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(ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.) , 1 % ScCJND COPY, a /. fey / tsfyU Jf, /foe CONTENTS CHAPTER PAGE I The Bartons of Talledega. 7 II Lord Asquith Apohaqui.12 III Mr. Rhett Calhoun of Alabama .... 18 IV Lord Apohaqui meets the Bartons ... 31 V Lord Apohaqui meets Mr. Rhett Calhoun . 45 VI Mr. Green Gassaway of Louisiana ... 49 VII Lord Apohaqui meets the Author of the G. A. N.60 VIII Mr. Blower’s Prodigies.68 IX Lady Apohaqui calls on the Bartons . 81 X Lord Bunger of Wendham Castle ... 92 XI Lord Bunger’s Castle.105 XII Lord Bunger Proposes.118 XIII Mr. Gassaway’s Burglar.136 •XIV The Bartons dine in Great Barrington Square.141 XV Lord Bunger is Exposed.149 XVI From Palace to Prison.159 XVII Lord Apohaqui and Grace Barton go Shop¬ ping . .164 XVIII Grace Barton’s Trial.176 XIX Lady Apohaqui Disapproves of the Bartons 193 XX A Comedy in Tyrol.206 XXI Count Volpi Proposes.222 XXII The Flight to Siena.238 XXIII Mr. Wookey’s Social Ambition .... 244 XXIV Count Volpi’s Coup d’etat ..... 253 XXV At Midnight in San Quirico.265 XXVI Lord Apohaqui Proposes.274 XXVII Conclusion.283 A LORD’S COURTSHIP. CHAPTER I. THE BARTONS OF TALLEDEGA. It was ten minutes after midnight when Miss Grace Barton returned from Mrs. Huntington Brown's musi- cale and announced her intention of taking the family abroad. Even under the most favorable circumstances such an announcement would have disturbed Mrs. Bal- lington Barton’s nerves. Coming in the middle of the night when suddenly awakened from profound slumber, she was almost dazed. Pulling herself up so that she sat rather than lay in bed, Mrs. Barton stared at her daughter. “Going to Europe?” she ejaculated. “That’s the plan, mamma. We must hurry and be ready by the first of May.” “Did you say Europe?” Like most persons who have never left their own firesides, Mrs. Barton fancied that Europe was at the end of the earth. “Yes, mamma. That is just what I said.” “Grace,” solemnly, “what do you mean?” “Exactly what I said, mamma. Clara and I have talked it all over. We must start by the first of May.” “We couldn’t keep it until morning,” burst out Miss Clara, excitedly. “We wanted you to know right away. We have ever so many things to buy, traveling gowns to make, trunks to see after, and—and—lots of things.” “Oh, dear!” sighed Mrs. Barton, fully awake now to the purpose of her daughters, “what an awful bother it will be. Please don’t!” “Mamma, we must go,” said Grace firmly. “We have (?) 8 THE BARTONS OF TALLEDEGA looked the question all over and feel that we must go. There’s Clara’s voice-” “Voice? What on earth has Clara’s voice to' do with the matter?” “Everything, mamma. It must be cultivated. Don’t you know Clara’s voice will equal Patti’s when it is laised up to D? It must be raised up to D, and that is why we are going to Europe, to Milan. Signore Tomaso says it is the only sensible thing to do.” “Signore Tomaso?” repeated Mrs. Barton, with mild scorn. “Grace, don’t tell me what that jerky little Ital¬ ian says.” “Signore Tomaso is a genius, mamma,” insisted Grace. “He is an authority on musical matters, and says that Clara’s voice must be cultivated up to D.” “What is to become of your poor mother while Clara’s voice is being dragged up to D?” tearfully demanded Mrs. Barton. “Mamma, did you think we would go without you? No, indeed, and that brings me to the other reasons why we must go to Europe. While Clara is cultivating her voice, you and I will see the sights—the wonderful pictures and palaces and churches. I know you will enjoy them. I’ll take you everywhere. I will be your guide, and pay all the bills and look after things—oh, you will have a lovely time!” Mrs. Barton made one last effort for peace and quiet in her own home: “Go to bed, girls—go to sleep and let Europe alone. I wouldn’t live in Europe if they gave me a gold crown to wear. I don’t like kings and queens.” “Mamma,” said Grace, earnestly, “we don’t like kings or queens any more than you do, and we both promise we won’t wear golden crowns—no, not if the people get on their knees and beg us to. But we are going to Europe, mamma, and you are going, too.” Grace Barton had features like her mother’s but there the resemblance ended. Grace was lithe and slender, while Mrs. Barton was plump almost to the point of THE BARTONS OF TALLEDEGA 9 pudginess. The daughter was as firm and self-reliant as the mother was soft and yielding. Mrs. Barton, although still on the sunny side of forty and a rather handsome woman, seemed to dread locomotion; her idea of perfect felicity was repose. She was never so> happy as when reclining on her couch reading a novel; since the death of her husband, Colonel Alpheus Barton, five years be¬ fore the opening of this story, Grace had been practically the head of the family. At the time of Col. Barton’s death their home was in Talledega, Alabama. When the Colonel’s simple affairs were wound up, Grace came to the conclusion that it would be better for the family to move to Bir¬ mingham. “We can never do anything in Talledega,” she said. “Let us sell our land and invest in Birmingham lots. People say there is a big boom in Birmingham. There are coal and iron mines there. We will find something. What is the good of staying here like the cabbage in our garden?” Mrs. Barton sighed softly. Although, she inwardly shrunk from her daughter’s plans, she had not the energy vigorously to oppose them. Grace, as energet¬ ic as her mother was languid, had her own way; energy always rules in this world. The farm near Talledega was sold and the proceeds invested in land in and around Birmingham. In less than a year Mrs. Barton’s $40,000 had quadrupled. This money, together with $90,000 left the two girls by their great-uncle, a Louisiana sugar planter, was reinvested in Birmingham coal and iron mines, and resulted, within a year, in making the Bartons worth more than a million. The Barton family and the Bartons’ friends gave Grace the credit for all the grand financial success; it had the effect of making the young woman a little imperious, and her mother and sister even more yielding. The first thing Grace thought necessary, after their financial affairs were in a satisfactory condition, was to take herself and sister to New York and enter as pupils in Mrs. Finisher’s 10 THE BARTONS OF TALLEDEGA celebrated Institute. Many mothers in the United States religiously believe that only by undergoing the polish¬ ing process to which girls in Mrs. Finisher’s Institute are subjected, can their daughters be made really fit to enter high society. Mrs. Barton by no means shared this common opinion; on the contrary, she believed that the educational facilities of the South far surpassed those of the North. But Grace insisted on a course at Mrs. Finisher’s, and so, with the spirit of mild martyr¬ dom, Mrs. Barton accompanied her daughters to New York, notwithstanding she disliked the North as a whole, and New York City especially. Its rush and roar and elevated road were a horror to her; but she endured all this for the sake of her girls, and when their school¬ ing was over, she was happy to get back to Birmingham. And now, after hardly a year’s peace and quiet, this dreadful European trip was sprung upon her. She felt that it was very hard, but it did not occur to her to restrain the more adventurous spirit of her daughters. Thus it was that the three Barton ladies were again in New York and again at the Finisher Institute; this time as boarders during the ten days that remained be¬ fore the date fixed for the departure of their steamer. Among their former classmates whom the girls found at the Institute was a Miss Marina Caro-11, who believed that in all the world there was no such piece of mascu¬ line perfection as her brother Louis, and who two years before had constantly sung his praises to Clara Barton, at that time her particular chum. She sang them so well that the Southern girl had become interested. Then, when Miss Caroll went to her home in Georgia for the holidays and enthusiastically described Clara Barton to her brother, that bold young man wrote a letter to his sister’s friend. The letter was answered and after a while Caroll sent his photograph. Other letters passed between them, but the two young people did not meet, and when Clara returned tO' Alabama the correspondence ended. “Louis is in Europe now,” said Marina. “Maybe you THE BARTONS OF TALLEDEGA 11 will run across him over there. He is painting pictures in Rome. Everybody says he is a great artist.” Clara’s face colored ,at the recollection of her school girl romance with this man whom she had never seen and who was winning fame in both Europe and America. “I hope, for your sake, Marina, he will come back cov¬ ered with glory.” , “For my sake, Clara? Don’t you hope it for his sake, and for yours? You know I have sworn to make a match between you and Louis.” ‘‘Hush! We are too old now for such nonsense!” “It isn’t nonsense for Louis to marry a girl like you! nor nonsense for you to marry as grand and good a man as my dear brother! I mean to write to him this very night and have him propose as soon as you get to Italy.” Of course this was school girl banter; nevertheless, Miss Caroll did write to her