The note-book of Mr. Horatio
Armorer, president of our street railways, contained
a page of interest to some people in our town, on the
occasion of his last visit.
He wrote it while the train creaked
over the river, and the porter of his Pullman car
was brushing all the dust that had been distributed
on the passengers’ clothing, into the main aisle.
If you had seen him writing it (with
a stubby little pencil that he occasionally brightened
with the tip of his tongue), you would not have dreamed
him to be more profoundly disturbed than he had been
in years. Nor would the page itself have much
enlightened you.
“See
abt road M D See L
See
E & M tea-set
See
abt L.”
Translated into long-hand, this reads:
“See about the street-car road, Marston (the
superintendent) and Dane (the lawyer). See Lossing,
see Esther and Maggie, and remember about tea-set.
See about Lossing.”
His memoranda written, he slipped
the book in his pocket, reflecting cynically, “There’s
habit! I’ve no need of writing that.
It’s not pleasant enough to forget!”
Thirty odd years ago, Horatio Armorer they
called him ’Raish, then had left
the town to seek his fortune in Chicago. It was
his daydream to wrestle a hundred thousand dollars
out of the world’s tight fists, and return to
live in pomp on Brady Street hill! He should drive
a buggy with two horses, and his wife should keep
two girls. Long ago, the hundred thousand limit
had been reached and passed, next the million; and
still he did not return. His father, the Presbyterian
minister, left his parish, or, to be exact, was gently
propelled out of his parish by the disaffected; the
family had a new home; and the son, struggling to
help them out of his scanty resources, went to the
new parish and not to the old. He grew rich,
he established his brothers and sisters in prosperity,
he erected costly monuments and a memorial church to
his parents (they were beyond any other gifts from
him); he married, and lavished his money on three
daughters; but the home of his youth neither saw him
nor his money until Margaret Ellis bought a house on
Brady Street, far up town, where she could have all
the grass that she wanted. Mrs. Ellis was a widow
and rich. Not a millionaire like her brother,
but the possessor of a handsome property.
She was the best-natured woman in
the world, and never guessed how hard her neighbors
found it to forgive her for always calling their town
of thirty thousand souls, “the country.”
She said that she had pined for years to live in the
country, and have horses, and a Jersey cow and chickens,
and “a neat pig.” All of which modest
cravings she gratified on her little estate; and the
gardener was often seen with a scowl and the garden
hose, keeping the pig neat.
It was later that Mr. Armorer had
bought the street railways, they having had a troublous
history and being for sale cheap. Nobody that
knows Armorer as a business man would back his sentiment
by so much as an old shoe; yet it was sentiment, and
not a good bargain, that had enticed the financier.
Once engaged, the instincts of a shrewd trader prompted
him to turn it into a good bargain, anyhow. His
fancy was pleased by a vision of a return to the home
of his childhood and his struggling youth, as a greater
personage than his hopes had ever dared promise.
But, in the event, there was little
enough gratification for his vanity. Not since
his wife’s death had he been so harassed and
anxious; for he came not in order to view his new
property, but because his sister had written him her
suspicions that Harry Lossing wanted to marry his
youngest daughter.
Armorer arrived in the early dawn.
Early as it was, a handsome victoria, with horses
sleeker of skin and harness heavier and brighter than
one is used to meet outside the great cities, had
been in waiting for twenty minutes; while for that
space of time a pretty girl had paced up and down
the platform. The keenest observer among the crowd,
airing its meek impatience on the platform, did not
detect any sign of anxiety in her behavior. She
walked erect, with a step that left a clean-cut footprint
in the dust, as girls are trained to walk nowadays.
Her tailor-made gown of fine blue serge had not a
wrinkle. It was so simple that only a fashionable
woman could guess anywhere near the awful sum total
which that plain skirt, that short jacket, and that
severe waistcoat had once made on a ruled sheet of
paper. When she turned her face toward the low,
red station-house and the people, it looked gentle,
and the least in the world sad. She had one of
those clear olive skins that easily grow pale; it
was pale to-day. Her black hair was fine as spun
silk; the coil under her hat-brim shone as she moved.
The fine hair, the soft, transparent skin, and the
beautiful marking of her brows were responsible for
an air of fragile daintiness in her person, just as
her almond-shaped, liquid dark eyes and unsmiling
mouth made her look sad. It was a most attractive
face, in all its moods; sometimes it was a beautiful
face; yet it did not have a single perfect feature
except the mouth, which at least so Harry
Lossing told his mother might have been
stolen from the Venus of Milo. Even the mouth,
some critics called too small for her nose; but it
is as easy to call her nose too large for her mouth.
The instant she turned her back on
the bustle of the station, all the lines in her face
seemed to waver and the eyes to brighten. Finally,
when the train rolled up to the platform and a young-looking
elderly man swung himself nimbly off the steps, the
color flared up in her cheeks, only to sink as suddenly;
like a candle flame in a gust of wind.
Mr. Armorer put his two arms and his
umbrella and travelling-bag about the charming shape
in blue, at the same time exclaiming, “You’re
a good girl to come out so early, Essie! How’s
Aunt Meg?”
“Oh, very well. She would
have come too, but she hasn’t come back from
training.”
“Training?”
“Yes, dear, she has a regular
trainer, like John L. Sullivan, you know. She
drives out to the park with Eliza and me, and walks
and runs races, and does gymnastics. She has
lost ten pounds.”
Armorer wagged his head with a grin:
“I dare say. I thought so when you began.
