<h2><SPAN name="VII">VII</SPAN></h2>
<h3>DIVERSIONS OF A RUINED GENTLEMAN,—RESUMED</h3>
</center>
<p>From the commanding elevation of the box, "Three 'n' six,"
enunciated the cabby, his tone that of a man prepared for
trouble, acquainted with trouble, inclined to give trouble a
welcome. His bloodshot eyes blinked truculently at his alighted
fare. "Three 'n' six," he iterated aggressively.</p>
<p>An adjacent but theretofore abstracted policeman pricked up
his ears and assumed an intelligent expression.</p>
<p>"Bermondsey Ol' Stairs to Sain' Pancras," argued the cabby
assertively; "seven mile by th' radius; three 'n' six!"</p>
<p>Kirkwood stood on the outer station platform, near the
entrance to third-class waiting-rooms. Continuing to fumble
through his pockets for an elusive sovereign purse, he looked
up mildly at the man.</p>
<p>"All right, cabby," he said, with pacific purpose; "you'll
get your fare in half a shake."</p>
<p>"Three 'n' six!" croaked the cabby, like a blowsy and
vindictive parrot.</p>
<p>The bobby strolled nearer.</p>
<p>"Yes?" said Kirkwood, mildly diverted. "Why not sing it,
cabby?"</p>
<p>"Lor' lumme!" The cabby exploded with indignation,
continuing to give a lifelike imitation of a rumpled parrot. "I
'ad trouble enough wif you at Bermondsey Ol' Stairs, hover that
quid you promised, didn't I? Sing it! My heye!"</p>
<p>"Quid, cabby?" And then, remembering that he had promised
the fellow a sovereign for fast driving from Quadrant Mews,
Kirkwood grinned broadly, eyes twinkling; for Mulready must
have fallen heir to that covenant. "But you got the sovereign?
You got it, didn't you, cabby?"</p>
<p>The driver affirmed the fact with unnecessary heat and
profanity and an amendment to the effect that he would have
spoiled his fare's sanguinary conk had the outcome been less
satisfactory.</p>
<p>The information proved so amusing that Kirkwood, chuckling,
forbore to resent the manner of its delivery, and, abandoning
until a more favorable time the chase of the coy sovereign
purse, extracted from one trouser pocket half a handful of
large English small change.</p>
<p>"Three shillings, six-pence," he counted the coins into the
cabby's grimy and bloated paw; and added quietly: "The exact
distance is rather less than, four miles, my man; your fare,
precisely two shillings. You may keep the extra eighteen pence,
for being such a conscientious blackguard,—or talk it over
with the officer here. Please yourself."</p>
<p>He nodded to the bobby, who, favorably impressed by the silk
hat which Kirkwood, by diligent application of his sleeve
during the cross-town ride, had managed to restore to a state
somewhat approximating its erstwhile luster, smiled at the
cabby a cold, hard smile. Whereupon the latter, smirking in
unabashed triumph, spat on the pavement at Kirkwood's feet,
gathered up the reins, and wheeled out.</p>
<p>"A 'ard lot, sir," commented the policeman, jerking his
helmeted head towards the vanishing four-wheeler.</p>
<p>"Right you are," agreed Kirkwood amiably, still tickled by
the knowledge that Mulready had been obliged to pay three times
over for the ride that ended in his utter discomfiture.
Somehow, Kirkwood had conceived no liking whatever for the man;
Calendar he could, at a pinch, tolerate for his sense of humor,
but Mulready—! "A surly dog," he thought him.</p>
<p>Acknowledging the policeman's salute and restoring two
shillings and a few fat copper pennies to his pocket, he
entered the vast and echoing train-shed. In the act, his
attention was attracted and immediately riveted by the
spectacle of a burly luggage navvy in a blue jumper in the act
of making off with a large, folding sign-board, of which the
surface was lettered expansively with the advice, in red
against a white background:</p>
<p>BOAT-TRAIN LEAVES ON TRACK 3</p>
<p>Incredulous yet aghast the young man gave instant chase to
the navvy, overhauling him with no great difficulty. For your
horny-handed British working-man is apparently born with two
golden aphorisms in his mouth: "Look before you leap," and
"Haste makes waste." He looks continually, seldom, if ever,
leaps, and never is prodigal of his leisure.</p>
<p>Excitedly Kirkwood touched the man's arm with a detaining
hand. "Boat-train?" he gasped, pointing at the board.</p>
<p>"Left ten minutes ago, thank you, sir."</p>
<p>"Wel-l, but...! Of course I can get another train at
Tilbury?"</p>
<p>"For yer boat? No, sir, thank you, sir. Won't be another
tryne till mornin', sir."</p>
<p>"Oh-h!..."</p>
<p>Aimlessly Kirkwood drifted away, his mind a blank.</p>
<p>Sometime later he found himself on the steps outside the
station, trying to stare out of countenance a glaring electric
mineral-water advertisement on the farther side of the Euston
Road.</p>
<p>He was stranded....</p>
<p>Beyond the spiked iron fence that enhedges the incurving
drive, the roar of traffic, human, wheel and hoof, rose high
for all the lateness of the hour: sidewalks groaning with the
restless contact of hundreds of ill-shod feet; the roadway
thundering—hansoms, four-wheelers, motor-cars, dwarfed
coster-mongers' donkey-carts and ponderous, rumbling, C.-P.
motor-vans, struggling for place and progress. For St. Pancras
never sleeps.</p>
<p>The misty air swam luminous with the light of electric signs
as with the radiance of some lurid and sinister moon. The voice
of London sounded in Kirkwood's ears, like the ominous purring
of a somnolent brute beast, resting, gorged and satiated, ere
rising again to devour. To devour— </p>
<p>Stranded!...</p>
<p>Distracted, he searched pocket after pocket, locating his
watch, cigar- and cigarette-cases, match-box, penknife—all the
minutiæ of pocket-hardware affected by civilized man; with
old letters, a card-case, a square envelope containing his
steamer ticket; but no sovereign purse. His small-change pocket
held less than three shillings—two and eight, to be exact—and
a brass key, which he failed to recognize as one of his
belongings.</p>
<p>And that was all. At sometime during the night he had lost
(or been cunningly bereft of?) that little purse of
chamois-skin containing the three golden sovereigns which he
had been husbanding to pay his steamer expenses, and which, if
only he had them now, would stand between him and starvation
and a night in the streets.</p>
<p>And, searching his heart, he found it brimming with
gratitude to Mulready, for having relieved him of the necessity
of settling with the cabby.</p>
<p>"Vagabond?" said Kirkwood musingly. "Vagabond?" He repeated
the word softly a number of times, to get the exact flavor of
it, and found it little to his taste. And yet...</p>
<p>He thrust both hands deep in his trouser pockets and stared
purposelessly into space, twisting his eyebrows out of
alignment and crookedly protruding his lower lip.</p>
<p>If Brentwick were only in town—But he wasn't, and wouldn't
be, within the week.</p>
<p>"No good waiting here," he concluded. Composing his face, he
reëntered the station. There were his trunks, of course.
He couldn't leave them standing on the station platform for
ever.</p>
<p>He found the luggage-room and interviewed a mechanically
courteous attendant, who, as the result of profound
deliberation, advised him to try his luck at the lost-luggage
room, across the station. He accepted the advice; it was a
foregone conclusion that his effects had not been conveyed to
the Tilbury dock; they could not have been loaded into the
luggage van without his personal supervision. Still, anything
was liable to happen when his unlucky star was in the
ascendant.</p>
<p>He found them in the lost-luggage room.</p>
<p>A clerk helped him identify the articles and ultimately
clucked with a perfunctory note: "Sixpence each, please."</p>
<p>"I—ah—pardon?"</p>
<p>"Sixpence each, the fixed charge, sir. For every twenty-four
hours or fraction thereof, sixpence per parcel."</p>
<p>"Oh, thank you so much," said Kirkwood sweetly. "I will call
to-morrow."</p>
<p>"Very good, sir. Thank you, sir."</p>
<p>"Five times sixpence is two-and-six," Kirkwood computed,
making his way hastily out of the station, lest a worse thing
befall him. "No, bless your heart!—not while two and eight
represents the sum total of my fortune."</p>
<p>He wandered out into the night; he could not linger round
the station till dawn; and what profit to him if he did? Even
were he to ransom his trunks, one can scarcely change one's
clothing in a public waiting-room.</p>
<p>Somewhere in the distance a great clock chimed a single
stroke, freighted sore with melancholy. It knelled the passing
of the half-hour after midnight; a witching hour, when every
public shuts up tight, and gentlemen in top-hats and evening
dress are doomed to pace the pave till day (barring they have
homes or visible means of support)—till day, when pawnshops
open and such personal effects as watches and hammered silver
cigar-cases may be hypothecated.</p>
<p>Sable garments fluttering, Care fell into step with Philip
Kirkwood; Care the inexorable slipped a skeleton arm through
his and would not be denied; Care the jade clung affectionately
to his side, refusing to be jilted.</p>
<p>"Ah, you thought you would forget me?" chuckled the
fleshless lips by his ear. "But no, my boy; I'm with you now,
for ever and a day. 'Misery loves company,' and it wouldn't be
pretty of me to desert you in this extremity, would it? Come,
let us beguile the hours till dawn with conversation. Here's a
sprightly subject: What are you going to do, Mr. Kirkwood?
<i>What are you going to do?</i>"</p>
<p>But Kirkwood merely shook a stubborn head and gazed straight
before him, walking fast through ways he did not recognize, and
pretending not to hear. None the less the sense of Care's
solicitous query struck like a pain into his consciousness.
What was he to do?</p>
<p>An hour passed.</p>
<p>Denied the opportunity to satisfy its beast hunger and
thirst, humanity goes off to its beds. In that hour London
quieted wonderfully; the streets achieved an effect of deeper
darkness, the skies, lowering, looked down with a blush less
livid for the shamelessness of man; cab ranks lengthened;
solitary footsteps added unto themselves loud, alarming,
offensive echoes; policemen, strolling with lamps blazing on
their breasts, became as lightships in a trackless sea; each
new-found street unfolded its perspective like a canyon of
mystery, and yet teeming with a hundred masked hazards; the air
acquired a smell more clear and clean, an effect more volatile;
and the night-mist thickened until it studded one's attire with
myriads of tiny buttons, bright as diamond dust.</p>
<p>Through this long hour Kirkwood walked without a pause.</p>
<p>Another clock, somewhere, clanged resonantly twice.</p>
<p>The world was very still....</p>
<p>And so, wandering foot-loose in a wilderness of ways,
turning aimlessly, now right, now left, he found himself in a
street he knew, yet seemed not to know: a silent, black street
one brief block in length, walled with dead and lightless
dwellings, haunted by his errant memory; a street whose
atmosphere was heavy with impalpable essence of desuetude; in
two words, Frognall Street.</p>
<p>Kirkwood identified it with a start and a guilty tremor. He
stopped stock-still, in an unreasoning state of semi-panic,
arrested by a silly impulse to turn and fly; as if the bobby,
whom he descried approaching him with measured stride, pausing
now and again to try a door or flash his bull's-eye down an
area, were to be expected to identify the man responsible for
that damnable racket raised ere midnight in vacant Number
9!</p>
<p>Oddly enough, the shock of recognition brought him to his
senses,—temporarily. He was even able to indulge himself in a
quiet, sobering grin at his own folly. He passed the policeman
with a nod and a cool word in response to the man's
good-natured, "Good-night, sir." Number 9 was on the other side
of the street; and he favored its blank and dreary elevation
with a prolonged and frank stare—that profited him nothing, by
the way. For a crazy notion popped incontinently into his head,
and would not be cast forth.</p>
<p>At the corner he swerved and crossed, still possessed of his
devil of inspiration. It would be unfair to him to say that he
did not struggle to resist it, for he did, because it was
fairly and egregiously asinine; yet struggling, his feet trod
the path to which it tempted him.</p>
<p>"Why," he expostulated feebly, "I might's well turn back and
beat that bobby over the head with my cane!..."</p>
<p>But at the moment his hand was in his change pocket, feeling
over that same brass door-key which earlier he had been unable
to account for, and he was informing himself how very easy it
would have been for the sovereign purse to have dropped from
his waistcoat pocket while he was sliding on his ear down the
dark staircase. To recover it meant, at the least, shelter for
the night, followed by a decent, comfortable and sustaining
morning meal. Fortified by both he could redeem his luggage,
change to clothing more suitable for daylight traveling, pawn
his valuables, and enter into negotiations with the steamship
company for permission to exchange his passage, with a sum to
boot, for transportation on another liner. A most feasible
project! A temptation all but irresistible!</p>
<p>But then—the risk.... Supposing (for the sake of argument)
the customary night-watchman to have taken up a transient
residence in Number 9; supposing the police to have entered
with him and found the stunned man on the second floor: would
the watchman not be vigilant for another nocturnal marauder?
would not the police now, more than ever, be keeping a wary eye
on that house of suspicious happenings?</p>
<p>Decidedly, to reënter it would be to incur a deadly
risk. And yet, undoubtedly, beyond question! his sovereign
purse was waiting for him somewhere on the second flight of
stairs; while as his means of clandestine entry lay warm in his
fingers—the key to the dark entry, which he had by force of
habit pocketed after locking the door.</p>
<p>He came to the Hog-in-the-Pound. Its windows were dim with
low-turned gas-lights. Down the covered alleyway, Quadrant Mews
slept in a dusk but fitfully relieved by a lamp or two round
which the friendly mist clung close and thick.</p>
<p>There would be none to see....</p>
<p>Skulking, throat swollen with fear, heart beating like a
snare-drum, Kirkwood took his chance. Buttoning his overcoat
collar up to his chin and cursing the fact that his hat must
stand out like a chimney-pot on a detached house, he sped on
tiptoe down the cobbled way and close beneath the house-walls
of Quadrant Mews. But, half-way in, he stopped, confounded by
an unforeseen difficulty. How was he to identify the narrow
entry of Number 9, whose counterparts doubtless communicated
with the mews from every residence on four sides of the city
block?</p>
<p>The low inner tenements were yet high enough to hide the
rear elevations of Frognall Street houses, and the mist was
heavy besides; otherwise he had made shift to locate Number 9
by ticking off the dwellings from the corner. If he went on,
hit or miss, the odds were anything-you-please to one that he
would blunder into the servant's quarters of some inhabited
house, and—be promptly and righteously sat upon by the
service-staff, while the bobby was summoned.</p>
<p>Be that as it might—he almost lost his head when he
realized this—escape was already cut off by the way he had
come. Some one, or, rather, some two men were entering the
alley. He could hear the tramping and shuffle of clumsy feet,
and voices that muttered indistinctly. One seemed to trip over
something, and cursed. The other laughed; the voices grew more
loud. They were coming his way. He dared no longer
vacillate.</p>
<p>But—which passage should he choose?</p>
<p>He moved on with more haste than discretion. One heel
slipped on a cobble time-worn to glassy smoothness; he lurched,
caught himself up in time to save a fall, lost his hat,
recovered it, and was discovered. A voice, maudlin with drink,
hailed and called upon him to stand and give an account of
himself, "like a goo' feller." Another tempted him with offers
of drink and sociable confabulation. He yielded not; adamantine
to the seductive lure, he picked up his heels and ran. Those
behind him, remarking with resentment the amazing fact that an
intimate of the mews should run away from liquor, cursed and
made after him, veering, staggering, howling like ravening
animals.</p>
<p>For all their burden of intoxication, they knew the ground
by instinct and from long association. They gained on him.
Across the way a window-sash went up with a bang, and a woman
screamed. Through the only other entrance to the mews a belated
cab was homing; its driver, getting wind of the unusual, pulled
up, blocking the way, and added his advice to the uproar.</p>
<p>Caught thus between two fires, and with his persecutors hard
upon him, Kirkwood dived into the nearest black hole of a
passageway and in sheer desperation flung himself, key in hand,
against the door at the end. Mark how his luck served him who
had forsworn her! He found a keyhole and inserted the key. It
turned. So did the knob. The door gave inward. He fell in with
it, slammed it, shot the bolts, and, panting, leaned against
its panels, in a pit of everlasting night but—saved!—for the
time being, at all events.</p>
<p>Outside somebody brushed against one wall, cannoned to the
other, brought up with a crash against the door, and, perforce
at a standstill, swore from his heart.</p>
<p>"Gorblimy!" he declared feelingly. "I'd 'a' took my oath I
sore'm run in 'ere!" And then, in answer to an inaudible
question: "No, 'e ain't. Gorn an' let the fool go to 'ell. 'Oo
wants 'im to share goo' liker? Not I!..."</p>
<p>Joining his companion he departed, leaving behind him a
trail of sulphur-tainted air. The mews quieted gradually.
Indoors Kirkwood faced unhappily the enigma of fortuity,
wondering: Was this by any possibility Number 9? The key had
fitted; the bolts had been drawn on the inside; and while the
key had been one of ordinary pattern and would no doubt have
proven effectual with any one of a hundred common locks, the
finger of probability seemed to indicate that his luck had
brought him back to Number 9. In spite of all this, he was
sensible of little confidence; though this were truly Number 9,
his freedom still lay on the knees of the gods, his very life,
belike, was poised, tottering, on a pinnacle of chance. In the
end, taking heart of desperation, he stooped and removed his
shoes; a precaution which later appealed to his sense of the
ridiculous, in view of the racket he had raised in entering,
but which at the moment seemed most natural and in accordance
with common sense. Then rising, he held his breath, staring and
listening. About him the pitch darkness was punctuated with
fading points of fire, and in his ears was a noise of strange
whisperings, very creepy—until, gritting his teeth, he
controlled his nerves and gradually realized that he was alone,
the silence undisturbed. He went forward gingerly, feeling his
way like a blind man on strange ground. Ere long he stumbled
over a door-sill and found that the walls of the passage had
fallen away; he had entered a room, a black cavern of
indeterminate dimensions. Across this he struck at random,
walked himself flat against a wall, felt his way along to an
open door, and passed through to another apartment as dark as
the first.</p>
<p>Here, endeavoring to make a circuit of the walls, he
succeeded in throwing himself bodily across a bed, which
creaked horribly; and for a full minute lay as he had fallen,
scarce daring to think. But nothing followed, and he got up and
found a shut door which let him into yet a third room, wherein
he barked both shins on a chair; and escaped to a fourth whose
atmosphere was highly flavored with reluctant odors of bygone
cookery, stale water and damp plumbing—probably the kitchen.
Thence progressing over complaining floors through what may
have been the servants' hall, a large room with a table in the
middle and a number of promiscuous chairs (witness his tortured
shins!), he finally blundered into the basement hallway.</p>
<p>By now a little calmer, he felt assured that this was really
Number 9, Frognall Street, and a little happier about it all,
though not even momentarily forgetful of the potential police
and night-watchman.</p>
<p>However, he mounted the steps to the ground floor without
adventure and found himself at last in the same dim and ghostly
hall which he had entered some six hours before; the mockery of
dusk admitted by the fan-light was just strong enough to enable
him to identify the general lay of the land and arrangement of
furniture.</p>
<p>More confidently with each uncontested step, he continued
his quest. Elation was stirring his spirit when he gained the
first floor and moved toward the foot of the second flight,
approaching the spot whereat he was to begin the search for the
missing purse. The knowledge that he lacked means of obtaining
illumination deterred him nothing; he had some hope of finding
matches in one of the adjacent rooms, but, failing that, was
prepared to ascend the stairs on all fours, feeling every inch
of their surface, if it took hours. Ever an optimistic soul,
instinctively inclined to father faith with a hope, he felt
supremely confident that his search would not prove fruitless,
that he would win early release from his temporary straits.</p>
<p>And thus it fell out that, at the instant he was thinking it
time to begin to crawl and hunt, his stockinged feet came into
contact with something heavy, yielding, warm—something that
moved, moaned, and caused his hair to bristle and his flesh to
creep.</p>
<p>We will make allowances for him; all along he had gone on
the assumption that his antagonist of the dark stairway would
have recovered and made off with all expedition, in the course
of ten or twenty minutes, at most, from the time of his
accident. To find him still there was something entirely
outside of Kirkwood's reckoning: he would as soon have thought
to encounter say, Calendar,—would have preferred the latter,
indeed. But this fellow whose disability was due to his own
interference, who was reasonably to be counted upon to raise
the very deuce and all of a row!</p>
<p>The initial shock, however shattering to his equanimity,
soon, lost effect. The man evidently remained unconscious, in
fact had barely moved; while the moan that Kirkwood heard, had
been distressingly faint.</p>
<p>"Poor devil!" murmured the young man. "He must be in a
pretty bad way, for sure!" He knelt, compassion gentling his
heart, and put one hand to the insentient face. A warm sweat
moistened his fingers; his palm was fanned by steady
respiration.</p>
<p>Immeasurably perplexed, the American rose, slipped on his
shoes and buttoned them, thinking hard the while. What ought he
to do? Obviously flight suggested itself,—incontinent flight,
anticipating the man's recovery. On the other hand, indubitably
the latter had sustained such injury that consciousness, when
it came to him, would hardly be reinforced by much aggressive
power. Moreover, it was to be remembered that the one was in
that house with quite as much warrant as the other, unless
Kirkwood had drawn a rash inference from the incident of the
ragged sentry. The two of them were mutual, if antagonistic,
trespassers; neither would dare bring about the arrest of the
other. And then—and this was not the least consideration to
influence Kirkwood—perhaps the fellow would die if he got no
attention.</p>
<p>Kirkwood shut his teeth grimly. "I'm no assassin," he
informed himself, "to strike and run. If I've maimed this poor
devil and there are consequences, I'll stand 'em. The Lord
knows it doesn't matter a damn to anybody, not even to me, what
happens to me; while <i>he</i> may be valuable."</p>
<p>Light upon the subject, actual as well as figurative, seemed
to be the first essential; his mind composed, Kirkwood set
himself in search of it. The floor he was on, however, afforded
him no assistance; the mantels were guiltless of candles and he
discovered no matches, either in the wide and silent
drawing-room, with its ghastly furniture, like mummies in their
linen swathings, or in the small boudoir at the back. He was to
look either above or below, it seemed.</p>
<p>After some momentary hesitation, he went up-stairs, his
ascent marked by a single and grateful accident; half-way to
the top he trod on an object that clinked underfoot, and,
stooping, retrieved the lost purse. Thus was he justified of
his temerity; the day was saved—that is, to-morrow was.</p>
<p>The rooms of the second-floor were bedchambers, broad, deep,
stately, inhabited by seven devils of loneliness. In one, on a
dresser, Kirkwood found a stump of candle in a china
candlestick; the two charred ends of matches at its base were
only an irritating discovery, however—evidence that real
matches had been the mode in Number 9, at some remote date.
Disgusted and oppressed by cumulative inquisitiveness, he took
the candle-end back to the hall; he would have given much for
the time and means to make a more detailed investigation into
the secret of the house.</p>
<p>Perhaps it was mostly his hope of chancing on some clue to
the mystery of Dorothy Calender—bewitching riddle that she
was!—that fascinated his imagination so completely. Aside from
her altogether, the great house that stood untenanted, yet in
such complete order, so self-contained in its darkened quiet,
intrigued him equally with the train of inexplicable events
that had brought him within its walls. Now—since his latest
entrance—his vision had adjusted itself to cope with the
obscurity to some extent; and the street lights, meagerly
reflected through the windows from the bosom of a sullen pall
of cloud, low-swung above the city, had helped him to piece
together many a detail of decoration and furnishing, alike
somber and richly dignified. Kirkwood told himself that the
owner, whoever he might be, was a man of wealth and taste
inherited from another age; he had found little of meretricious
to-day in the dwelling, much that was solid and sedate and
homely, and—Victorian.... He could have wished for more; a box
of early Victorian vestas had been highly acceptable.</p>
<p>Making his way down-stairs to the stricken man—who was
quite as he had been—Kirkwood bent over and thrust rifling
fingers into his pockets, regardless of the wretched sense of
guilt and sneakishness imparted by the action, stubbornly
heedless of the possibility of the man's awakening to find
himself being searched and robbed.</p>
<p>In the last place he sought, which should (he realized) have
been the first, to wit, the fob pocket of the white waistcoat,
he found a small gold matchbox, packed tight with wax vestas;
and, berating himself for crass stupidity—he had saved a deal
of time and trouble by thinking of this before—lighted the
candle.</p>
<p>As its golden flame shot up with scarce a tremor, preyed
upon by a perfectly excusable concern, he bent to examine the
man's countenance.... The arm which had partly hidden it had
fallen back into a natural position. It was a young face that
gleamed pallid in the candlelight—a face unlined, a little
vapid and insignificant, with features regular and neat,
betraying few characteristics other than the purely negative
attributes of a character as yet unformed, possibly unformable;
much the sort of a face that he might have expected to see,
remembering those thin and pouting lips that before had
impressed him. Its owner was probably little more than twenty.
In his attire there was a suspicion of a fop's preciseness,
aside from its accidental disarray; the cut of his waistcoat
was the extreme of the then fashion, the white tie (twisted
beneath one ear) an exaggerated "butterfly," his collar nearly
an inch too tall; and he was shod with pumps suitable only for
the dancing-floor,—a whim of the young-bloods of London of
that year.</p>
<p>"I can't make him out at all!" declared Kirkwood. "The son
of a gentleman too weak to believe that cubs need licking into
shape? Reared to man's estate, so sheltered from the wicked
world that he never grew a bark?... The sort that never had a
quarrel in his life, 'cept with his tailor?... Now what the
devil is <i>this</i> thing doing in this midnight mischief?...
Damn!"</p>
<p>It was most exasperating, the incongruity of the boy's
appearance assorted with his double rôle of persecutor of
distressed damsels and nocturnal house-breaker!</p>
<p>Kirkwood bent closer above the motionless head, with puzzled
eyes striving to pin down some elusive resemblance that he
thought to trace in those vacuous features—a resemblance to
some one he had seen, or known, at some past time, somewhere,
somehow.</p>
<p>"I give it up. Guess I'm mistaken. Anyhow, five young
Englishmen out of every ten of his class are just as blond and
foolish. Now let's see how bad he's hurt."</p>
<p>With hands strong and gentle, he turned the round, light
head. Then, "Ah!" he commented in the accent of comprehension.
For there was an angry looking bump at the base of the skull;
and, the skin having been broken, possibly in collision with
the sharp-edged newel-post, a little blood had stained and
matted the straw-colored hair.</p>
<p>Kirkwood let the head down and took thought. Recalling a
bath-room on the floor above, thither he went, unselfishly
forgetful of his predicament if discovered, and, turning on the
water, sopped his handkerchief until it dripped. Then,
returning, he took the boy's head on his knees, washed the
wound, purloined another handkerchief (of silk, with a giddy
border) from the other's pocket, and of this manufactured a
rude but serviceable bandage.</p>
<p>Toward the conclusion of his attentions, the sufferer began
to show signs of returning animation. He stirred restlessly,
whimpered a little, and sighed. And Kirkwood, in consternation,
got up.</p>
<p>"So!" he commented ruefully. "I guess I am an ass, all
right—taking all that trouble for you, my friend. If I've got
a grain of sense left, this is my cue to leave you alone in
your glory."</p>
<p>He was lingering only to restore to the boy's pockets such
articles as he had removed in the search for matches,—the
match-box, a few silver coins, a bulky sovereign purse, a
handsome, plain gold watch, and so forth. But ere he concluded
he was aware that the boy was conscious, that his eyes, open
and blinking in the candlelight, were upon him.</p>
<p>They were blue eyes, blue and shallow as a doll's, and edged
with long, fine lashes. Intelligence, of a certain degree, was
rapidly informing them. Kirkwood returned their questioning
glance, transfixed in indecision, his primal impulse to
cut-and-run for it was gone; he had nothing to fear from this
child who could not prevent his going whenever he chose to go;
while by remaining he might perchance worm from him something
about the girl.</p>
<p>"You're feeling better?" He was almost surprised to hear his
own voice put the query.</p>
<p>"I—I think so. Ow, my head!... I say, you chap, whoever you
are, what's happened?... I want to get up." The boy added
peevishly: "Help a fellow, can't you?"</p>
<p>"You've had a nasty fall," Kirkwood observed evenly, passing
an arm beneath the boy's shoulder and helping him to a sitting
position. "Do you remember?"</p>
<p>The other snuffled childishly and scrubbed across the floor
to rest his back against the wall.</p>
<p>"Why-y ... I remember fallin'; and then ... I woke up and it
was all dark and my head achin' fit to split. I presume I went
to sleep again ... I say, what're you, doing here?"</p>
<p>Instead of replying, Kirkwood lifted a warning finger.</p>
<p>"Hush!" he said tensely, alarmed by noises in the street.
"You don't suppose—?"</p>
<p>He had been conscious of a carriage rolling up from the
corner, as well as that it had drawn up (presumably) before a
near-by dwelling. Now the rattle of a key in the hall-door was
startlingly audible. Before he could move, the door itself
opened with a slam.</p>
<p>Kirkwood moved toward the stair-head, and drew back with a
cry of disgust. "Too late!" he told himself bitterly; his
escape was cut off. He could run up-stairs and hide, of course,
but the boy would inform against him and....</p>
<p>He buttoned up his coat, settled his hat on his head, and
moved near the candle, where it rested on the floor. One
glimpse would suffice to show him the force of the intruders,
and one move of his foot put out the light;
then— <i>perhaps</i>—he might be able to rush them.</p>
<p>Below, a brief pause had followed the noise of the door, as
if those entering were standing, irresolute, undecided which
way to turn; but abruptly enough the glimmer of candlelight
must have been noticed. Kirkwood heard a hushed exclamation, a
quick clatter of high heels on the parquetry, pattering feet on
the stairs, all but drowned by swish and ripple of silken
skirts; and a woman stood at the head of the flight—to the
American an apparition profoundly amazing as she paused, the
light from the floor casting odd, theatric shadows beneath her
eyes and over her brows, edging her eyes themselves with
brilliant light beneath their dark lashes, showing her lips
straight and drawn, and shimmering upon the spangles of an
evening gown, visible beneath the dark cloak which had fallen
back from her white, beautiful shoulders.</p>
<center>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />