Delphi Complete Works of William Dean Howells

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by William Dean Howells


  Louise rose upright on the lounge, where she had thrown herself, after dinner, to rest, in the dim light, and think over the day’s strange experience, and stared at him helplessly. For her greater ease and comfort, she had pushed off her shoes, and they had gone over the foot of the lounge. She found herself confronted with the contumacious-looking workman she had noticed at the station in Hatboro’, with those thin, mocking lips, and the large, dreamy eyes that she remembered.

  The serving-man said, “Oh, I didn’t know you were here, Miss,” and stood irresolute. “The gentleman wishes to see your father.”

  “Will you sit down?” she said to Maxwell. “My father will be in very soon, I think.” She began to wonder whether she could edge along unobserved to where her shoes lay, and slip her feet into them. But for the present she remained where she was, and not merely because her shoes were off and she could not well get away, but because it was not in her nature not to wish every one to be happy and comfortable. She was as far as any woman can be from coquetry, but she could not see any manner of man without trying to please him. “I’m sorry he’s isn’t here,” she said, and then, as there seemed nothing for him to answer, she ventured, “It’s very cold out, isn’t it?”

  “It’s grown colder since nightfall,” said Maxwell.

  He remembered her and she saw that he did, and this somehow promoted an illogical sense of acquaintance with him.

  “It seems,” she ventured farther, “very unusual weather for the beginning of February.”

  “Why, I don’t know,” said Maxwell, with rather more self-possession than she wished him to have, so soon. “I think we’re apt to have very cold weather after the January thaw.”

  “That’s true,” said Louise, with inward wonder that she had not thought of it. His self-possession did not comport with his threadbare clothes any more than his neat accent and quiet tone comported with the proletarian character she had assigned him. She decided that he must be a walking-delegate, and that he had probably come on mischief from some of the workpeople in her father’s employ; she had never seen a walking-delegate before, but she had heard much dispute between her father and brother as to his usefulness in society; and her decision gave Maxwell fresh interest in her mind. Before he knew who Louise was, he had made her represent the millionnaire’s purse-pride, because he found her in Hilary’s house, and because he had hated her for a swell, as much as a young man can hate a pretty woman, when he saw her walking up and down the platform at Hatboro’. He looked about the rich man’s library with a scornful recognition of its luxury. His disdain, which was purely dramatic, and had no personal direction, began to scare Louise; she wanted to go away, but even if she could get to her shoes without his noticing, she could not get them on without making a scraping noise on the hard-wood floor. She did not know what to say next, and her heart warmed with gratitude to Maxwell when he said, with no great relevancy to what they had been saying, but with much to what he had in mind, “I don’t think one realizes the winter, except in the country.”

  “Yes,” she said, “one forgets how lovely it is out of town.”

  “And how dreary,” he added.

  “Oh, do you feel that?” she asked, and she said to herself, “We shall be debating whether summer is pleasanter than winter, if we keep on at this rate.”

  “Yes, I think so,” said Maxwell. He looked at a picture over the mantel, to put himself at greater ease, and began to speak of it, of the color and drawing. She saw that he knew nothing of art, and felt only the literary quality of the picture, and she was trying compassionately to get the talk away from it, when she heard her father’s step in the hall below.

  Hilary gave a start of question, when he looked into the library, that brought Maxwell to his feet. “Mr. Hilary, I’m connected with the Daily Abstract, and I’ve come to see if you are willing to talk with me about this rumored accident to Mr. Northwick.”

  “No, sir! No, sir!” Hilary stormed back. “I don’t know any more about the accident, than you do! I haven’t a word to say about it. Not a word! Not a syllable! I hope that’s enough?”

  “Quite,” said Maxwell, and with a slight bow to Louise, he went out.

  “Oh, papa!” Louise moaned out, “how could you treat him so?”

  “Treat him so? Why shouldn’t I treat him so? Confound his impudence! What does he mean by thrusting himself in here and taking possession of my library? Why didn’t he wait in the hall?”

  “Patrick showed him in here. He saw that he was a gentleman!”

  “Saw that he was a gentleman?”

  “Yes, certainly. He is very cultivated. He’s not — not a common reporter at all!” Louise’s voice trembled with mortification for her father, and pity for Maxwell, as she adventured this assertion from no previous experience of reporters. It was shocking to feel that it was her father who had not been the gentleman. “You — you might have been a little kinder, papa; he wasn’t at all obtrusive; and he only asked you whether you would say anything. He didn’t persist.”

  “I didn’t intend he should persist,” said Hilary. His fire of straw always burnt itself out in the first blaze; it was uncomfortable to find himself at variance with his daughter, who was usually his fond and admiring ally; but he could not give up at once. “If you didn’t like the way I treated him, why did you stay?” he demanded. “Was it necessary for you to entertain him till I came in? Did he ask for the family? What does it all mean?”

  The tears came into her eyes, and she said with indignant resentment: “Patrick didn’t know I was here when he brought him in; I’m sure I should have been glad to go, when you began raging at him, papa, if I could. It wasn’t very pleasant to hear you. I won’t come any more, if you don’t want me to. I thought you liked me to be here. You said you did.”

  Her father blustered back: “Don’t talk nonsense. You’ll come, just as you always have. I suppose,” he added, after a moment, in which Louise gathered up her shoes, and stood with them in one hand behind her, a tall figure of hurt affection and wounded pride, “I suppose I might have been a little smoother with the fellow, but I’ve had twenty reporters after me to-day, and between them, and you, and Matt, in all this bother, I hardly know what I’m about. Didn’t Matt see that his going to Wellwater in behalf of Northwick’s family must involve me more and more?”

  “I don’t see how he could help offering to go, when he found Suzette was going alone. He couldn’t do less.”

  “Oh, do less!” said Hilary, with imperfectly sustained passion. He turned, to avoid looking at Louise, and his eyes fell on a strange-looking note-book on the table where Maxwell had sat. “What’s this?”

  He took it up, and Louise said, “He must have left it.” And she thought, “Of course he will come back for it.”

  “Well, I must send it to him. And I’ll — I’ll write him a note,” Hilary groaned.

  Louise smiled eager forgiveness. “He seemed very intelligent, poor fellow, in some ways. Didn’t you notice what a cultivated tone he had? It’s shocking to think of his having to go about and interview people, and meet all kinds of rebuffs.”

  “I guess you’d better not waste too much sympathy on him,” said Hilary, with some return to his grudge.

  “Oh, I didn’t mean you, papa,” said Louise, sweetly.

  The door-bell rang, and after some parley at the threshold, Patrick came up to say, “The gentleman that was just here thinks he left his note-book, he—”

  Hilary did not let him get the words out; “Oh, yes, show him up! Here it is.” He ran half down the stairs himself to meet Maxwell.

  XVI.

  Louise stole a glance at herself across the room in the little triptych mirror against one of the shelves. Her hair was not tumbled, and she completed her toilet to the eye by dropping her shoes and extending the edge of her skirt over them where she stood.

  Her father brought Maxwell in by the door, and she smiled a fresh greeting to him. “We — I had just picked your note-book up. I �
�� I’m glad you came back, I — was a little short with you a moment ago. I — I — Mayn’t I offer you a cigar?”

  “No, thanks. I don’t smoke,” said Maxwell.

  “Then a glass of — It’s pretty cold out!”

  “Thank you; I never drink.”

  “Well, that’s good! That’s — sit down; sit down! — that’s a very good thing. I assure you, I don’t think it’s the least use, though I do both. My boy doesn’t, he’s a pattern to his father.”

  In spite of Hilary’s invitation Maxwell remained on foot, with the effect of merely hearing him out as he went on.

  “I — I’m sorry I haven’t anything to tell about that accident. I’ve been telegraphing all day, without finding out anything beyond the fact as first reported; and now my son’s gone up to Wellwater, to look it up on the ground. It may have been our Mr. Northwick, or it may not. May I ask how much you know?”

