<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_254" id="Page_254"></SPAN></span></p>
<h2>CHAPTER XXV<br/> THE ABYSSINIAN PRINCE</h2>
<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">Snoqualmie Pass</span> lies among mountains
prickly with rocks and burnt stumps, but the
road is velvet, with broad saucer curves; and to Milt
it was pure beauty, it was release from life, to soar
up coaxing inclines and slip down easy grades in the
powerful car. "No more Teals for me," he cried,
in the ecstasy of handling an engine that slowed to a
demure whisper, then, at a touch of the accelerator,
floated up a rise, effortless, joyous, humming the booming
song of the joy in speed. He suddenly hated the
bucking tediousness of the Teal. The Gomez-Dep
symbolized his own new life.</p>
<p>So he came to Lake Washington, and just across it
was the city of his long dreams, the city of the Pacific—and
of Claire. There was no ferry in sight, and he
rounded the lake, struck a brick pavement, rolled
through rough woods, suburban villas, and petty
business streets, to a region of factories and mills, with
the funnels of ships beyond.</p>
<p>And every minute he drove more slowly and became
more uneasy.</p>
<p>The pavement—the miles of it; the ruthless lumbermills,
with their thousands of workmen quite like<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_255" id="Page_255"></SPAN></span>
himself; the agitation of realizing that every three
minutes he was passing a settlement larger than
Schoenstrom; the strangeness of ships and all the
cynical ways of the sea—the whole scene depressed
him as he perceived how little of the world he knew,
and how big and contemptuous of Milt Daggetts that
world must be.</p>
<p>"Huh!" he growled. "Quite some folks living
here. Don't suppose they spend such a whale of a lot
of time thinking about Milt Daggett and Bill McGolwey
and Prof Jones. I guess most of these people
wouldn't think Heinie Rauskukle's store was so gosh-awful
big. I wasn't scared of Minneapolis—much—but
there they didn't ring in mountains and an
ocean on you. And I didn't have to go up on the
hill and meet folks like Claire's relations, and figure
out whether you shake hands catch-as-catch-can or
Corinthian. Look at that sawmill chimney—isn't it
nice of 'em to put the fly-screen over it so the flies
won't get down into the flames. No, they haven't got
much more than a million feet of lumber in that one
pile. And here's a bum little furniture store—it
wouldn't cost more 'n about ten times all I've got to
buy one of those Morris chairs. Oh Gooooooosh,
won't these houses ever stop? Say, that must be a
jitney. The driver snickered at me. Will the whole
town be onto me? Milt, you're a kind young fellow,
and you know what's the matter with Heinie's differential,<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_256" id="Page_256"></SPAN></span>
but they don't need you here. Quite a few
folks to carry on the business. Gosh, look at that
building ahead—nine stories!"</p>
<p>He had planned to stop at a hotel, to wash up, and
to gallop to Claire. But—well—wouldn't it maybe
be better to leave the car at a public garage, so the
Boltwoods could get it when they wanted to? He'd
better "just kind of look around before he tackled the
watch-dog."</p>
<p>It was the public garage which finally crushed him.
It was a garage of enameled brick and colored tiles,
with a plate-glass-enclosed office in which worked
young men clad as the angels. One of them wore a
carnation, Milt noted.</p>
<p>"Huh! I'll write back and tell Ben Sittka that
hereafter he's to wear his best-Sunday-go-to-meeting
clothes and a milkweed blossom when he comes down
to work at the Red Trail Garage!"</p>
<p>Milt drove up the brick incline into a room
thousands of miles long, with millions of new and
recently polished cars standing in lines as straight as a
running-board. He begged of a high-nosed colored
functionary—not in khaki overalls but in maroon
livery—"Where'll I put this boat?"</p>
<p>The Abyssinian prince gave him a check, and in a
tone of extreme lack of personal interest snapped,
"Take it down the aisle to the elevator."</p>
<p>Milt had followed the natural lines of traffic into<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_257" id="Page_257"></SPAN></span>
the city; he had spoken to no one; the prince's snort
was his welcome to Seattle.</p>
<p>Meekly he drove past the cars so ebon and silvery,
so smug and strong, that they would have regarded a
Teal bug as an insult. Another attendant waved him
into the elevator, and Milt tried not to look surprised
when the car started, not forward, but upward, as
though it had turned into an aeroplane.</p>
<p>When these adventures were over, when he had had
a shave and a shine, and washed his hands, and looked
into a department-store window that contained ten
billion yards of silk draped against polished satinwood,
when he had felt unhappy over a movie theater large
enough to contain ten times the population of Schoenstrom,
and been cursed by a policeman for jaywalking,
and had passed a hotel entirely full of diplomats and
marble and caviare—then he could no longer put off
telephoning to Claire, and humbly, in a booth meant
for an umbrella-stand, he got the Eugene Gilson house,
and to a female who said "Yes?" in a tone which
made it mean "No!" he ventured, "May I speak to
Miss Boltwood?"</p>
<p>Miss Boltwood, it seemed, was out.</p>
<p>He was not sorry. He was relieved. He ducked out
of the telephone-booth with a sensation of escape.</p>
<p>Milt was in love with Claire; she was to him the
purpose of life; he thought of her deeply and tenderly
and longingly. All the way into Seattle he had<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_258" id="Page_258"></SPAN></span>
brooded about her; remembered her every word and
gesture; recalled the curve of her chin, and the fresh
feeling of her hands. But Claire had suddenly become
too big. In her were all these stores, these office
buildings for clever lawyers and surgeons, these contemptuous
trolley cars, these careless people in beautiful
clothes. They were too much for him. Desperately
he was pushing them back—back—fighting
for breath. And she belonged with them.</p>
<p>He mailed the check for the stored car to her,
with a note—written standing before a hacked wall-desk
in a branch post-office—which said only, "Here's
check for the boat. Did not know whether you would
have room for it at house. Tried to get you on phone,
phone again just as soon as rent room etc. Hope having
happy time, M.D."</p>
<p>He went out to the university. On the trolley he
relaxed. But he did not exultantly feel that he had
won to the Pacific; he could not regard Seattle now
as a magic city, the Bagdad of modern caravans, with
Alaska and the Orient on one hand, the forests to the
north, and eastward the spacious Inland Empire of
the wheat. He saw it as a place where you had to
work hard just to live; where busy policemen despised
you because you didn't know which trolley to take;
where it was incredibly hard to remember even the
names of the unceasing streets; where the conductors
said "Step lively!" and there was no room to whistle,<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_259" id="Page_259"></SPAN></span>
no time to swap stories with a Bill McGolwey at an
Old Home lunch-counter.</p>
<p>He found the university; he talked with the authorities
about entering the engineering school; the Y. M.
C. A. gave him a list of rooms; and, because it was
cheap, he chose a cubbyhole in a flat over a candy
store—a low room, which would probably keep out
the rain, but had no other virtues. It had one bed, one
table, one dissipated bureau, two straight bare chairs,
and one venerable lithograph depicting a girl with
ringlets shaking her irritating forefinger at a high-church
kitten.</p>
<p>The landlady consented to his importing an oil-stove
for cooking his meals. He bought the stove, with a
box of oatmeal, a jar of bacon, and half a dozen eggs.
He bought a plane and solid geometry, and an algebra.
At dinner time he laid the algebra beside his plate
of anemic bacon and leaking eggs. The eggs grew
cold. He did not stir. He was reviewing his high-school
algebra. He went down the pages, word by
word, steadily, quickly, absolutely concentrated—as
concentrated as he would recently have been in a new
problem of disordered transmission. Not once did
he stop to consider how glorious it would be to marry
Claire—or how terrifying it would be to marry Miss
Boltwood.</p>
<p>Three hours went by before he started up, bewildered,
rubbed his eyes, picked at the chill bacon<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_260" id="Page_260"></SPAN></span>
and altogether disgusting eggs, and rambled out into
the street.</p>
<p>Again he risked the scorn of conductors and jitney
drivers. He found Queen Anne Hill, found the residence
of Mr. Eugene Gilson. He sneaked about it,
slipped into the gate, prowled toward the house.
Flabby from the intensity of study, he longed for the
stimulus of Claire's smile. But as he stared up at the
great squares of the clear windows, at the flare of
white columns in the porch-lights, that smile seemed
unreachable. He felt like a rustic at court. From the
shelter of the prickly holly hedge he watched the
house. It was "some kind of a party?—or what
would folks like these call a party?" Limousines
were arriving; he had a glimpse of silken ankles,
frothy underskirts; heard easy laughter; saw people
moving through a big blue and silver room; caught
a drifting tremor of music.</p>
<p>At last he saw Claire. She was dancing with a
young man as decorative as "that confounded Saxton
fellow" he had met at Flathead Lake, but younger
than Saxton, a laughing young man, with curly black
hair. For the first time in his life Milt wanted to kill.
He muttered, "Damn—damn—DAMN!" as he saw
the young man carelessly embracing Claire.</p>
<p>His fingers tingling, his whole body yearning till
every cell seemed a beating hammer, Milt longed just
once to slip his hand about Claire's waist like that.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_261" id="Page_261"></SPAN></span>
He could feel the satin of her bodice and its warmth.</p>
<p>Then it seemed to him, as Claire again passed the
window, that he did not know her at all. He had
once talked to a girl who resembled her, but that was
long ago. He could understand a Gomez-Dep and
appreciate a brisk sports-suit, but this girl was of a
world unintelligible to him. Her hair, in its dips and
convolutions, was altogether a puzzle. "How did
she ever fix it like that?" Her low evening dress—"what
was it made of—some white stuff, but was it
silk or muslin or what?" Her shoulders were startling
in their bare powdery smoothness—"how dare that
young pup dance with her?" And her face, that had
seemed so jolly and friendly, floated past the window
as pale and illusive as a wisp of fog. His longing for
her passed into clumsy awe. He remembered, without
resentment, that once on a hilltop in Dakota she had
coldly forbidden him to follow her.</p>
<p>With all the pleasure of martyrdom—to make quite
sure that he should realize how complete a fool he had
been to intrude on Miss Boltwood—he studied the
other guests. He gave them, perhaps, a glory they did
not have. There were girls sleek as ivory. There
was a lean stooped man, very distinguished. There
was a bulky man in a dinner coat, with a semi-circle
of mustache, and eyes that even at a distance seemed
to give impatient orders. He would be a big banker,
or a lumberman.</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_262" id="Page_262"></SPAN></span>It was the easy friendliness of all of them that most
made Milt feel like an outsider. If a servant had
come out and ordered him away, he would have gone
meekly ... he fancied.</p>
<p>He straggled off, too solidly unhappy to think how
unhappy he was. In his clammy room he picked up
the algebra. For a quarter-hour he could not gather
enough vigor to open it. In his lassitude, his elbows
felt feeble, his fingers were ready to drop off. He
slowly scratched the book open——</p>
<p>At one o'clock he was reading algebra, his face
still and grim. But already it seemed less heartily
brick-red.</p>
<p>He listlessly telephoned to Claire, in the morning.</p>
<p>"Hello? Oh! Miss Boltwood? This is Milt Daggett."</p>
<p>"Oh! Oh, how are you?"</p>
<p>"Why, why I'm—I've got settled. I can get into
the engineering school all right."</p>
<p>"I'm glad."</p>
<p>"Uh, enjoying Seattle?"</p>
<p>"Oh! Oh yes. The mountains—— Do you like
it?"</p>
<p>"Oh! Oh yes. Sea and all—— Great town."</p>
<p>"Uh, w-when are we going to see you? Daddy
had to go East, left you his regards. W-when——?"</p>
<p>"Why—why I suppose you're awful—awfully busy,
meeting people and all——"</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_263" id="Page_263"></SPAN></span>"Yes, I am, rather, but——" Her hedging uncomfortable
tone changed to a cry of distress.
