Part 20 (1/2)
”I've already got it,” Quin said. ”Mr. Bangs told me to-day that I was to start in as s.h.i.+pping clerk Monday morning. But he'd let me off nights if I'd put it up to him. Old Chester says----”
Miss Enid's Pre-Raphaelite brows contracted slightly. ”Don't you think it would be more respectful----”
”Sure,” agreed Quin; ”I didn't mean any harm. I like Mr. Chester. He asked me to come up to his rooms some night and see his collection of flutes.”
”That was like him,” Miss Enid said warmly. ”He's always doing kind things like that. I know his reputation for being diffident and hard to get acquainted with, but once you get beneath the surface----”
Quin was not in the least interested in Mr. Chester's surface. He sat on the edge of the table, swinging his foot and staring off into s.p.a.ce, wholly absorbed in the idea of cultivating that newly discovered intellect of his.
”Say, Miss Enid,” he said, impulsively interrupting her eulogy of Mr.
Chester's neglected virtues, ”I wish you'd sort of take me in hand. _You_ know what I need better than I do. If you'll get a line on that school business, I'll start right in, if I have to start in the kindergarten.
Hand out the dope and I'll take it. And whenever you see me doing things wrong, or saying things wrong, I'd take it as a favor if you'd jack me up.”
Miss Enid smiled ruefully. ”Why, Quinby, that is just what we have all been doing ever since you came. If you weren't the best-natured----”
”Not a bit of it,” disclaimed Quin. ”Queen Vic lets me have it in the neck sometimes, but that's nothing. I've learned more since I've been in this house than I ever learned in all my life put together. Why, sometimes I don't hardly know myself!”
”Two negatives, Quinby, make an affirmative,” suggested Miss Enid primly; and thus his higher education began.
Miss Enid was right when she said his mind was above the average. Its one claim to superiority lay in the fact that it had received the little training it had at first hand. What he knew of geography he knew, not from maps, but from actual observation in many parts of the world. Higher mathematics were unknown to him, but through years of experience he had learned to solve the most difficult of all problems--that of making ends meet. He had learned astronomy from a Norwegian sailor, as they lay on the deck of a Pacific transport night after night in the southern seas.
He had even tackled literature during his six months in hospital, when he had plowed through all the books the wards provided from Dante's ”Inferno” to ”Dere Mable.”
Soon after his talk with Miss Enid he decided to call upon Mr. Chester, not because Mr. Chester was an enlivening companion, but because he was so touchingly grateful for the casual friends.h.i.+p that Quin bestowed upon him.
”He's so sort of lonesome,” Quin told Miss Leaks. ”When he looks at me with those big dog eyes of his, I feel like scratching him back of his ear.”
Mr. Chester, in his small but tastefully furnished bachelor apartment, outdid himself in his efforts to be hospitable. He insisted upon Quin taking the best chair, gave him a good cigar, showed him some rare first editions, displayed his collection of musical instruments, and struggled valiantly to establish a common footing. But there was only one subject upon which they could find anything to say, and they came back again and again to the affairs of the Bartlett family.
”Why don't you ever come around and see the folks?” Quin asked hospitably. ”They get awful lonesome with so few people dropping in.”
Mr. Chester in evident embarra.s.sment flicked the ash from his cigar and answered guardedly:
”I used to be there a great deal in the old days. Unfortunately, Madam Bartlett and I had a misunderstanding. As a matter of fact, I have not crossed that threshold in--let me see--it must be fifteen years! It was a party, I remember, given for Eleanor, the little granddaughter, on her fifth birthday.”
”Oh, yes!” said Quin, finding Mr. Chester for the first time interesting.
”They've got a picture of her taken with Miss Enid in her party dress.”
”I suppose you mean this?” Mr. Chester reached over and took from his desk a somewhat faded photograph, in a silver frame, of a little girl leaning against a big girl's shoulders, both enveloped in a cloud of white tulle.
”Gee, but she was pretty!” exclaimed Quin, devouring every detail of Eleanor's chubby features.
”A beautiful woman,” sighed Mr. Chester--and Quin, looking up suddenly, surprised a look in his host's eyes that was anything but numerical.
Obligingly relinquis.h.i.+ng his application of the p.r.o.noun for Mr.
Chester's, he said: