SAM CLICKS
Se
It was the fourth morning of the voyage.
Of course, when this story is done in the movies they
won’t be satisfied with a bald statement like
that; they will have a Spoken Title or a Cut-Back Sub-Caption
or whatever they call the thing in the low dens where
motion-picture scenario-lizards do their dark work,
which will run:
AND SO, CALM AND GOLDEN,
THE DAYS WENT BY, EACH FRAUGHT WITH HOPE
AND YOUTH AND SWEETNESS,
LINKING TWO YOUNG HEARTS IN SILKEN FETTERS
FORGED BY THE LAUGHING
LOVE-GOD.
and the males in the audience will
shift their chewing gum to the other cheek and take
a firmer grip of their companion’s hands and
the man at the piano will play “Everybody wants
a key to my cellar,” or something equally appropriate,
very soulfully and slowly, with a wistful eye on the
half-smoked cigarette which he has parked on the lowest
octave and intends finishing as soon as the picture
is over. But I prefer the plain frank statement
that it was the fourth day of the voyage. That
is my story and I mean to stick to it.
Samuel Marlowe, muffled in a bathrobe,
came back to the state-room from his tub. His
manner had the offensive jauntiness of the man who
has had a cold bath when he might just as easily have
had a hot one. He looked out of the porthole
at the shimmering sea. He felt strong and happy
and exuberant.
It was not merely the spiritual pride
induced by a cold bath that was uplifting this young
man. The fact was that, as he towelled his glowing
back, he had suddenly come to the decision that this
very day he would propose to Wilhelmina Bennett.
Yes, he would put his fortune to the test, to win
or lose it all. True, he had only known her for
four days, but what of that?
Nothing in the way of modern progress
is more remarkable than the manner in which the attitude
of your lover has changed concerning proposals of
marriage. When Samuel Marlowe’s grandfather
had convinced himself, after about a year and a half
of respectful aloofness, that the emotion which he
felt towards Samuel Marlowe’s grandmother-to-be
was love, the fashion of the period compelled him
to approach the matter in a roundabout way. First,
he spent an evening or two singing sentimental ballads,
she accompanying him on the piano and the rest of the
family sitting on the side-lines to see that no rough
stuff was pulled. Having noted that she drooped
her eyelashes and turned faintly pink when he came
to the “Thee only thee!” bit,
he felt a mild sense of encouragement, strong enough
to justify him in taking her sister aside next day
and asking if the object of his affections ever happened
to mention his name in the course of conversation.
Further pour-parlers having passed with her
aunt, two more sisters, and her little brother, he
felt that the moment had arrived when he might send
her a volume of Shelley, with some of the passages
marked in pencil. A few weeks later, he interviewed
her father and obtained his consent to the paying of
his addresses. And finally, after writing her
a letter which began “Madam, you will not have
been insensible to the fact that for some time past
you have inspired in my bosom feelings deeper than
those of ordinary friendship....” he waylaid
her in the rose-garden and brought the thing off.
How different is the behaviour of
the modern young man. His courtship can hardly
be called a courtship at all. His methods are
those of Sir W. S. Gilbert’s Alphonso.
“Alphonso, who
for cool assurance all creation licks,
He up and said to Emily
who has cheek enough for six:
‘Miss Emily, I
love you. Will you marry? Say the word!’
And Emily said:
‘Certainly, Alphonso, like a bird!’”
Sam Marlowe was a warm supporter of
the Alphonso method. He was a bright young man
and did not require a year to make up his mind that
Wilhelmina Bennett had been set apart by Fate from
the beginning of time to be his bride. He had
known it from the moment he saw her on the dock, and
all the subsequent strolling, reading, talking, soup-drinking,
tea-drinking, and shuffle-board-playing which they
had done together had merely solidified his original
impression. He loved this girl with all the force
of a fiery nature the fiery nature of the
Marlowes was a by-word in Bruton Street, Berkeley
Square and something seemed to whisper that
she loved him. At any rate she wanted somebody
like Sir Galahad, and, without wishing to hurl bouquets
at himself, he could not see where she could possibly
get anyone liker Sir Galahad than himself. So,
wind and weather permitting, Samuel Marlowe intended
to propose to Wilhelmina Bennett this very day.
He let down the trick basin which
hung beneath the mirror and, collecting his shaving
materials, began to lather his face.
“I am the Bandolero!”
sang Sam blithely through the soap. “I am,
I am the Bandolero! Yes, yes, I am the Bandolero!”
The untidy heap of bedclothes in the
lower berth stirred restlessly.
“Oh, God!” said Eustace
Hignett thrusting out a tousled head.
Sam regarded his cousin with commiseration.
Horrid things had been happening to Eustace during
the last few days, and it was quite a pleasant surprise
each morning to find that he was still alive.
“Feeling bad again, old man?”
“I was feeling all right,”
replied Hignett churlishly, “until you began
the farmyard imitations. What sort of a day is
it?”
“Glorious! The sea....”
“Don’t talk about the sea!”
“Sorry! The sun is shining
brighter than it has ever shone in the history of
the race. Why don’t you get up?”
“Nothing will induce me to get up.”
“Well, go a regular buster and have an egg for
breakfast.”
Eustace Hignett shuddered. He
eyed Sam sourly. “You seem devilish pleased
with yourself this morning!” he said censoriously.
Sam dried the razor carefully and
put it away. He hesitated. Then the desire
to confide in somebody got the better of him.
“The fact is,” he said apologetically,
“I’m in love!”
“In love!” Eustace Hignett
sat up and bumped his head sharply against the berth
above him. “Has this been going on long?”
“Ever since the voyage started.”
“I think you might have told
me,” said Eustace reproachfully. “I
told you my troubles. Why did you not let me
know that this awful thing had come upon you?”
“Well, as a matter of fact,
old man, during these last few days I had a notion
that your mind was, so to speak, occupied elsewhere.”
“Who is she?”
“Oh, a girl I met on board.”
“Don’t do it!” said
Eustace Hignett solemnly. “As a friend I
entreat you not to do it. Take my advice, as
a man who knows women, and don’t do it!”
“Don’t do what?”
“Propose to her. I can
tell by the glitter in your eye that you are intending
to propose to this girl probably this morning.”
“Not this morning after
lunch. I always think one can do oneself more
justice after lunch.”
“Don’t do it. Women
are the devil, whether they marry you or jilt you.
Do you realise that women wear black evening dresses
that have to be hooked up in a hurry when you are
late for the theatre, and that, out of sheer wanton
malignity, the hooks and eyes on those dresses are
also made black? Do you realise...?”
“Oh, I’ve thought it all out.”
“And take the matter of children.
How would you like to become the father and
a mere glance around you will show you that the chances
are enormously in favour of such a thing happening of
a boy with spectacles and protruding front teeth who
asks questions all the time? Out of six small
boys whom I saw when I came on board, four wore spectacles
and had teeth like rabbits. The other two were
equally revolting in different styles. How would
you like to become the father...?”
“There is no need to be indelicate,”
said Sam stiffly. “A man must take these
chances.”
“Give her the miss in baulk,”
pleaded Hignett. “Stay down here for the
rest of the voyage. You can easily dodge her when
you get to Southampton. And, if she sends messages,
say you’re ill and can’t be disturbed.”
Sam gazed at him, revolted. More
than ever he began to understand how it was that a
girl with ideals had broken off her engagement with
this man. He finished dressing, and, after a
satisfying breakfast, went on deck.
Se
It was, as he had said, a glorious
morning. The sample which he had had through
the porthole had not prepared him for the magic of
it. The ship swam in a vast bowl of the purest
blue on an azure carpet flecked with silver.
It was a morning which impelled a man to great deeds,
a morning which shouted to him to chuck his chest
out and be romantic. The sight of Billie Bennett,
trim and gleaming in a pale green sweater and white
skirt had the effect of causing Marlowe to alter the
programme which he had sketched out. Proposing
to this girl was not a thing to be put off till after
lunch. It was a thing to be done now and at once.
The finest efforts of the finest cooks in the world
could not put him in better form than he felt at present.
“Good morning, Miss Bennett.”
“Good morning, Mr. Marlowe.”
“Isn’t it a perfect day?”
“Wonderful!”
“It makes all the difference on board ship if
the weather is fine.”
“Yes, doesn’t it?”
How strange it is that the great emotional
scenes of history, one of which is coming along almost
immediately, always begin in this prosaic way Shakespeare
tries to conceal the fact, but there can be little
doubt that Romeo and Juliet edged into their balcony
scene with a few remarks on the pleasantness of the
morning.
“Shall we walk round?” said Billie.
Sam glanced about him. It was
the time of day when the promenade deck was always
full. Passengers in cocoons of rugs lay on chairs,
waiting in a dull trance till the steward should arrive
with the eleven o’clock soup. Others, more
energetic, strode up and down. From the point
of view of a man who wished to reveal his most sacred
feelings to a beautiful girl, the place was practically
a tube station during the rush hour.
“It’s so crowded,” he said.
“Let’s go on to the upper deck.”
“All right. You can read to me. Go
and fetch your Tennyson.”
Sam felt that fortune was playing
into his hands. His four-days’ acquaintance
with the bard had been sufficient to show him that
the man was there forty ways when it came to writing
about love. You could open his collected works
almost anywhere and shut your eyes and dab down your
finger on some red-hot passage. A proposal of
marriage is a thing which it is rather difficult to
bring neatly into the ordinary run of conversation.
It wants leading up to. But, if you once start
reading poetry, especially Tennyson’s, almost
anything is apt to give you your cue. He bounded
light-heartedly into the state-room, waking Eustace
Hignett from an uneasy dose.
“Now what?” said Eustace.
“Where’s that copy of
Tennyson you gave me? I left it ah,
here it is. Well, see you later!”
“Wait! What are you going to do?”
“Oh, that girl I told you about,”
said Sam making for the door. “She wants
me to read Tennyson to her on the upper deck.”
“Tennyson?”
“Yes.”
“On the upper deck?”
“Yes.”
“This is the end,” said Eustace Hignett,
turning his face to the wall.
Sam raced up the companion-way as
far as it went; then, going out on deck, climbed a
flight of steps and found himself in the only part
of the ship which was ever even comparatively private.
The main herd of passengers preferred the promenade
deck, two layers below.
He threaded his way through a maze
of boats, ropes, and curious-shaped steel structures
which the architect of the ship seemed to have tacked
on at the last moment in a spirit of sheer exuberance.
Above him towered one of the funnels, before him a
long, slender mast. He hurried on, and presently
came upon Billie sitting on a garden seat, backed by
the white roof of the smoke-room; beside this was
a small deck which seemed to have lost its way and
strayed up here all by itself. It was the deck
on which one could occasionally see the patients playing
an odd game with long sticks and bits of wood not
shuffleboard but something even lower in the mental
scale. This morning, however, the devotees of
this pastime were apparently under proper restraint,
for the deck was empty.
“This is jolly,” he said
sitting down beside the girl and drawing a deep breath
of satisfaction.
“Yes, I love this deck. It’s so peaceful.”
“It’s the only part of
the ship where you can be reasonably sure of not meeting
stout men in flannels and nautical caps. An ocean
voyage always makes me wish that I had a private yacht.”
“It would be nice.”
“A private yacht,” repeated
Sam, sliding a trifle closer. “We would
sail about, visiting desert islands which lay like
jewels in the heart of tropic seas.”
“We?”
“Most certainly we. It wouldn’t be
any fun if you were not there.”
“That’s very complimentary.”
“Well, it wouldn’t. I’m not
fond of girls as a rule....”
“Oh, aren’t you?”
“No!” said Sam decidedly.
It was a point which he wished to make clear at the
outset. “Not at all fond. My friends
have often remarked upon it. A palmist once told
me that I had one of those rare spiritual natures
which cannot be satisfied with substitutes but must
seek and seek till they find their soul-mate.
When other men all round me were frittering away their
emotions in idle flirtations which did not touch their
deeper natures, I was ... I was ... well, I wasn’t,
if you see what I mean.”
“Oh, you wasn’t ... weren’t?”
“No. Some day I knew I
should meet the only girl I could possibly love, and
then I would pour out upon her the stored-up devotion
of a lifetime, lay an unblemished heart at her feet,
fold her in my arms and say ’At last!’”
“How jolly for her. Like having a circus
all to oneself.”
“Well, yes,” said Sam after a momentary
pause.
“When I was a child I always
thought that that would be the most wonderful thing
in the world.”
“The most wonderful thing in
the world is love, a pure and consuming love, a love
which....”
“Oh, hello!” said a voice.
All through this scene, right from
the very beginning of it, Sam had not been able to
rid himself of a feeling that there was something missing.
The time and the place and the girl they
were all present and correct; nevertheless there was
something missing, some familiar object which seemed
to leave a gap. He now perceived that what had
caused the feeling was the complete absence of Bream
Mortimer. He was absent no longer. He was
standing in front of them with one leg, his head lowered
as if he were waiting for someone to scratch it.
Sam’s primary impulse was to offer him a nut.
“Oh, hello, Bream!” said Billie.
“Hullo!” said Sam.
“Hello!” said Bream Mortimer. “Here
you are!”
There was a pause.
“I thought you might be here,” said Bream.
“Yes, here we are,” said Billie.
“Yes, we’re here,” said Sam.
There was another pause.
“Mind if I join you?” said Bream.
“N no,” said Billie.
“N no,” said Sam.
“No,” said Billie again. “No
... that is to say ... oh no, no at all.”
There was a third pause.
“On second thoughts,”
said Bream, “I believe I’ll take a stroll
on the promenade deck if you don’t mind.”
They said they did not mind.
Bream Mortimer, having bumped his head twice against
overhanging steel ropes, melted away.
“Who is that fellow?” demanded Sam wrathfully.
“He’s the son of father’s best friend.”
Sam started. Somehow this girl
had always been so individual to him that he had never
thought of her having a father.
“We have known each other all
our lives,” continued Billie. “Father
thinks a tremendous lot of Bream. I suppose it
was because Bream was sailing by her that father insisted
on my coming over on this boat. I’m in
disgrace, you know I was cabled for and had to sail
at a few days’ notice. I....”
“Oh, hello!”
“Why, Bream!” said Billie
looking at him as he stood on the old spot in the
same familiar attitude with rather less affection than
the son of her father’s best friend might have
expected. “I thought you said you were
going down to the promenade deck.
“I did go down to the promenade
deck. And I’d hardly got there when a fellow
who’s getting up the ship’s concert to-morrow
night nobbled me to do something for it. I said
I could only do conjuring tricks and juggling and
so on, and he said all right, do conjuring tricks and
juggling, then. He wanted to know if I knew anyone
else who would help. I came up to ask you,”
he said to Sam, “if you would do something.”
“No,” said Sam. “I won’t.”
“He’s got a man who’s
going to lecture on deep-sea fish and a couple of
women who both want to sing ‘The Rosary’
but he’s still a turn or two short. Sure
you won’t rally round?”
“Quite sure.”
“Oh, all right.”
Bream Mortimer hovered wistfully above them. “It’s
a great morning, isn’t it?”
“Yes,” said Sam.
“Oh, Bream!” said Billie.
“Hello?”
“Do be a pet and go and talk
to Jane Hubbard. I’m sure she must be feeling
lonely. I left her all by herself down on the
next deck.”
A look of alarm spread itself over Bream’s face.
“Jane Hubbard! Oh, say, have a heart!”
“She’s a very nice girl.”
“She’s so darned dynamic.
She looks at you as if you were a giraffe or something
and she would like to take a pot at you with a rifle.”
“Nonsense! Run along.
Get her to tell you some of her big-game hunting experiences.
They are most interesting.”
Bream drifted sadly away.
“I don’t blame Miss Hubbard,” said
Sam.
“What do you mean?”
“Looking at him as if she wanted
to pot at him with a rifle. I should like to
do it myself.”
“Oh, don’t let’s talk about Bream.
Read me some Tennyson.”
Sam opened the book very willingly.
Infernal Bream Mortimer had absolutely shot to pieces
the spell which had begun to fall on them at the beginning
of their conversation. Only by reading poetry,
it seemed to him, could it be recovered. And
when he saw the passage at which the volume had opened
he realised that his luck was in. Good old Tennyson!
He was all right. He had the stuff. You could
rely on him every time.
He cleared his throat.
“Oh let the solid
ground
Not fail
beneath my feet
Before my life has found
What some
have found so sweet;
Then let come what come
may,
What matter
if I go mad,
I shall have had my
day.
Let the sweet heavens
endure,
Not close
and darken above me
Before I am quite quite
sure
That there
is one to love me....”
This was absolutely topping.
It was like diving off a spring-board. He could
see the girl sitting with a soft smile on her face,
her eyes, big and dreamy, gazing out over the sunlit
sea. He laid down the book and took her hand.
“There is something,”
he began in a low voice, “which I have been trying
to say ever since we met, something which I think you
must have read in my eyes.”
Her head was bent. She did not withdraw her hand.
“Until this voyage began,”
he went on, “I did not know what life meant.
And then I saw you! It was like the gate of heaven
opening. You’re the dearest girl I ever
met, and you can bet I’ll never forget....”
He stopped. “I’m not trying to make
it rhyme,” he said apologetically. “Billie,
don’t think me silly ... I mean ... if you
had the merest notion, dearest ... I don’t
know what’s the matter with me ... Billie,
darling, you are the only girl in the world! I
have been looking for you for years and years and
I have found you at last, my soul-mate. Surely
this does not come as a surprise to you? That
is, I mean, you must have seen that I’ve been
keen.... There’s that damned Walt Mason
stuff again!” His eyes fell on the volume beside
him and he uttered an exclamation of enlightenment.
“It’s those poems!” he cried.
“I’ve been boning them up to such an extent
that they’ve got me doing it too. What
I’m trying to say is, Will you marry me?”
She was drooping towards him.
Her face was very sweet and tender, her eyes misty.
He slid an arm about her waist. She raised her
lips to his.
Se
Suddenly she drew herself away, a cloud on her face.
“Darling,” she said, “I’ve
a confession to make.”
“A confession? You? Nonsense!”
“I can’t get rid of a
horrible thought. I was wondering if this will
last.”
“Our love? Don’t
be afraid that it will fade ... I mean ... why,
it’s so vast, it’s bound to last ... that
is to say, of course it will.”
She traced a pattern on the deck with her shoe.
“I’m afraid of myself.
You see, once before and it was not so very
long ago, I thought I had met my ideal,
but....”
Sam laughed heartily.
“Are you worrying about that
absurd business of poor old Eustace Hignett?”
She started violently.
“You know!”
“Of course! He told me himself.”
“Do you know him? Where did you meet him?”
“I’ve known him all my
life. He’s my cousin. As a matter of
fact, we are sharing a state-room on board now.”
“Eustace is on board! Oh,
this is awful! What shall I do when I meet him?”
“Oh, pass it off with a light
laugh and a genial quip. Just say: ’Oh,
here you are!’ or something. You know the
sort of thing.”
“It will be terrible.”
“Not a bit of it. Why should
you feel embarrassed? He must have realised by
now that you acted in the only possible way. It
was absurd his ever expecting you to marry him.
I mean to say, just look at it dispassionately ...
Eustace ... poor old Eustace ... and you!
The Princess and the Swineherd!”
“Does Mr. Hignett keep pigs?” she asked,
surprised.
“I mean that poor old Eustace
is so far below you, darling, that, with the most
charitable intentions, one can only look on his asking
you to marry him in the light of a record exhibition
of pure nerve. A dear, good fellow, of course,
but hopeless where the sterner realities of life are
concerned. A man who can’t even stop a dog-fight!
In a world which is practically one seething mass
of fighting dogs, how could you trust yourself to
such a one? Nobody is fonder of Eustace Hignett
than I am, but ... well, I mean to say!”
“I see what you mean. He really wasn’t
my ideal.”
“Not by a mile!”
She mused, her chin in her hand.
“Of course, he was quite a dear in a lot of
ways.”
“Oh, a splendid chap,” said Sam tolerantly.
“Have you ever heard him sing?
I think what first attracted me to him was his beautiful
voice. He really sings extraordinarily well.”
A slight but definite spasm of jealousy
afflicted Sam. He had no objection to praising
poor old Eustace within decent limits, but the conversation
seemed to him to be confining itself too exclusively
to one subject.
“Yes?” he said. “Oh
yes, I’ve heard him sing. Not lately.
He does drawing-room ballads and all that sort of
thing still, I suppose?”
“Have you ever heard him sing
’My love is like a glowing tulip that in an
old-world garden grows’?”
