of a table set for four.
“Take your things right off,”
cried his grandmother. “Here, I’ll
take ’em. There! now turn ’round
and let me look at you. Don’t move till
I get a good look.”
He stood perfectly still while she
inspected him from head to foot.
“You’ve got her mouth,”
she said slowly. “Yes, you’ve got
her mouth. Her hair and eyes were brown and yours
are black, but but I think you look
like her. Oh, I did so want you to! May I
kiss you, Albert? I’m your grandmother,
you know.”
With embarrassed shyness he leaned
forward while she put her arms about his neck and
kissed him on the cheek. As he straightened again
he became aware that the big man had entered the room
and was regarding him intently beneath a pair of shaggy
gray eyebrows. Mrs. Snow turned.
“Oh, Zelotes,” she cried,
“he’s got Janie’s mouth, don’t
you think so? And he does look like her,
doesn’t he?”
Her husband shook his head. “Maybe
so, Mother,” he said, with a half smile.
“I ain’t a great hand for locatin’
who folks look like. How are you, boy? Glad
to see you. I’m your grandfather, you know.”
They shook hands, while each inspected
and made a mental estimate of the other. Albert
saw a square, bearded jaw, a firm mouth, gray eyes
with many wrinkles at the corners, and a shock of
thick gray hair. The eyes had a way of looking
straight at you, through you, as if reading your thoughts,
divining your motives and making a general appraisal
of you and them.
Captain Zelotes Snow, for his part,
saw a tall young fellow, slim and straight, with black
curly hair, large black eyes and regular features.
A good-looking boy, a handsome boy almost
too handsome, perhaps, or with just a touch of the
effeminate in the good looks. The captain’s
glance took in the well-fitting suit of clothes, the
expensive tie, the gold watch chain.
“Humph!” grunted Captain
Zelotes. “Well, your grandma and I are glad
to have you with us. Let me see, Albert that’s
your right name, ain’t it Albert?”
Something in his grandfather’s
looks or tone aroused a curious feeling in the youth.
It was not a feeling of antagonism, exactly, but more
of defiance, of obstinacy. He felt as if this
big man, regarding him so keenly from under the heavy
brows, was looking for faults, was expecting to find
something wrong, might almost be disappointed if he
did not find it. He met the gaze for a moment,
the color rising to his cheeks.
“My name,” he said deliberately,
“is Alberto Miguel Carlos Speranza.”
Mrs. Snow uttered a little exclamation.
“Oh!” she ejaculated. And then added:
“Why why, I thought we we
understood ’twas ‘Albert.’ We
didn’t know there was we didn’t
know there was any more to it. What did you say
it was?”
Her grandson squared his shoulders.
“Alberto Miguel Carlos Speranza,” he repeated.
“My father” there was pride
in his voice now “my father’s
name was Miguel Carlos. Of course you knew that.”
He spoke as if all creation must have
known it. Mrs. Snow looked helplessly at her
husband. Captain Zelotes rubbed his chin.
“We ll,” he
drawled dryly, “I guess likely we’ll get
along with ‘Albert’ for a spell.
I cal’late ’twill come more handy to us
Cape folks. We’re kind of plain and everyday
’round here. Sapper’s ready, ain’t
it, Mother? Al must be hungry. I’m
plaguey sure I am.”
“But, Zelotes, maybe he’d
like to go up to his bedroom first. He’s
been ridin’ a long ways in the cars and maybe
he’d like to wash up or change his clothes?”
“Change his clothes! Lord
sakes, Olive, what would he want to change his clothes
this time of night for? You don’t want to
change your clothes, do you, boy?”
“No, sir, I guess not.”
“Sartin sure you don’t.
Want to wash? There’s a basin and soap and
towel right out there in the kitchen.”
He pointed to the kitchen door.
At that moment the door was partially opened and a
brisk feminine voice from behind it inquired:
“How about eatin’? Are you all ready
in there?”
It was Captain Snow who answered.
“You bet we are, Rachel!”
he declared. “All ready and then some.
Trot her out. Sit down, Mother. Sit down,
Al. Now then, Rachel, all aboard.”
Rachel, it appeared, was the owner
of the brisk feminine voice just mentioned. She
was brisk herself, as to age about forty, plump, rosy
and very business-like. She whisked the platter
of fried mackerel and the dishes of baked potatoes,
stewed corn, hot biscuits and all the rest, to the
table is no time, and then, to Albert’s astonishment,
sat down at that table herself. Mrs. Snow did
the honors.
“Albert,” she said, “this
is Mrs. Ellis, who helps me keep house. Rachel,
this is my grandson, Albert er Speranza.”
She pronounced the surname in a tone
almost apologetic. Mrs. Ellis did not attempt
to pronounce it. She extended a plump hand and
observed: “Is that so? Real glad to
know you, Albert. How do you think you’re
goin’ to like South Harniss?”
Considering that his acquaintance
with the village had been so decidedly limited, Albert
was somewhat puzzled how to reply. His grandfather
saved him the trouble.
“Lord sakes, Rachel,”
he declared, “he ain’t seen more’n
three square foot of it yet. It’s darker’n
the inside of a nigger’s undershirt outdoors
to-night. Well, Al Albert, I mean,
how are you on mackerel? Pretty good stowage
room below decks? About so much, eh?”
Mrs. Snow interrupted.
“Zelotes,” she said reprovingly, “ain’t
you forgettin’ somethin’?”
“Eh? Forgettin’?
Heavens to Betsy, so I am! Lord, we thank thee
for these and all other gifts, Amen. What did
I do with the fork; swallow it?”
As long as he lives Albert Speranza
will not forget that first meal in the home of his
grandparents. It was so strange, so different
from any other meal he had ever eaten. The food
was good and there was an abundance of it, but the
surroundings were so queer. Instead of the well-ordered
and sedate school meal, here all the eatables from
fish to pie were put upon the table at the same time
and the servant or housekeeper, which to
his mind were one and the same sat down,
not only to eat with the family, but to take at least
an equal part in the conversation. And the conversation
itself was so different. Beginning with questions
concerning his own journey from the New York town where
the school was located, it at length reached South
Harniss and there centered about the diminutive person
of Laban Keeler, his loquacious and tuneful rescuer
from the platform of the railway station.
“Where are your things, Albert?”
asked Mrs. Snow. “Your trunk or travelin’
bag, or whatever you had, I mean?”
“My trunks are coming by express,”
began the boy. Captain Zelotes interrupted him.
“Your trunks?” he repeated. “Got
more’n one, have you?”
“Why why, yes, there
are three. Mr. Holden he is the headmaster,
you know ”
“Eh? Headmaster? Oh,
you mean the boss teacher up there at the school?
Yes, yes. Um-hm.”
“Yes, sir. Mr. Holden says
the trunks should get here in a few days.”
Mrs. Ellis, the housekeeper, made
the next remark. “Did I understand you
to say you had three trunks?” she demanded.
“Why, yes.”
“Three trunks for one boy! For mercy sakes,
what have you got in ’em?”
“Why why, my things. My clothes
and and everything.”
“Everything, or just about,
I should say. Goodness gracious me, when I go
up to Boston I have all I can do to fill up one trunk.
And I’m bigger’n you are bigger
’round, anyway.”
There was no doubt about that. Captain Zelotes
laughed shortly.
“That statement ain’t
what I’d call exaggerated, Rachel,” he
declared. “Every time I see you and Laban
out walkin’ together he has to keep on the sunny
side or be in a total eclipse. And, by the way,
speakin’ of Laban Say, son, how did
you and he get along comin’ down from the depot?”
“All right. It was pretty dark.”
“I’ll bet you! Laban wasn’t
very talkative, was he?”
“Why, yes, sir, he talked a good deal but he
sang most of the time.”