  “I don’t know that I’m quite free to say,” answered Maxwell.

  “Oh!”

  “And I didn’t expect you to say anything unless you wished to make something known. It’s a matter of business.”

  “Exactly,” said Hilary. “But I think I might been a little civiller in saying what I did. The rumor’s been a great annoyance to me; and I like to share my annoyances with other people. I suppose your business often brings you in contact with men of that friendly disposition? Heigh?” Hilary rolled the cigar he was about to light between his lips.

  “We see the average man,” said Maxwell, not at all flattered from his poise by Hilary’s apologies. “It’s a bore to be interviewed; I know that from the bore it is to interview.”

  “I dare say that’s often the worst part of it,” said Hilary, lighting his cigar, and puffing out the first great clouds. “Well, then, I may congratulate myself on sparing you an unpleasant duty. I didn’t know I should come off so handsomely.”

  There seemed nothing more to say, and Maxwell did not attempt to make conversation. Hilary offered him his hand, and he said, as if to relieve the parting of abruptness, “If you care to look in on me again, later on, perhaps—”

  “Thank you,” said Maxwell, and he turned to go. Then he turned back, and after a moment’s hesitation, bowed to Louise, and said very stiffly, “Good-evening!” and went out.

  Louise fetched a deep breath. “Why didn’t you keep him longer, papa, and find out all about him?”

  “I think we know all that’s necessary,” said her father, dryly. “At least he isn’t on my conscience any longer; and now I hope you’re satisfied.”

  “Yes — yes,” she hesitated. “You don’t think you were too patronizing in your reparation, papa?”

  “Patronizing?” Hilary’s crest began to rise.

  “Oh, I don’t mean that; but I wish you hadn’t let him see that you expected him to leap for joy when you stooped to excuse yourself.”

  Hilary delayed, for want of adequate terms, the violence he was about to permit himself. “The next time, if you don’t like my manner with people, don’t stay, Louise.”

  “I knew you wanted me to stay, papa, to see how beautifully you could do it; and you did do it beautifully. It was magnificent — perhaps too magnificent.” She began to laugh and to kiss away the vexation from her father’s face, keeping her hands behind her with her shoes she had picked up again, in them, as she came and leaned over him, where he sat.

  “And did I want you to stay and entertain him here till I came in?” he demanded, to keep from being mollified too soon.

  “No,” she faltered. “That was a work of necessity. He looked so sick and sad, that he appealed to my sympathy, and besides — Do you think I could trust you with a secret, papa?”

  “What are you talking about?”

  “Why, you see I thought he was a walking-delegate at first.”

  “And was that the reason you stayed?”

  “No. That was what frightened me, and then interested me. I wanted to find out what they were like. But that isn’t the secret.”

  “It’s probably quite as important,” Hilary growled.

  “Well, you see it’s such a good lesson to me! I had slipped off my shoes when I was lying down, and I couldn’t get away, he came in so suddenly.”

  “And do you mean to tell me, Louise, that you were talking to that reporter all the time in—”

  “How should he know it? You didn’t know it yourself, papa. I couldn’t get my shoes on after he came, of course!” She brought them round before her in evidence.

  “Well, it’s scandalous, Louise, simply scandalous! I never come in after you’ve been here without finding some part of your gear lying round — hair-pins, or gloves, or ribbons, or belts, or handkerchiefs, or something — and I won’t have it. I want you to understand that I think it’s disgraceful. I’m ashamed of you.”

  “Oh, no! Not ashamed, papa!”

  “Yes, I am!” said her father; but he had to relent under her look of meek imploring, and say, “or I ought to be. I don’t see how you could hold up your head.”

  “I held it very high up. When you haven’t got your shoes on — in company — it gives you a sort of — internal majesty; and I behaved very loftily. But it’s been a fearful lesson to me, papa!” She made her father laugh, and then she flung herself upon him, and kissed him for his amiability.

  She said at the end of this rite, “He didn’t seem much impressed even after you had apologized, do you think, papa?”

  “No, he didn’t,” Hilary grumbled. “He’s as stiff-necked as need be.”

  “Yes,” said Louise, thoughtfully. “He must be proud. How funny proud people are, papa! I can’t understand them. That was what always fascinated me with Suzette.”

  Hilary’s face saddened as it softened. “Ah, poor thing! She’ll have need of all her pride, now.”

  “You mean about her father,” said Louise, sobered too. “Don’t you hope he’s got away?”

  “What do you mean, child? That would be a very rascally wish in me.”

  “Well, you’d rather he had got away than been killed?”

  “Why, of course, of course,” Hilary ruefully assented. “But if Matt finds he wasn’t — in the accident, it’s my business to do all I can to bring him to justice. The man’s a thief.”

  “Well, then, I hope he’s got away.”

  “You mustn’t say such things, Louise.”

  “Oh, no, papa! Only think them.”

  XVII.

  Hilary had to yield to the pressure on him and send detectives to look into the question of Northwick’s fate at the scene of the accident. It was a formal violation of his promise to Northwick that he should have three days unmolested; but perhaps the circumstances would have justified Hilary to any business man, and it could really matter nothing to the defaulter dead or alive. In either case he was out of harm’s way. Matt, all the same, felt the ghastliness of being there on the same errand with these agents of his father, and reaching the same facts with them. At moments it seemed to him as if he were tacitly working in agreement with them, for the same purpose as well as to the same end; but he would not let this illusion fasten upon him; and he kept faith with Suzette in the last degree. He left nothing undone which she could have asked if he had done; he invented some quite useless things to do, and did them, to give his conscience no cause against him afterwards. The fire had left nothing but a few charred fragments of the wreck. There had been no means of stopping it, and it had almost completely swept away the cars in which it had broken out. Certain of the cars to the windward were not burnt; these lay capsized beside the track, bent and twisted, and burst athwart, fantastically like the pictures of derailed cars as Matt had seen them in the illustrated papers; the locomotive, pitched into a heavy drift, was like some dead monster that had struggled hard for its life. Where the fire had raged, there was a wide black patch in the whiteness glistening everywhere else; there were ashes, and writhen iron-work; and bits of charred wood-work; but nothing to tell who or how many
had died there. It was certain that the porter and the parlor-car conductor were among the lost; and his list of passengers had perished with the conductor; there was only left with the operator the original of that telegram, asking to have a chair reserved in the Pullman from Wellwater, and signed with Northwick’s name, but those different initials, which had given rise to the report of his death.

  This was the definite fact which Matt could carry back with him to Northwick’s family, and this they knew already. It settled nothing; it left the question of his death just where it was before. But Matt struggled with it as if it were some quite new thing, and spent himself in trying to determine how he should present it to them. In his own mind he had very great doubt whether Northwick was in the accident, and whether that dispatch was not a trick, a ruse to cover up the real course of his flight. But then there was no sense in his trying to hide his track, for he must have known that as yet there was no pursuit. If the telegram was a ruse, it was a ruse to conceal the fact that Northwick was still in the country, and had not gone to Canada at all. But Matt could not imagine any reason for such a ruse; the motive must be one of those illogical impulses which sometimes govern criminals. In any case, Matt could not impart his conjectures to the poor women who must be awaiting his return with such cruel anxiety. If the man were really dead, it would simplify the matter beyond the power of any other fact; Matt perceived how it would mitigate the situation for his family; he could understand how people should hold that suicide was the only thing left for a man in Northwick’s strait. He blamed himself for coming a moment to that ground, and owned the shame of his interested motive; but it was, nevertheless, a relief which he did not know how to refuse when Suzette Northwick took what he had to tell as final proof that her father was dead.

  She said that she had been talking it all over with her sister, and they were sure of it; they were prepared for it; they expected him to tell them so.

 

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