brother; and the reader who follows this chronicle to the end will learn how, in due time, Mr. Louis Caroll set forth to pay his respects to his sister’s friend whom he had never met. On the ninth day of their stay at Mrs. Finisher’s, the Bartons were joined by Miss Agnes Allan, a thin, sedate young woman who wore glasses and spoke both Ger¬ man and Italian. Miss Allan was the daughter of Mrs. Barton’s dressmaker in Birmingham and was to accom¬ pany the party in the capacity of companion and general assistant. The day after Miss Allan’s arrival in New York, the travelers, accompanied by a liberal escort from the Finisher Institute, went down to the Clarkson street dock to board the Etruria, on which staunch steamer their journey was to begin; but before relating the haps and mishaps that occurred on that memorable voyage, the reader must be introduced to a personage destined to play a more or less prominent part in this narrative. CHAPTER II. LORD ASQUITH APOHAQUI. Of the many fashionable Clubs that line Piccadilly be¬ tween Albert Memorial and Trafalgar Square, none sur¬ pass the Victoria either in the elegance of its equipment, or in the number and rank of its members. On a certain April afternoon, when the Victoria’s windows were oc¬ cupied by members of that class of civilized society which never works, never produces, yet consumes the best the world affords, one of the loungers in the Club’s luxuri¬ ous leather arm chairs seemed more absorbed in his own thoughts than in the passing crowd. This was not because this lounger’s thoughts were more pleasant than Piccadilly’s afternoon show; on the contrary, Lord Apohaqui’s thoughts were of a decidedly unpleasant character. Lord Apohaqui (Charles Asquith, Baron Apohaqui in the peerage of Great Britain) had reached a point where thinking, pleasant or unpleasant, was a stern necessity. Numerous bills had been thrust upon him that very morning—tailors’, harberdashers’ and other vulgar tradesmen’s bills. He had succeeded in putting them off, but it had not been done without difficulty, and it was only too apparent that his social ruin was postponed—not averted. The vulgar trades¬ men would continue their persecution, and, worst or all, his club fees would soon be due. Any man may owe his tailor, but what gentleman will owe his club? When Lord Apohaqui found his bank account reduced to> abso¬ lute zero, and no funds with which to settle his club indebtedness, he realized the necessity for prompt action. He was now at the Victoria Club awaiting the com¬ ing of Mr. Alonzo Wookey. The appointment had been for four o’clock; it was now nearly five and Lord Apo¬ haqui’s brow was dark and gloomy. Was it possible ( 12 ) LORD ASQUITH APOHAQUI 13 i that Wookey suspected the reason of his invitation? And did he, of all men, mean to fail him in this, his hour of necessity? It was Lord Apohaqui who had “put up” Mr. Wookey’s name for membership in the Victoria and made him acquainted with his aristocratic friends, many of whom treated the son of England’s great vinegar manufacturer with more or less cordiality according to the state of their finances. Mr. Wookey’s perceptions were not as sharp as was his father’s vinegar. He did not know that he was merely tolerated, not genuinely admitted to good fellowship among the Victoria’s mem¬ bers, that he was tolerated only because of his willing¬ ness to accommodate with financial loans the young scions of Britain’s nobility. Many a man has bought a seat in the House of Lords, just as many a man has bought a seat in the American Senate. Alonzo Wookey had read what was written about Lord Chandler and the Marquis of Bootsdale, both of which noblemen began life in humble circum¬ stances and yet had raised themselves to the peerage through the powerful lever of gold. If Mr. Wookey did not set his heart on being a peer of England, at any rate he was resolved to enter aristoc¬ racy’s charmed circle; and in this ambition he was seconded, heart and soul, by his father, old Peter Wookey, who owned the biggest vinegar factory “in the world” and counted his wealth by millions. Lord Apohaqui was already deeply indebted to Mr. Wookey, and when the latter failed to appear at the ap¬ pointed hour, the young nobleman not unnaturally began to fear that the man of vinegar meant to escape him. But the Lord underestimated the power of snobbism. If further loans were necessary in order to cement his “friendship” with members of the aristocracy, Mr. Wookey was willing to invest much more than he had hitherto invested; his nonappearance at four o’clock was due to accident, not design; this he explained with many apologies when at length he did arrive, about five, just as Lord Apohaqui was on the point of leaving 14 LORD ASQUITH APOHAQUI the Victoria. The young Baron accepted Wookey s apologies, then without circumlocution, stated his pur¬ pose in requesting the interview—he wanted the loan of £2,000. Accustomed as Mr. Wookey was to such re¬ quests his breath stopped short for a moment. £2,000 is not a trifling amount even to a vinegar king’s son; moreover Mr. Wookey already held Lord Apohaqui’s I. O. U.s for a large sum. “I say, my lord, you don’t mean it?” Mr. Wookey managed at last to gasp. “But I do mean it, Wookey,” returned Lord Apoha- qui, “and you won’t hesitate to lend it unless you wish to throw away what I already owe you.” Mr. Wookey did not understand the force of this reasoning: it seemed to him this new loan would simply mean a new loss. “You don’t look at it in the right light,” urged the peer. “I owe you ever so much, and half a dozen fellows are even worse off with me than you are. As things stand, none of you will ever see your money again. Falmouth is going to pieces, so is Apohaqui, and I’ve been to the Jews until they won’t lend another shilling. If you will help me out now, it will be for the last time, for it will put me in the way of settling all the old scores.” “That’s all very fair, Lord Apohaqui, but how the deuce do you expect to manage it?” “By marrying!” “Who is the lady?” “I don’t know.” Mr. Wookey’s eyes opened wide: “Nobody in sight at all?” he said. Then Lord Apohaqui explained. Eng- lish girls who were at once rich and beautiful were, of course, uncommon, but not so in America. “Americans are daft about titles, Wookey, I shall be able to get a beauty as well as an heiress.” Lord Apohaqui, who was a tall, well made young Englishman, with a fine head, soft brown hair, a fresh, clear complexion and patrician features, was what most women would call decidedly handsome, and what all LORD ASQUITH APOHAQUI 15 men would be obliged to own decidedly distinguished. Mr. Wookey could not but confess that such a man, with such a title—one of the oldest in England—ought to be able to take his pick of American heiresses. As for Lord Apohaqui, it is due him to say that he laid no particular store upon his personal appearance, but he was very proud of his name and his rank, and was determined that money alone should not buy him; the lady must also possess good breeding, good looks and amiability. “By Jove, you’ve got the right kind of pluck!” ex¬ claimed Mr. Wookey, when the nobleman’s plan was fully explained. “And hang it, if I don’t see you through.” “I knew you would,” returned Lord Apohaqui with • an infectious smile; he could be gracious and winning when he cared to be. Ringing a bell, a blank check was ordered and, five minutes later, Lord Apohaqui buttoned within his well-fitting Prince Albert coat Mr. Alonzo Wookey’s check for £2,000. The matter of the check being disposed of, Mr. Wookey asked his noble friend to intercede for him with a certain Lady Daron who was about to give a dinner party. Wookey felt certain that Lord Apohaqui could induce Lady Daron to send him an invitation; and if his Lordship ever meant to befriend him surely he ought to do so now. “I’d be delighted, only I shan’t have time. I’m off for New York to-morrow,” said the young nobleman, inwardly determining to go to purgatory before he would help any vinegar seller’s son break into the exclusive circles of his feminine acquaintances. As a man of fashion, a club lounger, a pleasure seeker, I fear something also of a roue , Lord Apohaqui seldom had occasion to engage in anything so plebeian as mental or physical labor. Nevertheless, he had ability and, if spurred, was capable of energetic action. Recogniz¬ ing on the present occasion the necessity for the prompt¬ est sort of a move, when he arrived in New York he pursued his plans with a boldness that would have aston- 16 LORD ASQUITH APOHAQUI ished his aristocratic friends in London. The young lord was not insensible to the delights of a season at Newport or Saratoga, but he realized that his borrowed capital might easily become exhausted before such a campaign could be brought to a successful conclusion. And in this emergency he adopted a*plan that was al¬ most an inspiration; he would engage passage on some steamer on which a suitable heiress was to sail for Europe! The ocean ferries are frequently used by those who gamble with cards; why not also by one who would gamble in hearts? What place affords better opportunity to become acquainted—better opportunity for moonlight promenades, for sentimental tete-a-tetes than the deck of an Atlantic steamer? Six months at Newport would not achieve what a single voyage might easily accom¬ plish; and six months at Newport would bankrupt him, while the voyage would leave enough of his £2,000 to make the display which would need be made by a noble¬ man acting the role of a “grand seigneur”. The finding of a suitable party proved somewhat easier than might have been expected. A little diplomacy and the employment of a shrewd agent elicited from the steamship company a list of passengers as far as they had been booked for the summer, together with hints as to the financial standing of the prospective travelers. There was no lack of heiresses—it is not the poor who go to Europe—but it required some weeks’ correspon¬ dence and several trips of his confidential agent before there was found the requisite combination of youth, beauty and money. When Mr. Joseph Sharp, of Sharp’s Detective Agency, returned from Birmingham, Alabama, he informed Lord Apohaqui that there was no necessity for further investigation. “I never saw anything like her, my lord—beautiful is no word for it—she’s lovely and bright and has a regular gold mine in the shape of iron mines and iron mills.” “By what steamer does she sail?” . By the Etruria—-the same vessel in which your lord- ship came to America; there’s another heiress going on LORD ASQUITH APOHAQUI 17 the Etruria, a Chicago lady. If your lordship doesn’t fancy the Birmingham lady the one from Chicago may please you. I have seen both ladies and I believe your lordship will admit they are as handsome as could be desired.” Through the services of Mr. Sharp all was done that could be done to make sure of the financial standing and general “availability” of the Etruria passengers. This investigation was made very quietly by the discreet Mr. Sharp, nevertheless some months later the fact of its having been made accidentally came to the knowledge of Col. Henry Moreton, of Alabama. Col. Moreton, an old army friend of the late Col. Alpheus Barton, prompt¬ ly wrote diis late friend’s widow a full account of Mr. Joseph Sharp’s investigations. What was the effect of Col. Moreton’s letter will be seen in a subsequent chapter. CHAPTER III. MR. RHETT CALHOUN OF ALABAMA. On the day the Etruria sailed, Lord Apohaqui went down to the Clarkson street dock about noon and his valet William, after arranging his master comfortably on the hurricane deck, went off to find the table steward. “I say, steward,” asked William with a solemn air, “have you got two young ladies by the name of Barton booked for this steamer?” The table steward ran his eye down the ship’s list, and stopped at the Bs, “Yes. Here they are. Mrs. Barton and daughters. What of ’em?” “Just this,” said William. “My master, Lord Apoha¬ qui, would like to sit betwixt and between them young ladies by the name of Barton; or if that ain’t easy to fix, then between two ladies by the name of Packer.” “Betwixt and between?” said the table steward. “I cawn’t do that, you know. It won’t do to separate a family, don’t you know?” “No, I don’t know,” replied William, slipping a sover¬ eign into the steward’s hand. “This’ll make it easy and if you keep quiet and work smooth there’s more where this came from. His lordship wants a seat alongside the young ladies.” “My heyes!” muttered the steward, who was a genuine cockney with a cockney’s reverence for aristocracy, “my heyes, your master’s a lord is he?” “That’s what he is,” said William, “and there aint a bigger one in all England.” Foreseeing fat fees, the table steward made the de¬ sired arrangements as to seats and instructed his sub¬ ordinates to keep a lookout for the ladies of cabin num¬ ber 93. When the Bartons arrived one of the cabin boys who took their parcels to their stateroom conveyed ( 18 ) MR. RHETT CALHOUN OF ALABAMA 19 to the table steward the information that “Number 93 had come,” whereupon the table steward told William, who in turn told Lord Apohaqui. “What do they look like?” asked the lord, trying to read in William’s face his opinion of the girls, one of whom he thought he might marry—that is, in case he found he did not prefer the Chicago heiress. But William’s face was inscrutable. “It is impossible to say, m’lud,” he replied gravely. “There are so many of them.” “So many?” repeated Lord Apohaqui, dropping a little of his elegant indifference. “I thought there were only two.” “Nearer a dozen, m’lud.” “A dozen? Does that fool Sharp want to tumble me into long division?” Lord Apohaqui raised himself up in his steamer chair and gazed at the approaching throng from the Finisher Institute. A few paces behind the girls followed Miss Primm, one of the Institute’s teachers, who piously kept her charges in sight notwithstanding they led her a race up and down the steps, along the decks, into the saloons and to every other portion of the vessel to which people were permitted access. They even wanted to inspect the hold and the engine rooms, but here Miss Primm drew the line. “Young ladies,” she said severely—she was out of breath and fairly ached all over from so much unaccustomed climbing—“Young ladies, a little more quiet dignity would better become your years and sta¬ tion. Remember, you represent the Finisher Institute.” “Girls,” cried Miss Grace Barton, “we have behaved shamefully to dear Miss Primm—and she was so kind and good to come with us. Please excuse us, Miss Primm. We will be quiet as lambs. Won’t you sit down and rest? I will get you a chair.” Darting towards the nearest vacant chair—the one as it happened next that occupied by Lord Apohaqui,—she laid hands upon it. “May I?” she asked, flashing one glance at the young 20 MR. RHETT CALHOUN OF ALABAMA Englishman. Lord Apohaqui’s monocle dropped from his eye as if it had been struck. Taking silence for assent, Grace dragged the chair forward and pushed Miss Primm down into it. “Now you are comfortable,” she said, “and we promise to give no more trouble. Girls, we have seen enough of the ship. We must behave now. We make Miss Primm nervous.” “Ah—ahem!” muttered Lord Apohaqui, replacing the monocle in his eye and staring at Grace, whose eyes were fixed on the people surging about on the deck below. “A pretty girl—deuced pretty for an American. I wonder if she is the one?” He thought he had seldom seen a more attractive looking maiden than Grace ap¬ peared in he/ gray serge traveling dress. On her head was a small sailor hat; she wore a gray jacket with pockets; her gray-gloved hands were small and shapely. “A lady’s hand,” muttered the critical lord, “not a plebeian’s.” Her hair was dark brown, eyes ditto, her nose was straight and well-shaped, her cheeks, with a complexion as soft and sweet as that of a new-blown rose—such was the outward presentment of the young woman who, Lord Apohaqui hoped, might be the one he intended should become his wife. While the party from the Finisher Institute were chat¬ ting and looking at the crowd surging about on the dock, and while Lord Apohaqui was observing them from his steamer chair, a second party climbed up the gang-plank and stood within a short distance of the spot where Miss Primm and her charges were seated. One of this second party was a well-grown, handsome girl with a fresh face, highly colored. Her cloak was of Russian sable, her gown of fine material, richly em¬ broidered. Her two companions were also women, one evidently her maid, the other as evidently her mother. Mother and daughter strongly resembled each other, al¬ though the former was much stouter and her face was fuller and more florid. Both were very blonde and both had abundant coils of yellow hair. As this party ap- MR. RHETT CALHOUN OF ALABAMA 21 proached an exclamation struck the ears of all present. “It is a shame! A sin!” exclaimed the girl in gray serge. “What is a shame? What do you see?” asked the girl by her side. “That little man! That enormous trunk on his shoulder! It will break his back. If I ever go to Con¬ gress I’ll get a law passed to cut down the size of trunks.” The woman with the sable cloak turned and glared at the girl in serge. “See! The poor fellow staggers under the load,” cried Grace, not seeing the disapproving glare of the portly wearer of the sable cloak. “He need not carry such loads if he doesn’t want to,” calmly remarked one of her companions. “He isn’t a slave. Nobody makes him do it.” “Necessity makes him,” replied Grace. “I have been reading Henry George. Poverty is the hardest master in the world and makes men do that which injures them body and soul.” “Oh, come, Grace!” said one of the girls. “Don’t mount your high horse! We can’t keep up with you if you gallop so fast!” “There! He is down!” cried Grace, not noticing her companion’s remark. “I thought he would fall under that dreadful burden. I am afraid his back is broken.” “No, but the trunk is. It has burst wide open. Look at the fine things tumbling out in the dirt.” “I am glad of it! I hope they will be ruined. Maybe that will teach their owner not to travel with trunks that kill porters.” The accident to the trunk greatly agitated the portly lady in Russian sables. Ordering her maid to fly to the scene of disaster and pick up the scattered things, she darted an angry glance at the girl in gray—then turn¬ ing to her daughter, she entered into a low but