Part 20 (1/2)
Now this all seems a long way from John Barclay--the hero of this romance. Yet the departure of Watts McHurdie for his scene of glory was on the same day that a most important thing happened in the lives of Bob Hendricks and Molly Brownwell. That day Bob Hendricks walked one end of the station platform alone. The east-bound train was half an hour late, and while the veterans were teasing Watts and the women railing at Mrs. McHurdie, Hendricks discovered that it was one hundred and seventy-eight steps from one end of the walk to the other, and that to go entirely around the building made the distance fifty-four steps more. It was almost train time before Adrian Brownwell arrived.
When the dapper little chap came with his bright crimson carnation, and his flas.h.i.+ng red necktie, and his inveterate gloves and cane, Hendricks came only close enough to him to smell the perfume on the man's clothes, and to nod to him. But when Hendricks found that the man was going with the Culpeppers as far as Cleveland, as he told the entire depot platform, ”to report the trip,” Hendricks sat on a baggage truck beside the depot, and considered many things. As he was sitting there Dolan came up, out of breath, and fearful he should be late.
”How long will you be gone, Jake?” asked Hendricks.
”The matter of a week or ten days, maybe,” answered Dolan.
”Well, Jake,” said Hendricks, looking at Dolan with serious eyes, yet rather abstractedly, ”I am thinking of taking a long trip--to be gone a long time--I don't know exactly how long. I may not go at all--I haven't said anything to the boys in the store or the bank or out at the shop about it; it isn't altogether settled--as yet.” He paused while a switch engine clanged by and the crowd surged out of the depot, and ebbed back again into their seats. ”Did you deliver my note this morning?”
”Yes,” replied Dolan, ”just as you said. That's what made me a little late.”
”To the lady herself?”
”To the lady herself,” repeated Dolan.
”All right,” acquiesced Hendricks. ”Now, Jake, if I give it out that I'm going away on a trip, there'll be a lot of pulling and hauling and fussing around in the bank and in the store and at the shop and--every place, and then I may not go. So I've gone over every concern carefully during the past week, and have set down what ought to be done in case I'm gone. I didn't tell my sister even--she's so nervous. And, Jake, I won't tell any one. But if, when you get back from Was.h.i.+ngton, I'm not here, I'm going to leave this key with you.
Tell the boys at the bank that it will open my tin box, and in the tin box they'll find some instructions about things.” He smiled, and Dolan a.s.sented. Hendricks uncoiled his legs from the truck, and began to get down. ”I won't mix up with the old folks, I guess, Jake. They have their own affairs, and I'm tired. I worked all last night,” he added.
He held out his hand to Dolan and said, ”Well, good-by, Jake--have a good time.”
The elder man had walked away a few steps when Hendricks called him back, and fumbling in his pockets, said: ”Well, Jake, I certainly am a fool; here--” he pulled an envelope marked ”Dolan” from his inside pocket--”Jake, I was in the bank this morning, and I found a picture for you. Take it and have a good time. It's a long time till pension day--so long.”
The Irishman peeped at the bill and grinned as he said, ”Them holy pictures from the bank, my boy, have powerful healing qualities.” And he marched off with joy in his carriage.
Hendricks then resumed his tramp; up and down the long platform he went, stepping on cracks one way, and avoiding cracks the next, thinking it all out. He tried to remember if he had been unfair to any one; if he had left any ragged edges; if he had taken a penny more than his honest due. The letter to the county treasurer, returning the money his father had taken, was on top of the pile of papers in his tin box at the bank. He had finally concluded, that when everything else was known, that would not add much to his disgrace. And then it would be paid, and that page with the forged entry would not always be in his mind. There were deeds, each witnessed by a different notary, so that the town would not gossip before he went, transferring all of his real estate to his sister, and the stock he had sold to the bank was transferred, and the records all in the box; then he went over the prices again at which he had disposed of his holdings to the bank, and he was sure he had made good bargains in every case for the bank. So it was all fair, he argued for the thousandth time--he was all square with the world. He had left a deposit subject to his check of twenty thousand dollars--that ought to do until they could get on their feet somewhere; and it was all his, he said to himself--all his, and no one's business.
And when he thought of the other part, the voice of Adrian Brownwell saying, ”Well, come on, old lady, we must be going,” rose in his consciousness. It was not so much Brownwell's words, as his air of patronage and possession; it was cheerful enough, quite gay in fact, but Hendricks asked himself a hundred times why the man didn't whistle for her, and clamp a steel collar about her neck. He wondered cynically if at the bottom of Brownwell's heart, he would not rather have the check for twelve thousand dollars which Hendricks had left for Colonel Culpepper, to pay off the Brownwell note, than to have his wife. For seven years the colonel had been cheerfully neglecting it, and now Hendricks knew that Adrian was troubling him about the old debt.
As he rounded the depot for the tenth time he got back to their last meeting. There stood General Ward with his arm about the girlish waist of Mrs. Ward, the mother of seven. There was John Barclay with Jane beside him, and they were holding hands like lovers. The Ward children were running like rabbits over the broad lawn under the elms, and there, talking to the wide, wide world, was Adrian Brownwell, propounding the philosophy of the _Banner_, and quoting from last week's editorials. And there sat Bob and Molly by the flower bed that bordered the porch.
”I am going to the city to hear Gilmore,” he said. That was simple enough, and her sigh had no meaning either. It was just a weary little sigh, such as women sometimes bring forth when they decide to say something else. So she had said: ”I'll be all alone next week. I think I'll visit Jane--if she's in town.”
Then something throbbed in his brain and made him say:--
”So you'd like to hear Gilmore, too?”
She coloured and was silent, and the pulse of madness that was beating in her made her answer:--
”Oh--I can't--you know the folks are going to Was.h.i.+ngton to the encampment, and Adrian is going as far as Cleveland with the delegation to write it up.”
An impulse loosened his tongue, and he asked:--
”Why not? Come on. If you don't know any one up there, go to the Fifth Avenue; it's all right, and I'll get tickets, and we'll go every night and both matinees. Come on!” he urged.
She was aflame and could not think. ”Oh--don't, Bob, don't--not now.
Please don't,” she begged, in as low a tone as she dared to use.
Adrian was thundering on about the tariff, and the general was wrangling with him. The Barclays were talking to themselves, and the children were clattering about underfoot, and in the trees overhead.
Bob's eyes and Molly's met, and the man shuddered at what he saw of pathos and yearning, and he said: ”Well, why not? It's no worse to go than to want to go. What's wrong about it--Molly, do you think--”
He did not finish the sentence, for Adrian had ceased talking, and Molly, seeing his jealous eyes upon her, rose and moved away. But before they left that night she found occasion to say, ”I've been thinking about it, Bob, and maybe I will.”