Meg is always moaning and groaning because she isn’t
a sylph! She will make her cook’s life
a burden for about two months and lose ten pounds,
and then she will revel in ice-cream! Last time,
she was raving about Dr. Salisbury and living on beefsteak
sausages, spending a fortune starving herself.”
“She had Dr. Salisbury’s
pamphlet; but Cardigan told her it was a long way
out; so she said she hated to have it do no one any
good, and she gave it to Maria, one of the maids,
who is always fretting because she is so thin.”
“But the thing was to cure fat people!”
“Precisely.” Esther
laughed a little low laugh, at which her father’s
eyes shone; “but you see she told Maria to exactly
reverse the advice and eat everything that was injurious
to stout people, and it would be just right for her.”
“I perceive,” said Armorer,
dryly; “very ingenious and feminine scheme.
But who is Cardigan?”
“Shuey Cardigan? He is
the trainer. He is a fireman in a furniture shop,
now; but he used to be the boxing teacher for some
Harvard men; and he was a distinguished pugilist,
once. He said to me, modestly, ’I don’t
suppose you will have seen my name in the Police
Gazette, miss?’ But he really is a very
sober, decent man, notwithstanding.”
“Your Aunt Meg always was picking
up queer birds! Pray, who introduced this decent
pugilist?”
Esther was getting into the carriage;
her face was turned from him, but he could see the
pink deepen in her ear and the oval of her cheek.
She answered that it was a friend of theirs, Mr. Lossing.
As if the name had struck them both dumb, neither
spoke for a few moments. Armorer bit a sigh in
two. “Essie,” said he, “I guess
it is no use to side-track the subject. You know
why I came here, don’t you?”
“Aunt Meg told me what she wrote to you.”
“I knew she would. She
had compunctions of conscience letting him hang round
you, until she told me; and then she had awful gripes
because she had told, and had to confess to YOU!”
He continued in a different tone:
“Essie, I have missed your mother a long while,
and nobody knows how that kind of missing hurts; but
it seems to me I never missed her as I do to-day.
I need her to advise me about you, Essie. It
is like this: I don’t want to be a stern
parent any more than you want to elope on a rope ladder.
We have got to look at this thing together, my dear
little girl, and try to to trust each other.”
“Don’t you think, papa,”
said Esther, smiling rather tremulously, “that
we would better wait, before we have all these solemn
preparations, until we know surely whether Mr. Lossing
wants me?”
“Don’t you know surely?”
“He has never said anything of of
that kind.”
“Oh, he is in love with you
fast enough,” growled Armorer; but a smile of
intense relief brightened his face. “Now,
you see, my dear, all I know about this young man,
except that he wants my daughter which you
will admit is not likely to prejudice me in his favor is
that he is mayor of this town and has a furniture
store ”
“A manufactory; it is a very large business!”
“All right, manufactory, then;
all the same he is not a brilliant match for my daughter,
not such a husband as your sisters have.”
Esther’s lip quivered and her color rose again;
but she did not speak. “Still I will say
that I think a fellow who can make his own fortune
is better than a man with twice that fortune made
for him. My dear, if Lossing has the right stuff
in him and he is a real good fellow, I shan’t
make you go into a decline by objecting; but you see
it is a big shock to me, and you must let me get used
to it, and let me size the young man up in my own
way. There is another thing, Esther; I am going
to Europe Thursday, that will give me just a day in
Chicago if I go to-morrow, and I wish you would come
with me. Will you mind?”
Either she changed her seat or she
started at the proposal. But how could she say
that she wanted to stay in America with a man who had
not said a formal word of love to her? “I
can get ready, I think, papa,” said Esther.
They drove on. He felt a crawling
pain in his heart, for he loved his daughter Esther
as he had loved no other child of his; and he knew
that he had hurt her. Naturally, he grew the
more angry at the impertinent young man who was the
cause of the flitting; for the whole European plan
had been cooked up since the receipt of Mrs. Ellis’s
letter. They were on the very street down which
he used to walk (for it takes the line of the hills)
when he was a poor boy, a struggling, ferociously ambitious
young man. He looked at the changed rows of buildings,
and other thoughts came uppermost for a moment.
“It was here father’s church used to stand;
it’s gone, now,” he said. “It
was a wood church, painted a kind of gray; mother
had a bonnet the same color, and she used to say she
matched the church. I bought it with the very
first money I earned. Part of it came from weeding,
and the weather was warm, and I can feel the way my
back would sting and creak, now! I would want
to stop, often, but I thought of mother in church
with that bonnet, and I kept on! There’s
the place where Seeds, the grocer that used to trust
us, had his store; it was his children had the scarlet
fever, and mother went to nurse them. My! but
how dismal it was at home! We always got more
whippings when mother was away. Your grandfather
was a good man, too honest for this world, and he
loved every one of his seven children; but he brought
us up to fear him and the Lord. We feared him
the most, because the Lord couldn’t whip us!
He never whipped us when we did anything, but waited
until next day, that he might not punish in anger;
so we had all the night to anticipate it. Did
I ever tell you of the time he caught me in a lie?
I was lame for a week after it. He never caught
me in another lie.”
“I think he was cruel; I can’t
help it, papa,” cried Esther, with whom this
was an old argument, “still it did good, that
time!”
“Oh, no, he wasn’t cruel,
my dear,” said Armorer, with a queer smile that
seemed to take only one-half of his face, not answering
the last words; “he was too sure of his interpretation
of the Scripture, that was all. Why, that man
just slaved to educate us children; he’d have
gone to the stake rejoicing to have made sure that
we should be saved. And of the whole seven only
one is a church member. Is that the road?”
