On their return from the Barracks
Mrs. Thatcher and Edith Stevens left the men on the
piazza and went up-stairs for the ostensible purpose
of lying down, but with that ease with which two women
change their plans when once alone they found themselves
sitting in Marian’s room, engaged in a heart-to-heart
conversation.
“I really think he might do,”
Edith remarked, a propos of nothing.
As Mrs. Thatcher was intimately acquainted
with Edith’s mental processes the remark was
more intelligible than might have been expected.
“You don’t mean Philip Hamlen?”
Edith laughed. “No; you
warned me off of him yesterday. I mean Mr. Cosden.”
“At it again?” Marian
laughed. “Edith, you are absolutely incorrigible!
It has been so long since you have played ducks and
drakes with a man that I really believed you had reformed.
You are old enough to know better!”
“I presume it will be the same
with him as with the others,” Edith sighed.
“That is my great weakness, I admit: I like
a man just so long, and then he bores me stiff.
I don’t see how a married woman stands it to
have only one man around her all the time. If
you were as honest as I am you would admit that it
would be a relief to you, every now and then if you
could pour out your breakfast coffee with some one
else sitting in front of you instead of Harry.”
“Harry answers very well, thank you.”
“Habit, nothing else,”
Edith insisted. “He’s as much a part
of the family furniture as the grand piano. But
that’s what gives me hope: if you and so
many other women can endure it, why can’t I?”
“There are hundreds of men; why pick on Mr.
Cosden?”
“I had a long, experimental
conversation with him last night while you and Mr.
Huntington were holding your revival meeting on the
pier, and I really think he might do. Tell me
what you know about him.”
“Only what Harry has told me.
They have had some business dealings together, and
Harry says he has made a lot of money. The fact
that Monty Huntington is his friend is his best recommendation.”
“Mr. Huntington has a good social
position in Boston, hasn’t he?”
“Good heavens, yes! I believe
one of his ancestors discovered Beacon Street, or
something of that kind; but that doesn’t imply
that Mr. Cosden has the same position. A bachelor
may have friends at his clubs whom he does not necessarily
bring into his social circle, especially
in Boston.”
“Mr. Cosden is frightfully commercial,”
Edith meditated aloud.
“So are you,” Marian broke in laughing.
“I don’t mind that,”
Edith continued, “so long as he has a human side.
I believe I could serve as a counter-irritant to keep
him from remaining merely a machine.
“You mustn’t take away
his capacity as provider,” Marian teased her;
“he would need a fairly stiff income to sail
the good ship ‘Edith Stevens.’”
“With everything I want costing
more and everything I own yielding less, that is of
vital importance, of course. But I really believe
Cossie Connie whatever they call
him, might do.”
“Well, it’s fine to have
that all settled, my dear,” Marian agreed, still
showing her amusement. “Now, when are you
going to break the news to him?”
“Ah! that’s another question!”
Edith answered, entirely unabashed. “Couldn’t
you find out from Mr. Huntington something about his
hobbies and his antipathies?”
“Of course; unless you select
some one else in the mean time. Perhaps we’d
better wait until after luncheon.”
“Oh, I’m serious,”
Edith protested, “provided of course
that he measures up all right. The more I think
it over the more serious I become. Ricky was
particularly trying this morning; I’m aghast
at the amount of last month’s bills, and all
in all it makes me realize the importance of not letting
one’s age become an indiscretion. Even you
referred to my passing years.”
“Poor Ricky!” Marian said
sympathetically; “he never gets any credit for
sacrificing himself.”
“I’ve acted in the interests
of my sex,” Edith asserted stoutly. “Ricky
is a joke. Except for the fact that he’s
my own brother I’d say he was a scream.
If it hadn’t been for me he would have married
some girl and bored her to extinction. She couldn’t
have escaped him, but I can. Somebody owes me
a debt of gratitude.”
“Well,” Marian sighed,
“I wish you luck; if Mr. Cosden isn’t smart
enough to protect himself it will be his own fault.”
“Why be catty, Marian?”
Edith retorted with asperity. “It isn’t
becoming.”
Marian laughed. “You silly
child!” she said. “You are the most
supremely selfish creature in the world, but you are
so blissfully unconscious of the fact that I love
you for it. Some one has to stand up for Ricky;
Heaven knows he can’t stand up for himself.”
“Very good.” Edith
was only partly mollified. “I’ve no
doubt Ricky will be exceedingly grateful, but if you
were to ask me I’d say that you have men enough
on your hands already without him. Now, I’m
going to my room to dress for luncheon. Afterwards,
when you find an opportunity, I want you to pump Mr.
Huntington dry about Cossie Connie I’ll
never get used to that name! and leave
me to do the rest.”
Unconscious of plots and counterplots,
Cosden and Huntington sauntered innocently onto the
piazza after their noonday meal. Billy had managed
to get himself invited to the Thatchers’
table, so the two friends had lunched by themselves.
Both were self-centered, but neither noticed it because
of his own abstraction. Cosden was measuring up
the girl as his opportunity for observation broadened,
Huntington was still affected by his experience with
Hamlen. Curiously enough, in spite of their friendship,
or perhaps because their intimacy gave each so clear
a knowledge of the other’s characteristics neither
one cared to speak of the subject which was uppermost
in his mind. “Monty is too much of a cynic
to appreciate my situation here,” Cosden told
himself; and Huntington, without even mentally putting
it into words, knew that Hamlen did not and never
would appeal to Cosden.
Shortly after the men had lighted
their cigars the party from the Thatchers’
table joined them. Marian noticed that Edith casually
dropped into the chair beside Cosden’s, and
was amused to see that she began operations at once.
“What are we going to do this
afternoon?” Edith queried breezily.
“We’ve all been going
since breakfast,” Stevens suggested; “why
not sit still for a while?”
“Ricky!” said his sister
severely, “no one asked your opinion. What
in the world is the use of sitting still? We
can do that at home.”
“What do you suggest?” Cosden asked her
incautiously.
“Have you been to Harrington Sound?”
“No,” he admitted; recognizing
at once that he had given an unwise opening.
“Then why don’t you let
me show you the way?” Edith asked, as if the
thought had only just occurred to her.
A chorus of approval went up from
Huntington, Mrs. Thatcher and Billy.
“Suppose we all go,” Cosden
said, seeking safety in numbers.
“We have taken the drive several
times,” Mrs. Thatcher abetted Edith in her conspiracy,
“and I am sure Mr. Huntington is too gallant
to leave us. You can drive over and back comfortably
by dinner-time.”
“Won’t you stop on the
way home and get me some coral sand?” Merry
asked. “Edith will show you the beach.”
A drive with Miss Stevens was the
last thing Cosden had intended, but as there seemed
no possible escape he rose to the occasion and at once
ordered the victoria. Nor was the enthusiasm
of Billy’s send-off balm-of-Gilead to his soul
as the carriage moved away from the hotel steps.
Edith, in a suit of white Bermuda doe-skin, with a
small purple hat perched rakishly on her head, and
carrying a purple parasol with handle of abalone pearl,
was looking her best, and to the amused onlookers
her snapping eyes and beaming countenance seemed to
promise compensation.
“I wish we might have a word
together about Hamlen,” Huntington remarked
to Marian as they turned back to the piazza.
“That is the very subject which
is uppermost in my mind,” she replied eagerly.
“You saw him this morning?”
“Yes; and he has absorbed my
thoughts ever since. Suppose we sit down and
talk him over.”
The others in the party left them
to themselves. They had heard Huntington’s
preliminary remark, and understood that they had no
part in the conversation.
“He is a pathetic figure,”
Huntington continued, “and he has won a sympathy
from me which I never remember to have given to any
one before. Think of twenty years of solitude!
By Jove! he is the Modern Edmond Dantes!”
“I’ve known him since
he was a boy,” Marian said as Huntington paused
for a moment. “If you are to understand
the situation, perhaps I ought to tell you more.
For a time, we were engaged, but these relations were
broken off soon after his graduation. In fact
I feel that I am to a certain extent responsible for
his present condition, for he left America as soon
as he heard of my engagement to Mr. Thatcher.”
Huntington looked up quickly.
“That gives Hamlen and me another bond of sympathy,”
he said quietly.
“What do you mean?” she asked, surprised.
“That same announcement produced
disastrous effects upon my life as well.”
“Why, you never saw me half a dozen times ”
“Once was enough,” he replied seriously.
“Your imagination is as highly
developed as your gallantry, Mr. Huntington,”
Marian laughed; “but we mustn’t let ourselves
become diverted. Philip Hamlen was always
sensitive and moody, but until I discovered him down
here I had no idea these characteristics could become
so exaggerated.”
“He believes himself always
to have been misunderstood,” Huntington added.
“To-day he felt that we met on common ground,
and the gratitude in his eyes still haunts me.”
“Can’t we do something
for him, between us?” she asked earnestly.
“We must,” Huntington
assented with decision. “I am still puzzling
over the problem. Have you anything to suggest?”
Mrs. Thatcher did not reply at once,
and Huntington respected her silence. He realized
that her answer could not be given spontaneously,
that the proposition was too vital for anything but
the most serious consideration. As a matter of
fact, however, she had already considered it.
Marian Thatcher was a woman of strong impulses, with
strength of will equal to carry them through to success.
She had been appalled by Hamlen’s condition,
and felt keenly her personal responsibility. During
the hours which had intervened since the accidental
meeting, many of them sleepless hours of the night,
she had searched her mind for some expedient which
should in part work restitution. She had discovered
a possible solution, but it was of a nature so intimate
that she hesitated to take Huntington into her confidence.
“I had thought ”
she began at length, but then she paused. “We
must pull him out of himself,” she began again;
“we must get him where he will find something
to think of other than himself.”
“Suppose that to be accomplished, what then?”
“I had thought he
needs he needs a woman who believes in him,
to give him courage, to restore his lost faith in
himself. A friendship such as you or any other
man can give will help much, but if the right woman
could happen to come into his life ”
“Isn’t that taking too
long a step for a first one? Huntington inquired.
“Perhaps; but I feel myself
so largely responsible that it would mean much to
me to atone ”
Marian’s intensity made its
impression upon Huntington even as it had upon Hamlen;
but he could not follow her. How a married woman
could make atonement just at this crisis was not clearly
apparent. She realized that her stumbling remarks
must be confusing.
“It is difficult for me to tell
you just what I have in mind,” she stated definitely
at length. “You don’t know me well
enough not to misunderstand, and you don’t know
Merry. But if I am to accept your aid I must
run that risk, mustn’t I?”
“I shall try not to misunderstand ”
“You mustn’t think me
unmotherly or indelicate,” she continued.
“It may be the last thing in the world which
ought to happen, but if Philip Hamlen and Merry should
take it into their heads to marry it would seem almost
like poetic justice, wouldn’t it?”
“By Jove, no!” Huntington
ejaculated hastily, with visions of Cosden swimming
before his eyes.
“Of course you are surprised,”
Marian said, laughing consciously; “but if you
think of it you must admit that Merry would make him
an ideal wife, and I believe he would be a wonderful
husband. Her interest has always been in men
older than herself, and he is only now ready to enjoy
his youth. Of course, it is only an idea, but
stranger things than that have happened.”
“Well,” he said guardedly,
sparring for time, “that may be the ultimate
outcome; but first of all we must do a bit of humanizing.
I would like to take him back to Boston to pay me
a long visit if he would go. After that, we could
see how things worked out.”
“Splendid!” Marian exclaimed;
“and being in Boston he would be nearer my Philip.
That was the one suggestion which seemed to appeal
to him when I tried to persuade him to leave Bermuda.
He would be much more likely to accept the suggestion
from you than from me. The boy is named for him,
and I believe they could do much for each other.”
“Capital!” echoed Huntington.
“I know from experience how much a boy can do
to keep an older man from thinking too much about himself.
We are making progress. I will do my best to
drag him away from here, and if I succeed we will
arrange with Philip to take charge of that side of
his education.”
Marian smiled gratefully as she heard
the plan put definitely into words. “You
have relieved me of an oppressive burden,” she
said feelingly. “It is such a relief to
talk the matter over with some one who really understands.
Don’t misjudge me by what I suggest about Merry.
I can’t forget the closeness of those earlier
relations, I can’t forget my responsibility,
and I shouldn’t be true to myself if I failed
to do all in my power to bring Philip Hamlen back
to himself.”
“His natural qualities and his
helplessness form a strong appeal,” Huntington
replied evasively. “I shall be glad to assist
in this socialistic experiment, Mrs. Thatcher, but
I’m not quite sure that I am wholly sympathetic.”
“You will see more reason in
my suggestion after you know them both better,”
Marian said confidently, placing her hand within the
one outstretched to her. “When you do,
I am sure I shall have your cordial co-operation in
bringing about the match.”
“If you are right, I shall ask
that my case be placed next upon the calendar.”
“Willingly!” Mrs. Thatcher
laughed. “I’ll find a wife within
a month.”
“Heaven forbid!” he cried.
“Unless ” he added slyly; “unless
you become a widow in the mean time!”