animated conversation. The Finisher girls watched the maid pick up her mistress’ finery; she replaced it in the trunk and 22 MR. RHETT CALHOUN OF ALABAMA employed two porters to bear the huge thing aboard the steamer. Soon after came the cry: “All ashore who are going!” Whereupon there was much hurrying and scurrying about the decks, and up and down the gang-steps. When the last kisses were given and the last good-byes said, the Finisher girls followed Miss Primm back to the dock, where they remained, waving handkerchiefs until the Etruria was well out in the Hud¬ son. Then the Bartons retreated to their stateroom. “Ma, did you notice that bold, impudent thing in gray?” asked the well-grown young woman whose heavy Russian sables made her look much larger than she was. “Notice her? I should say I did. They can’t amount to much. You can see that from her dress, Lobelia. I don’t suppose that gray serge cost more than a dollar a yard, and that gray jacket would be dear at ten dollars. Imagine a girl going to Europe in a ten dollar jacket!” “I can’t see what poor people want to travel for,” replied the blonde daughter. “It’s perfectly absurd. People that can’t afford to dress decently oughtn’t to go to Europe. Did you notice her hat, ma? A cheap straw! Not a bow nor a plume on it. I don’t think we ought to notice them.” “Certainly not,” said the elder woman, pulling up her portly person with a sudden pride. “Ladies that travel can’t be too particular who they speak to, Lobelia. What’s the use of going to Europe if we don’t shake common folks and fall in with the aristocracy? They say there’s a real lord on board; we must get acquainted with him, Lobelia. I’ve heard there’s no place like a ship for young people to get mashed on each other. How would you like to be an English lordess?” “La, ma! There’s no such word as 'lordess’. If you marry a lord you’re called a ‘lady’ not a lordess. Don’t forget that.” “Well, it’s all the same in the long run. You say poet and poetess? Why shouldn’t you say lord and lordess?” MR. RHETT CALHOUN OF ALABAMA 23 “Just because it isn’t right, ma,” returned the daughter. “Aint that reason enough?” “Maybe so, Lobelia, though I don’t see no sense in it. But I haven’t had your schooling. They didn’t have such chances in my day, and I didn’t have a pa with six millions like you’ve got. But you haven’t said how you’d like to be a high English lady?” “Oh, good gracious, ma! that’s all nonsense,” re¬ turned Miss Lobelia.” “I don’t see why it’s all nonsense,” said the sober practical mother. “I’m sure your pa’s left you a big enough pile to catch the biggest lord in England.” Lord Apohaqui was screened from the range of the ladies’ eyes by the high back of his bamboo chair; more¬ over Mrs. Ford Packer and her daughter were looking out over the sea, hence had no suspicion that he was sitting near them. By raising his head a little and peer¬ ing over the back of his chair Lord Apohaqui had a full view of both mother and daughter. “Plere’s wealth,” muttered the young Englishman as he surveyed the generous amplitude of both forms, “wealth and willingness, for I dare say all a fellow’s got to do is to go in and get her—and, by Jove! the girl isn’t bad looking!—But the mother—hideous! That girl in gray is the thing if she is the one Sharp said has £20,000 a year.” Lord Apohaqui was not tne only interested spectator of these incidents. A young man of about five and twenty, quietly dressed, with the demeanor and face of a gentleman, had boarded the Etruria early in the fore¬ noon. The coming of the English lord had not disturbed his occupation, which consisted, for the time being, in leaning on the rail gazing at the busy scene on the dock below. But when the party from the Finisher Institute started up the ship’s gangway, Mr. Rhett Cal¬ houn made a low exclamation and withdrew from view. Mr. Calhoun was not a fool—he merely had an incon¬ veniently large amount of foolish, awkward pride. Born and reared in Talledega, he had been intimate with the 24 MR. RHETT CALHOUN OF ALABAMA Bartons in their days of poverty; now they had become wealthy, while he was still in the ranks of the struggling ones. Would they meet him as of old? Could he ex¬ pect from millionaires the same free and easy companion¬ ship he had enjoyed in the days when Mrs. Barton kept boarders? His ticket was for the second class cabin; theirs, of course, was for the first—probably for the finest staterooms in the ship. Would not first class passengers disdain to recognize a traveler in the second cabin? It was cowardly fear of a possible snub that caused Rhett Calhoun to hold back, when he discovered that the Bartons were aboard the vessel. At the extreme end of the promenade deck of the Etruria, cut off from view of the first-class passenger’s quarters, is a cosy nook with one bench. Usually this bench, the only really pleasant deck space allotted to second-class passengers, is filled, so that late comers stroll about or, if they wish to recline, select some coil of rope whereon to rest themselves. The first two days of the voyage were so stormy that most of the Etruria’s pas¬ sengers were sea-sick; and during those two days the bench had but a single occupant—Miss Grace Barton, of Birmingham. The young lady was not traveling second-class, but in the course of her explorations her eyes lighted on the bench. She had not the slightest idea that this place was in the second-class quarters; she did not know that she had crossed the line; but, when she found herself free from sea-sickness, she en¬ sconced herself in that cosy nook and alternately read Macaulay’s “England,” or looked out at the big "waves as they dashed against the ship and burst into showers of foaming spray. On the afternoon of the second day, just as Grace had taken her seat in her favorite corner, approaching footsteps warned her that her solitude was to be invaded. A man was coming that way, walking with caution, leaning his body this way, then that, in an effort to keep from pitching headlong on the deck, for the sea was lolling high. At the last moment, just as the difficult MR. RHETT CALHOUN OF ALABAMA 25 journey seemed over, the Etruria gave an extra big lurch and this disturber of Grace’s solitude, instead of balancing himself slowly and safely into port, found him¬ self shot as from a catapult into Grace’s arms—a pro¬ ceeding which almost stunned both parties alike. The young man picked himself up as quickly as possible. “I beg a thousand pardons—” he began, then abruptly stopped and blushed tO' the roots of his hair. “Good gracious!” cried Grace, “is this Rhett Cal¬ houn?” “I am Rhett Calhoun,” returned the young man, wish¬ ing he could drop through the Etruria’s deck and hide in the hold. By this time the ship had steadied a bit and Rhett stood on his feet erect and firm, though cov¬ ered with confusion. His second-class ticket gave him as much pain as though it involved something criminal. Rhett was a handsome fellow and the girl’s eyes dwelt on him with admiration as well as old-time friendliness. “Surely,” said Grace, “you haven’t forgotten me—I am Grace Barton. It hasn’t been so> very long since we lived on the same street in Talledega. Have I changed much?” “Not at all. That is—I remember you very well, Miss Barton.” “I don’t believe you did at first. Mamma and Clara will be so glad to see you. We don’t know a single soul on board. Why haven’t we met before? I have been on deck nearly all the time. Mamma and Clara keep to their beds; they can’t stand the rolling as I do.” Rhett said he also had been a little sea-sick. “And what have you been doing since we left Talle¬ dega?” Rhett gave an account of himself—he intended to practice law and possibly, later on, enter politics. “And are you going to run against your uncle Dick for Congress?” asked Grace, with a merry look at the handsome Southerner. Rhett turned uncomfortably red at the question; some¬ how it made that second-class ticket look blacker and 26 MR. RHETT CALHOUN OF ALABAMA more horrible than ever. When children, he and Grace had been sweethearts; at the age of six he had gone to Colonel Alpheus Barton and asked leave to marry Grace, then four years old. The Colonel demanded to know how he meant to support his wife? “I am going to run against uncle Dick and go to Congress,” replied the youthful suitor. Since then that Congressional am¬ bition had been a standing joke in the Barton and Calhoun families. This time, Rhett answered going to Congress seemed no longer such a big thing to him. He had lived in Washington long enough to learn what small potatoes Congressmen are. “Because nine out of ten potatoes are small,” said Grace, “is no reason why the tenth potato may not be large. Were I a man I should want to- be the tenth potato.” “Why do you say, ‘if you were a man?’ Has the tenth woman no chance to grow beyond the other nine?” “Oh, yes, she might in some directions, but not in a political way. You know, we are shut out from politics.” “I hope you don’t regret it,” said Rhett, who had strong prejudices against ‘Women’s Rights’ principles. “If a woman is ambitious she has nobler fields than politics open to her; she may take up literature, art, science or music.” “And which of these nobler fields do you mean to invade?” asked Grace, her eyes twinkling with merri¬ ment. The young Southerner said he had talent for none of them; he knew nothing of music, had no turn for science, nor genius for literature. “Then to distinguish yourself you will find yourself obliged to enter the political field?” “It looks that way,” was the half rueful answer; “Uncle Dick says by the time I am ready to run for Congress he will retire.” While they were thus merrily chatting, the young man was trying to muster enough courage to put a bold face on his poverty and to decide how he would act when MR. RHETT CALHOUN OF ALABAMA 27 Grace arose to return to her part of the ship; the first- class passengers may enter with impunity the quarters of the second-class, but no second-class passenger is allowed to cross into the first-class part of the ship. “Won’t you come and see mamma and Clara?” asked Grace as she arose from her seat. “By this time they may be in the ladies’ saloon.” “I wish I could go with you,” said Rhett. “But I may not.” “You may not?” echoed Grace astonished. “Yes; I’m traveling second-class, and we are not al¬ lowed to cross this line. The fact—the awful fact that he was too poor to travel first-class was told and the world did not shake, nor did the girl appear the least bit shocked. “Well,” she laughed, “if you can’t come to us it is lucky we can come to you. I’ll bring mamma and Clara to see you as soon as they are able tO' get out on deck.” “Miss Grace,” said Rhett, feeling quite relieved now that his secret was out; “you must not forget that your family have risen among the millionaires since we lived as neighbors in Talledega, while my family are still down among the workers of the world. I cannot afford to travel in style as you do.” “Well, you are the one to be envied. The way you travel will be far more interesting than the way we have to go. I would like to tramp it, would like to live with the people and learn something of their customs and ways.” Leaning on the rail they watched the crowd in the steerage. Among them were a few miserable Italian emigrants shipped back to their native country, not hav¬ ing been permitted to remain on American soil because unable to satisfy the immigration authorities that they had money or were self-sustaining. Others were well- to-do Irish and Germans who had come to America a few years ago and had prospered enough to pay a visit to their kin in the Old World. These seemed to be as proud and happy as if they had accumulated fortunes; 28 MR. RHETT CALHOUN OF ALABAMA in fact, when compared with the relatives they expected to see in the Old World, they might be considered rich. They had-come to America almost as paupers; they were returning almost as princes, well-dressed, with money in their pockets—a degree of prosperity work¬ ingmen seldom attain in Europe. “Were I a man,” said Grace, “I should like to take steerage once, so as to get some knowledge of the plain people.” “You mean by that, poor people?” “I suppose that is about it,” laughed Grace, “yet it is not exactly the same either. In Talledega we were poor enough, but we never thought of ourselves as being like those people down there. When I think of how poor we once were, strange questions come into my head.” “What sort of questions, Miss Grace?” “Why, I cannot forget that we never did any real work, that neither mamma nor Clara nor I earned the money we spend. We just sold out Talledega land and bought Birmingham land, and presto!—we were rich. Miners and smelters and carpenters and engineers and all sorts of men work day and night for barely enough to clothe and feed themselves; all the rest of their labor’s products comes to us. Rhett, who earns the money we spend? What real right have we to take nearly all that those miners dig out of the earth?” “They are your mines; that is why you have the right to take all the miners dig out; you pay them their wages.” “Of course that is why I have the legal right, or rather the power; but I mean—if we go beyond that—what real right have we to live all our lives spending money that other people earn? What do we give in return for what they give us?” “You pay them their wages.” “Yes, but with what? We could not pay any one wages before we left Talledega; what have we done that MR. RHETT CALHOUN OF ALABAMA 23 enables us to pay them now? Don’t we pay them out of what they themselves extract from the mines ?” “It does look that way/’ admitted Rhett. “It is that way,” continued Grace, energetically. “It is just as though I were to tell you to get a hook and line and work ten hours a day fishing, and offer you one fish out of every ten you catch. We sell the iron and then give the miners a tenth of what they produced.” “Well, isn’t that fair?” “Would it be fair to take nine out of every ten fish you catch in the ocean?” “Of course not; that is different. You don’t own the ocean while you do own the Birmingham mines.” “But we had no more to do with making those mines than with making the ocean. Why have we the right to own the one and not the other?” “I can’t answer that,” returned Rhett with a smile, “unless it be an answer to say that it is impossible for anybody to own the ocean. Were I you, since, as a matter of fact you do- own those Birmingham mines, I wouldn’t bother as to how or why I came to own them.” Changing the subject, Grace now asked what sort of people were in the second-class. “We have some who promise to- be amusing,” an¬ swered Rhett. “Mr. Blower, the manager of a company of players, is going to perform before the Queen. He says if Buffalo Bill can hobnob with the Queen he guesses he can too.” “Will the Queen receive him?” “Maybe not, but Blower has the assurance to push himself anywhere. The moment he heard I wrote for the newspapers he proposed to give an exhibition and have me write him up.” “An exhibition in midocean?” cried Grace, delighted at the prospect. “Do let us have one, Rhett.” The young man promised to notify the Bartons if the performance were to take place; then Grace arose to go. “Must you really leave?” asked Rhett, a wistful look in his eyes. 30 MR. RHETT CALHOUN OF ALABAMA “Yes, to see how mamma and Clara get on.” Just then, the ship gave a lurch, causing Grace to lose her balance. “This boat is rolling so,” said Rhett, as he steadied the girl on her feet, “that even at the risk of being ordered back I’ve a mind to see you to your quarters.” “No,” said Grace. “I won’t have it. I’m every bit as good a sailor as you, and they might put you in the lock-up if you pass the first-class line.” With this she started off, swaying this way and that, to meet the motion of the ship, and keeping her feet like an old sailor. “Money hasn’t spoiled her,” murmured Rhett, as he watched her lithe figure disappear through the door leading into the saloon quarters of the favored class. Then he looked grimly at the railing beyond which he could not pass. “Before I saw her,” he muttered, “how little. that railing worried me. Now I would like to tear it down and pitch it into the ocean,” CHAPTER IV. LORD APOHAQUI MEETS THE BARTONS. When Miss Barton seated herself at the dinner table, her appetite sharpened by exercise, her complexion rosy and freshened by the sea air, she found the seat to her left occupied by Lord Apohaqui. The young nobleman had been ill since the ship steamed past Sandy Hook, and this was his first appearance at table. As Grace took her seat the lord gave her a side glance and men¬ tally decided that she was the prettiest girl he had seen since he left England. Grace quietly proceeded with her dinner, seemingly unconscious that any eye was upon her. Presently the Captain entered and took his place at the table, a short distance from the Englishman. “I am glad to see you down, Lord Apohaqui/’ said the captain, smiling pleasantly, “you have had quite a siege of it, and no wonder: this is rather nasty weather. Miss Barton, you seem to be a good sailor?” “Every moment is delightful,” replied Grace, youth¬ ful rapture in her face and eyes. “But my mother and sister don’t like it. They have not been able even to look out at the ocean.” “They will enjoy it all the better when they do get about,” said the captain. “That’s what I tell them; I don’t see how anybody can help enjoying the ocean. I wonder, Captain, if you who cross so often ever get tired of the sea, of its grand rolling waves, its wide, wide horizon? Does it ever seem commonplace to you?” The captain, who was a grizzled old sea-dog with iron gray beard and hair and a good-humored counte¬ nance, laughed and said the romance and poetry had long since vanished from his view; all he now cared for was to take his vessel safe from one port to another. ( 31 ) 32 LORD APOHAQUI MEETS THE BARTONS “Miss Barton, since you and Lord Apohaqui are neigh¬ bors at table perhaps you will permit me to present him?” Grace gave an assenting nod, and the next minute the young British peer was formally introduced to the Talledega heiress. “His lordship has not been as fortunate as you, said the captain, as he was rising to go on deck, “he has been ill until this afternoon.” Grace and the Englishman were the only persons at their end of the table. “You are indeed fortunate, Miss Barton, to escape sea-sickness,” said Lord Apohaqui. “Have you crossed often?” “No, I have never crossed before. It seems odd that you should be sick when this is not your first voyage. It is my first trip on the sea, but I have not been ill a single minute.” “How do you know that it is not my first voyage?” asked Lord Apohaqui, as he looked at the girl’s clear-cut features and rosy complexion. “Because the Etruria is going the wrong way for this to be your first voyage.” “How do you mean?” “Why, there are no lords in our country, hence you must have come to America before you could leave it.” “I hadn’t thought of that,” he laughingly admitted. “It is not my first voyage, but I assure you it is my last. Since you escaped the trouble, you have no idea how wretched one feels when sea-sick. If ever I go to America again it shall be by land, through Asia by way of Behring’s Straits.” “That would be a great deal worse than getting sea¬ sick—still I am ready to believe you wouldn’t mind coming that way. I have always heard that Englishmen, especially noblemen, like to do unusual things.” “I hope by that you don’t mean eccentric things, Miss Barton?” “No, not exactly eccentric, but—but it is true, is it not?” LORD APOHAQUI MEETS THE BARTONS 33 “Why do you fancy that? Are you prejudiced against my class ?” “Prejudiced is not the right word; of course being a democrat I don’t approve of a titled class. You would hardly expect that of me.” “No, Miss Barton; little as I know you I should ex¬ pect you to stick to your principles. But you have not told me why you think English noblemen more apt to be eccentric—more disposed to indulge in whims and caprices than other people.” “Because—” then Grace hesitated. “Don’t be afraid to speak frankly,” said the lord en¬ couragingly. “I promise not to mind your criticism.” “I did not hesitate because I was about to be severe, but because I was trying to put my reason into words.” “Well?” “Well, ordinary individuals have regard for public opinion—titled people are above public opinion, con¬ sequently they care less to please, are less willing to obey and more ready to defy the accepted ideas of the masses. You know how dreadful kings used to be before the days of newspapers. They used to feel themselves so much above the people that they didn’t even try to put a curb on the bad impulses of their hearts.” “Do you think newspapers put a curb on kings?” queried the young lord, eying Grace with a look of interest mixed with admiration. “Yes, I do. Newspapers make everything so public. Even a king is ashamed to have the knowledge of the bad things he may do scattered to the four winds.” “I beg your pardon, Miss Barton, but don’t you think you rather contradict yourself?” “How?” “You said titled men are eccentric because they are above the rule of public opinion. Now you say even kings are curbed by public opinion. If kings are kept straight by the newspapers, how much more effect will publicity have on mere noblemen?” 34 LORD APOHAQUI MEETS THE BARTONS Grace laughed. “Yes, it does look inconsistent, yet I believe both my statements are true. I believe the newspapers exercise a wholesome restraint over kings, I also think it to be true that titled men are more prone to act on their own individual ideas than untitled men. Perhaps their greater independence is the cause. Ordi¬ nary men have to make their living; a lord is born to a living without work, and no matter what work one does, one is bound more or less to please the public.” At this moment the head-steward entered the. saloon with a lady on either side of him leaning on his arms for support. Neither of them was small and it was evident the steward had no slight task to keep them on their feet. Finally, however, despite the rolling of the ship, he succeeded in getting his charges safely seated at the table opposite Lord Apohaqui and Grace Barton. When this was done the steward came to Grace and leaning over whispered something into her ear. “Mam¬ ma feeling worse?” she exclaimed. “That is too bad. I will go to her at once.” With a bow to Lord Apo¬ haqui she left the dining-saloon. During the next five minutes the Englishman confined himself to the business of eating his dinner; during the same period the two ladies who had come in leaning on the steward’s arms occupied themselves in staring at, and whispering about, their vis-a-vis. At length, the elder one could contain herself no longer. “I think we saw you on deck, the afternoon we left New York,” she said with an extremely gracious air. Lord Apohaqui bowed politely. “I am sure me and my daughter are charmed to be your neighbors at the table,” continued the portly lady whose face was now rather pale; usually Mrs. Packer’s color was very high but she still showed the traces of that indescribable misery which accompanies “going to sea” and from which even the dollars of the late Packer could not buy her absolvence. “Very kind, I am sure,” observed the young lord, taking a good look at his vis-a-vis across the table. LORD APOHAQUI MEETS THE BARTONS 35 “Yes,” continued Mrs. Packer, “it is so much to be neighbors with nice people. I am Mrs. Ford Packer of Chicago.” The Englishman bowed. “As we are going to be table-neighbors,” the Chica¬ goan added affably, “what is the use of being stiff and formal? That’s what Mr. Packer used always to be a- saying. Packer was a self-made man and mixed with everybody, but he always said to me, ‘Mrs. Packer, men and women are different; men can mix but women can’t, and you and Lobelia take care that you go only with the first. Poor Packer! I wish he could be here so as to see how we are following his advice.” “Mr. Packer did not come with you then?” asked the lord. “Come with us! How I wish he could! but lie’s dead, my lord,—died three years ago, not long after our Johnny died. Johnny’s dying so sudden-like—Johnny was drowned in the Lake—sorter preyed on Packer’s mind and he kept saying, ‘It’s too much money for one child., What’ll she do with it?’ meaning his money was too much for Lobelia, which he had expected to divide equal with her and Johnny.” “Indeed? sad, very sad,” muttered Lord Apohaqui, rather bewildered by this unbidden flow of confidences. “Yes, it was sad,” said Mrs. Packer, “it preyed on Packer’s mind and worried him into the grave. This is my daughter Lobelia, Lord Apohaqui.” “Ah, I am glad to know you, Miss Packer,” said his lordship; there was an awkward pause which the young nobleman broke by passing Miss Lobelia the toast. “Lobelia,” said Mrs. Packer, reprovingly, “don’t you see the lord is offering you some toast? Can’t you thank him?” “Thanks,” murmured Lobelia, blushing furiously as she put out her large white hand—by no means an ugly one—and took a piece of the proffered toast. “I wish,” remarked Mrs. Packer, “that we’d had the pleasure of meeting your lordship in Chicago. Lobelia 36 LORD APOHAQUI MEETS THE BARTONS and I would have been proud to have you visit us. Poor dear Packer was fond of entertaining distinguished men, especially the military. Packer was not in the army himself but he always had the great generals come to see him. Many a time we’ve had twenty people all at once. We have a large house. I told Packer when he was building it that it was too< big and so it was, even when Packer and Johnny were alive. You can imagine how big a thirty-six room house seems to me and Lobelia all by ourselves.” The young Englishman good-naturedly said, “Yes, a thirty-six room house was rather large for two people soon after that he bowed himself away. In high feather at the progress she was making, Mrs. Packer quite forgot how sea-sick she had been, and how weak she still was. “He’s just as affable and friendly as any of the common sort,” she said to Lobelia. “I never see any man more so. It’s a lucky thing we came on this ship, and to think of getting seats right opposite him! If we act right he’ll interduce us to the nobility when we get to London, and who knows then what may happen?” “La, ma, don’t talk nonsense,” said Lobelia. “I don’t see why it’s nonsense for you any more than for any other rich American girl,” retorted the mother. “I am sure your pa left you as big a pile as that New York woman who married a Dook. How would you like to be a Dookess, Lobelia?” “Duchess, ma, duchess!” said Lobelia, petulantly. “Don’t say Dookess, there’s no such word.” “Well, Duchess then,” repeated Mrs. Packer, with perfect good humor. She recognized in her daughter a right to correct mistakes: had she not paid the very highest prices to have her educated? “You are hand¬ some enough and rich enough, Lobelia, to marry a dook or even a prince. Look at that Ward girl! she married a prince!” . for gracious sake, ma!” cried Lobelia, impa¬ tiently, don t talk about her. She disgraced herself. LORD APOHAQUI MEETS THE BARTONS 3? Let’s go on deck. Mr. Morton is there. Besides, I’m dying for a breath of fresh air.” These two short interviews had made Lord Apohaqui feel confident he could obtain either one of the Ameri¬ can heiresses for the asking; but in the event he honored one of them with the noble Apohaqui name, could her Americanisms be toned down to suit English ideas of good form? Lord Apohaqui knew that his mother, the Dowager Baroness Apohaqui, was greatly prejudiced against Americans; he questioned if any number of millions would atone in her eyes for such extraordinary manners as those displayed by the Chicagoan “lady”. True, Miss Packer had kept quiet and was really hand¬ some, but with such a mother as Mrs. Packer, Lord Apohaqui doubted if any amount of veneering would make the daughter a lady. So for the time being he dropped the Packers from his calculations and turned his thoughts to the Barton girl. She was unconventional, she went about on deck with the captain without a chaperone, she walked and talked with a second-class passenger and she had some curious ideas—in short, she was decidedly American; but might not this be remedied in time? There was no denying her beauty; moreover, there was something about Grace’s manner that fascinated him, despite her ultra-Americanism. Next morning, as he was eating his orange at break¬ fast, he saw Grace coming to the table leading two ladies whom he surmised to be her mother and sister. Both these new-comers had a languid air and pale features; Mrs. Barton’s face had something of the martyr in it, as if patiently suffering, but appealing for sympathy. “Mamma,” said Grace, “permit me to present to you Lord Apohaqui. Lord Apohaqui, this is my mother and my sister Clara.” “I am pleased to meet you, Mrs. Barton, and Miss Clara Barton,” said the young lord. “Your daughter has told me you have suffered from sea-sickness. I sympathize with you. I was horribly sick myself.” “If the sea made you half as miserable as it made 38 LORD APOHAQUI MEETS THE BARTONS me” moaned Mrs. Barton, plaintively, “1 pity you deep¬ ly; I don’t see why people will go to sea. We are not sea animals, we are land animals; it is contrary to the —the Creator’s intentions to—to try to make sea animals of ourselves. I can’t eat, Grace; make them take my plate away.” “Try a little coffee, mamma,” urged Grace, when the beefsteak was removed. Mrs. Barton sipped the coffee in silence. Presently she raised her big, innocent eyes and thoughtfully contemplated Lord Apohaqui’s counte¬ nance. “Did you say he was a lord, Grace?” she asked softly, but loud enough for all near to hear. “Yes, mamma, from England.” “Grace, don’t you think Lord Apohaqui looks like that Italian nobleman in the Grand Hotel in Talledega?” Clara bit her lip to keep from laughing, but Grace maintained imperturbable gravity. The young lord’s face flushed a little under these open comments. “Do you mean Count Satolli?” questioned Grace. “Yes, that Italian Count everybody was talking about and pitying. Don’t you think Lord Apohaqui looks like him?” “No, mamma, not the least in the world. Count Satolli was a small man, and dark, whereas Lord Apo¬ haqui is tall and not at all dark.” “I did not mean in the details, Grace,” returned Mrs. Barton, with mild reproach. “You are not as critical an observer as your mother; I meant in general bear¬ ing. Both being noblemen it is only to be expected that there should be a resemblance in their manners. No, my dear, I can’t eat. Tell the man not to bring me anything more; it makes me sick to see food.” Soon after this the young lord escorted the Bartons on deck, where they ensconced themselves in reclining chairs to enjoy the bracing air. Five or ten minutes later, Lord Apohaqui saw coming toward him what may be called an “old-young” man, i. e., a man about forty- five who tried to act and look like a man of twenty-five. LORD APOHAQUI MEETS THE BARTONtS 39 The streaks of gray in his hair and mustache were care¬ fully dyed; his dress and manner led the Bartons to fancy he was an Englishman; in reality he was a native New Yorker who had lived much abroad and was thor¬ oughly imbued with European tastes. The manners and customs of England were in Mr. Montrose Morton’s esteem the most perfect manners and customs imagin¬ able. The Anglomaniac had once met Lord Apohaqui at a dinner in London and on the strength of this meet¬ ing now claimed his acquaintance. He thrust his hand out to the young peer in the most friendly way, but the noble digits remained hidden under their rug, and the noble owner of the digits merely stared at the man who presumed to know him. “Aw, you know, my lord,” insisted Morton, with un¬ abashed assurance, “I had the pleasure of meeting you at the Cheshire Cheese.” “The Cheshire Cheese?” said Lord Apohaqui. “Yes, I remember now.” “Oh, dear Mr. Morton,” cried a loud, cheerful female voice, a voice which the Englishman well knew by this time, “are you an old friend of Lord Apohaqui? He is our neighbor at table. I do hope, Mr. Morton, you’ll get a seat at our table. Lobelia, make the deck steward fetch our wraps and chairs on this side. It ain’t half so windy here. I tell you, Lord Apohaqui, we most got blowed away on the other side.” Of course Mr. Morton’s gallantry did not permit • Miss Packer to go. “Aw, I’ll see the steward,” he offered, and when the wraps and chairs were brought, Mr. Moreton busied himself tucking up the Packer ladies. “I call this real comfort,” commented Mrs. Packer, giving Mr. Morton an amiable smile. “Don’t you, my lord?” “Yes, very,” replied Lord Apohaqui, politely. “Mr. Morton,” continued Mrs. Packer, “I want you and Lord Apohaqui to tell us what we must see in London. We are going to London first. Lobelia and 40 LORD APOHAQUI MEETS THE BARTONS me are crazy to see the Queen. I suppose you see the Queen very frequently, my lord?” “I have seen her Majesty but once in my life, madam.” “Goodness gracious! I thought the aristocracy was real thick with the royal family. Is—is she as proud as all that?” Mr. Montrose Morton made a diversion. “Miss Barton,” he drawled, “Aw—I’m awfully glad, I’m sure, to find you on board.” “We did not expect to see you, Mr. Morton,” replied Grace. “Your sister did not tell us you were going.” “Aw, I didn’t know myself until the day before. Made up my mind very sudden, you know.” Then Mr. Morton introduced the Bartons to the Packers. Mrs. Packer was frigid, but the Bartons, unaccustomed to being snubbed, were not on the lookout for snubs, hence attributed Mrs. Packer’s frigidity to a mere peculiarity of temper, never dreaming it could be due to a feeling of superiority. “You will remain some time in London?” said Grace with a view to being friendly. Mrs. Packer became afraid that the Bartons might wish to “hang on” to her in London, so she answered icily: “We haven’t made up our minds just how long we’ll stay in London.” “Is this your first ocean voyage?” asked Clara with the same idea of being friendly. “Yes, it is,” snapped Miss Packer, carrying out her mother’s plan of not picking up “common folks” while traveling. Then silence fell between the Packers and the Bartons. Mr. Morton was more cordial. He had met the Bartons at the Finisher Institute where his sister was being educated, and through his sister he knew of their solid financial standing, and so he devoted himself to them, leaving Lord Apohaqui to the charming Packer ladies. “My lord,” began Mrs. Packer, smiling benignantly on the Englishman, “Lobelia and me are extremely LORD APOHAQUI MEETS THE BARTONS 41 partial to your country. We like the aristocracy; it is so refining; we Americans who have money enough to keep it up would be delighted to have lords and ladies and dooks and doo-” “Ma!” remonstrated Miss Packer, in an agonized whisper, as she gave her mother a sharp pinch under her rug. “Well, Lobelia, I wasn’t going to say anything wrong. Don’t squeal before you’re hurt. Lord Apohaqui knows what I mejan. I was going to say, my lord, it’s a shame we haven’t got a solid aristocracy in America, and more shame we haven’t even got a 400 in Chicago. Don’t you think so, Mr. Morton?” Mr. Montrose Morton felt the compliment implied in Mrs. Packer’s question; he was a member of New York’s “400” and Mrs. Packer was right to apply to him as an authority; Mr. Morton believed that New York’s “400” was next door to England’s nobility, and was a little wounded when Lord Apohaqui inquired, “What is the ‘400’?” “New York’s 400 is America’s aristocracy,” responded Mr. Morton, with a gravity befitting the subject. “Our aristocracy is not established in law, as yours is in Eng¬ land, but it rests on a firm foundation.” “What is that foundation?” asked the lord. “Money—millions of money, especially millions hand¬ ed down from father to son. The 400 seldom tolerate the membership of a man who has made his own millions.” “Very interesting, indeed,” said the lord. “Oh, Mr. Morton!” cried Mrs. Packer, warmly, “you don’t know how awful anxious the millionaire ladies of Chicago are to get up a 400 like yours in New York. We all read Ward McAllister’s grand little book, and we tried to get him to come to Chicago and start a 400.” “There never was another man like Ward McAllister,” said Mr. Morton, impressively. “No other man could have done what he did. As he said in his book, he found society a chaos*—and left it a 400.” 