They could see a car swinging past,
on a parallel street, its bent pole hitching along
the trolley-wire.
“Pretty scrubby-looking cars,”
commented Armorer; “but get our new ordinance
through the council, we can save enough to afford some
fine new cars. Has Lossing said anything to you
about the ordinance and our petition to be allowed
to leave off the conductors?”
“He hasn’t said anything,
but I read about it in the papers. Is it so very
important that it should be passed?”
“Saving money is always important,
my dear,” said Armorer, seriously.
The horses turned again. They
were now opposite a fair lawn and a house of wood
and stone built after the old colonial pattern, as
modern architects see it. Esther pointed, saying:
“Aunt Meg’s, papa; isn’t it pretty?”
“Very handsome, very fine,”
said the financier, who knew nothing about architecture,
except its exceeding expense. “Esther, I’ve
a notion; if that young man of yours has brains and
is fond of you he ought to be able to get my ordinance
through his little eight by ten city council.
There is our chance to see what stuff he is made of!”
“Oh, he has a great deal of
influence,” said Esther; “he can do it,
unless unless he thinks the ordinance would
be bad for the city, you know.”
“Confound the modern way of
educating girls!” thought Armorer. “Now,
it would have been enough for Esther’s mother
to know that anything was for my interests; it wouldn’t
have to help all out-doors, too!”
But instead of enlarging on this point,
he went into a sketch of the improvements the road
could make with the money saved by the change, and
was waxing eloquent when a lady of a pleasant and comely
face, and a trig though not slender figure, advanced
to greet them.
It was after breakfast (and the scene
was the neat pig’s pen, where Armorer was displaying
his ignorance of swine) that he found his first chance
to talk with his sister alone. “Oh, first,
Sis,” said he, “about your birthday, to-day;
I telegraphed to Tiffany’s for that silver service,
you know, that you liked, so you needn’t think
there’s a mistake when it comes.”
“Oh, ’Raish, that gorgeous
thing! I must kiss you, if Daniel does see me!”
“Oh, that’s all right,”
said Armorer, hastily, and began to talk of the pig.
Suddenly, without looking up, he dropped into the pig-pen
the remark: “I’m very much obliged
to you for writing me, Meg.”
“I don’t know whether
to feel more like a virtuous sister or a villanous
aunt,” sighed Mrs. Ellis; “things seemed
to be getting on so rapidly that it didn’t seem
right, Esther visiting me and all, not to give you
a hint; still, I am sure that nothing has been said,
and it is horrid for Esther, perfectly HORRID, discussing
her proposals that haven’t been proposed!”
“I don’t want them ever
to be proposed,” said Armorer, gloomily.
“I know you always said you
didn’t want Esther to marry; but I thought if
she fell in love with the right man we know
that marriage is a very happy estate, sometimes, Horatio!”
She sighed again. In her case it was only the
memory of happiness, for Colonel Ellis had been dead
these twelve years; but his widow mourned him still.
“If you marry the right one,
maybe,” answered Armorer, grudgingly; “but
see here, Meg, Esther is different from the other girls;
they got married when Jenny was alive to look after
them, and I knew the men, and they were both big matches,
you know. Then, too, I was so busy making money
while the other girls grew up that I hadn’t time
to get real well acquainted with them. I don’t
think they ever kissed me, except when I gave them
a check. But Esther and I ”
he drummed with his fingers on the boards, his thin,
keen face wearing a look that would have amazed his
business acquaintances “you remember
when her mother died, Meg? Only fifteen, and
how she took hold of things! And we have been
together ever since, and she makes me think of her
grandmother and her mother both. She’s
never had a wish I knew that I haven’t granted why,
d it! I’ve bought my
clothes to please her ”
“That’s why you are become
so well-dressed, Horatio; I wondered how you came
to spruce up so!” interrupted Mrs. Ellis.
“It has been so blamed lonesome
whenever she went to visit you, but yet I wouldn’t
say a word because I knew what a good time she had;
but if I had known that there was a confounded, long-legged,
sniffy young idiot all that while trying to steal
my daughter away from me!” In an access of wrath
at the idea Armorer wrenched off the picket that he
clutched, at which he laughed and stuck his hands
in his pockets.
“Why, Meg, the papers and magazines
are always howling that women won’t marry,”
cried he, with a fresh sense of grievance; “now,
two of my girls have married, that’s enough;
there was no reason for me to expect any more of them
would! There isn’t one d
bit of need for Esther to marry!”
“But if she loves the young
fellow and he loves her, won’t you let them
be happy?”
“He won’t make her happy.”
“He is a very good fellow, truly
and really, ’Raish. And he comes of a good
family ”
“I don’t care for his
family; and as to his being moral and all that, I
know several young fellows that could skin him alive
in a bargain that are moral as you please. I
have been a moral man, myself. But the trouble
with this Lossing (I told Esther I didn’t know
anything about him, but I do), the trouble with him
is that he is chock full of all kinds of principles!
Just as father was. Don’t you remember how
he lost parish after parish because he couldn’t
smooth over the big men in them? Lossing is every
bit as pig-headed. I am not going to have my daughter
lead the kind of life my mother did. I want a
son-in-law who ain’t going to think himself
so much better than I am, and be rowing me for my way
of doing business. If Esther MUST marry I’d
like her to marry a man with a head on him that I
can take into business, and who will be willing to
live with the old man. This Lossing has got his
notions of making a sort of Highland chief affair
of the labor question, and we should get along about
as well as the Kilkenny cats!”
