Minver’s brother took down from
the top of the low bookshelf a small painting on panel,
which he first studied in the obverse, and then turned
and contemplated on the back with the same dreamy smile.
“I don’t see how that got here,”
he said, absently.
“Well,” Minver returned,
“you don’t expect me to tell you,
except on the principle that any one would naturally
know more about anything of yours than you would.”
He took it from his brother and looked at the front
of it. “It isn’t bad. It’s
pretty good!” He turned it round. “Why,
it’s one of old Blakey’s! How did
you come by it?”
“Stole it, probably,”
Minver’s brother said, still thoughtfully.
Then with an effect of recollecting: “No,
come to think of it,” he added, “Blakey
gave it to me.” The Minvers played these
little comedies together, quite as much to satisfy
their tenderness for each other as to give their friends
pleasure. “Think you’re the only painter
that gets me to take his truck as a gift? He
gave it to me, let’s see, about ten years ago,
when he was trying to make a die of it, and failed;
I thought he would succeed. But it’s been
in my wife’s room nearly ever since, and what
I can’t understand is what she’s doing
with it down here.”
“Probably to make trouble for
you, somehow,” Minver suggested.
“No, I don’t think it’s
that, quite,” his brother returned, with
a false air of scrupulosity, which was part of their
game with each other. He looked some more at
the picture, and then he glanced from it at me.
“There’s a very curious story connected
with that sketch.”
“Oh, well, tell it,” Minver
said. “Tell it! I suppose I can stand
it again. Acton’s never heard it, I believe.
But you needn’t make a show of sparing him.
I couldn’t stand that.”
“I certainly haven’t heard
the story,” I said, “and if I had I would
be too polite to own it.”
Minver’s brother looked towards
the open door over his shoulder, and Minver interpreted
for him: “She’s not coming. I’ll
give you due warning.”
“It was before we were married,
but not much before, and the picture was a sort of
wedding present for my wife, though Blakey made a show
of giving it to me. Said he had painted it for
me, because he had a prophetic soul, and felt in his
bones that I was going to want a picture of the place
where I first met her. You see, it’s the
little villa her mother had taken that winter on the
Viale Petrarca, just outside of Florence. It
was the first place I met her, but not the last.”
“Don’t be obvious,” Minver ordered.
His brother did not mind him.
“I thought it was mighty nice of Blakey.
He was barking away, all the time he was talking, and
when he wasn’t coughing he was so hoarse he
could hardly speak above a whisper; but he kept talking
on, and wishing me happy, and fending off my gratitude,
while he was finding a piece of manila paper to
wrap the sketch in, and then hunting for a piece of
string to tie it. When he handed it to me at
last, he gasped out: ’I don’t mind
her knowing that I partly meant it as the place where
she first met you, too. I’m
not ashamed of it as a bit of color. Anyway,
I sha’n’t live to do anything better.’
“‘Oh, yes, you will,’
I came back in that lying way we think is kind with
dying people. I suppose it is; anyway, it turned
out all right with Blakey, as he’ll testify
if you look him up when you go to Florence. By
the way, he lives in that villa now.”
“No?” I said. “How charming!”
Minver’s brother went on:
“I made up my mind to be awfully careful of
that picture, and not let it out of my hand till I
left it with ‘her’ mother, to be put among
the other wedding presents that were accumulating
at their house in Exeter Street. So I held it
on my lap going in by train from Lexington, where
Blakey lived, and when I got out at the old Lowell
Depot North Station, now and
got into the little tinkle-tankle horse-car that took
me up to where I was to get the Back Bay car Those
were the prehistoric times before trolleys, and there
were odds in horse-cars. We considered the blue-painted
Back Bay cars very swell. You remember them?”
he asked Minver.
“Not when I can help it,”
Minver answered. “When I broke with Boston,
and went to New York, I burnt my horse-cars behind
me, and never wanted to know what they looked like,
one from another.”
“Well, as I was saying,”
Minver’s brother went on, without regarding his
impatriotism, “when I got into the horse-car
at the depot, I rushed for a corner seat, and I put
the picture, with its face next the car-end, between
me and the wall, and kept my hand on it; and when I
changed to the Back Bay car, I did the same thing.
There was a florist’s just there, and I couldn’t
resist some Mayflowers in the window; I was in that
condition, you know, when flowers seemed to be made
for her, and I had to take her own to her wherever
I found them. I put the bunch between my knees,
and kept one hand on it, while I kept my other hand
on the picture at my side. I was feeling first-rate,
and when General Filbert got in after we started,
and stood before me hanging by a strap and talking
down to me, I had the decency to propose giving him
my seat, as he was about ten years older.”
“Sure?” Minver asked.
“Well, say fifteen. I don’t
pretend to be a chicken, and never did. But he
wouldn’t hear of it. Said I had a bundle,
and winked at the bunch of Mayflowers. We had
such a jolly talk that I let the car carry me a block
by and had to get out at Gloucester and run back to
Exeter. I rang, and, when the maid came to the
door, there I stood with nothing but the Mayflowers
in my hand.”
“Good coup de theatre,” Minver
jeered. “Curtain?”
His brother disdained reply, or was
too much absorbed in his tale to think of any.
“When the girl opened the door and I discovered
my fix I burst out, ‘Good Lord!’ and I
stuck the bunch of flowers at her, and turned and
ran. I suppose I must have had some notion of
overtaking the car with my picture in it. But
the best I could do was to let the next one overtake
me several blocks down Marlborough Street, and carry
me to the little jumping-off station on Westchester
Park, as we used to call it in those days, at the
end of the Back Bay line.
“As I pushed into the railroad
office, I bet myself that the picture would not be
there, and, sure enough, I won.”
“You were always a lucky dog,” Minver
said.
“But the man in charge was very
encouraging, and said it was sure to be turned in;
and he asked me what time the car had passed the corner
of Gloucester Street. I happened to know, and
then he said, Oh yes, that conductor was a substitute,
and he wouldn’t be on again till morning; then
he would be certain to bring the picture with him.
I was not to worry, for it would be all right.
Nothing left in the Back Bay cars was ever lost; the
character of the abutters was guarantee for that, and
they were practically the only passengers. The
conductors and the drivers were as honest as the passengers,
and I could consider myself in the hands of friends.
“He was so reassuring that I
went away smiling at my fears, and promising to be
round bright and early, as soon, the official suggested the
morrow being Sunday as soon as the men and
horses had had their baked beans.
“Still, after dinner, I had
a lurking anxiety, which I turned into a friendly
impulse to go and call on Mrs. Filbert, whom I really
owed a bread-and-butter visit, and who, I knew, would
not mind my coming in the evening. The general,
she said, had been telling her of our pleasant chat
in the car, and would be glad to smoke his after-dinner
cigar with me, and why wouldn’t I come into
the library?
“We were so very jolly together,
all three, that I made light of my misadventure about
the picture. The general inquired about the flowers
first. He remembered the flowers perfectly, and
hoped they were acceptable; he thought he remembered
the picture, too, now I mentioned it; but he would
not have noticed it so much, there by my side, with
my hand on it. I would be sure to get it.
He gave several instances, personal to him and his
friends, of recoveries of lost articles; it was really
astonishing how careful the horse-car people were,
especially on the Back Bay line. I would find
my picture all right at the Westchester Park station
in the morning; never fear.
“I feared so little that I slept
well, and even overslept; and I went to get my picture
quite confidently, and I could hardly believe it had
not been turned in yet, though the station-master
told me so. The substitute conductor had not
seen it, but more than likely it was at the stables,
where the cleaners would have found it in the car and
turned it in. He was as robustly cheerful about
it as ever, and offered to send an inquiry by the
next car; but I said, Why shouldn’t I go myself;
and he said that was a good idea. So I went,
and it was well I did, for my picture was not there,
and I had saved time by going. It was not there,
but the head man said I need not worry a mite about
it; I was certain to get it sooner or later; it would
be turned in, to a dead certainty. We became
rather confidential, and I went so far as to explain
about wanting to make my inquiries very quietly on
Blakey’s account: he would be annoyed if
he heard of its loss, and it might react unfavorably
on his health.
“The head man said that was
so; and he would tell me what I wanted to do:
I wanted to go to the Company’s General Offices
in Milk Street, and tell them about it. That
was where everything went as a last resort, and he
would bet any money that I would see my picture there
the first thing I got inside the door. I thanked
him with the fervor I thought he merited, and said
I would go at once.
“‘Well,’ he said,
’you don’t want to go to-day, you know.
The offices are not open Sunday. And to-morrow’s
a holiday. But you’re all right. You’ll
find your picture there, don’t you have any doubts
about it.’
“That was my next to last Sunday
supper with my wife, before she became my wife, at
her mother’s house, and I went to the feast with
as little gayety as I suppose any young man ever carried
to a supper of the kind. I was told, afterwards,
that my behavior up to a certain point was so suggestive
either of secret crime or of secret regret, that the
only question was whether they should have in the
police or I should be given back my engagement ring
and advised to go. Luckily I ceased to bear my
anguish just in time.
“The fact is, I could not stand
it any longer, and as soon as I was alone with her
I made a clean breast of it; partially clean, that
is: I suppose a fellow never tells all
to a girl, if he truly loves her.” Minver’s
brother glanced round at us and gathered the harvest
of our approving smiles. “I said to her,
‘I’ve been having a wedding present.’
‘Well,’ she said, ’you’ve come
as near having no use for a wedding present as anybody
I know. Was having a wedding present what
made you so gloomy at supper? Who gave it to
you, anyway?’ ‘Old Blakey.’
’A painting?’ ‘Yes a
sketch.’ ‘What of?’ This was
where I qualified. I said: ‘Oh, just
one of those Sorrento things of his.’ You
see, if I told her that it was the villa where we
first met, and then said I had left it in the horse-car,
she would take it as proof positive that I did not
really care anything about her or I never could have
forgotten it.”
“You were wise as far as you went,” Minver
said. “Go on.”
“Well, I told her the whole
story circumstantially: how I had kept the sketch
religiously in my lap in the train, and then held it
down with my hand all the while beside me in the first
horse-car, and did the same thing in the Back Bay
car I changed to; and felt of it the whole time I
was talking with General Filbert, and then left it
there when I got out to leave the flowers at her door,
when the awful fact came over me like a flash.
‘Yes,’ she said, ’Norah said you
poked the flowers at her without a word, and she had
to guess they were for me.’
“I had got my story pretty glib
by this time; I had reeled it off with increasing
particulars to the Westchester Park station-master,
and the head man at the stables, and General Filbert,
and I was so letter-perfect that I had a vision of
the whole thing, especially of my talking with the
general while I kept my hand on the picture and
then all was dark.
“At the end she said we must
advertise for the picture. I said it would kill
Blakey if he saw it; and she said: No matter,
let it kill him; it would show him that we
valued his gift, and were moving heaven and earth
to find it; and, at any rate, it would kill me
if I kept myself in suspense. I said I should
not care for that; but with her sympathy I guessed
I could live through the night, and I was sure I should
find the thing at the Milk Street office in the morning.
“‘Why,’ said she,
‘to-morrow it’ll be shut!’ and then
I didn’t really know what to say, and I agreed
to drawing up an advertisement then and there, so
as not to lose an instant’s time after I had
been at the Milk Street office on Tuesday and found
the picture had not been turned in. She said
I could dictate the advertisement and she would write
it down, and she asked: ’Which one of his
Sorrento things was it? You must describe it
exactly, you know.’ That made me feel awfully,
and I said I was not going to have my next-to-last
Sunday evening with her spoiled by writing advertisements;
and I got away, somehow, with all sorts of comforting
reassurances from her. I could see that she was
feigning them to encourage me.
“The next morning, I simply
could not keep away from the Milk Street office, and
my unreasonable impatience was rewarded by finding
it at least ajar, if not open. There was the
nicest kind of a young fellow there, and he said he
was not officially present; but what could he do for
me? Then I told him the whole story, with details
I had not thought of before; and he was just as enthusiastic
about my getting my picture as the Westchester Park
station-master or the head man of the stables.
It was morally certain to be turned in, the first thing
in the morning; but he would take a description of
it, and send out inquiries to all the conductors and
drivers and car-cleaners, and make a special thing
of it. He entered into the spirit of the affair,
and I felt that I had such a friend in him that I
confided a little more and hinted at the double interest
I had in the picture. I didn’t pretend that
it was one of Blakey’s Sorrento things, but
I gave him a full and true description of it, with
its length, breadth, and thickness, in exact measure.”
Here Minver’s brother stopped
and lost himself in contemplation of the sketch, as
he held it at arm’s-length.
“Well, did you get your picture?”
I prompted, after a moment.
“Oh yes,” he said, with
a quick turn towards me. “This is it.
A District Messenger brought it round the first thing
Tuesday morning. He brought it,” Minver’s
brother added, with a certain effectiveness, “from
the florist’s, where I had stopped to get those
Mayflowers. I had left it there.”
“You’ve told it very well,
this time, Joe,” Minver said. “But
Acton here is waiting for the psychology. Poor
old Wanhope ought to be here,” he added to me.
He looked about for a match to light his pipe, and
his brother jerked his head in the direction of the
chimney.
“Box on the mantel. Yes,”
he sighed, “that was really something very curious.
You see, I had invented the whole history of the case
from the time I got into the Back Bay car with my
flowers. Absolutely nothing had happened of all
I had remembered till I got out of the car. I
did not put the picture beside me at the end of the
car; I did not keep my hand on it while I talked with
General Filbert; I did not leave it behind me when
I left the car. Nothing of the kind happened.
I had already left it at the florist’s, and
that whole passage of experience which was so vividly
and circumstantially stamped in my memory that I related
it four or five times over, and would have made oath
to every detail of it, was pure invention, or, rather,
it was something less positive: the reflex of
the first half of my horse-car experience, when I really
did put the picture in the corner next me, and did
keep my hand on it.”
“Very strange,” I was
beginning, but just then the door opened and Mrs.
Minver came in, and I was presented.
She gave me a distracted hand, as
she said to her husband: “Have you been
telling the story about that picture again?”
He was still holding it. “Silly!”
She was a mighty pretty woman, but
full of vim and fun and sense.
“It’s one of the most
curious freaks of memory I ever heard of, Mrs. Minver,”
I said.
Then she showed that she was proud
of it, though she had called him silly. “Have
you told,” she demanded of her husband, “how
oddly your memory behaved about the subject of the
picture, too?”
“I have again eaten that particular
piece of humble-pie,” Minver’s brother
replied.
“Well,” she said to me,
“I think he was simply so possessed with
the awfulness of having lost the picture that all
the rest took place prophetically, but unconsciously.”
“By a species of inverted presentiment?”
I suggested.
“Yes,” she assented, slowly,
as if the formulation were new to her, but not unacceptable.
“Something of that kind. I never heard of
anybody else having it.”
Minver had got his pipe alight, and
was enjoying it. “I think Joe was simply
off his nut, for the time being.”