"Milt! I must see you. Come up at four this afternoon."</p>
<p>"Yes!"</p>
<p>He rushed to a small, hot tailor-shop. He panted
"Press m' suit while I wait?" They gave him a
pair of temporary trousers, an undesirable pair of
trousers belonging to a short fat man with no taste
in fabrics, and with these flapping about his lean legs,
he sat behind a calico curtain, reading <i>The War Cry</i>
and looking at a "fashion-plate" depicting nine gentlemen
yachtsmen each nine feet tall, while the Jugoslav
in charge unfeelingly sprinkled and ironed and patted
his suit.</p>
<p>He spent ten minutes in blacking his shoes, in his
room—and twenty minutes in getting the blacking off
his fingers.</p>
<p>He was walking through the gate in the Gilson hedge
at one minute to four.</p>
<p>But he had reached Queen Anne Hill at three. For
an hour he had walked the crest road, staring at the
steamers below, alternately gripping his hands with
desire of Claire, and timorously finally deciding that
he wouldn't go to her house—wouldn't ever see her
again.</p>
<p>He came into the hall tremblingly expecting some
great thing, some rending scene, and she met him with<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_264" id="Page_264"></SPAN></span>
a cool, "Oh, this is nice. Eva had some little white
cakes made for us." He felt like a man who has asked
for a drink of cold charged water and found it warm
and flat.</p>
<p>"How—— Dandy house," he muttered, limply
shaking her limp hand.</p>
<p>"Yes, isn't it a darling. They do themselves awfully
well here. I'm afraid your bluff, plain, democratic
Westerners are a fraud. I hear a lot more about
'society' here than I ever did in the East. The
sets seem frightfully complicated." She was drifting
into the drawing-room, to a tapestry stool, and Milt
was awkwardly stalking a large wing chair, while she
fidgeted:</p>
<p>"Everybody tells me about how one poor dear
soul, a charming lady who used to take in washing
or salt gold-mines or something, and she came here
a little while ago with billions and billions of
dollars, and tried to buy her way in by shopping
for all the charities in town, and apparently she's
just as out of it here as she would be in London.
You and I aren't exclusive like that, are
we!"</p>
<p>Somehow——</p>
<p>Her "you and I" was too kindly, as though she was
trying to put him at ease, as though she knew he
couldn't possibly be at ease. With a horribly elaborate
politeness, with a smile that felt hot on his twitching<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_265" id="Page_265"></SPAN></span>
cheeks, he murmured, "Oh no. No, we—— No, I
guess——"</p>
<p>If he knew what it was he guessed, he couldn't get
it out. While he was trying to find out what had become
of all the things there were to say in the world,
a maid came in with an astonishing object—a small,
red, shelved table on wheels, laden with silver vessels,
and cake, and sandwiches that were amazingly small
and thin.</p>
<p>The maid was so starched that she creaked. She
glanced at Milt—— Claire didn't make him so
nervous that he thought of his clothes, but the maid
did. He was certain that she knew that he had blacked
his own shoes, knew how old were his clothes. He
was urging himself, "Must get new suit tomorrow—ready-made—mustn't
forget, now—be sure—get suit
tomorrow." He wanted to apologize to the maid for
existing.... He wouldn't dare to fall in love with
the maid.... And he'd kill the man who said he
could be fool enough to fall in love with Miss Boltwood.</p>
<p>He sipped his tea, and dropped sandwich crumbs,
and ached, and panted, and peeped at the crushing
quantities of pictures and sconces and tables and
chairs in the room, and wondered what they did with
all of them, while Claire chattered:</p>
<p>"Yes, we weren't exclusive out on the road. Didn't
we meet funny people though! Oh, somehow that<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_266" id="Page_266"></SPAN></span>
'funny people' sounds familiar. But—— What fun
that morning was at—Pellago, was it? Heavens, I'm
forgetting those beastly little towns already—that
place where we hazed the poor landlady who overcharged
me."</p>
<p>"Yes." He was thinking of how much Claire
would forget, now. "Yes. We certainly fixed her,
all right. Uh—did you get the storage check for your
car?"</p>
<p>"Oh yes, thank you. So nice of you to bother
with it."</p>
<p>"Oh, nothing at all, nothing—— Nothing at all.
Uh—— Do you like Seattle?"</p>
<p>"Oh yes. Such views—the mountains—— Do you
like it?"</p>
<p>"Oh yes. Always wanted to see the sea."</p>
<p>"Yes, and—— Such a well-built town."</p>
<p>"Yes, and—— They must do a lot of business
here."</p>
<p>"Yes, they—— Oh yes, I do like Seat——"</p>
<p>He had darted from his chair, brushed by the tea-wagon,
ignoring its rattle and the perilous tipping of
cups. He put his hand on her shoulder, snorted,
"Look here. We're both sparring for time. Stop
it. It's—it's all right, Claire. I want you to like
me, but I'm not—I'm not like that woman you were
telling about that's trying to butt in. I know, Lord I
know so well what you're thinking! You're thinking<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_267" id="Page_267"></SPAN></span>
I'm not up to the people you've been seeing last couple
of days—not up to 'em yet, anyway. Well—— We'll
be good friends."</p>
<p>Fearless, now, his awe gone in tenderness, he lifted
her chin, looked straight into her eyes, smiled. But
his courage was slipping. He wanted to run and
hide.</p>
<p>He turned abruptly, grumbling, "Well, better get
back to work now, I guess."</p>
<p>Her cry was hungry: "Oh, please don't go." She
was beside him, shyly picking at his sleeve. "I know
what you mean. I like you for being so understanding.
But—— I do like you. You were the perfect
companion. Let's—— Oh, let's have a walk—and
try to laugh again."</p>
<p>He definitely did not want to stay. At this moment
he did not love her. He regarded her as an estimable
young woman who, for a person so idiotically reared,
had really shown a good deal of pluck out on the road—where
he wanted to be. He stood in the hall disliking
his old cap while she ran up to put on a top
coat.</p>
<p>Mute, casual, they tramped out of the house together,
and down the hill to a region of shabby old
brown houses like blisters on the hillside. They had
little to say, and that little was a polite reminiscence
of incidents in which neither was interested.</p>
<p>When they came back to the Gilson hedge, he<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_268" id="Page_268"></SPAN></span>
stopped at the gate, with terrific respectableness removed
his cap.</p>
<p>"Good night," she said cheerily. "Call me up soon
again."</p>
<p>He did not answer "Good night." He said "Good-by";
and he meant it to be his last farewell. He
caught her hand, hastily dropped it, fled down the hill.</p>
<p>He was, he told himself, going to leave Seattle that
evening.</p>
<p>That, doubtless, is the reason why he ran to a
trolley, to get to a department-store before it closed;
and why, precipitating himself upon a startled clerk,
he purchased a new suit of chaste blue serge, a new
pair of tan boots (curiously like some he had seen on
the university campus that morning) and a new hat
so gray and conservative and felty that it might have
been worn by Woodrow Wilson.</p>
<p>He spent the evening in reading algebra and geometry,
and in telling himself that he was beautifully not
thinking about Claire.</p>
<p>In the midst of it, he caught himself at it, and
laughed.</p>
<p>"What you're doing, my friend, is pretending you
don't like Claire, so that you can hide from your fool
self the fact that you're going to sneak back to see
her the first chance you get—first time the watch-dog
is out. Seriously now, son, Claire is impossible for
you. No can do. Now that you've been chump<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_269" id="Page_269"></SPAN></span>
enough to leave home—— Oh Lord, I wish I hadn't
promised to take this room for all winter. Wish I
hadn't matriculated at the U. But I'm here now, and
I'll stick it out. I'll stay here one year anyway, and
go back home. Oh! And to—— By Golly! She
liked me!"</p>
<p>He was thinking of the wild-rose teacher to whom
he had given a lift back in Dakota. He was remembering
her daintiness, her admiration.</p>
<p>"Now there's somebody who'd make me keep climbing,
but wouldn't think I was a poor hick. If I were
to drive back next spring, I could find her——"</p>
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