This simple statement appeared to
cause a most surprising sensation. The Snows
and their housekeeper looked at each other. Captain
Zelotes leaned back in his chair and whistled.
“Whew!” he observed. “Hum!
Sho! Thunderation!”
“Oh, dear!” exclaimed his wife.
Mrs. Ellis, the housekeeper, drew
a long breath. “I might have expected it,”
she said tartly. “It’s past time.
He’s pretty nigh a month overdue, as ’tis.”
Captain Snow rose to his feet.
“I was kind of suspicious when he started for
the barn,” he declared. “Seemed to
me he was singin’ then. What did he
sing, boy?” he asked, turning suddenly upon his
grandson.
“Why why, I don’t
know. I didn’t notice particularly.
You see, it was pretty cold and ”
Mrs. Ellis interrupted. “Did
he sing anything about somebody’s bein’
his darlin’ hanky-panky and wearin’ a
number two?” she demanded sharply.
“Why why, yes, he did.”
Apparently that settled it. Mrs.
Snow said, “Oh, dear!” again and the housekeeper
also rose from the table.
“You’d better go right
out to the barn this minute, Cap’n Lote,”
she said, “and I guess likely I’d better
go with you.”
The captain already had his cap on his head.
“No, Rachel,” he said,
“I don’t need you. Cal’late
I can take care of ’most anything that’s
liable to have happened. If he ain’t put
the bridle to bed in the stall and hung the mare up
on the harness pegs I judge I can handle the job.
Wonder how fur along he’d got. Didn’t
hear him singin’ anything about ‘Hyannis
on the Cape,’ did you, boy?”
“No.”
“That’s some comfort.
Now, don’t you worry, Mother. I’ll
be back in a few minutes.”
Mrs. Snow clasped her hands.
“Oh, I hope he hasn’t set the barn
afire,” she wailed.
“No danger of that, I guess.
No, Rachel, you ’tend to your supper. I
don’t need you.”
He tramped out into the hall and the
door closed behind him. Mrs. Snow turned apologetically
to her puzzled grandson, who was entirely at a loss
to know what the trouble was about.
“You see, Albert,” she
hesitatingly explained, “Laban Mr.
Keeler the man who drove you down from
the depot he he’s an awful
nice man and your grandfather thinks the world and
all of him, but but every once in a while
he Oh, dear, I don’t know how to say
it to you, but ”
Evidently Mrs. Ellis knew how to say
it, for she broke into the conversation and said it
then and there.
“Every once in a while he gets
tipsy,” she snapped. “And I only wish
I had my fingers this minute in the hair of the scamp
that gave him the liquor.”
A light broke upon Albert’s
mind. “Oh! Oh, yes!” he exclaimed.
“I thought he acted a little queer, and once
I thought I smelt Oh, that was why he was
eating the peppermints!”
Mrs. Snow nodded. There was a
moment of silence. Suddenly the housekeeper,
who had resumed her seat in compliance with Captain
Zelotes’ order, slammed back her chair and stood
up.
“I’ve hated the smell
of peppermint for twenty-two year,” she declared,
and went out into the kitchen. Albert, looking
after her, felt his grandmother’s touch upon
his sleeve.
“I wouldn’t say any more
about it before her,” she whispered. “She’s
awful sensitive.”
Why in the world the housekeeper should
be particularly sensitive because the man who had
driven him from the station ate peppermint was quite
beyond the boy’s comprehension. Nor could
he thoroughly understand why the suspicion of Mr.
Keeler’s slight inebriety should cause such a
sensation in the Snow household. He was inclined
to think the tipsiness rather funny. Of course
alcohol was lectured against often enough at school
and on one occasion a member of the senior class a
twenty-year-old “hold-over” who should
have graduated the fall before had been
expelled for having beer in his room; but during his
long summer vacations, spent precariously at hotels
or in short visits to his father’s friends,
young Speranza had learned to be tolerant. Tolerance
was a necessary virtue in the circle surrounding Speranza
Senior, in his later years. The popping of corks
at all hours of the night and bottles full, half full
or empty, were sounds and sights to which Albert had
been well accustomed. When one has more than once
seen his own father overcome by conviviality and the
affair treated as a huge joke, one is not inclined
to be too censorious when others slip. What if
the queer old Keeler guy was tight? Was that anything
to raise such a row about?
