She had been strange, perceptibly
strange, had Eliza La Heu; that was the most which
I could make out of it. I had angered her in some
manner wholly beyond my intention or understanding
and not all at one fixed point in our talk; her irritation
had come out and gone in again in spots all along
the colloquy, and it had been a displeasure wholly
apart from that indignation which had flashed up in
her over the negro question. This, indeed, I
understood well enough, and admired her for, and admired
still more her gallant control of it; as for the other,
I gave it up.
A sense of guilt-a very
slight one, to be sure-dispersed my speculations
when I was preparing for dinner, and Aunt Carola’s
postscript, open upon my writing-table, reminded me
that I had never asked Miss La Heu about the Bombos.
Well, the Bombos could keep! And I descended to dinner a little
late (as too often) to feel instantly in the air that they had been talking
about me. I doubt if any company in the world, from the Greeks down
through Machiavelli to the present moment, has ever been of a subtlety adequate
to conceal from an observant person entering a room the fact that he has been
the subject of their conversation. This company, at any rate, did not
conceal it from me. Not even when the upcountry bride astutely greeted me
with:-
Why, we were just speaking of you! We were lust saying
it would be a perfect shame if you missed those flowers at Live Oaks.
And, at this, various of the guests assured me that another storm would finish
them; upon which I assured every one that to-morrow should see me embark upon
the Live Oaks excursion boat, knowing quite well in my heart that some decidedly
different question concerning me had been hastily dropped upon my appearance at
the door. It poked up its little concealed head, did this question, when
the bride said later to me, with immense archness:-
“How any gentleman can help
falling just daid in love with that lovely young girl
at the Exchange, I don’t see!”
“But I haven’t helped it!” I immediately
exclaimed.
“Oh!” declared the bride
with unerring perception, “that just shows he
hasn’t been smitten at all! Well, I’d
be ashamed, if I was a single gentleman.”
And while I brought forth additional phrases concerning
the distracted state of my heart, she looked at me
with large, limpid eyes. “Anybody could
tell you’re not afraid of a rival,” was
her resulting comment; upon which several of the et
ceteras laughed more than seemed to me appropriate.
I left them all free again to say
what they pleased; for John Mayrant called for me
to go upon our walk while we were still seated at table,
and at table they remained after I had excused myself.
The bruise over John’s left
eye was fading out, but traces of his spiritual battle
were deepening. During the visit which he had
paid (under compulsion, I am sure) to Juno at our
boarding-house in company with Miss Josephine St.
Michael, his recent financial triumph at the bedside
had filled his face with diabolic elation as he confronted
his victim’s enraged but checkmated aunt; when
to the thinly veiled venom of her inquiry as to a
bridegroom’s health he had retorted with venom
as thinly veiled that he was feeling better that night
than for many weeks, he had looked better, too; the
ladies had exclaimed after his departure what a handsome
young man he was, and Juno had remarked how fervently
she trusted that marriage might cure him of his deplorable
tendencies. But to-day his vitality had sagged
off beneath the weight of his preoccupation:
it looked to me as if, by a day or two more, the boy’s
face might be grown haggard.
Whether by intention, or, as is more
likely, by the perfectly natural and spontaneous working
of his nature, he speedily made it plain to me that
our relation, our acquaintance, had progressed to a
stage more friendly and confidential. He did
not reveal this by imparting any confidence to me;
far from it; it was his silence that indicated the
ease he had come to feel in my company. Upon our
last memorable interview he had embarked at once upon
a hasty yet evidently predetermined course of talk,
because he feared that I might touch upon subjects
which he wished excluded from all discussion between
us; to-day he embarked upon nothing, made no conventional
effort of any sort, but walked beside me, content
with my mere society; if it should happen that either
of us found a thought worth expressing aloud, good!
and if this should not happen, why, good also!
And so we walked mutely and agreeably together for
a long while. The thought which was growing clear
in my mind, and which was decidedly worthy of expression,
was also unluckily one which his new reliance upon
my discretion completely forbade my uttering in even
the most shadowy manner; but it was a conviction which
Miss Josephine St. Michael should have been quick to
force upon him for his good. Quite apart from
selfish reasons, he had no right to marry a girl whom
he had ceased to care for. The code which held
a “gentleman” to his plighted troth in
such a case did more injury to the “lady”
than any “jilting” could possibly do.
