Katie had never been more surprised
in her life than when the serious young man with the
brown eyes and the Charles Dana Gibson profile spirited
her away from his friend and Genevieve. Till that
moment she had looked on herself as playing a sort
of ‘villager and retainer’ part to the
brown-eyed young man’s hero and Genevieve’s
heroine. She knew she was not pretty, though
somebody (unidentified) had once said that she had
nice eyes; whereas Genevieve was notoriously a beauty,
incessantly pestered, so report had it, by musical
comedy managers to go on the stage.
Genevieve was tall and blonde, a destroyer
of masculine peace of mind. She said ‘harf’
and ‘rahther’, and might easily have been
taken for an English duchess instead of a cloak-model
at Macey’s. You would have said, in short,
that, in the matter of personable young men, Genevieve
would have swept the board. Yet, here was this
one deliberately selecting her, Katie, for his companion.
It was almost a miracle.
He had managed it with the utmost
dexterity at the merry-go-round. With winning
politeness he had assisted Genevieve on her wooden
steed, and then, as the machinery began to work, had
grasped Katie’s arm and led her at a rapid walk
out into the sunlight. Katie’s last glimpse
of Genevieve had been the sight of her amazed and
offended face as it whizzed round the corner, while
the steam melodeon drowned protests with a spirited
plunge into ‘Alexander’s Ragtime Band’.
Katie felt shy. This young man
was a perfect stranger. It was true she had had
a formal introduction to him, but only from Genevieve,
who had scraped acquaintance with him exactly two
minutes previously. It had happened on the ferry-boat
on the way to Palisades Park. Genevieve’s
bright eye, roving among the throng on the lower deck,
had singled out this young man and his companion as
suitable cavaliers for the expedition. The young
man pleased her, and his friend, with the broken nose
and the face like a good-natured bulldog, was obviously
suitable for Katie.
Etiquette is not rigid on New York
ferry-boats. Without fuss or delay she proceeded
to make their acquaintance to Katie’s
concern, for she could never get used to Genevieve’s
short way with strangers. The quiet life she
had led had made her almost prudish, and there were
times when Genevieve’s conduct shocked her.
Of course, she knew there was no harm in Genevieve.
As the latter herself had once put it, ’The feller
that tries to get gay with me is going to get a call-down
that’ll make him holler for his winter overcoat.’
But all the same she could not approve. And the
net result of her disapproval was to make her shy and
silent as she walked by this young man’s side.
The young man seemed to divine her thoughts.
‘Say, I’m on the level,’
he observed. ’You want to get that.
Right on the square. See?’
‘Oh, yes,’ said Katie,
relieved but yet embarrassed. It was awkward to
have one’s thoughts read like this.
‘You ain’t like your friend.
Don’t think I don’t see that.’
‘Genevieve’s a sweet girl,’ said
Katie, loyally.
‘A darned sight too sweet. Somebody ought
to tell her mother.’
‘Why did you speak to her if you did not like
her?’
‘Wanted to get to know you,’ said the
young man simply.
They walked on in silence. Katie’s
heart was beating with a rapidity that forbade speech.
Nothing like this very direct young man had ever happened
to her before. She had grown so accustomed to
regarding herself as something too insignificant and
unattractive for the notice of the lordly male that
she was overwhelmed. She had a vague feeling
that there was a mistake somewhere. It surely
could not be she who was proving so alluring to this
fairy prince. The novelty of the situation frightened
her.
‘Come here often?’ asked her companion.
‘I’ve never been here before.’
‘Often go to Coney?’
‘I’ve never been.’
He regarded her with astonishment.
’You’ve never been to
Coney Island! Why, you don’t know what this
sort of thing is till you’ve taken in Coney.
This place isn’t on the map with Coney.
Do you mean to say you’ve never seen Luna Park,
or Dreamland, or Steeplechase, or the diving ducks?
Haven’t you had a look at the Mardi Gras stunts?
