It was all well enough for me to say - as
I had to to Tillie many a time - that it
was ridiculous to make a fuss over a person for what,
after all, was an accident of birth. It was well
enough for me to say that it was only by chance that
I wasn’t strutting about with a crown on my
head and a man blowing a trumpet to let folks know
I was coming, and by the same token and the same chance
Prince Oskar might have been a red-haired spring-house
girl, breaking the steels in her figure stooping over
to ladle mineral water out of a hole in the earth.
Nevertheless, at five o’clock,
after every one had gone, when I saw Miss Patty, muffled
in furs, tripping out through the snow, with a tall
thin man beside her, walking very straight and taking
one step to her four, I felt as though somebody had
hit me at the end of my breast-bone.
They stopped a minute outside before
they came in, and I had to take myself in hand.
“Now look here, Minnie, you
idiot,” I said to myself, “this is America;
you’re as good as he is; not a bend of the knee
or a stoop of the neck. And if he calls you ‘my
good girl’ hit him.”
They came in together, laughing and
talking, and, to be honest, if I hadn’t caught
the back of a chair, I’d have had one foot back
of the other and been making a courtesy in spite of
myself.
“We’re late, Minnie!”
Miss Patty said. “Oskar, this is one of
my best friends, and you are to be very nice to her.”
He had one of those single glass things
in his eye and he gave me a good stare through it.
Seen close he was handsomer than Mr. Pierce, but he
looked older than his picture.
“Ask her if she won’t
be nice to me,” he said in as good English as
mine, and held out his hand.
“Any of Miss Patty’s friends - ”
I began, with a lump in my throat, and gave his hand
a good squeeze. I thought he looked startled,
and suddenly I had a sort of chill.
“Good gracious!” I exclaimed, “should
I have kissed it?”
They roared at that, and Miss Patty had to sit down
in a chair.
“You see, she knows, Oskar,”
she said. “The rest are thinking and perhaps
guessing, but Minnie is the only one that knows, and
she never talks. Everybody who comes here tells
Minnie his troubles.”
“But - am I a trouble?”
he asked in a low tone. I was down in the spring,
but I heard it.
“So far you have hardly been
an unalloyed joy,” she replied, and from the
spring I echoed “Amen.”
“Yes - I’m so
hung with family skeletons that I clatter when I walk,”
I explained, pretending I hadn’t heard, and
brought them both glasses of water. “It’s
got to be a habit with some people to save their sciatica
and their husband’s dispositions and their torpid
livers and their unpaid bills and bring ’em
here to me.”
He sniffed at the glass and put it down.
“Herr Gott!” he said,
“what a water! It is - the whole
thing is extraordinary! I can understand the
reason for Carlsbad or Wiesbaden - it is
gay. One sees one’s friends; it is - social.
But here !”
He got up and, lifting a window curtain,
peered out into the snow.
“Here,” he repeated, “shut
in by forests and hills, a thousand miles from life - ”
He shrugged his shoulders and came back to the table.
“It is well enough for the father,” he
went on to Miss Patty, “but for you! Why - it
is depressing, gray. The only bit of color in
it all is - here, in what you call the spring-house.”
I thought he meant Miss Patty’s cheeks or her
lovely violet eyes, but he was looking at my hair.
I had caught his eye on it before, but this time he
made no secret about it, and he sighed, for all the
world as if it reminded him of something. He
went over to the slot-machine and stood in front of
it, humming and trying the different combinations.
I must say he had a nice back.
Miss Patty came over and slipped her hand in mine.
“Well?” she whispered, looking at me with
her pretty eyebrows raised.
“He looks all right,”
I had to confess. “Perhaps you can coax
him to shave.”
She laughed.
“Oskar!” she called, “you
have passed, but you are conditioned. Minnie
objects to the mustache.”
He turned and looked at me gravely.
“It is my - greatest
attraction,” he declared, “but it is also
a great care. If Miss Minnie demands it, I shall
give it to her in a - in a little box.”
He sauntered over and looked at me in his audacious
way. “But you must promise to care for
it. Many women have loved it.”
“I believe that!” I answered,
and stared back at him without blinking. “I
guess I wouldn’t want the responsibility.”
But I had an idea that he meant what
he said about the many women, and that Miss Patty
knew it as well as I did. She flushed a little,
and they went very soon after that. I stood and
watched them until they disappeared in the snow, and
I felt lonelier than ever, and sad, although certainly
he was better than I had expected to find him.
He was a man, and not a little cub with a body hardly
big enough to carry his forefathers’ weaknesses.
But he had a cold eye and a warm mouth, and that sort
of man is generally a social success and a matrimonial
failure.
It wasn’t until toward night
that I remembered I’d been talking to a real
prince and I hadn’t once said “your Highness”
or “your Excellency” or whatever I should
have said. I had said “You!”
I had hardly closed the door after
them when it opened again and Mr. Pierce came in.
He shut the door and, going over to one of the tables,
put a package down on it.
“Here’s the stuff you
wanted for the spring, Minnie,” he announced.
“I suppose I can’t do anything more than
register a protest against it?”
“You needn’t bother doing
that,” I answered, “unless it makes you
feel better. Your authority ends at that door.
Inside the spring-house I’m in control.”
(It’s hard to believe, with
things as they are, that I once really believed that.
But I did. It was three full days later that I
learned that I’d been mistaken!)
Well, he sat there and looked at nothing
while I heated water in my brass kettle over the fire
and dissolved the things against Thoburn’s quick
eye the next day, and he didn’t say anything.
He had a gift for keeping quiet, Mr. Pierce had.
It got on my nerves after a while.
“Things are doing better,”
I remarked, stirring up my mixture.
“Yes,” he said, without moving.
“I suppose they’re happier now they have
a doctor?”
“Yes - no - I
don’t know. He’s not much of a doctor,
you know - and there don’t seem to
be any medical books around.”
“There’s one on the care
and feeding of infants in the circulating library,”
I said, “and he can have my Anatomy.”
“You’re generous!”
he remarked, with one of his quick smiles.
“It’s a book,” I
snapped, and fell to stirring again. But he was
moping once more, with his feet out and his hands
behind his head, staring at the ceiling.
“I say, Minnie -
“Yes?”
“Miss - Miss Jennings
and the von Inwald were here just now, weren’t
they? I passed them on the bridge.”
“Yes.”
“What - how do you like him?”
“Better than I expected and
not so well as I might,” I said. “If
you are going to the house soon you might take Miss
Patty her handkerchief. It’s there under
that table.”
I took my mixture into the pantry
and left it to cool. But as I started back I
stopped. He had got the handkerchief and was standing
in front of the fire, holding it in the palm of his
hand and looking at it. And all in a minute he
crushed it to his face with both hands and against
the firelight I could see him quivering.
I stepped back into the pantry and
came out again noisily. He was standing very
calm and quiet where he had been before, and no handkerchief
in sight.
“Well,” I said, “did you get it?”
“Get what?”
“Miss Patty’s handkerchief?”
“Oh - that! Yes.
Here it is.” He pulled it out of his pocket
and held it up by the corner.
“Ridiculous size, isn’t
it, and - ” he held it up to his nose - “I
dare say one could almost tell it was hers by the
scent. It’s - it’s like
her.”
“Humph!” I said, suddenly
suspicious, and looked at it. “Well,”
I said, “it may remind you of Miss Patty, and
the scent may be like Miss Patty, but she doesn’t
use perfume on her handkerchief. This has an E.
C. on it, which means Eliza Cobb.”
He left soon after, rather crestfallen,
but to save my life I couldn’t forget what I’d
seen - him with that scrap of linen that he
thought was hers crushed to his face, and his shoulders
heaving. I had an idea that he hadn’t cared
much for women before, and that, this being a first
attack, he hadn’t established what the old doctor
used to call an immunity.