Part 4 (1/2)

”But WHO saw you?” insisted Mrs. Vertrees.

”One of the sons, I suppose he was. I believe he's insane, or something.

At least I hear they keep him in a sanitarium somewhere, and never talk about him. He was staring at himself in a mirror and talking to himself.

Then he looked out and caught me.”

”What did he--”

”Nothing, of course.”

”How did he look?”

”Like a ghost in a blue suit,” said Miss Vertrees, moving toward the street and waving a white-gloved hand in farewell to her father, who was observing them from the window of his library. ”Rather tragic and altogether impossible. Do come on, mother, and let's get it over!”

And Mrs. Vertrees, with many misgivings, set forth with her daughter for their gracious a.s.sault upon the New House next door.

CHAPTER V

Mr. Vertrees, having watched their departure with the air of a man who had something at hazard upon the expedition, turned from the window and began to pace the library thoughtfully, pending their return. He was about sixty; a small man, withered and dry and fine, a trim little sketch of an elderly dandy. His lambrequin mustache--relic of a forgotten Anglomania--had been profoundly black, but now, like his smooth hair, it was approaching an equally sheer whiteness; and though his clothes were old, they had shapeliness and a flavor of mode. And for greater spruceness there were some jaunty touches; gray spats, a narrow black ribbon across the gray waistcoat to the eye-gla.s.ses in a pocket, a fleck of color from a b.u.t.ton in the lapel of the black coat, labeling him the descendant of patriot warriors.

The room was not like him, being cheerful and hideous, whereas Mr.

Vertrees was anxious and decorative. Under a mantel of imitation black marble a merry little coal-fire beamed forth upon high and narrow ”Eastlake” bookcases with long gla.s.s doors, and upon comfortable, incongruous furniture, and upon meaningless ”woodwork” everywhere, and upon half a dozen Landseer engravings which Mr. and Mrs. Vertrees sometimes mentioned to each other, after thirty years of possession, as ”very fine things.” They had been the first people in town to possess Landseer engravings, and there, in art, they had rested, but they still had a feeling that in all such matters they were in the van; and when Mr. Vertrees discovered Landseers upon the walls of other people's houses he thawed, as a chieftain to a trusted follower; and if he found an edition of Bulwer Lytton accompanying the Landseers as a final corroboration of culture, he would say, inevitably, ”Those people know good pictures and they know good books.”

The growth of the city, which might easily have made him a millionaire, had ruined him because he had failed to understand it. When towns begin to grow they have whims, and the whims of a town always ruin somebody.

Mr. Vertrees had been most strikingly the somebody in this case. At about the time he bought the Landseers, he owned, through inheritance, an office-building and a large house not far from it, where he spent the winter; and he had a country place--a farm of four hundred acres--where he went for the summers to the comfortable, ugly old house that was his home now, perforce, all the year round. If he had known how to sit still and let things happen he would have prospered miraculously; but, strangely enough, the dainty little man was one of the first to fall down and wors.h.i.+p Bigness, the which proceeded straightway to enact the role of Juggernaut for his better education. He was a true prophet of the prodigious growth, but he had a fatal gift for selling good and buying bad. He should have stayed at home and looked at his Landseers and read his Bulwer, but he took his cow to market, and the trained milkers milked her dry and then ate her. He sold the office-building and the house in town to buy a great tract of lots in a new suburb; then he sold the farm, except the house and the ground about it, to pay the taxes on the suburban lots and to ”keep them up.” The lots refused to stay up; but he had to do something to keep himself and his family up, so in despair he sold the lots (which went up beautifully the next year) for ”traction stock” that was paying dividends; and thereafter he ceased to buy and sell. Thus he disappeared altogether from the commercial surface at about the time James Sheridan came out securely on top; and Sheridan, until Mrs. Vertrees called upon him with her ”anti-smoke”

committee, had never heard the name.

Mr. Vertrees, pinched, retired to his Landseers, and Mrs. Vertrees ”managed somehow” on the dividends, though ”managing” became more and more difficult as the years went by and money bought less and less. But there came a day when three servitors of Bigness in Philadelphia took greedy counsel with four fellow-wors.h.i.+pers from New York, and not long after that there were no more dividends for Mr. Vertrees. In fact, there was nothing for Mr. Vertrees, because the ”traction stock” henceforth was no stock at all, and he had mortgaged his house long ago to help ”manage somehow” according to his conception of his ”position in life”--one of his own old-fas.h.i.+oned phrases. Six months before the completion of the New House next door, Mr. Vertrees had sold his horses and the worn Victoria and ”station-wagon,” to pay the arrears of his two servants and re-establish credit at the grocer's and butcher's--and a pair of elderly carriage-horses with such accoutrements are not very ample barter, in these days, for six months' food and fuel and service.

Mr. Vertrees had discovered, too, that there was no salary for him in all the buzzing city--he could do nothing.

It may be said that he was at the end of his string. Such times do come in all their bitterness, finally, to the man with no trade or craft, if his feeble clutch on that slippery ghost, Property, shall fail.

The windows grew black while he paced the room, and smoky twilight closed round about the house, yet not more darkly than what closed round about the heart of the anxious little man patrolling the fan-shaped zone of firelight. But as the mantel clock struck wheezily six there was the rattle of an outer door, and a rich and beautiful peal of laughter went ringing through the house. Thus cheerfully did Mary Vertrees herald her return with her mother from their expedition among the barbarians.

She came rus.h.i.+ng into the library and threw herself into a deep chair by the hearth, laughing so uncontrollably that tears were in her eyes. Mrs.

Vertrees followed decorously, no mirth about her; on the contrary, she looked vaguely disturbed, as if she had eaten something not quite certain to agree with her, and regretted it.

”Papa! Oh, oh!” And Miss Vertrees was fain to apply a handkerchief upon her eyes. ”I'm SO glad you made us go! I wouldn't have missed it--”

Mrs. Vertrees shook her head. ”I suppose I'm very dull,” she said, gently. ”I didn't see anything amusing. They're most ordinary, and the house is altogether in bad taste, but we antic.i.p.ated that, and--”

”Papa!” Mary cried, breaking in. ”They asked us to DINNER!”

”What!”

”And I'm GOING!” she shouted, and was seized with fresh paroxysms.

”Think of it! Never in their house before; never met any of them but the daughter--and just BARELY met her--”