Part 43 (1/2)

A brazen minx I had once thought her, but tonight in her plain white frock and sober conventional surroundings she seemed to show something of the quiet poise of a nurse or a nun. She seemed to exemplify the thought that the ideal woman is both wood-nymph and madonna. By contrast to the Nietzschian intriguer I had left that morning at Briar Hills, she was a paragon of all virtues. Nietzsche! The philosopher of the sty! Freud, his runt!

When, the following morning, I found Jack Ballard in his apartment at eleven (as usual fastening his cravat) I told him of the unfortunate end to my ventures, but he only laughed at me.

”My dear Pope,” he said, ”you are suffering from a severe attack of paternomania. If you don't mind my saying so, you're making a prodigious a.s.s of yourself and of Jerry. If I were the boy, I'd pack you out bag and baggage. Imagine it! Put yourself in his place. Would _you_ like any meddling in your little affairs of gallantry?” And he laughed aloud at his joke. I scowled at him, but pa.s.sed the absurd remark in dignified silence.

”If it _were_ an affair of gallantry!” I said at last, ”I could forgive him that, and her. But this--it's mere milk and water and he thinks it's the nectar of the G.o.ds. The pity of it!”

”A pity, yes. But who is responsible? Not Jerry, surely. He's what you've made him,” Jack paused expressively. ”Does he--?” he began and paused. I read his meaning.

”No,” I said.

”Um! Knowledge will come like a thunderclap to Jerry. Then--look out!”

I agreed with him.

”But Jerry's amatory ventures are none of your business, Pope,” he went on. ”Let the boy go the limit. He has got to do it. It won't hurt him. I told you that Marcia would help him cut his eye-teeth. She's doing it in approved modern fas.h.i.+on, without instruments or gas.

He'll recover. Let 'em alone. I'll tell you what to do. Just put your precious dialectics in cold storage awhile--they'll keep; n.o.body'll thaw 'em out unless you do--and take a trip to 'Frisco.”

”Frisco or not, I meddle no more.”

”Frankenstein!” he laughed again. ”The monster is getting away from you.”

”If you're going to be facetious--”

”There are times when nothing else is possible. This is one of 'em.

Brace up, old boy. All's lost but hope and that's going soon. You go home and take a pill. You're yellow. Perhaps I'll come up for the week-end for Marcia's party, you know,--if you'll promise to have the beds well-aired. I'm sure they're reminiscent of Jerry's pugs. Going?

Oh, very well. Love to Jerry. And remember, old top, that a man is as heaven made him and sometimes a great deal worse.”

This was the comforting reflection I took with me to the train that afternoon. But I was now resigned. I had done what I could and failed.

The only thing left, it seemed, was to reconcile myself to the situation, seek a friends.h.i.+p with Marcia and await the _debacle_.

I made, of course, no mention of the object of my visit to New York and Jerry gave me no confidences. He went to town Tuesday and Wednesday, returned tired and sullen. And the next night after a long period alone in the study in which I had managed at last to get my mind on my work, I found Jerry in the dining-room quite drunk with the brandy bottle beside him. He was ugly and disposed to be quarrelsome, but I got him to bed at last, suffering myself no graver damage than a bruised biceps where his great fingers had grasped me. Jack Ballard's remark about Frankenstein was no joke. That night a monster Jerry was; from the bottom of my heart I pitied him.

I argued with Jerry in the morning, pleaded with him and threatened to leave the Manor, but he was so contrite, so earnest in his promises of reformation that I couldn't find it in my heart to go. I proposed a trip to Europe, but he refused.

”Not now, Roger,” he demurred. ”I've got to stay here now. Just stick around with me for awhile, won't you, old chap?”

”Will you stop drinking?” I asked.

”Brandy?”

”Everything.”

”H--m. You're the devil of a martinet.”

”Will you?”

It was the supreme test of what remained of my influence over him. His head ached, I'm sure, for he looked a wreck. I watched his face anxiously. He went to the table, took a cigarette from the box and lighted it deliberately. Then turning, faced me with a smile, and offered his hand.

”Yes,” he said. ”Old Dry-as-dust, I will.”