Part 16 (1/2)
”What are you going to do with your Freak? ” called out Julius Steinberger.
Tembarom actually started. As things had surged over him, he had had too much to think over. He had not had time to give to his strange responsibility; it had become one nevertheless.
”Are you going to leave him behind when you go to England?”
He leaned forward and put his chin on his hand.
”Why, say,” he said, as though he were thinking it out, ”he's spoken about England two or three times. He's said he must go there. By jings! I'll take him with me, and see what'll happen.”
When Little Ann got up to leave the room he followed her and her father into the hall.
”May I come up and talk it over with you?” he appealed. ”I've got to talk to some one who knows something about it. I shall go dotty if I don't. It's too much like a dream.”
”Come on up when you're ready,” answered Hutchinson. ”Ann and me can give you a tip or two.”
”I'm going to be putting the last things in the trunks,” said Ann, ”but I dare say you won't mind that. The express'll be here by eight in the morning.”
”0 Lord!” groaned Tembarom.
When he went up to the fourth floor a little later, Hutchinson had fallen into a doze in his chair over his newspaper, and Ann was kneeling by a trunk in the hall, folding small articles tightly, and fitting them into corners. To Tembarom she looked even more than usual like a slight child thing one could s.n.a.t.c.h up in one's arms and carry about or set on one's knee without feeling her weight at all. An inferior gas-jet on the wall just above her was doing its best with the lot of soft, red hair, which would have been an untidy bundle if it had not been hers.
Tembarom sat down on the trunk next to her.
”0 Little Ann!” he broke out under his breath, lest the sound of his voice might check Hutchinson's steady snoring. ”0 Little Ann!”
Ann leaned back, sitting upon her small heels, and looked up at him.
”You're all upset, and it's not to be wondered at, Mr. Temple Barholm,” she said.
”Upset! You're going away to-morrow morning! And, for the Lord's sake, don't call me that!” he protested.
”You're going away yourself next Wednesday. And you ARE Mr. Temple Barholm. You'll never be called anything else in England.
”How am I going to stand it?” he protested again. ”How could a fellow like me stand it! To be yanked out of good old New York, and set down in a place like a museum, with Central Park round it, and called Mr.
Temple Temple Barholm instead of just 'Tem' or 'T. T.'! It's not natural.”
”What you must do, Mr. Temple Barholm, is to keep your head clear, that's all,” she replied maturely.
”Lord! if I'd got a head like yours!”
She seemed to take him in, with a benign appreciativeness, in his entirety.
”Well, you haven't,” she admitted, though quite without disparagement, merely with slight reservation. ”But you've got one like your own. And it's a good head--when you try to think steady. Yours is a man's head, and mine's only a woman's.”
”It's Little Ann Hutchinson's, by gee!” said Tembarom, with feeling.
”Listen here, Mr. Tem--Temple Barholm,” she went on, as nearly disturbed as he had ever seen her outwardly. ”It's a wonderful thing that's happened to you. It's like a novel. That splendid place, that splendid name! It seems so queer to think I should ever have talked to a Mr. Temple Barholm as I've talked to you.”
He leaned forward a little as though something drew him.