Plainly, he decided, this was a strange
place, this household of his grandparents. His
premonition that they might be “Rubes”
seemed likely to have been well founded. What
would his father his great, world-famous
father have thought of them? “Bah!
these Yankee bourgeoisie!” He could almost hear
him say it. Miguel Carlos Speranza detested in
private the Yankee bourgeoisie. He
took their money and he married one of their daughters,
but he detested them. During his last years,
when the money had not flowed his way as copiously,
the detest grew.
“You won’t say anything
about Laban before Mrs. Ellis, will you, Albert?”
persisted Mrs. Snow. “She’s dreadful
sensitive. I’ll explain by and by.”
He promised, repressing a condescending smile.
Both the housekeeper and Captain Snow
returned in a few minutes. The latter reported
that the mare was safe and sound in her stall.
“The harness was mostly on the
floor, but Jess was all right, thank the Lord,”
observed the captain.
“Jess is our horse’s name,
Albert,” explained Mrs. Snow. “That
is, her name’s Jessamine, but Zelotes can’t
ever seem to say the whole of any name. When
we first bought Jessamine I named her Magnolia, but
he called her ‘Mag’ all the time and I
couldn’t stand that. Have some more
preserves, Albert, do.”
All through the meal Albert was uneasily
conscious that his grandfather was looking at him
from under the shaggy brows, measuring him, estimating
him, reading him through and through. He resented
the scrutiny and the twinkle of sardonic humor which,
it seemed to him, accompanied it. His way of
handling his knife and fork, his clothes, his tie,
his manner of eating and drinking and speaking, all
these Captain Zelotes seemed to note and appraise.
But whatever the results of his scrutiny and appraisal
might be he kept them entirely to himself. When
he addressed his grandson directly, which was not often,
his remarks were trivial commonplaces and, although
pleasant enough, were terse and to the point.
Several times Mrs. Snow would have
questioned Albert concerning the life at school, but
each time her husband interfered.
“Not now, not now, Mother,”
he said. “The boy ain’t goin’
to run away to-night. He’ll be here to-morrow
and a good many to-morrows, if” and
here again Albert seemed to detect the slight sarcasm
and the twinkle “if we old-fashioned
‘down easters’ ain’t too common and
every-day for a high-toned young chap like him to put
up with. No, no, don’t make him talk to-night.
Can’t you see he’s so sleepy that it’s
only the exercise of openin’ his mouth to eat
that keeps his eyes from shuttin’? How
about that, son?”
It was perfectly true. The long
train ride, the excitement, the cold wait on the station
platform and the subsequent warmth of the room, the
hearty meal, all these combined to make for sleepiness
so overpowering that several times the boy had caught
his nose descending toward his plate in a most inelegant
nod. But it hurt his pride to think his grandfather
had noticed his condition.
“Oh, I’m all right,” he said, with
dignity.
Somehow the dignity seemed to have little effect upon
Captain Zelotes.
“Um yes, I know,”
observed the latter dryly, “but I guess likely
you’ll be more all right in bed. Mother,
you’ll show Albert where to turn in, won’t
you? There’s your suitcase out there in
the hall, son. I fetched it in from the barn
just now.”
Mrs. Snow ventured a protest.
“Oh, Zelotes,” she cried,
“ain’t we goin’ to talk with him
at all? Why, there is so much to say!”
“‘Twill say just as well
to-morrow mornin’, Mother; better, because we’ll
have all day to say it in. Get the lamp.”
Albert looked at his watch.
“Why, it’s only half-past nine,”
he said.
Captain Zelotes, who also had been
looking at the watch, which was a very fine and very
expensive one, smiled slightly. “Half-past
nine some nights,” he said, “is equal
to half-past twelve others. This is one of the
some. There, there, son, you’re so sleepy
this minute that you’ve got a list to starboard.
When you and I have that talk that’s comin’
to us we want to be shipshape and on an even keel.
Rachel, light that lamp.”
The housekeeper brought in and lighted
a small hand lamp. Mrs. Snow took it and led
the way to the hall and the narrow, breakneck flight
of stairs. Captain Zelotes laid a hand on his
grandson’s shoulder.
“Good-night, son,” he said quietly.
Albert looked into the gray eyes.
Their expression was not unkindly, but there was,
or he imagined there was, the same quizzical, sardonic
twinkle. He resented that twinkle more than ever;
it made him feel very young indeed, and correspondingly
obstinate. Something of that obstinacy showed
in his own eyes as he returned his grandfather’s
look.
“Good-night sir,”
he said, and for the life of him he could not resist
hesitating before adding the “sir.”
As he climbed the steep stairs he fancied he heard
a short sniff or chuckle he was not certain
which from the big man in the dining-room.
His bedroom was a good-sized room;
that is, it would have been of good size if the person
who designed it had known what the term “square”
meant. Apparently he did not, and had built the
apartment on the hit-or-miss, higglety-pigglety pattern,
with unexpected alcoves cut into the walls and closets
and chimneys built out from them. There were
three windows, a big bed, an old-fashioned bureau,
a chest of drawers, a washstand, and several old-fashioned
chairs. Mrs. Snow put the lamp upon the bureau.
She watched him anxiously as he looked about the room.
“Do do you like it?” she asked.
Albert replied that he guessed he
did. Perhaps there was not too much certainty
in his tone. He had never before seen a room like
it.
“Oh, I hope you will like it!
It was your mother’s room, Albert. She
slept here from the time she was seven until until
she went away.”
The boy looked about him with a new
interest, an odd thrill. His mother’s room.
His mother. He could just remember her, but that
was all. The memories were childish and unsatisfactory,
but they were memories. And she had slept there;
this had been her room when she was a girl, before
she married, before long before such a person
as Alberto Miguel Carlos Speranza had been even dreamed
of. That was strange, it was queer to think about.
Long before he was born, when she was years younger
than he as he stood there now, she had stood there,
had looked from those windows, had
His grandmother threw her arms about
his neck and kissed him. Her cheek was wet.
“Good-night, Albert,”
she said chokingly, and hurried out of the room.
He undressed quickly, for the room
was very cold. He opened the window, after a
desperate struggle, and climbed into bed. The
wind, whistling in, obligingly blew out the lamp for
him. It shrieked and howled about the eaves and
the old house squeaked and groaned. Albert pulled
the comforter up about his neck and concentrated upon
the business of going to sleep. He, who could
scarcely remember when he had had a real home, was
desperately homesick.
Downstairs in the dining-room Captain
Zelotes stood, his hands in his pockets, looking through
the mica panes of the stove door at the fire within.
His wife came up behind him and laid a hand on his
sleeve.
“What are you thinkin’ about, Father?”
she asked.
Her husband shook his head. “I
was wonderin’,” he said, “what my
granddad, the original Cap’n Lote Snow that built
this house, would have said if he’d known that
he’d have a great-great-grandson come to live
in it who was,” scornfully, “a half-breed.”
Olive’s grip tightened on his arm.
“Oh, don’t talk so, Zelotes,”
she begged. “He’s our Janie’s
boy.”
The captain opened the stove door,
regarded the red-hot coals for an instant, and then
slammed the door shut again.
“I know, Mother,” he said
grimly. “It’s for the sake of Janie’s
half that I’m takin’ in the other.”
“But but, Zelotes,
don’t you think he seems like a nice boy?”
The twinkle reappeared in Captain Lote’s eyes.
“I think he thinks he’s
a nice boy, Mother,” he said. “There,
there, let’s go to bed.”