“I have not had that advantage,”
replied Sam stiffly. “But anyone can sing
a drawing-room ballad. Now something funny, something
that will make people laugh, something that really
needs putting across ... that’s a different
thing altogether.”
“Do you sing that sort of thing?”
“People have been good enough to say....”
“Then,” said Billie decidedly,
“you must certainly do something at the ship’s
concert to-morrow! The idea of your trying to
hide your light under a bushel! I will tell Bream
to count on you. He is an excellent accompanist.
He can accompany you.”
“Yes, but ... well, I don’t
know,” said Sam doubtfully. He could not
help remembering that the last time he had sung in
public had been at a house-supper at school, seven
years before, and that on that occasion somebody whom
it was a lasting grief to him that he had been unable
to identify had thrown a pat of butter at him.
“Of course you must sing,”
said Billie. “I’ll tell Bream when
I go down to lunch. What will you sing?”
“Well er ”
“Well, I’m sure it will
be wonderful whatever it is. You are so wonderful
in every way. You remind me of one of the heroes
of old!”
Sam’s discomposure vanished.
In the first place, this was much more the sort of
conversation which he felt the situation indicated.
In the second place he had remembered that there was
no need for him to sing at all. He could do that
imitation of Frank Tinney which had been such a hit
at the Trinity smoker. He was on safe ground there.
He knew he was good. He clasped the girl to him
and kissed her sixteen times.
Se
Billie Bennett stood in front of the
mirror in her state-room dreamily brushing the glorious
red hair that fell in a tumbled mass about her shoulders.
On the lounge beside her, swathed in a business-like
grey kimono, Jane Hubbard watched her, smoking a cigarette.
Jane Hubbard was a splendid specimen
of bronzed, strapping womanhood. Her whole appearance
spoke of the open air and the great wide spaces and
all that sort of thing. She was a thoroughly wholesome,
manly girl, about the same age as Billie, with a strong
chin and an eye that had looked leopards squarely
in the face and caused them to withdraw abashed into
the undergrowth, or where-ever it is that leopards
withdraw when abashed. One could not picture
Jane Hubbard flirting lightly at garden parties, but
one could picture her very readily arguing with a mutinous
native bearer, or with a firm touch putting sweetness
and light into the soul of a refractory mule.
Boadicea in her girlhood must have been rather like
Jane Hubbard.
She smoked contentedly. She had
rolled her cigarette herself with one hand, a feat
beyond the powers of all but the very greatest.
She was pleasantly tired after walking eighty-five
times round the promenade deck. Soon she would
go to bed and fall asleep the moment her head touched
the pillow. But meanwhile she lingered here, for
she felt that Billie had something to confide in her.
“Jane,” said Billie, “have you ever
been in love?”
Jane Hubbard knocked the ash off her cigarette.
“Not since I was eleven,”
she said in her deep musical voice. “He
was my music-master. He was forty-seven and completely
bald, but there was an appealing weakness in him which
won my heart. He was afraid of cats, I remember.”
Billie gathered her hair into a molten
bundle and let it run through her fingers.
“Oh, Jane!” she exclaimed.
“Surely you don’t like weak men. I
like a man who is strong and brave and wonderful.”
“I can’t stand brave men,”
said Jane, “it makes them so independent.
I could only love a man who would depend on me in
everything. Sometimes, when I have been roughing
it out in the jungle,” she went on rather wistfully,
“I have had my dreams of some gentle clinging
man who would put his hand in mine and tell me all
his poor little troubles and let me pet and comfort
him and bring the smiles back to his face. I’m
beginning to want to settle down. After all there
are other things for a woman to do in this life besides
travelling and big-game hunting. I should like
to go into Parliament. And, if I did that, I should
practically have to marry. I mean, I should have
to have a man to look after the social end of life
and arrange parties and receptions and so on, and sit
ornamentally at the head of my table. I can’t
imagine anything jollier than marriage under conditions
like that. When I came back a bit done up after
a long sitting at the House, he would mix me a whisky-and-soda
and read poetry to me or prattle about all the things
he had been doing during the day.... Why, it
would be ideal!”
Jane Hubbard gave a little sigh.
Her fine eyes gazed dreamily at a smoke ring which
she had sent floating towards the ceiling.
