Part 29 (1/2)

”Which, occasionally, it is,” added Tom seriously.

Dudley threw himself back into his chair and crossed his shapely legs.

For a moment he smoked in silence, then he removed his cigar from his mouth and flecked the ashes upon the uncarpeted floor.

”Oh! the mystery to me is,” he said, ”that you exist down here and live to tell the tale--or at least that you earn enough crumbs to feed the crows.”

”Kingsborough crows aren't high livers,” remarked Nicholas as he threw himself into the remaining chair.

Dudley laughed softly--a humorous laugh that fell pleasantly on the ear.

”That reminds me,” he began whimsically. ”I met a tourist with spectacles walking along Duke of Gloucester Street. 'Sir,' he said courteously, 'I am looking for Kingsborough. I am told that it is a city.' 'Sir,' I responded, with a bow that did honour to my grandfather's ghost, 'it was once a chartered city; it is now only a charter.'”

Then he turned to Tom.

”We haven't got used to the railroad yet, have we?” he asked.

Tom shook his head.

”General Battle's still protesting,” he replied. ”He swears it makes Kingsborough common.”

Dudley thoughtfully examined his cigar, an amused smile about his mouth.

”My mother doesn't want the cows turned out of the churchyard,” he observed, ”because it would abolish one of Kingsborough's characteristics. She's right, too, by Jove.”

”They're having a fight over it now,” put in Nicholas with the gravity he rarely lost. ”The people who own cows call it an 'ancient right.' The people who don't, call it sacrilege. The rector leads one faction, and the congregation has split.”

”And split we smash,” added Dudley. ”Well, these are exciting times in Kingsborough's history; it is almost as lively as Richmond. There we had a religious convention and an elopement last week. I don't suppose you come up to that?”

Nicholas ran his hand through his hair with a habitual gesture. He was idly watching the light of Dudley's cigar and noting the quality by the aroma. He could not afford cigars himself, and he wondered how Dudley managed to do so.

”We are a people without a present,” he returned inattentively. ”You've heard, I take it, that an old elm has gone near the court-house.”

”My mother told me. I believe she knows every brick that used to be and is not. I'm trying to get her away with me, but she won't come.”

”Sally Burwell was telling me,” said Tom, a dawning interest in his face, ”she had tried to persuade her.”

”Yes, we tried and failed. By the way, is it true that Sally's engaged to Jack Wyth? I hear it at every turn.”

”I--I shouldn't be surprised,” gasped Tom painfully.

”I don't believe a word of it,” protested Nicholas.

”He isn't much good, eh?”

”Why, he's a brick,” said Nicholas.

”He's a cad,” said Tom.

Dudley laughed and blew a cloud of smoke in the air.

”Well, she's a daisy herself, and as good as gold. She's the kind of woman to flirt herself hoa.r.s.e and then settle down into dove-like domesticity. But what about Eugie? Is she really grown up? My mother declares she's splendid.”