Mrs. Ellis knew more than Esther about
Armorer’s business methods, having the advantage
of her husband’s point of view; and Colonel Ellis
had kept the army standard of honor as well as the
army ignorance of business. To counterbalance,
she knew more than anyone alive what a good son and
brother Horatio had always been. But she could
not restrain a smile at the picture of the partnership.
“Precisely, you see yourself,”
said Armorer. “Meg” hesitating “you
don’t suppose it would be any use to offer Esther
a cool hundred thousand to promise to bounce this
young fellow?”
“Horatio, NO!” cried Mrs.
Ellis, tossing her pretty gray head indignantly; “you’d
insult her!”
“Take it the same way, eh?
Well, perhaps; Essie has high-toned notions.
That’s all right, it is the thing for women.
Mother had them too. Look here, Meg, I’ll
tell you, I want to see if this young fellow has ANY
sense! We have an ordinance that we want passed.
If he will get his council to pass it, that will show
he can put his grand theories into his pockets sometimes;
and I will give him a show with Esther. If he
doesn’t care enough for my girl to oblige her
father, even if he doesn’t please a lot of carping
roosters that want the earth for their town and would
like a street railway to be run to accommodate them
and lose money for the stockholders, well, then, you
can’t blame me if I don’t want him!
Now, will you do one thing for me, Meg, to help me
out? I don’t want Lossing to persuade Esther
to commit herself; you know how, when she was a little
mite, if Esther gave her word she kept it. I want
you to promise me you won’t let Esther be alone
one second with young Lossing. She is going to-morrow,
but there’s your whist-party to-night; I suppose
he’s coming? And I want you to promise you
won’t let him have our address. If he treats
me square, he won’t need to ask you for it.
Well?”
He buttoned up his coat and folded his arms, waiting.
Mrs. Ellis’s sympathy had gone
out to the young people as naturally as water runs
down hill; for she is of a romantic temperament, though
she doesn’t dare to be weighed. But she
remembered the silver service, the coffee-pot, the
tea-pot, the tray for spoons, the creamer, the hot-water
kettle, the sugar-bowl, all on a rich salver, splendid,
dazzling; what rank ingratitude it would be to oppose
her generous brother! Rather sadly she answered,
but she did answer: “I’ll do that
much for you, ’Raish, but I feel we’re
risking Esther’s happiness, and I can only keep
the letter of my promise.”
“That’s all I ask, my
dear,” said Armorer, taking out a little shabby
note-book from his breast-pocket, and scratching out
a line. The line effaced read:
“See E & M tea-set.”
“The silver service was a good
muzzle,” he thought. He went away for an
interview with the corporation lawyer and the superintendent
of the road, leaving Mrs. Ellis in a distraction of
conscience that made her the wonder of her servants
that morning, during all the preparations for the
whist-party. She might have felt more remorseful
had she guessed her brother’s real plan.
He knew enough of Lossing to be assured that he would
not yield about the ordinance, which he firmly believed
to be a dangerous one for the city. He expected,
he counted on the mayor’s refusing his proffers.
He hoped that Esther would feel the sympathy which
women give, without question generally, to the business
plans of those near and dear to them, taking it for
granted that the plans are right because they will
advantage those so near and dear. That was the
beautiful and proper way that Jenny had always reasoned;
why should Jenny’s daughter do otherwise?
When Harry Lossing should oppose her father and refuse
to please him and to win her, mustn’t any high-spirited
woman feel hurt? Certainly she must; and he would
take care to whisk her off to Europe before the young
man had a chance to make his peace! “Yes,
sir,” says Armorer, to his only confidant, “you
never were a domestic conspirator before, Horatio,
but you have got it down fine! You would do for
Gaboriau” Gaboriau’s novels
being the only fiction that ever Armorer read.
Nevertheless, his conscience pricked him almost as
sharply as his sister’s pricked her. Consciences
are queer things; like certain crustaceans, they grow
shells in spots; and, proof against moral artillery
in one part, they may be soft as a baby’s cheek
in another. Armorer’s conscience had two
sides, business and domestic; people abused him for
a business buccaneer, at the same time his private
life was pure, and he was a most tender husband and
father. He had never deceived Esther before in
her life. Once he had ridden all night in a freight-car
to keep a promise that he had made the child.
It hurt him to be hoodwinking her now. But he
was too angry and too frightened to cry back.
The interview with the lawyer did
not take any long time, but he spent two hours with
the superintendent of the road, who pronounced him
“a little nice fellow with no airs about him.
Asked a power of questions about Harry Lossing; guess
there is something in that story about Lossing going
to marry his daughter!”
Marston drove him to Lossing’s office and left
him there.
He was on the ground, and Marston
lifting the whip to touch the horse, when he asked:
“Say, before you go is there any danger
in leaving off the conductors?”
Marston was raised on mules, and he
could not overcome a vehement distrust of electricity.
“Well,” said he, “I guess you want
the cold facts. The children are almighty thick
down on Third Street, and children are always trying
to see how near they can come to being killed, you
know, sir; and then, the old women like to come and
stand on the track and ask questions of the motorneer
on the other track, so that the car coming down has
a chance to catch ’em. The two together
keep the conductors on the jump!”
“Is that so?” said Armorer,
musingly; “well, I guess you’d better close
with that insurance man and get the papers made out
before we run the new way.”
“If we ever do run!” muttered
the superintendent to himself as he drove away.
Armorer ran his sharp eye over the
buildings of the Lossing Art Furniture Manufacturing
Company, from the ugly square brick box that was the
nucleus the egg, so to speak from
which the great concern had been hatched, to the handsome
new structures with their great arched windows and
red mortar. “Pretty property, very pretty
property,” thought Armorer; “wonder if
that story Marston tells is true!” The story
was to the effect that a few weeks before his last
sickness the older Lossing had taken his son to look
at the buildings, and said, “Harry, this will
all be yours before long. It is a comfort to me
to think that every workman I have is the better,
not the worse, off for my owning it; there’s
no blood or dirt on my money; and I leave it to you
to keep it clean and to take care of the men as well
as the business.”
“Now, wasn’t he a d
fool!” said Armorer, cheerfully, taking out his
note-book to mark.
“See abt road M D ”
And he went in. Harry greeted
him with exceeding cordiality and a fine blush.
Armorer explained that he had come to speak to him
about the proposed street-car ordinances; he (Armorer)
always liked to deal with principals and without formality;
now, couldn’t they come, representing the city
and the company, to some satisfactory compromise?
Thereupon he plunged into the statistics of the earnings
and expenses of the road (with the aid of his note-book),
and made the absolute necessity of retrenchment plain.
Meanwhile, as he talked he studied the attentive listener
before him; and Harry, on his part, made quite as good
use of his eyes. Armorer saw a tall, athletic,
fair young man, very carefully, almost foppishly dressed,
with bright, steady blue eyes and a firm chin, but
a smile under his mustache like a child’s; it
was so sunny and so quick. Harry saw a neat little
figure in a perfectly fitting gray check travelling
suit, with a rose in the buttonhole of the coat lapel.
Armorer wore no jewellery except a gold ring on the
little finger of his right hand, from which he had
taken the glove the better to write. Harry knew
that it was his dead wife’s wedding-ring; and
noticed it with a little moving of the heart.
The face that he saw was pale but not sickly, delicate
and keen. A silky brown mustache shot with gray
and a Van-dyke beard hid either the strength or the
weakness of mouth and chin. He looked at Harry
with almond-shaped, pensive dark eyes, so like the
eyes that had shone on Harry’s waking and sleeping
dreams for months that the young fellow felt his heart
rise again. Armorer ended by asking Harry (in
his most winning manner) to help him pull the ordinance
out of the fire. “It would be,” he
said, impressively, “a favor he should not forget!”
“And you must know, Mr. Armorer,”
said Harry, in a dismal tone at which the president
chuckled within, “that there is no man whose
favor I would do so much to win!”
“Well, here’s your chance!” said
Armorer.
Harry swung round in his chair, his
clinched fists on his knee. He was frowning with
eagerness, and his eyes were like blue steel.
“See here, Mr. Armorer,”
said he, “I am frank with you. I want to
please you, because I want to ask you to let me marry
your daughter. But I CAN’T please you,
because I am mayor of this town, and I don’t
dare to let you dismiss the conductors. I don’t
DARE, that’s the point. We have had four
children killed on this road since electricity was
put in.”
“We have had forty killed on
one street railway I know; what of it? Do you
want to give up electricity because it kills children?”
“No, but look here! the conductors
lessen the risk. A lady I know, only yesterday,
had a little boy going from the kindergarten home,
nice little fellow only five years old ”
“She ought to have sent a nurse
with a child five years old, a baby!” cried
Armorer, warmly.
“That lady,” answered
Harry, quietly, “goes without any servant at
all in order to keep her two children at the kindergarten;
and the boy’s elder sister was ill at home.
The boy got on the car, and when he got off at the
crossing above his house, he started to run across;
the other train-car was coming, the little fellow
didn’t notice, and ran to cross; he stumbled
and fell right in the path of the coming car!”
“Where was the conductor? He didn’t
seem much good!”
“They had left off the conductor on that line.”
“Well, did they run over the
boy? Why haven’t I been informed of the
accident?”
“There was no accident.
A man on the front platform saw the boy fall, made
a flying leap off the moving car, fell, but scrambled
up and pulled the boy off the track. It was sickening;
I thought we were both gone!”
“Oh, you were the man?”
“I was the man; and don’t
you see, Mr. Armorer, why I feel strongly on the subject?
If the conductor had been on, there wouldn’t
have been any occasion for any accident.”
“Well, sir, you may be assured
that we will take precautions against any such accidents.
It is more for our interest than anyone’s to
guard against them. And I have explained to you
the necessity of cutting down our expense list.”
“That is just it, you think
you have to risk our lives to cut down expenses; but
we get all the risk and none of the benefits.
I can’t see my way clear to helping you, sir;
I wish I could.”
“Then there is nothing more
to say, Mr. Lossing,” said Armorer, coldly.
“I’m sorry a mere sentiment that has no
real foundation should stand in the way of our arranging
a deal that would be for the advantage of both the
city and our road.” He rose.
Harry rose also, but lifted his hand
to arrest the financier. “Pardon me, there
is something else; I wouldn’t mention it, but
I hear you are going to leave to-morrow and go abroad
with Miss Armorer. I am conscious
I haven’t introduced myself very favorably, by
refusing you a favor when I want to ask the greatest
one possible; but I hope, sir, you will not think
the less of a man because he is not willing to sacrifice
the interests of the people who trust him, to please
ANYONE. I I hope you will not object
to my asking Miss Armorer to marry me,” concluded
Harry, very hot and shaky, and forgetting the beginning
of his sentences before he came to the end.
“Does my daughter love you,
do I understand, Mr. Lossing?”
“I don’t know, sir. I wish I did.”
“Well, Mr. Lossing,” said
Armorer, wishing that something in the young man’s
confusion would not remind him of the awful moment
when he asked old Forrester for his Jenny, “I
am afraid I can do nothing for you. If you have
too nice a conscience to oblige me, I am afraid it
will be too nice to let you get on in the world.
Good-morning.”
“Stop a minute,” said Harry; “if it is only my ability to get on in the
world that is the trouble, I think--”
“It is your love for my daughter,”
said Armorer; “if you don’t love her enough
to give up a sentimental notion for her, to win her,
I don’t see but you must lose her, I bid you
good-morning, sir.”
“Not quite yet, sir” Harry
jumped before the door; “you give me the alternative
of being what I call dishonorable or losing the woman
I love!” He pronounced the last word with a
little effort and his lips closed sharply as his teeth
shut under them. “Well, I decline the alternative.
I shall try to do my duty and get the wife I want,
BOTH.”
“Well, you give me fair warning,
don’t you?” said Armorer.
Harry held out his hand, saying, “I
am sorry that I detained you. I didn’t
mean to be rude.” There was something boyish
and simple about the action and the tone, and Armorer
laughed. As Harry attended him through the outer
office to the door, he complimented the shops.
“Miss Armorer and Mrs. Ellis
have promised to give me the pleasure of showing them
to them this afternoon,” said Harry; “can’t
I show them and part of our city to you, also?
It has changed a good deal since you left it.”
The remark threw Armorer off his balance;
for a rejected suitor this young man certainly kept
an even mind. But he had all the helplessness
of the average American with regard to his daughter’s
amusements. The humor in the situation took him;
and it cannot be denied that he began to have a vivid
curiosity about Harry. In less time than it takes
to read it, his mind had swung round the circle of
these various points of view, and he had blandly accepted
Harry’s invitation. But he mopped a warm
and furrowed brow, outside, and drew a prodigious sigh
as he opened the note-book in his hand and crossed
out, “See L.” “That young
fellow ain’t all conscience,” said he,
“not by a long shot.”
He found Mrs. Ellis very apologetic
about the Lossing engagement. It was made through
the telephone; Esther had been anxious to have her
father meet Lossing; Lossing was to drive them there,
and later show Mr. Armorer the town.
“Mr. Lossing is a very clever
young man, very,” said Armorer, gravely, as
he went out to smoke his cigar after luncheon.
He wished he had stayed, however, when he returned
to find that a visitor had called, and that this visitor
was the mother of the little boy that Harry Lossing
had saved from the car. The two women gave him
the accident in full, and were lavish of harrowing
detail, including the mother’s feelings.
“So you see, ’Raish,” urged Mrs.
Ellis, timidly, “there is some reason for opposition
to the ordinance.”
Esther’s cheeks were red and
her eyes shone, but she had not spoken. Her father
put his arm around her waist and kissed her hair.
“And what did you say, Essie,” he asked,
gently, “to all the criticisms?”
“I told her I thought you would
find some way to protect the children even if the
conductors were taken off; you didn’t enjoy the
slaughter of children any more than anyone else.”
“I guess we can fix it. Here is your young
man.”
Harry drove a pair of spirited horses.
He drove well, and looked both handsome and happy.
“Did you know that lady the
mother of the boy that wasn’t run over was
coming to see my sister?” said Armorer, on the
way.
“I did,” said Harry, “I
sent her; I thought she could explain the reason why
I shall have to oppose the bill, better than I.”
Armorer made no reply.
At the shops he kept his eye on the
young man. Harry seemed to know most of his workmen,
and had a nod or a word for all the older men.
He stopped several moments to talk with one old German
who complained of everything, but looked after Harry
with a smile, nodding his head. “That man,
Lieders, is our best workman; you can’t get any
better work in the country,” said he. “I
want you to see an armoire that he has carved, it
is up in our exhibition room.”
Armorer said, “You seem to get
on very well with your working people, Mr. Lossing.”
“I think we generally get on
well with them, and they do well themselves, in these
Western towns. For one thing, we haven’t
much organization to fight, and for another thing,
the individual workman has a better chance to rise.
That man Lieders, whom you saw, is worth a good many
thousand dollars; my father invested his savings for
him.”
“You are one of the philanthropists,
aren’t you, Mr. Lossing, who are trying to elevate
the laboring classes?”
“Not a bit of it, sir.
I shall never try to elevate the laboring classes;
it is too big a contract. But I try as hard as
I know how to have every man who has worked for Harry
Lossing the better for it. I don’t concern
myself with any other laboring men.”
Just then a murmur of exclamations
came from Mrs. Ellis and Esther, whom the superintendent
was piloting through the shops. “Oh, no,
it is too heavy; oh, don’t do it, Mr. Cardigan!”
“Oh, we can see it perfectly well from here!
PLEASE don’t, you will break yourself somewhere!”
Mrs. Ellis shrieked this; but the shrieks turned to
a murmur of admiration as a huge carved sideboard
came bobbing and wobbling, like an intoxicated piece
of furniture in a haunted house, toward the two gentlewomen.
Immediately, a short but powerfully built man, whose
red face beamed above his dusty shoulders like a full
moon with a mustache, emerged, and waved his hand
at the sideboard.
“I could tackle the two of them,
begging your pardon, ladies.”
“That’s Cardigan,”
explained Harry, “Miss Armorer may have told
you about him. Oh, SHUEY!”
Cardigan approached and was presented.
He brought both his heels together and bowed solemnly,
bending his head at the same time.
“Pleased to meet you, sir,”
said Shuey. Then he assumed an attitude of military
attention.
“Take us up in the elevator,
will you, Shuey?” said Harry. “Step
in, Mr. Armorer, please, we will go and see the reproductions
of the antique; we have a room upstairs.”
Mr. Armorer stepped in, Shuey following;
and then, before Harry could enter it, the elevator
shot upward and stuck!
“What’s the matter?” cried Armorer.
Shuey was tugging at the wire rope.
He called, in tones that seemed to come from a panting
chest: “Take a pull at it yourself, sir!
Can you move it?”
Armorer grasped the rope viciously;
Shuey was on the seat pulling from above. “We’re
stuck, sir, fast!”
“Can’t you get down either?”
“Divil a bit, saving your presence,
sir. Do ye think like the water-works could be
busted?”
“Can’t you make somebody hear?”
panted Armorer.
“Well, you see there’s
a deal of noise of the machinery,” said Shuey,
scratching his chin with a thoughtful air, “and
they expect we’ve gone up!”
“Best try, anyhow. This
infernal machine may take a notion to drop!”
said Armorer.
“And that’s true, too,”
acquiesced Shuey. Forthwith he did lift up his
voice in a loud wailing: “OH H,
Jimmy! OH H, Jimmy Ryan!”
Jimmy might have been in Chicago for
any response he made; though Armorer shouted with
Shuey; and at every pause the whir of the machinery
mocked the shouters. Indescribable moans and gurgles,
with a continuous malignant hiss, floated up to them
from the rebel steam below, as from a volcano considering
eruption. “They’ll be bound to need
the elevator some time, if they don’t need US,
and that’s one comfort!” said Shuey, philosophically.
“Don’t you think if we
pulled on her we could get her up to the next floor,
by degrees? Now then!”
Armorer gave a dash and Shuey let
out his muscles in a giant tug. The elevator
responded by an astonishing leap that carried them
past three or four floors!
“Stop her! stop her!”
bawled Shuey; but in spite of Armorer’s pulling
himself purple in the face, the elevator did not stop
until it bumped with a crash against the joists of
the roof.
“Well, do you suppose we’re stuck HERE?”
growled Armorer.
“Well, sir, I’ll try.
Say, don’t be exerting yourself violent.
It strikes me she’s for all the world like the
wimmen, in exthremes, sir, in exthremes!
And it wouldn’t be noways so pleasant to go riproaring
that gait down cellar! Slow and easy, sir, let
me manage her. Hi! she’s working.”
In fact, by slow degrees and much
puffing, Shuey got the erratic box to the next floor,
where, disregarding Shuey’s protestations that
he could “make her mind,” Mr. Armorer
got out, and they left the elevator to its fate.
It was a long way, through many rooms, downstairs.
Shuey would have beguiled the way by describing the
rooms, but Armorer was in a raging hurry and urged
his guide over the ground. Once they were delayed
by a bundle of stuff in front of a door; and after
Shuey had laboriously rolled the great roll away,
he made a misstep and tumbled over, rolling it back,
to a tittering accompaniment from the sewing-girls
in the room. But he picked himself up in perfect
good temper and kicked the roll ten yards. “Girls
is silly things,” said the philosopher Shuey,
“but being born that way it ain’t to be
expected otherwise!”
He had the friendly freedom of his
class in the West. He praised Mrs. Ellis’s
gymnastics, and urged Armorer to stay over a morning
train and see a “real pretty boxing match”
between Mr. Lossing and himself.
“Oh, he boxes too, does he?” said Armorer.
“And why on earth would he groan-like?”
wondered Shuey to himself. “He does that,
sir,” he continued aloud; “didn’t
Mrs. Ellis ever tell you about the time at the circus?
She was there herself, with three children she borrowed
and an unreasonable gyurl, with a terrible big screech
in her and no sense. Yes, sir, Mr. Lossing he
is mighty cliver with his hands! There come
a yell of ‘Lion loose! lion loose!’ at
that circus, just as the folks was all crowding out
at the end of it, and them that had gone into the
menagerie tent came a-tumbling and howling back, and
them that was in the circus tent waiting for the concert
(which never ain’t worth waiting for, between
you and me!) was a-scrambling off them seats, making
a noise like thunder; and all fighting and pushing
and bellowing to get out! I was there with my
wife and making for the seats that the fools quit,
so’s to get under and crawl out under the canvas,
when I see Mrs. Ellis holding two of the children,
and that fool girl let the other go and I grabbed
it. ’Oh, save the baby! save one, anyhow,’
cries my wife the woman is a tinder-hearted
crechure! And just then I seen an old lady tumble
over on the benches, with her gray hair stringing
out of her black bonnet. The crowd was WILD, hitting
and screaming and not caring for anything, and I see
a big jack of a man come plunging down right spang
on that old lady! His foot was right in the air
over her face! Lord, it turned me sick. I
yelled. But that minnit I seen an arm shoot out
and that fellow shot off as slick! it was Mr. Lossing.
He parted that crowd, hitting right and left, and he
got up to us and hauled a child from Mrs. Ellis and
put it on the seats, all the while shouting:
’Keep your seats! it’s all right! it’s
all over! stand back!’ I turned and floored
a feller that was too pressing, and hollered it was
all right too. And some more people hollered too.
You see, there is just a minnit at such times when
it is a toss up whether folks will quiet down and
begin to laugh, or get scared into wild beasts and
crush and kill each other. And Mr. Lossing he
caught the minnit! The circus folks came up and
the police, and it was all over. WELL, just look
here, sir; there’s our folks coming out of the
elevator!”
They were just landing; and Mrs. Ellis
wanted to know where he had gone.
“We run away from ye, shure,”
said Shuey, grinning; and he related the adventure.
Armorer fell back with Mrs. Ellis. “Did
you stay with Esther every minute?” said he.
Mrs. Ellis nodded. She opened her lips to speak,
then closed them and walked ahead to Harry Lossing.
Armorer looked suspicion of a dozen kinds
gnawing him and insinuating that the three all seemed
agitated from Harry to Esther, and then
to Shuey. But he kept his thoughts to himself
and was very agreeable the remainder of the afternoon.
He heard Harry tell Mrs. Ellis that
the city council would meet that evening; before,
however, Armorer could feel exultant he added, “but
may I come late?”
“He is certainly the coolest
beggar,” Armorer snarled, “but he is sharp
as a nigger’s razor, confound him!”
Naturally this remark was a confidential one to himself.
He thought it more times than one
during the evening, and by consequence played trumps
with equal disregard of the laws of the noble game
of whist and his partner’s feelings. He
found a few, a very few, elderly people who remembered
his parent, and they will never believe ill of Horatio
Armorer, who talked so simply and with so much feeling
of old times, and who is going to give a memorial
window in the new Presbyterian church. He was
beginning to think with some interest of supper, the
usual dinner of the family having been sacrificed to
the demands of state; then he saw Harry Lossing.
The young mayor’s blond head was bowing before
his sister’s black velvet. He caught Armorer’s
eye and followed him out to the lawn and the shadows
and the gay lanterns. He looked animated.
Evening dress was becoming to him. “One
of my daughters married a prince, but I am hanged
if he looked it like this fellow,” thought Armorer;
“but then he was only an Italian. I suppose
the council did not pass the ordinance? your committee
reported against it?” he said quite amicably
to Harry.
“I wish you could understand
how much pain it has given me to oppose you, Mr. Armorer,”
said Harry, blushing.
“I don’t doubt it, under
the circumstances, Mr. Lossing.” Armorer
spoke with suave politeness, but there was a cynical
gleam in his eye.
“But Esther understands,” says Harry.
“Esther!” repeats Armorer,
with an indescribable intonation. “You spoke
to her this afternoon? For a man with such high-toned
ideas as you carry, I think you took a pretty mean
advantage of your guests!”
“You will remember I gave you fair warning,
Mr. Armorer.”
“It was while I was in the elevator,
of course. I guessed it was a put-up job; how
did you manage it?”
Harry smiled outright; he is one who
cannot keep either his dog or his joke tied up.
“It was Shuey did it,” said he; “he
pulled the opposite way from you, and he has tremendous
strength; but he says you were a handful for him.”
“You seem to have taken the
town into your confidence,” said Armorer, bitterly,
though he had a sneaking inclination to laugh himself;
“do you need all your workmen to help you court
your girl?”
“I’d take the whole United
States into my confidence rather than lose her, sir,”
answered Harry, steadily.
Armorer turned on his heel abruptly;
it was to conceal a smile. “How about my
sister? did you propose before her? But I don’t
suppose a little thing like that would stop you.”
“I had to speak; Miss Armorer
goes away tomorrow. Mrs. Ellis was kind enough
to put her fingers in her ears and turn her back.”
“And what did my daughter say?”
“I asked her only to give me
the chance to show her how I loved her, and she has.
God bless her! I don’t pretend I’m
worthy of her, Mr. Armorer, but I have lived a decent
life, and I’ll try hard to live a better one
for her trust in me.”
“I’m glad there is one
thing on which we are agreed,” jeered Armorer,
“but you are more modest than you were this noon.
I think it was considerably like bragging, sending
that woman to tell of your heroic feats!”
“Oh, I can brag when it is necessary,”
said Harry, serenely; “what would the West be
but for bragging?”
“And what do you intend to do
if I take your girl to Europe?”
“Europe is not very far,” said Harry.
Armorer was a quick thinker, but he
had never thought more quickly in his life. This
young fellow had beaten him. There was no doubt
of it. He might have principles, but he declined
to let his principles hamper him. There was something
about Harry’s waving aside defeat so lightly,
and so swiftly snatching at every chance to forward
his will, that accorded with Armorer’s own temperament.
“Tell me, Mr. Armorer,”
said Harry, suddenly; “in my place wouldn’t
you have done the same thing?”
Armorer no longer checked his sense
of humor. “No, Mr. Lossing,” he answered,
sedately, “I should have respected the old gentleman’s
wishes and voted any way he pleased.” He
held out his hand. “I guess Esther thinks
you are the coming young man of the century; and to
be honest, I like you a great deal better than I expected
to this morning. I’m not cut out for a
cruel father, Mr. Lossing; for one thing, I haven’t
the time for it; for another thing, I can’t
bear to have my little girl cry. I guess I shall
have to go to Europe without Esther. Shall we
go in to the ladies now?”
Harry wrung the president’s
hand, crying that he should never regret his kindness.
“See that Esther never regrets
it, that will be better,” said Armorer, with
a touch of real and deep feeling. Then, as Harry
sprang up the steps like a boy, he took out the note-book,
and smiling a smile in which many emotions were blended,
he ran a black line through
“See abt L.”