Why, Coney during Mardi Gras is the greatest thing
on earth. It’s a knockout. Just about
a million boys and girls having the best time that
ever was. Say, I guess you don’t go out
much, do you?’
‘Not much.’
’If it’s not a rude question,
what do you do? I been trying to place you all
along. Now I reckon your friend works in a store,
don’t she?’
‘Yes. She’s a cloak-model. She
has a lovely figure, hasn’t she?’
’Didn’t notice it.
I guess so, if she’s what you say. It’s
what they pay her for, ain’t it? Do you
work in a store, too?’
‘Not exactly. I keep a little shop.’
‘All by yourself?’
’I do all the work now.
It was my father’s shop, but he’s dead.
It began by being my grandfather’s. He
started it. But he’s so old now that, of
course, he can’t work any longer, so I look after
things.’
‘Say, you’re a wonder! What sort
of a shop?’
’It’s only a little second-hand
bookshop. There really isn’t much to do.’
‘Where is it?’
‘Sixth Avenue. Near Washington Square.’
‘What name?’
‘Bennett.’
‘That’s your name, then?’
‘Yes.’
‘Anything besides Bennett?’
‘My name’s Kate.’
The young man nodded.
‘I’d make a pretty good
district attorney,’ he said, disarming possible
resentment at this cross-examination. ’I
guess you’re wondering if I’m ever going
to stop asking you questions. Well, what would
you like to do?’
’Don’t you think we ought
to go back and find your friend and Genevieve?
They will be wondering where we are.’
’Let ’em,’ said the young man briefly.
‘I’ve had all I want of Jenny.’
‘I can’t understand why you don’t
like her.’
’I like you. Shall we have
some ice-cream, or would you rather go on the Scenic
Railway?’
Katie decided on the more peaceful
pleasure. They resumed their walk, socially licking
two cones. Out of the corner of her eyes Katie
cast swift glances at her friend’s face.
He was a very grave young man. There was something
important as well as handsome about him. Once,
as they made their way through the crowds, she saw
a couple of boys look almost reverently at him.
She wondered who he could be, but was too shy to inquire.
She had got over her nervousness to a great extent,
but there were still limits to what she felt herself
equal to saying. It did not strike her that it
was only fair that she should ask a few questions
in return for those which he had put. She had
always repressed herself, and she did so now.
She was content to be with him without finding out
his name and history.
He supplied the former just before he finally consented
to let her go.
They were standing looking over the
river. The sun had spent its force, and it was
cool and pleasant in the breeze which was coming up
the Hudson. Katie was conscious of a vague feeling
that was almost melancholy. It had been a lovely
afternoon, and she was sorry that it was over.
The young man shuffled his feet on the loose stones.
‘I’m mighty glad I met
you,’ he said. ’Say, I’m coming
to see you. On Sixth Avenue. Don’t
mind, do you?’
He did not wait for a reply.
‘Brady’s my name.
Ted Brady, Glencoe Athletic Club,’ he paused.
’I’m on the level,’ he added, and
paused again. ’I like you a whole lot.
There’s your friend, Genevieve. Better
go after her, hadn’t you? Good-bye.’
And he was gone, walking swiftly through the crowd
about the bandstand.
Katie went back to Genevieve, and
Genevieve was simply horrid. Cold and haughty,
a beautiful iceberg of dudgeon, she refused to speak
a single word during the whole long journey back to
Sixth Avenue. And Katie, whose tender heart would
at other times have been tortured by this hostility,
leant back in her seat, and was happy. Her mind
was far away from Genevieve’s frozen gloom,
living over again the wonderful happenings of the
afternoon.
Yes, it had been a wonderful afternoon,
but trouble was waiting for her in Sixth Avenue.
Trouble was never absent for very long from Katie’s
unselfish life. Arriving at the little bookshop,
she found Mr Murdoch, the glazier, preparing for departure.
Mr Murdoch came in on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays
to play draughts with her grandfather, who was paralysed
from the waist, and unable to leave the house except
when Katie took him for his outing in Washington Square
each morning in his bath-chair.
Mr Murdoch welcomed Katie with joy.
’I was wondering whenever you
would come back, Katie. I’m afraid the
old man’s a little upset.’
‘Not ill?’
’Not ill. Upset. And
it was my fault, too. Thinking he’d be interested,
I read him a piece from the paper where I seen about
these English Suffragettes, and he just went up in
the air. I guess he’ll be all right now
you’ve come back. I was a fool to read it,
I reckon. I kind of forgot for the moment.’
’Please don’t worry yourself
about it, Mr Murdoch. He’ll be all right
soon. I’ll go to him.’
In the inner room the old man was
sitting. His face was flushed, and he gesticulated
from time to time.
‘I won’t have it,’
he cried as Katie entered. ’I tell you I
won’t have it. If Parliament can’t
do anything, I’ll send Parliament about its
business.’
‘Here I am, grandpapa,’
said Katie quickly. ’I’ve had the
greatest time. It was lovely up there. I ’
’I tell you it’s got to
stop. I’ve spoken about it before.
I won’t have it.’
’I expect they’re doing
their best. It’s your being so far away
that makes it hard for them. But I do think you
might write them a very sharp letter.’
‘I will. I will. Get
out the paper. Are you ready?’ He stopped,
and looked piteously at Katie. ’I don’t
know what to say. I don’t know how to begin.’
Katie scribbled a few lines.
’How would this do? “His
Majesty informs his Government that he is greatly
surprised and indignant that no notice has been taken
of his previous communications. If this goes
on, he will be reluctantly compelled to put the matter
in other hands."’
She read it glibly as she had written
it. The formula had been a favourite one of her
late father, when roused to fall upon offending patrons
of the bookshop.
The old man beamed. His resentment
was gone. He was soothed and happy.
’That’ll wake ’em
up,’ he said. ’I won’t have
these goings on while I’m king, and if they
don’t like it, they know what to do. You’re
a good girl, Katie.’
He chuckled.
‘I beat Lord Murdoch five games to nothing,’
he said.
It was now nearly two years since
the morning when old Matthew Bennett had announced
to an audience consisting of Katie and a smoky blue
cat, which had wandered in from Washington Square
to take pot-luck, that he was the King of England.
This was a long time for any one delusion
of the old man’s to last. Usually they
came and went with a rapidity which made it hard for
Katie, for all her tact, to keep abreast of them.
She was not likely to forget the time when he went
to bed President Roosevelt and woke up the Prophet
Elijah. It was the only occasion in all the years
they had passed together when she had felt like giving
way and indulging in the fit of hysterics which most
girls of her age would have had as a matter of course.
She had handled that crisis, and she
handled the present one with equal smoothness.
When her grandfather made his announcement, which he
did rather as one stating a generally recognized fact
than as if the information were in any way sensational,
she neither screamed nor swooned, nor did she rush
to the neighbours for advice. She merely gave
the old man his breakfast, not forgetting to set aside
a suitable portion for the smoky cat, and then went
round to notify Mr Murdoch of what had happened.
Mr Murdoch, excellent man, received
the news without any fuss or excitement at all, and
promised to look in on Schwartz, the stout saloon-keeper,
who was Mr Bennett’s companion and antagonist
at draughts on Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Saturdays,
and, as he expressed it, put him wise.
Life ran comfortably in the new groove.
Old Mr Bennett continued to play draughts and pore
over his second-hand classics. Every morning he
took his outing in Washington Square where, from his
invalid’s chair, he surveyed somnolent Italians
and roller-skating children with his old air of kindly
approval. Katie, whom circumstances had taught
to be thankful for small mercies, was perfectly happy
in the shadow of the throne. She liked her work;
she liked looking after her grandfather; and now that
Ted Brady had come into her life, she really began
to look on herself as an exceptionally lucky girl,
a spoilt favourite of Fortune.
For Ted Brady had called, as he said
he would, and from the very first he had made plain
in his grave, direct way the objects of his visits.
There was no subtlety about Ted, no finesse. He
was as frank as a music-hall love song.
On his first visit, having handed
Katie a large bunch of roses with the stolidity of
a messenger boy handing over a parcel, he had proceeded,
by way of establishing his bona fides, to tell
her all about himself. He supplied the facts
in no settled order, just as they happened to occur
to him in the long silences with which his speech was
punctuated. Small facts jostled large facts.
He spoke of his morals and his fox-terrier in the
same breath.
’I’m on the level.
Ask anyone who knows me. They’ll tell you
that. Say, I got the cutest little dog you ever
seen. Do you like dogs? I’ve never
been a fellow that’s got himself mixed up with
girls. I don’t like ’em as a general
thing. A fellow’s got too much to do keeping
himself in training, if his club expects him to do
things. I belong to the Glencoe Athletic.
I ran the hundred yards dash in evens last sports there
was. They expect me to do it at the Glencoe,
so I’ve never got myself mixed up with girls.
Till I seen you that afternoon I reckon I’d hardly
looked at a girl, honest. They didn’t seem
to kind of make any hit with me. And then I seen
you, and I says to myself, “That’s the
one.” It sort of came over me in a flash.
I fell for you directly I seen you. And I’m
on the level. Don’t forget that.’
And more in the same strain, leaning
on the counter and looking into Katie’s eyes
with a devotion that added emphasis to his measured
speech.
Next day he came again, and kissed
her respectfully but firmly, making a sort of shuffling
dive across the counter. Breaking away, he fumbled
in his pocket and produced a ring, which he proceeded
to place on her finger with the serious air which
accompanied all his actions.
‘That looks pretty good to me,’
he said, as he stepped back and eyed it.
It struck Katie, when he had gone,
how differently different men did things. Genevieve
had often related stories of men who had proposed to
her, and according to Genevieve, they always got excited
and emotional, and sometimes cried. Ted Brady
had fitted her with the ring more like a glover’s
assistant than anything else, and he had hardly spoken
a word from beginning to end. He had seemed to
take her acquiescence for granted. And yet there
had been nothing flat or disappointing about the proceedings.
She had been thrilled throughout. It is to be
supposed that Mr Brady had the force of character
which does not require the aid of speech.
It was not till she took the news
of her engagement to old Mr Bennett that it was borne
in upon Katie that Fate did not intend to be so wholly
benevolent to her as she supposed.
That her grandfather could offer any
opposition had not occurred to her as a possibility.
She took his approval for granted. Never, as long
as she could remember, had he been anything but kind
to her. And the only possible objections to marriage
from a grandfather’s point of view badness
of character, insufficient means, or inferiority of
social position were in this case gloriously
absent.
She could not see how anyone, however
hypercritical, could find a flaw in Ted. His
character was spotless. He was comfortably off.
And so far from being in any way inferior socially,
it was he who condescended. For Ted, she had
discovered from conversation with Mr Murdoch, the
glazier, was no ordinary young man. He was a celebrity.
So much so that for a moment, when told the news of
the engagement, Mr Murdoch, startled out of his usual
tact, had exhibited frank surprise that the great
Ted Brady should not have aimed higher.
‘You’re sure you’ve
got the name right, Katie?’ he had said.
’It’s really Ted Brady? No mistake
about the first name? Well-built, good-looking
young chap with brown eyes? Well, this beats me.
Not,’ he went on hurriedly, ’that any
young fellow mightn’t think himself lucky to
get a wife like you, Katie, but Ted Brady! Why,
there isn’t a girl in this part of the town,
or in Harlem or the Bronx, for that matter, who wouldn’t
give her eyes to be in your place. Why, Ted Brady
is the big noise. He’s the star of the
Glencoe.’
‘He told me he belonged to the Glencoe Athletic.’
’Don’t you believe it.
It belongs to him. Why, the way that boy runs
and jumps is the real limit. There’s only
Billy Burton, of the Irish-American, that can touch
him. You’ve certainly got the pick of the
bunch, Katie.’
He stared at her admiringly, as if
for the first time realizing her true worth.
For Mr Murdoch was a great patron of sport.
With these facts in her possession
Katie had approached the interview with her grandfather
with a good deal of confidence.
The old man listened to her recital
of Mr Brady’s qualities in silence. Then
he shook his head.
‘It can’t be, Katie. I couldn’t
have it.’
‘Grandpapa!’
‘You’re forgetting, my dear.’
‘Forgetting?’
’Who ever heard of such a thing?
The grand-daughter of the King of England marrying
a commoner! It wouldn’t do at all.’
Consternation, surprise, and misery
kept Katie dumb. She had learned in a hard school
to be prepared for sudden blows from the hand of fate,
but this one was so entirely unforeseen that it found
her unprepared, and she was crushed by it. She
knew her grandfather’s obstinacy too well to
argue against the decision.
‘Oh, no, not at all,’ he repeated.
‘Oh, no, it wouldn’t do.’
Katie said nothing; she was beyond
speech. She stood there wide-eyed and silent
among the ruins of her little air-castle. The
old man patted her hand affectionately. He was
pleased at her docility. It was the right attitude,
becoming in one of her high rank.
‘I am very sorry, my dear, but oh,
no! oh, no! oh, no ’ His voice trailed
away into an unintelligible mutter. He was a very
old man, and he was not always able to concentrate
his thoughts on a subject for any length of time.
So little did Ted Brady realize at
first the true complexity of the situation that he
was inclined, when he heard of the news, to treat the
crisis in the jaunty, dashing, love-laughs-at-locksmith
fashion so popular with young men of spirit when thwarted
in their loves by the interference of parents and
guardians.
It took Katie some time to convince
him that, just because he had the licence in his pocket,
he could not snatch her up on his saddle-bow and carry
her off to the nearest clergyman after the manner of
young Lochinvar.
In the first flush of his resentment
at restraint he saw no reason why he should differentiate
between old Mr Bennett and the conventional banns-forbidding
father of the novelettes with which he was accustomed
to sweeten his hours of idleness. To him, till
Katie explained the intricacies of the position, Mr
Bennett was simply the proud millionaire who would
not hear of his daughter marrying the artist.
‘But, Ted, dear, you don’t
understand,’ Katie said. ’We simply
couldn’t do that. There’s no one
but me to look after him, poor old man. How could
I run away like that and get married? What would
become of him?’
‘You wouldn’t be away
long,’ urged Mr Brady, a man of many parts, but
not a rapid thinker. ’The minister would
have us fixed up inside of half an hour. Then
we’d look in at Mouquin’s for a steak and
fried, just to make a sort of wedding breakfast.
And then back we’d come, hand-in-hand, and say,
“Well, here we are. Now what?"’
‘He would never forgive me.’
‘That,’ said Ted judicially, ‘would
be up to him.’
’It would kill him. Don’t
you see, we know that it’s all nonsense, this
idea of his; but he really thinks he is the king, and
he’s so old that the shock of my disobeying
him would be too much. Honest, Ted, dear, I couldn’t.’
Gloom unutterable darkened Ted Brady’s
always serious countenance. The difficulties
of the situation were beginning to come home to him.
‘Maybe if I went and saw him ’
he suggested at last.
‘You could,’ said Katie doubtfully.
Ted tightened his belt with an air
of determination, and bit resolutely on the chewing-gum
which was his inseparable companion.
‘I will,’ he said.
‘You’ll be nice to him, Ted?’
He nodded. He was the man of action, not words.
It was perhaps ten minutes before
he came out of the inner room in which Mr Bennett
passed his days. When he did, there was no light
of jubilation on his face. His brow was darker
than ever.
Katie looked at him anxiously.
He returned the look with a sombre shake of the head.
‘Nothing doing,’ he said
shortly. He paused. ‘Unless,’
he added, ’you count it anything that he’s
made me an earl.’
In the next two weeks several brains
busied themselves with the situation. Genevieve,
reconciled to Katie after a decent interval of wounded
dignity, said she supposed there was a way out, if
one could only think of it, but it certainly got past
her. The only approach to a plan of action was
suggested by the broken-nosed individual who had been
Ted’s companion that day at Palisades Park, a
gentleman of some eminence in the boxing world, who
rejoiced in the name of the Tennessee Bear-Cat.
What they ought to do, in the Bear-Cat’s
opinion, was to get the old man out into Washington
Square one morning. He of Tennessee would then
sasshay up in a flip manner and make a break.
Ted, waiting close by, would resent his insolence.
There would be words, followed by blows.
‘See what I mean?’ pursued
the Bear-Cat. ’There’s you and me
mixing it. I’ll square the cop on the beat
to leave us be; he’s a friend of mine.
Pretty soon you land me one on the plexus, and I take
th’ count. Then there’s you hauling
me up by th’ collar to the old gentleman, and
me saying I quits and apologizing. See what I
mean?’
The whole, presumably, to conclude
with warm expressions of gratitude and esteem from
Mr Bennett, and an instant withdrawal of the veto.
Ted himself approved of the scheme.
He said it was a cracker-jaw, and he wondered how
one so notoriously ivory-skulled as the other could
have had such an idea. The Bear-Cat said modestly
that he had ’em sometimes. And it is probable
that all would have been well, had it not been necessary
to tell the plan to Katie, who was horrified at the
very idea, spoke warmly of the danger to her grandfather’s
nervous system, and said she did not think the Bear-Cat
could be a nice friend for Ted. And matters relapsed
into their old state of hopelessness.
And then, one day, Katie forced herself
to tell Ted that she thought it would be better if
they did not see each other for a time. She said
that these meetings were only a source of pain to both
of them. It would really be better if he did
not come round for well, quite some time.
It had not been easy for her to say
it. The decision was the outcome of many wakeful
nights. She had asked herself the question whether
it was fair for her to keep Ted chained to her in
this hopeless fashion, when, left to himself and away
from her, he might so easily find some other girl
to make him happy.
So Ted went, reluctantly, and the
little shop on Sixth Avenue knew him no more.
And Katie spent her time looking after old Mr Bennett
(who had completely forgotten the affair by now, and
sometimes wondered why Katie was not so cheerful as
she had been), and for, though unselfish,
she was human hating those unknown girls
whom in her mind’s eye she could see clustering
round Ted, smiling at him, making much of him, and
driving the bare recollection of her out of his mind.
The summer passed. July came
and went, making New York an oven. August followed,
and one wondered why one had complained of July’s
tepid advances.
It was on the evening of September
the eleventh that Katie, having closed the little
shop, sat in the dusk on the steps, as many thousands
of her fellow-townsmen and townswomen were doing, turning
her face to the first breeze which New York had known
for two months. The hot spell had broken abruptly
that afternoon, and the city was drinking in the coolness
as a flower drinks water.
From round the corner, where the yellow
cross of the Judson Hotel shone down on Washington
Square, came the shouts of children, and the strains,
mellowed by distance, of the indefatigable barrel-organ
which had played the same tunes in the same place
since the spring.
Katie closed her eyes, and listened.
It was very peaceful this evening, so peaceful that
for an instant she forgot even to think of Ted.
And it was just during this instant that she heard
his voice.
‘That you, kid?’
He was standing before her, his hands
in his pockets, one foot on the pavement, the other
in the road; and if he was agitated, his voice did
not show it.
‘Ted!’
‘That’s me. Can I see the old man
for a minute, Katie?’
This time it did seem to her that
she could detect a slight ring of excitement.
‘It’s no use, Ted. Honest.’
’No harm in going in and passing
the time of day, is there? I’ve got something
I want to say to him.’
‘What?’
‘Tell you later, maybe. Is he in his room?’
He stepped past her, and went in.
As he went, he caught her arm and pressed it, but
he did not stop. She saw him go into the inner
room and heard through the door as he closed it behind
him, the murmur of voices. And almost immediately,
it seemed to her, her name was called. It was
her grandfather’s voice which called, high and
excited. The door opened, and Ted appeared.
‘Come here a minute, Katie, will you?’
he said. ‘You’re wanted.’
The old man was leaning forward in
his chair. He was in a state of extraordinary
excitement. He quivered and jumped. Ted,
standing by the wall, looked as stolid as ever; but
his eyes glittered.
‘Katie,’ cried the old
man, ’this is a most remarkable piece of news.
This gentleman has just been telling me extraordinary.
He ’
He broke off, and looked at Ted, as
he had looked at Katie when he had tried to write
the letter to the Parliament of England.
Ted’s eye, as it met Katie’s, was almost
defiant.
‘I want to marry you,’ he said.
‘Yes, yes,’ broke in Mr Bennett, impatiently,
‘but ’
‘And I’m a king.’
‘Yes, yes, that’s it, that’s it,
Katie. This gentleman is a king.’
Once more Ted’s eye met Katie’s,
and this time there was an imploring look in it.
‘That’s right,’
he said, slowly. ’I’ve just been telling
your grandfather I’m the King of Coney Island.’
‘That’s it. Of Coney Island.’
’So there’s no objection
now to us getting married, kid Your Royal
Highness. It’s a royal alliance, see?’
‘A royal alliance,’ echoed Mr Bennett.
Out in the street, Ted held Katie’s
hand, and grinned a little sheepishly.
‘You’re mighty quiet,
kid,’ he said. ’It looks as if it
don’t make much of a hit with you, the notion
of being married to me.’
‘Oh, Ted! But ’
He squeezed her hand.
’I know what you’re thinking.
I guess it was raw work pulling a tale like that on
the old man. I hated to do it, but gee! when a
fellow’s up against it like I was, he’s
apt to grab most any chance that comes along.
Why, say, kid, it kind of looked to me as if it was
sort of meant. Coming just now, like it
did, just when it was wanted, and just when it didn’t
seem possible it could happen. Why, a week ago
I was nigh on two hundred votes behind Billy Burton.
The Irish-American put him up, and everybody thought
he’d be King at the Mardi Gras. And then
suddenly they came pouring in for me, till at the finish
I had Billy looking like a regular has-been.
’It’s funny the way the
voting jumps about every year in this Coney election.
It was just Providence, and it didn’t seem right
to let it go by. So I went in to the old man,
and told him. Say, I tell you I was just sweating
when I got ready to hand it to him. It was an
outside chance he’d remember all about what
the Mardi Gras at Coney was, and just what being a
king at it amounted to. Then I remembered you
telling me you’d never been to Coney, so I figured
your grandfather wouldn’t be what you’d
call well fixed in his information about it, so I took
the chance.
’I tried him out first.
I tried him with Brooklyn. Why, say, from the
way he took it, he’d either never heard of the
place, or else he’d forgotten what it was.
I guess he don’t remember much, poor old fellow.
Then I mentioned Yonkers. He asked me what Yonkers
were. Then I reckoned it was safe to bring on
Coney, and he fell for it right away. I felt
mean, but it had to be done.’
He caught her up, and swung her into
the air with a perfectly impassive face. Then,
having kissed her, he lowered her gently to the ground
again. The action seemed to have relieved his
feelings, for when he spoke again it was plain that
his conscience no longer troubled him.
‘And say,’ he said, ’come
to think of it, I don’t see where there’s
so much call for me to feel mean. I’m not
so far short of being a regular king. Coney’s
just as big as some of those kingdoms you read about
on the other side; and, from what you see in the papers
about the goings-on there, it looks to me that, having
a whole week on the throne like I’m going to
have, amounts to a pretty steady job as kings go.’