Part 3 (1/2)
”That happens to be a case I'll never forget,” he went on to explain.
”Professionally speaking, it was unique, but it had points of human interest as well. The girl was a patient in one of the wards at the Presbyterian. I didn't get a look at her until the last minute when it was desperate. Her father was opposed to the operation--a religious scruple, it turned out. Didn't want G.o.d's will interfered with. He was a workman, a skilled workman in a piano factory. There was no time to lose so I drove out there and got him; converted him on the way back to the hospital. I remember the son, now I think of it; by his speech, too. I remember thinking that the mother must have been a really cultivated woman. Well, it's all right. I've got the address in the files at the office. I'll send a letter there in the morning and enclose a check. How much ought it to be?”
Once more Paula did not know. Hadn't, she protested, an idea; and when John asked her how much she paid Bernstein, she didn't know that either.
It all went on the bill.
”Well, that's easy,” said John. ”I've got last month's bills in my desk.
All right, I'll look into it. You needn't bother about it any more.”
An approximation to a sniff from Miss Wollaston conveyed the comment that Paula hadn't bothered appreciably about it from the beginning, but neither of the others paid any attention to that.
As it fell out, John might have spared his labors because at eight o'clock or thereabouts the next morning just as he was sitting down to breakfast, Anthony March came back to repair his omission of the day before and tune the drawing-room piano.
A minor domestic detail of that sort would normally have fallen within Lucile's province, but John decisively took it away from her.
”When I finish breakfast,” he said, ”I'll write him a check and take it in to him.” He added, ”I'm curious to see what this new discovery of Paula's looks like.”
That was exactly what he felt, an amused comfortable curiosity. Nothing in the least like that flash of jealousy he had felt over Novelli. If it had occurred to him to try to explain the difference to himself and had he taken the trouble to skim off the superficial explanation,--that Portia Stanton's husband belonged in Paula's world and that a tramp genius who came around to tune pianos did not,--he might have got down to the recognition of the fact that the character Paula had sketched for him last night was a grotesque and not therefore to be taken seriously. You could not, at least, do anything but smile over a man who sat on the floor under Paula's piano while she played and came crawling out to express surprise that a singer should be a musician as well.
So the look of the man he found in the drawing-room stopped him rather short. Anthony March had taken off the ill-fitting khaki blouse and the sleeves of his olive-drab uniform s.h.i.+rt were rolled up above the elbows.
He was sitting sidewise on the piano bench, his left hand on the keyboard, his right making imperceptible changes in the tension of one of the strings. His implement, John's quick eye noticed, was not the long-handled L shaped affair he had always seen tuners use but a T shaped thing that put the tuner's hand exactly above the pin.
”It must take an immense amount of strength,” he observed, ”to tune a piano with a wrench like that.”
March turned and with a pleasant sort of smile wished him a good morning.
But he finished ironing the wave out of a faulty unison before he replied to John's remark. He arose from the bench as he spoke. ”It does; but it is more a matter of knack really. A great tuner named Clark taught me, and he learned it from Jonas Chickering himself. Old Jonas wouldn't allow any of his grand pianos to be tuned with an L head wrench.”
”My wife,” said John, ”recalled you to me last night, in the effort to remedy her omission to pay you for your services yesterday. I remember your sister's case very distinctly. I hope she is ...”
”She is quite well, thank you,” March said. Oddly enough his manner stiffened a little.
John hastily produced his check. It had struck him as possible that March might suspect him of hinting that one gratuitous service ought to offset the other.
”I hope the amount is satisfactory,” he said.
March glanced at the check and smiled. ”It's rather more than satisfactory; I should call it handsome. Thank you very much.” He tucked the check into the pocket of his s.h.i.+rt.
”My wife's immensely pleased over what you did to her piano. I'm sure she will be glad to do all she can in the way of recommending you among her musical friends.”
March looked at him in consternation. ”Oh, she mustn't do that!” he cried. ”I hope she won't--recommend me to any one.”
John's sudden unwelcome surmise must have been legible in his face because March then said earnestly and quite as if the doctor had spoken his thought aloud, ”Oh, it isn't that. I mean, I haven't done anything disgraceful. It's only that I know too many musicians as it is--professional pianists and such. If they find out I'm back, they'll simply make a slave of me. I don't need to earn much money and I like to live my own way, but it's hard to deny people what they are determined to get.” He added thoughtfully, ”I dare say you understand that, sir.”
John Wollaston nodded. He understood very well indeed. He checked on his tongue the words, ”Only I _have_ to earn a lot of money.” ”You are a composer, too, my wife tells me.”
”Yes,” March said, ”but that isn't the point exactly. Put it that I enjoy traveling light and that I don't like harness. Though this one,”--he glanced down at his uniform,--”hasn't been so bad.” He turned toward the piano with the evident idea of going back to work.
”Well,” John said, ”I must be off. You've a good philosophy of life if you can make it work. Not many men can. Good-by. We'll meet again some time, I hope.”