Never until now had I thought this out so lucidly,
and I was determined that time and my own tact should
assuredly help me find a way to say it to him, if he
continued in his present course.
“Daddy Ben says you can’t be a real Northerner.”
This was his first observation, and
I think that we must have walked a mile before he
made it.
“Because I pounded a negro?
Of course, he retains your Southern ante-bellum mythical
notion of Northerners-all of us willing
to have them marry our sisters. Well, there’s
a lady at our boarding-house who says you are a real
gambler.”
The impish look came curling round
his lips, but for a moment only, and it was gone.
“That shook Daddy Ben up a good deal.”
“Having his grandson do it, do you mean?”
“Oh, he’s used to his
grandson! Grandsons in that race might just as
well be dogs for all they know or care about their
progenitors. Yet Daddy Ben spent his savings
on educating Charles Cotesworth and two more-but
not one of them will give the old man a house to-day.
If ever I have a home-” John stopped
himself, and our silence was no longer easy; our unspoken
thoughts looked out of our eyes so that they could
not meet. Yet no one, unless directly invited
by him, had the right to say to hint what I was thinking,
except some near relative. Therefore, to relieve
this silence which had ceased to be agreeable, I talked
about Daddy Ben and his grandsons, and negro voting,
and the huge lie of “equality” which our
lips vociferate and our lives daily disprove.
This took us comfortably away from weddings and cakes
into the subject of lynching, my violent condemnation
of which surprised him; for our discussion had led
us over a wide field, and one fertile in well-known
disputes of the evergreen sort, conducted by the North
mostly with more theory than experience, and by the
South mostly with more heat than light; whereas, between
John and me, I may say that our amiability was surpassed
only by our intelligence! Each allowed for the
other’s standpoint, and both met in many views:
he would have voted against the last national Democratic
ticket but for the Republican upholding of negro equality,
while I assured him that such stupid and criminal
upholding was on the wane. He informed me that
he did not believe the pure blooded African would
ever be capable of taking the intellectual side of
the white man’s civilization, and I informed
him that we must patiently face this probability,
and teach the African whatever he could profitably
learn and no more; and each of us agreed with the other.
I think that we were at one, save for the fact that
I was, after all, a Northerner-and that
is a blemish which nobody in Kings Port can quite
get over. John, therefore, was unprepared for
my wholesale denunciation of lynching.
“With your clear view of the negro,” he
explained.
“My dear man, it’s my
clear view of the white! It’s the white,
the American citizen, the ‘hope of humanity,’
as he enjoys being called, who, after our English-speaking
race has abolished public executions, degenerates
back to the Stone Age. It’s upon him that
lynching works the true injury.”
“They’re nothing but animals,” he
muttered.
“Would you treat an animal in that way?”
I inquired.
He persisted. “You’d do it yourself
if you had to suffer from them.”
“Very probably. Is that
an answer? What I’d never do would be to
make a show, an entertainment, a circus, out of it,
run excursion trains to see it-come, should
you like your sister to buy tickets for a lynching?”
This brought him up rather short.
“I should never take part myself,” he
presently stated, “unless it were immediate personal
vengeance.”
“Few brothers or husbands would
blame you,” I returned. “It would
be hard to wait for the law. But let no community
which treats it as a public spectacle presume to call
itself civilized.”
He gave a perplexed smile, shaking
his head over it. “Sometimes I think civilization
costs-
“Civilization costs all you’ve got!”
I cried.
“More than I’ve got!” he declared.
“I’m mortal tired of civilization.”
“Ah, yes! What male creature
is not? And neither of us will live quite long
enough to see the smash-up of our own.”
“Aren’t you sometimes inconsistent?”
he inquired, laughing.
“I hope so,” I returned.
“Consistency is a form of death. The dead
are the only perfectly consistent people.”
“And sometimes you sound like a Socialist,”
he pursued, still laughing.
“Never!” I shouted.
“Don’t class me with those untrained puppies
of thought. And you’ll generally observe,”
I added, “that the more nobly a Socialist vaporizes
about the rights of humanity, the more wives and children
he has abandoned penniless along the trail of his life.”
He was livelier than ever at this.
“What date have you fixed for the smash-up of
our present civilization?”
“Why fix dates? Is it not
diversion enough to watch, and step handsomely through
one’s own part, with always a good sleeve to
laugh in?”
Pensiveness returned upon him.
“I shall be able to step through my own part,
I think.” He paused, and I was wondering
secretly, “Does that include the wedding?”
when he continued - “What’s there to
laugh at?”
“Why, our imperishable selves!
For instance - we swear by universal suffrage.
Well, sows’ ears are an invaluable thing in their
place, on the head of the animal; but send them to
make your laws, and what happens? Bribery, naturally.
The silk purse buys the sow’s ear. We swear
by Christianity, but dishonesty is our present religion.
That little phrase ‘In God We Trust’ is
about as true as the silver dollar it’s stamped
on-worth some thirty-nine cents. We
get awfully serious about whether or no good can come
of evil, when every sky-scraping thief of finance
is helping hospitals with one hand while the other’s
in my pocket; and good and evil attend each other,
lead to each other, are such Siamese twins that if
separated they would both die. We make phrases
about peace, pity, and brotherhood, while every nation
stands prepared for shipwreck and for the sinking
plank to which two are clinging and the stronger pushes
the weaker into the flood and thus floats safe.
Why, the old apple of wisdom, which Adam and Eve swallowed
and thus lost their innocence, was a gentle nursery
drug compared with the new apple of competition, which,
as soon as chewed, instantly transforms the heart
into a second brain. But why worry, when nothing
is final? Haven’t you and I, for instance,
lamented the present rottenness of smart society?
Why, when kings by the name of George sat on the throne
of England, society was just as drunken, just as dissolute!
Then a decent queen came, and society behaved itself;
and now, here we come round again to the Georges,
only with the name changed! There’s nothing
final. So, when things are as you don’t
like them, remember that and bear them; and when they’re
as you do like them, remember it and make the most
of them-and keep a good sleeve handy!”
“Have you got any creed at all?” he demanded.
“Certainly; but I don’t live up to it.”
“That’s not expected. May I ask what
it is?”
“It’s in Latin.”
“Well, I can probably bear it. Aunt Eliza
had a classical tutor for me.”
I always relish a chance to recite my favorite poet, and I
began accordingly:-
“Laetus
in praesens animus quod ultra est
Oderit
curare et-
I know that one! he exclaimed, interrupting me. The
tutor made me put it into English verse. I had the severest sort of a
time. I ran away from it twice to a deer-hunt. And he, in his turn,
recited:-
“Who
hails each present hour with zest
Hates
fretting what may be the rest,
Makes
bitter sweet with lazy jest;
Naught
is in every portion blest.”
I complimented him, in spite of my
slight annoyance at being deprived by him of the chance
to declaim Latin poetry, which is an exercise that
I approve and enjoy; but of course, to go on with it,
after he had intervened with his translation, would
have been flat.
“You have written good English,
and very close to the Latin, too,” I told him,
“particularly in the last line.” And
I picked up from the bridge which we were crossing,
an oyster-shell, and sent it skimming over the smooth
water that stretched between the low shores, wide,
blue, and vacant.
“I suppose you wonder why we
call this the ‘New Bridge,’” he remarked.
“I did wonder when I first came,” I replied.
He smiled. “You’re getting used to
us!”
This long structure wore, in truth,
no appearance of yesterday. It was newer than
the “New Bridge” which it had replaced
some fifteen years ago, and which for forty years
had borne the same title. Spanning the broad
river upon a legion of piles, this wooden causeway
lies low against the face of the water, joining the
town with a serene and pensive country of pines and
live oaks and level opens, where glimpses of cabin
and plantation serve to increase the silence and the
soft, mysterious loneliness. Into this the road
from the bridge goes straight and among the purple
vagueness gently dissolves away.
We watched a slow, deep-laden boat
sliding down toward the draw, across which we made
our way, and drew near the further end of the bridge.
The straight avenue of the road in front of us took
my eyes down its quiet vista, until they were fixed
suddenly by an alien object, a growing dot, accompanied
by dust, whence came the small, distorted honks of
an automobile. These fat, importunate sounds redoubled
as the machine rushed toward the bridge, growing up
to its full staring, brazen dimensions. Six or
seven figures sat in it, all of the same dusty, shrouded
likeness, their big glass eyes and their masked mouths
suggesting some fabled, unearthly race, a family of
replete and bilious ogres; so that as they flew honking by us I called
out to John:-
“Behold the yellow rich!”
and then remembered that his Hortense probably sat
among them.
The honks redoubled, and we turned to see that the drawbridge
had no thought of waiting for them. We also saw a bewildered curly white
dog and a young girl, who called despairingly to him as he disappeared beneath
the automobile. The engine of murder could not, as is usual, proceed upon
its way, honking, for the drawbridge was visibly swinging open to admit the
passage of the boat. When John and I had run back near enough to become
ourselves a part of the incident, the white dog lay still behind the stationary
automobile, whose passengers were craning their muffled necks and glass eyes to
see what they had done, while one of their number had got out, and was stooping
to examine if the machine had sustained any injuries. The young girl, with
a face of anguish, was calling the dogs name as she hastened toward him, and
her voice aroused him - he lifted his head, got on his legs, and walked over to
her, which action on his part brought from the automobile a penetrating female
voice:-
“Well, he’s in better luck than that Savannah
dog!”
But General was not in luck. He lay quietly down at the
feet of his mistress and we soon knew that life had passed from his faithful
body. The first stroke of grief, dealt her in such cruel and sudden form,
overbore the poor girls pride and reserve; she made no attempt to remember or
heed surroundings, but kneeling and placing her arms about the neck of her dead
servant, she spoke piteously aloud:-
“And I raised him, I raised him from a puppy!”
The female voice, at this, addressed
the traveller who was examining the automobile:
“Charley, a five or a ten spot is what her feelings
need.”
The obedient and munificent Charley
straightened up from his stooping among the mechanical
entrails, dexterously produced money, and advanced
with the selected bill held out politely in his hand,
while the glass eyes and the masks peered down at
the performance. Eliza La Heu had perceived none
of this, for she was intent upon General; nor had John
Mayrant, who had approached her with the purpose of
coming to her aid. But when Charley, quite at
hand, began to speak words which were instantly obliterated
from my memory by what happened, the young girl realized
his intention and straightened stiffly, while John,
with the rapidity of light, snatched the extended
bill from Charley’s hand, and tearing it in
four pieces, threw it in his face.
A foreign voice cackled from the automobile:
“Oh la la! il a du panache!”
But Charley now disclosed himself
to be a true man of the world-the financial
world-by picking the pieces out of the mud;
and, while he wiped them and enclosed them in his
handkerchief and with perfect dignity returned them
to his pocket, he remarked simply, with a shrug:
“As you please.” His accent also was
ever so little foreign-that New York downtown
foreign, of the second generation, which stamps so,
many of our bankers.
The female now leaned from her seat,
and with the tone of setting the whole thing right,
explained - “We had no idea it was a lady.”
“Doubtless you’re not
accustomed to their appearance,” said John to
Charley.
I don’t know what Charley would
have done about this; for while the completely foreign
voice was delightedly whispering, “Toujours
lé panache! a new, deep, and altogether different female
voice exclaimed:-
“Why, John, it’s you!”
So that was Hortense, then! That
rich and quiet utterance was hers, a schooled and
studied management of speech. I found myself surprised,
and I knew directly why; that word of one of the old
ladles, “I consider that she looks like a steel
wasp,” had implanted in me some definite anticipations
to which the voice certainly did not correspond.
How fervently I desired that she would lift her thick
veil, while John, with hat in hand, was greeting her,
and being presented to her companions! Why she
had not spoken to John sooner was of course a recondite
question, and beyond my power to determine with merely
the given situation to guide me. Hadn’t
she recognized him before? Had her thick veil,
and his position, and the general slight flurry of
the misadventure, intercepted recognition until she
heard his voice when he addressed Charley. Or
had she known her lover at once, and rapidly decided
that the moment was an unpropitious one for a first
meeting after absence, and that she would pass on
to Kings Port unrevealed, but then had found this
plan become impossible through the collision between
Charley and John? It was not until certain incidents
of the days following brought Miss Rieppe’s
nature a good deal further home to me, that a third
interpretation of her delay in speaking to John dawned
upon my mind; that I was also made aware how a woman’s
understanding of the words “Steel wasp,”
when applied by her to one of her own sex, may differ
widely from a man’s understanding of them; and
that Miss Rieppe, through her thick veil, saw from
her seat in the automobile something which my own
unencumbered vision had by no means detected.
But now, here on the bridge, even
her outward appearance was as shrouded as her inward
qualities-save such as might be audible
in that voice, as her skilful, well-placed speeches
to one and the other of the company tided over and
carried off into ease this uneasy moment. All
men, at such a voice, have pricked up their ears since
the beginning; there was much woman in it; each slow,
schooled syllable called its challenge to questing
man. But I got no chance to look in the eye that
went with that voice; she took all the advantages
which her veil gave her; and how well she used them
I was to learn later.
In the general smoothing-out process
which she was so capably effecting, her attention
was about to reach me, when my name was suddenly called
out from behind her. It was Beverly Rodgers, that
accomplished and inveterate bachelor of fashion.
Ten years before, when I had seen much of him, he
had been more particular in his company, frequently
declaring in his genial, irresponsible way that New
York society was going to the devil. But many
tempting dances on the land, and cruises on the water,
had taken him deep among our lower classes that have
boiled up from the bottom with their millions-and
besides, there would be nothing to marvel at in Beverly’s
presence in any company that should include Hortense
Rieppe, if she carried out the promise of her voice.
Beverly was his customary, charming,
effusive self, coming out of the automobile to me
with his “By Jove, old man,” and his “Who’d
have thought it, old fellow?” and sprinkling
urbane little drops of jocosity over us collectively,
as the garden water-turning apparatus sprinkles a
lawn. His knowing me, and the way he brought it
out, and even the tumbling into the road of a few
wraps and chattels of travel as he descended from
the automobile, and the necessity of picking these
up and handing them back with delightful little jocular
apologies, such as, “By Jove, what a lout I
am,” all this helped the meeting on prodigiously,
and got us gratefully away from the disconcerting incident
of the torn money. Charley was helpful, too;
you would never have supposed from the polite small-talk
which he was now offering to John Mayrant that he had
within some three minutes received the equivalent of
a slap across the eyes from that youth, and carried
the soiled consequences in his pocket. And such
a thing is it to be a true man of the world of finance,
that upon the arrival now of a second automobile,
also his property, and containing a set of maids and
valets, and also some live dogs sitting up, covered
with glass eyes and wrappings like their owners, munificent
Charley at once offered the dead dog and his mistress
a place in it, and begged she would let it take her
wherever she wished to go. Everybody exclaimed
copiously and condolingly over the unfortunate occurrence.
What a fine animal he was, to be sure! What breed
was he? Of course, he wasn’t used to automobiles!
Was it quite certain that he was dead? Quel
dommage! And Charley would be so happy to
replace him.
And how was Eliza La Heu bearing herself
amid these murmurously chattered infelicities?
She was listening with composure to the murmurs of
Hortense Rieppe, more felicitous, no doubt. Miss
Rieppe, through her veil, was particularly devoting
herself to Miss La Lieu. I could not hear what
she said; the little chorus of condolence and suggestion
intercepted all save her tone, and that, indeed, coherently
sustained its measured cadence through the texture
of fragments uttered by Charley and the others.
Eliza La Heu had now got herself altogether in hand,
and, saving her pale cheeks, no sign betrayed that
the young girl’s feelings had been so recently
too strong for her. To these strangers, ignorant
of her usual manner, her present strange quietness
may very well have been accepted as her habit.
“Thank you,” she replied
to munificent Charley’s offer that she would
use his second automobile. She managed to make
her polite words cut like a scythe. “I
should crowd it.”
“But they shall get out and
walk; it will be good for them,” said Charley,
indicating the valets and maids, and possibly the dogs,
too.
Beverly Rodgers did much better than
Charley. With a charming gesture and bow, he
offered his own seat in the first automobile.
“I am going to walk in any case,” he assured
her.
“One gentleman among them,”
I heard John Mayrant mutter behind me.
Miss La Heu declined, the chorus urged,
but Beverly (who was indeed a gentleman, every inch
of him) shook his head imperceptibly at Charley; and
while the little exclamations-“Do
come! So much more comfortable! So nice
to see more of you!”-dropped away,
Miss La Heu had settled her problem quite simply for
herself. A little procession of vehicles, townward
bound, had gathered on the bridge, waiting until the
closing of the draw should allow them to continue
upon their way. From these most of the occupants
had descended, and were staring with avidity at us
all; the great glass eyes and the great refulgent
cars held them in timidity and fascination, and the
poor lifeless white body of General, stretched beside
the way, heightened the hypnotic mystery; one or two
of the boldest had touched him, and found no outward
injury upon him; and this had sent their eyes back
to the automobile with increased awe. Eliza La
Heu summoned one of the onlookers, an old negro; at
some word she said to him he hurried back and returned,
leading his horse and empty cart, and General was
lifted into this. The girl took her seat beside
the old driver.
“No,” she said to John Mayrant, “certainly
not.”
I wondered at the needless severity
with which she declined his offer to accompany her
and help her.
He stood by the wheel of the cart,
looking up at her and protesting, and I joined him.
“Thank you,” she returned,
“I need no one. You will both oblige me
by saying no more about it.”
“John!” It was the slow,
well-calculated utterance of Hortense Rieppe.
Did I hear in it the caressing note of love?
John turned.
The draw had swung to, the mast and
sail of the vessel were separating away from the bridge
with a stealthy motion, men with iron bars were at
work fastening the draw secure, and horses’ hoofs
knocked nervously upon the wooden flooring as the
internal churning of the automobiles burst upon their
innocent ears.
“John, if Mr. Rodgers is really not going with
us-
Thus Hortense; and at that Miss La Heu:-
“Why do you keep them waiting?”
There was no caress in that note! It was polished
granite.
He looked up at her on her high seat
by the extremely dilapidated negro, and then he walked
forward and took his place beside his veiled fiancee,
among the glass eyes. A hiss of sharp noise spurted
from the automobiles, horses danced, and then, smoothly,
the two huge engines were gone with their cargo of
large, distorted shapes, leaving behind them-quite
as our present epoch will leave behind it-a
trail of power, of ingenuity, of ruthlessness, and
a bad smell.
“Hold hard, old boy!”
chuckled Beverly, to whom I communicated this sentiment.
“How do you know the stink of one generation
does not become the perfume of the next?” Beverly,
when he troubled to put a thing at all (which was
seldom-for he kept his quite good brains
well-nigh perpetually turned out to grass-or
rather to grass widows) always put it well, and with
a bracing vocabulary. “Hullo!” he
now exclaimed, and walked out into the middle of the
roadway, where he picked up a parasol. “Kitty
will be in a jolly old stew. None of its expensive
bones broken however.” And then he hailed
me by a name of our youth. “What are you
doing down here, you old sourbelly?”
“Watching you sun yourself on
the fat cushions of the yellow rich.”
“Oh, shucks, old man, they’re not so yellow!”
“Charley strikes me as yellower than his own
gold.”
“Charley’s not a bad little
sort. Of course, he needs coaching a bit here
and there-just now, for instance, when he
didn’t see that that girl wouldn’t think
of riding in the machine that had just killed her
dog. By Jove, give that girl a year in civilization
and she’d do! Who was the young fire-eater?”
“Fire-eater! He’s a lot more decent
than you or I.”
“But that’s saying so little, dear boy!”
“Seriously, Beverly.”
“Oh, hang it with your ‘seriously’!
Well, then, seriously, melodrama was the correct ticket
and all that in 1840, but we’ve outgrown it;
it’s devilish démode to chuck things in
people’s faces.
“I’m not sorry John Mayrant
did it!” I brought out his name with due emphasis.
“All the same,” Beverly
was beginning, when the automobile returned rapidly
upon us, and, guessing the cause of this, he waved
the parasol. Charley descended to get it-an
unnecessary act, prompted, I suppose, by the sudden
relief of finding that it was not lost.
He made his thanks marked. “It
is my sister’s,” he concluded, to me, by
way of explanation, in his slightly foreign accent.
“It is not much, but it has got some stones
and things in the handle.”
We were favored with a bow from the
veiled Hortense, shrill thanks from Kitty, and the
car, turning, again left us in a moment.
“You’ve got a Frenchman along,”
I said.
“Little Gazza,” Beverly
returned. “Italian; though from his morals
you’d never guess he wasn’t Parisian.
Great people in Rome. Hereditary right to do
something in the presence of the Pope-or
not to do it, I forget which. Not a bit of a
bad little sort, Gazza. He has just sold a lot
of old furniture-Renaissance-Lorenzo
du Borgia-that sort of jolly old truck-to
Bohm, you know.”
I didn’t know.
“Oh, yes, you do, old boy.
Harry Bohm, of Bohm & Cohn. Everybody knows Bohm,
and we’ll all be knowing Cohn by next year.
Gazza has sold him a lot of furniture, too. Bohm’s
from Pittsfield, or South Lee, or East Canaan, or
West Stockbridge, or some of those other back-country
cider presses that squirt some of the hardest propositions
into Wall Street. He’s just back from buying
a railroad, and four or five mines in Mexico.
Bohm represents Christianity in the firm. At Newport
they call him the military attache to Jerusalem.
He’s the big chap that sat behind me in the
car. He’ll marry Kitty as soon as she can
get her divorce. Bohm’s a jolly old sort-and
I tell you, you old sourbelly, you’re letting
this Southern moss grow over you a bit. Hey?
What? Yellow rich isn’t half bad, and I’ll
say it myself, and pretend it’s mine; but hang
it, old man, their children won’t be worse than
lemon-colored, and the grandchildren will be white!”
“Just in time,” I exclaimed,
“to take a back seat with their evaporated fortunes!”
Beverly chuckled. “Well,
if they do evaporate, there will be new ones.
Now don’t walk along making Mayflower eyes at
me. I’m no Puritan, and my people have
had a front seat since pretty early in the game, which
I’m holding on to, you know. And by Jove,
old man, I tell you, if you wish to hold on nowadays,
you can’t be drawing lines! If you don’t
want to see yourself jolly well replaced, you must
fall in with the replacers. Our blooming old
republic is merely the quickest process of endless
replacing yet discovered, and you take my tip, and
back the replacers! That’s where Miss Rieppe,
for all her Kings Port traditions, shows sense.”
I turned square on him. “Then she has broken
it?”
“Broken what?”
“Her engagement to John Mayrant. You mean
to say that you didn’t ?”
“See here, old man. Seriously. The
fire-eater?”
I was so very much bewildered that
I merely stared at Beverly Rodgers. Of course,
I might have known that Miss Rieppe would not feel
the need of announcing to her rich Northern friends
an engagement which she had fallen into the habit
of postponing.
But Beverly had a better right to
be taken aback. “I suppose you must have
some reason for your remark,” he said.
“You don’t mean that you’re engaged
to her?” I shot out.
“Me? With my poor little
fifteen thousand a year? Consider, dear boy!
Oh, no, we’re merely playing at it, she and I.
She’s a good player. But Charley-
“He is?” I shouted.
“I don’t know, old man, and I don’t
think he knows-yet.”
“Beverly,” said I, “let me tell
you.” And I told him.
After he had got himself adjusted
to the novelty of it he began to take it with a series
of thoughtful chuckles.
Into these I dropped with - “Where’s
her father, anyhow?” I began to feel, fantastically,
that she mightn’t have a father.
“He stopped in Savannah,”
Beverly answered. “He’s coming over
by the train. Kitty-Charley’s
sister, Mrs. Bleecker-did the chaperoning
for us.
“Very expertly, I should guess,” I said.
“Perfectly; invisibly,”
said Beverly. And he returned to his thoughts
and his chuckles.
“After all, it’s simple,” he presently
remarked.
“Doesn’t that depend on what she’s
here for?”
“Oh, to break it.”
“Why come for that?”
He took another turn among his cogitations.
I took a number of turns among my own, but it was
merely walking round and round in a circle.
“When will she announce it, then?” he
demanded.
“Ah!” I murmured. “You said
she was a good player.”
“But a fire-eater!” he
resumed. “For her. Oh, hang it!
She’ll let him go!”
“Then why hasn’t she?”
He hesitated. “Well, of course her game
could be spoiled by-
His speech died away into more cogitation,
and I had to ask him what he meant.
“By love getting into it somewhere.”
We walked on through Worship Street,
which we had reached some while since, and the chief
features of which I mechanically pointed out to him.
“Jolly old church, that,”
said Beverly, as we reached my favorite corner and
brick wall. “Well, I’ll not announce
it!” he murmured gallantly.
“My dear man,” I said,
“Kings Port will do all the announcing for you
to-morrow.”