Northwick’s man met him at the
station with the cutter. The train was a little
late, and Elbridge was a little early; after a few
moments of formal waiting, he began to walk the clipped
horses up and down the street. As they walked
they sent those quivers and thrills over their thin
coats which horses can give at will; they moved their
heads up and down, slowly and easily, and made their
bells jangle noisily together; the bursts of sound
evoked by their firm and nervous pace died back in
showers and falling drops of music. All the time
Elbridge swore at them affectionately, with the unconscious
profanity of the rustic Yankee whose lot has been
much cast with horses. In the halts he made at
each return to the station, he let his blasphemies
bubble sociably from him in response to the friendly
imprecations of the three or four other drivers who
were waiting for the train; they had apparently no
other parlance. The drivers of the hotel ’bus
and of the local express wagon were particular friends;
they gave each other to perdition at every other word;
a growing boy, who had come to meet Mr. Gerrish, the
merchant, with the family sleigh, made himself a fountain
of meaningless malédictions; the public hackman,
who admired Elbridge almost as much as he respected
Elbridge’s horses (they were really Northwick’s,
but the professional convention was that they were
Elbridge’s), clothed them with fond curses as
with a garment. He was himself, more literally
speaking, clothed in an old ulster, much frayed about
the wrists and skirts, and polished across the middle
of the back by rubbing against counters and window-sills.
He was bearded like a patriarch, and he wore a rusty
fur cap pulled down over his ears, though it was not
very cold; its peak rested on the point of his nose,
so that he had to throw his head far back to get Elbridge
in the field of his vision. Elbridge had on a
high hat, and was smoothly buttoned to his throat in
a plain coachman’s coat of black; Northwick
had never cared to have him make a closer approach
to a livery; and it is doubtful if Elbridge would have
done it if he had asked or ordered it of him.
He deferred to Northwick in a measure as the owner
of his horses, but he did not defer to him in any
other quality.
“Say, Elbridge, when you goin’
to give me that old hat o’ your’n?”
asked the hackman in a shout that would have reached
Elbridge if he had been half a mile off instead of
half a rod.
“What do you want of another
second-hand hat, you — —
old fool, you?” asked Elbridge in his turn.
The hackman doubled himself down for
joy, and slapped his leg; at the sound of a whistle
to the eastward, he pulled himself erect again, and
said, as if the fact were one point gained, “Well,
there she blows, any way.” Then he went
round the corner of the station to be in full readiness
for any chance passenger the train might improbably
bring him.
No one alighted but Mr. Gerrish and
Northwick. Mr. Gerrish found it most remarkable
that he should have come all the way from Boston on
the same train with Northwick and not known it; but
Northwick was less disposed to wonder at it.
He passed rapidly beyond the following of Mr. Gerrish,
and mounted to the place Elbridge made for him in the
cutter. While Elbridge was still tucking the
robes about their legs, Northwick drove away from
the station, and through the village up to the rim
of the highland that lies between Hatboro’ and
South Hatboro’. The bare line cut along
the horizon where the sunset lingered in a light of
liquid crimson, paling and passing into weaker violet
tints with every moment, but still tenderly flushing
the walls of the sky, and holding longer the accent
of its color where a keen star had here and there already
pierced it and shone quivering through. The shortest
days were past, but in the first week of February
they had not lengthened sensibly, though to a finer
perception there was the promise of release from the
winter dark, if not from the winter cold. It
was not far from six o’clock when Northwick
mounted the southward rise of the street; it was still
almost light enough to read; and the little slender
black figure of a man that started up in the middle
of the road, as if it had risen out of the ground,
had an even vivid distinctness. He must have been
lying in the snow; the horses crouched back with a
sudden recoil, as if he had struck them back with
his arm, and plunged the runners of the cutter into
the deeper snow beside the beaten track. He made
a slight pause, long enough to give Northwick a contemptuous
glance, and then continued along the road at a leisurely
pace to the deep cut through the snow from the next
house. Here he stood regarding such difficulty
as Northwick had in quieting his horses, and getting
underway again. He said nothing, and Northwick
did not speak; Elbridge growled, “He’s
on one of his tears again,” and the horses dashed
forward with a shriek of all their bells. Northwick
did not open his lips till he entered the avenue of
firs that led from the highway to his house; they
were still clogged with the snowfall, and their lowermost
branches were buried in the drifts.
“What’s the matter with the colt?”
he asked.
“I don’t know as that
fellow understands the colt’s feet very well.
I guess one of the shoes is set wrong,” said
Elbridge.
“Better look after it.”
Northwick left Elbridge the reins,
and got out of the cutter at the flight of granite
steps which rose to the ground-floor of his wooden
palace. Broad levels of piazza stretched away
from the entrance under a portico of that carpentry
which so often passes with us for architecture.
In spite of the effect of organic flimsiness in every
wooden structure but a log cabin, or a fisherman’s
cottage shingled to the ground, the house suggested
a perfect functional comfort. There were double
windows on all round the piazzas; a mellow glow from
the incandescent electrics penetrated to the outer
dusk from them; when the door was opened to Northwick,
a pleasant heat gushed out, together with the perfume
of flowers, and the odors of dinner.
“Dinner is just served, sir,”
said the inside man, disposing of Northwick’s
overcoat and hat on the hall table with respectful
scruple.
Northwick hesitated. He stood
over the register, and vaguely held his hands in the
pleasant warmth indirectly radiated from the steam-pipes
below.
“The young ladies were just
thinking you wouldn’t be home till the next
train,” the man suggested, at the sound of voices
from the dining-room.
“They have some one with them?” Northwick
asked.
“Yes, sir. The rector, sir; Mr. Wade, sir.”
“I’ll come down by and
by,” Northwick said, turning to the stairs.
“Say I had a late lunch before I left town.”
“Yes, sir,” said the man.
Northwick went on up stairs, with
footfalls hushed by the thickly-padded thick carpet,
and turned into the sort of study that opened out of
his bedroom. It had been his wife’s parlor
during the few years of her life in the house which
he had built for her, and which they had planned to
spend their old age in together. It faced southward,
and looked out over the greenhouses and the gardens,
that stretched behind the house to the bulk of woods,
shutting out the stage-picturesqueness of the summer
settlement of South Hatboro’. She had herself
put the rocking-chair in the sunny bay-window, and
Northwick had not allowed it to be disturbed there
since her death. In an alcove at one side he had
made a place for the safe where he kept his papers;
his wife had intended to keep their silver in it,
but she had been scared by the notion of having burglars
so close to them in the night, and had always left
the silver in the safe in the dining-room.
She was all her life a timorous creature,
and after her marriage had seldom felt safe out of
Northwick’s presence. Her portrait, by Hunt,
hanging over the mantelpiece, suggested something of
this, though the painter had made the most of her
thin, middle-aged blond good looks, and had given
her a substance of general character which was more
expressive of his own free and bold style than of
the facts in the case. She was really one of
those hen-minded women, who are so common in all walks
of life, and are made up of only one aim at a time,
and of manifold anxieties at all times. Her instinct
for saving long survived the days of struggle in which
she had joined it to Northwick’s instinct for
getting; she lived and died in the hope, if not the
belief, that she had contributed to his prosperity
by looking strictly after all manner of valueless
odds and ends. But he had been passively happy
with her; since her death, he had allowed her to return
much into his thoughts, from which her troublesome
solicitudes and her entire uselessness in important
matters had obliged him to push her while she lived.
He often had times when it seemed to him that he was
thinking of nothing, and then he found he had been
thinking of her. At such times, with a pang,
he realized that he missed her; but perhaps the wound
was to habit rather than affection. He now sat
down in his swivel-chair and turned it from the writing-desk
which stood on the rug before the fireplace, and looked
up into the eyes of her effigy with a sense of her
intangible presence in it, and with a dumb longing
to rest his soul against hers. She was the only
one who could have seen him in his wish to have not
been what he was; she would have denied it to his face,
if he had told her he was a thief; and as he meant
to make himself more and more a thief, her love would
have eased the way by full acceptance of the theories
that ran along with his intentions and covered them
with pretences of necessity. He thought how even
his own mother could not have been so much comfort
to him; she would have had the mercy, but she would
not have had the folly. At the bottom of his heart,
and under all his pretences, Northwick knew that it
was not mercy which would help him; but he wanted
it, as we all want what is comfortable and bad for
us at times. With the performance and purpose
of a thief in his heart, he turned to the pictured
face of his dead wife as his refuge from the face
of all living. It could not look at him as if
he were a thief.
The word so filled his mind that it
seemed always about to slip from his tongue.
It was what the president of the board had called him
when the fact of his fraudulent manipulation of the
company’s books was laid so distinctly before
him that even the insane refusal, which the criminal
instinctively makes of his crime in its presence, was
impossible. The other directors sat blankly round,
and said nothing; not because they hated a scene,
but because the ordinary course of life among us had
not supplied them with the emotional materials for
making one. The president, however, had jumped
from his seat and advanced upon Northwick. “What
does all this mean, sir? I’ll tell you what
it means. It means that you’re a thief,
sir; the same as if you had picked my pocket, or stolen
my horse, or taken my overcoat out of my hall.”
He shook his clenched fist in Northwick’s
face, and seemed about to take him by the throat.
Afterwards he inclined more to mercy than the others;
it was he who carried the vote which allowed Northwick
three days’ grace, to look into his affairs,
and lay before the directors the proof that he had
ample means, as he maintained, to meet the shortage
in the accounts. “I wish you well out of
it, for your family’s sake,” he said at
parting; “but all the same, sir, you are a thief.”
He put his hands ostentatiously in
his pockets, when some others meaninglessly shook
hands with Northwick, at parting, as Northwick himself
might have shaken hands with another in his place;
and he brushed by him out of the door without looking
at him. He came suddenly back to say, “If
it were a question of you alone, I would cheerfully
lose something more than you’ve robbed me of
for the pleasure of seeing you handcuffed in this
room and led to jail through the street by a constable.
No honest man, no man who was not always a rogue at
heart, could have done what you’ve done; juggled
with the books for years, and bewitched the record
so by your infernal craft, that it was never suspected
till now. You’ve given mind to your
scoundrelly work, sir; all the mind you had; for if
you hadn’t been so anxious to steal successfully,
you’d have given more mind to the use of your
stealings. You may have some of them left,
but it looks as if you’d made ducks and drakes
of them, like any petty rascal in the hands of the
Employees’ Insurance Company. Yes, sir,
I believe you’re of about the intellectual calibre
of that sort of thief. I can’t respect you
even on your own ground. But I’m willing
to give you the chance you ask, for your daughter’s
sake. She’s been in and out of my house
with my girl like one of my own children, and I won’t
send her father to jail if I can help it. Understand!
I haven’t any sentiment for you, Northwick.
You’re the kind of rogue I’d like to see
in a convict’s jacket, learning to make shoe-brushes.
But you shall have your chance to go home and see if
you can pay up somehow, and you sha’n’t
be shadowed while you’re at it. You shall
keep your outside to the world three days longer, you
whited sepulchre; but if you want to know, I think
the best thing that could happen to you on your way
home would be a good railroad accident.”
The man’s words and looks were
burnt into Northwick’s memory, which now seemed
to have the faculty of simultaneously reproducing them
all. Northwick remembered his purple face, with
its prominent eyes, and the swing of his large stomach,
and just how it struck against the jamb as he whirled
a second time out of the door. The other directors,
some of them, stood round buttoned up in their overcoats,
with their hats on, and a sort of stunned aspect;
some held their hats in their hands, and looked down
into them with a decorous absence of expression, as
people do at a funeral. Then they left him alone
in the treasurer’s private room, with its official
luxury of thick Turkey rugs, leathern arm-chairs,
and nickel-plated cuspidors standing one on each side
of the hearth where a fire of soft coal in a low-down
grate burned with a subdued and respectful flicker.