“Jane,” said Billie.
“I believe you’re thinking of somebody
definite. Who is he?”
The big-game huntress blushed.
The embarrassment which she exhibited made her look
manlier than ever.
“I don’t know his name.”
“But there is really someone?”
“Yes.”
“How splendid! Tell me about him.”
Jane Hubbard clasped her strong hands and looked down
at the floor.
“I met him on the Subway a couple
of days before I left New York. You know how
crowded the Subway is at the rush hour. I had
a seat, of course, but this poor little fellow so
good-looking, my dear! he reminded me of the pictures
of Lord Byron was hanging from a strap and
being jerked about till I thought his poor little arms
would be wrenched out of their sockets. And he
looked so unhappy, as though he had some secret sorrow.
I offered him my seat, but he wouldn’t take it.
A couple of stations later, however, the man next
to me got out and he sat down and we got into conversation.
There wasn’t time to talk much. I told him
I had been down-town fetching an elephant-gun which
I had left to be mended. He was so prettily interested
when I showed him the mechanism. We got along
famously. But oh, well, it was just
another case of ships that pass in the night I’m
afraid I’ve been boring you.”
“Oh, Jane! You haven’t! You
see ... you see, I’m in love myself.”
“I had an idea you were,”
said her friend looking at her critically. “You’ve
been refusing your oats the last few days, and that’s
a sure sign. Is he that fellow that’s always
around with you and who looks like a parrot?”
“Bream Mortimer? Good gracious,
no!” cried Billie indignantly. “As
if I should fall in love with Bream!”
“When I was out in British East
Africa,” said Miss Hubbard, “I had a bird
that was the living image of Bream Mortimer. I
taught him to whistle ‘Annie Laurie’ and
to ask for his supper in three native dialects.
Eventually he died of the pip, poor fellow. Well,
if it isn’t Bream Mortimer, who is it?”
“His name is Marlowe. He’s
tall and handsome and very strong-looking. He
reminds me of a Greek god.”
“Ugh!” said Miss Hubbard.
“Jane, we’re engaged.”
“No!” said the huntress, interested.
“When can I meet him?”
“I’ll introduce you to-morrow I’m
so happy.”
“That’s fine!”
“And yet, somehow,” said
Billie, plaiting her hair, “do you ever have
presentiments? I can’t get rid of an awful
feeling that something’s going to happen to
spoil everything.”
“What could spoil everything?”
“Well, I think him so wonderful,
you know. Suppose he were to do anything to blur
the image I have formed of him.”
“Oh, he won’t. You
said he was one of those strong men, didn’t you?
They always run true to form. They never do anything
except be strong.”
Billie looked meditatively at her
reflection in the glass.
“You know I thought I was in love once before,
Jane.”
“Yes?”
“We were going to be married
and I had actually gone to the church. And I
waited and waited and he didn’t come; and what
do you think had happened?”
“What?”
“His mother had stolen his trousers.”
Jane Hubbard laughed heartily.
“It’s nothing to laugh
at,” said Billie seriously “It was a tragedy.
I had always thought him romantic, and when this happened
the scales seemed to fall from my eyes. I saw
that I had made a mistake.”
“And you broke off the engagement?”
“Of course!”
“I think you were hard on him.
A man can’t help his mother stealing his trousers.”
“No. But when he finds
they’re gone, he can ’phone to the tailor
for some more or borrow the janitor’s or do
something. But he simply stayed where
he was and didn’t do a thing. Just because
he was too much afraid of his mother to tell her straight
out that he meant to be married that day.”
“Now that,” said Miss
Hubbard, “is just the sort of trait in a man
which would appeal to me. I like a nervous, shrinking
man.”
“I don’t. Besides,
it made him seem so ridiculous, and I don’t
know why it is I can’t forgive a
man for looking ridiculous. Thank goodness, my
darling Sam couldn’t look ridiculous, even if
he tried. He’s wonderful, Jane. He
reminds me of a knight of the Round Table. You
ought to see his eyes flash.”
Miss Hubbard got up and stretched herself with a yawn.
“Well, I’ll be on the
promenade deck after breakfast to-morrow. If you
can arrange to have him flash his eyes then say
between nine-thirty and ten I shall be
delighted to watch them.”