42 LORD APOHAQUI MEETS THE BARTONS “Do you remember, Mr. Morton, what Ward said in his book about soup?” said Mrs. Packer. “Before we read dear Ward’s book we had no idea how important soup is in society—of course, I mean aristocratic society. Soup, you know, is every bit as high up as wine?” “More so,” interrupted Mr. Morton sententiously, and continued with the gravity of a judge delivering the opinion of the associate justices of the Supreme Court : “Soup being served first is the test. As is the soup, so is the dinner. In his great book Mr. McAllister relates how he lost a charming friend by excelling in soups.” “How was that,” queried Lord Apohaqui. “His friend’s wife was dining at Mr. McAllister’s; the soup was—well—it was soup for the gods; his friend’s wife was in despair—her soup could never rival McAllister’s. On returning home to her husband she threw up her hands exclaiming, ‘Oh, what a soup’, and from that moment the two charming friends were lost to the McAllisters, because they could not bear to be outdone in soup.” “Ah—sad—very sad,” murmured the young English¬ man, with a serious face. “Mr. Morton,” said Grace Barton, “is that little story really related in Mr. McAllister’s book?” “It is indeed, I assure you.” “Related in earnest?” “Miss Barton,” replied Mr. Morton, “Mr. McAllister did not permit himself to jest about the high society of New York.” I beg pardon,” said Grace. “I have never read the book, and we of the South know nothing of 400s.” “Of course not,” interposed Mrs. Packer. “There can’t be a 400 in the South; you haven’t got the material down there. Heaven knows it’s hard enough to get up a 400 in Chicago where we have every bit as much money as they have in New York. Society is so awfully mixed in Chicago. A poor lawyer’s wife with last year’s LORD APOHAQUI MEETS THE BARTONS 43 silk gown turned and made over, is just as apt to be noticed and taken up as a millionaire lady, so what’s the use of having millions of money? At the last ball we went to in Chicago we saw a chit of a girl whose father is a doctor and keeps only one carriage—the one he uses in his business—would you believe it, mylord, that girl was made as much of as though she was covered with diamonds.” I “Is it possible?” said Lord Apohaqui, gravely. “It’s true, let alone possible; and that’s why I say, what’s the use wearing Paris gowns and driving in your own carriage when a doctor’s girl is taken up like that?” “La, ma,” said Miss Lobelia, “how you do talk! You oughtn’t to run Chicago down as long as we live there.” “We needn’t keep on living there. I’m free to say, Lord Apohaqui, I like aristocracy, and maybe we will settle in England; at any rate, we’ll stay for some time where Lobelia can associate with the high society—I consider high society so refining.” “You are too flattering, madam,” said the young lord, “too flattering by far. I’ve no doubt we English have more to learn from* your new and vigorous west than you have to learn from us. Do you not think so, Miss Barton?” “I know too little of the English to express an opinion about them, but I agree with Mrs. Packer, it is dreadful to mix up with lawyers’ and doctors’ families. It is worth while to move to England to escape such con¬ tamination, even were there no other reasons, which, of course, there are.” A twinkle in Grace’s eye was the only indication the girl gave thaj: she was indulging in “a bit of chaff,” as Lord Apohaqui mentally termed it. Mrs. Barton, not observing the twinkle and suppos¬ ing her daughter in earnest, gathered up her rug and wraps and arose with an air of wounded dignity. “Grace,” she said, “your own father was a lawyer, and your uncle was a doctor. It does not become the daughter of a Confederate Colonel to disparage the legal 44 LORD APOHAQUI MEETS THE BARTONS and medical professions. I’ll go in now; I am tired of such talk.” “Mamma,” cried Grace, as she arose to accompany her mother, “I did not mean to say a thing against the South, you know I didn’t.” The rest of her explanation was lost to the party on deck, but that the explanation was satisfactory, Lord Apohaqui, who had seen the twinkle in Grace’s eye, made no manner of doubt. CHAPTER V. LORD APOHAQUI MEETS MR. RHETT CALHOUN. On reaching the ladies’ cabin Mrs. Barton resumed the reading of her novel, Clara retired to her room, and Grace began writing notes in her diary. When she had finished writing she announced her intention of going aft to see Rhett Calhoun. “It is only nine o’clock, and Rhett said he would be in the nook until after ten. The night is beautiful, the moon is as bright as a new silver dollar. I won’t be gone long.” “It would be better for Rhett to come here,” said Mrs. Barton. “I wish he could, but he can’t cross the line into our territory, it’s against the rule; we can go over to his part.” Throwing a shawl around her shoulders and promising not to be gone long, the girl went on deck. At that moment, the moon was obscured by a passing cloud, and Grace almost walked into, a solid body that was promenading the deck and proved to be Lord Apo- haqui. “I beg your pardon—” began his lordship, then stopped shcyt as he recognized with whom he had collided. “Oh, it is you?” said Grace. “You were gliding about so softly I mistopk you for a ghost.” “But since I have been so awkward as to run against you, you see how very tangible I am?” “Yes.” “And now you no longer mistake me for a ghost?” “No, indeed,” answered Grace, laughing. “No ghost could run against a person like that.” With this she was ( 45 ) 46 LORD APOHAQUI MEETS MR. CALHOUN about to pass on, when Lord Apohaqui said with some earnestness: “I beg your pardon, Miss Barton. I would like to say just a word. I want you to know that I—I quite understand the difference between you and those—those countrywomen of yours from Chicago-” “Oh, they are not our countrywomen, Lord Apohaqui. Chicago is a thousand miles from Alabama. We are Southern.” “The way they talked to you and your mother cer¬ tainly showed they had not the advantages of good breeding. I trust they did not wound your feelings or your mother’s?” “Wound our feelings?” said Grace. “Not a bit of it. On the contrary, I enjoy the Packers. They are so different from our people. They amuse us. Mamma may be a little resentful at times, but it does not last. For my part, I feel actually indebted to the Packers because of the material they furnished for my note-book. I have filled five pages to-night since we went into the cabin, and but for the Packers I could not have filled one page.” They were now at the railing separating the second from the first class quarters; dropping the lord’s arm, which she had accepted to steady her steps, Grace thanked him for bringing her so far in safety, and bade him “good-night.” “But why must you leave me?” asked Lord Apohaqui. “May I not see you back to the ladies’ saloon?” “Thank you, but I am going on this side to see an old friend who is traveling second-class.” “An Alabama girl?” “No, an Alabama man—the son of my mother’s oldest and dearest friend. Mr. Calhoun hasn’t made his fortune yet, that’s why he is traveling second-class.” At this moment Rhett approached, and Grace said to him; “I came to tell you mamma and Clara are not well enough to pay you a visit to-night; they will come to-morrow. Lord Apohaqui, if you like I will introduce LORD APOHAQUI MEETS MR. CALHOUN 47 you to Mr. Calhoun and you can come over to his side of the ship and see the second cabin.” The two young men bowed rather stiffly. It was so dark neither could farm an accurate opinion of the other’s personal appearance; both were tall, both stalwart—that was all they could determine. It can not be said that either the Englishman or the Alabamian was in love with Grace, yet they felt an instinctive dislike to each other. Rhett Calhoun became somewhat moody and depressed, the young lord somewhat suspicious and dis¬ satisfied. “An English lord?” was Calhoun’s bitter thought. “And American girls are crazy about titles. D-him! He can see her every hour of the day while I am railed off here-” This state of affairs was enough to irritate any Ameri¬ can youth who never before had felt himself cabined, cribbed and confined on account of his impecuniosity. While in Washington, Rhett went among the highest, although he was known to be just a clerk in one of the Government departments. As to the Englishman, a gloom also fell upon his spirits; he fancied he had found the very girl he would like to make his wife if only she were not so American. She was pretty enough, indeed he admitted to himself that she was prettier than any woman he had ever met; she was vivacious, bright, entertaining; but could he marry a girl guilty of such bad form as walking at night on deck alone? What sort of a mother could Mrs. Barton be to permit her daughter to start out alone in the night to see a young man—a second cabin passenger? And yet—and yet there was something about her which commanded his entire respect; not for a moment did he imagine that he or any other man could be more familiar with her than with a girl chaperoned by the grandest Duchess in England. “Rhett,” said Grace, “mamma and Clara are anxious to see your show people. When are they to give their exhibition?” “Mr. Blower means to have the performance come 48 LORD APOHAQUI MEETS MR. CALHOUN off to-morrow night,” returned Rhett, rather coldly. “It is for the benefit of a poor Italian girl on her way back to Italy, very ill with consumption. She went to America to make money for her family. She is a singer.” “That is all the more reason why we must come,” cried Grace. “You must come too, Lord Apohaqui, and bring the Packers and Mr. Morton. You know them; do use your influence to make them attend. We must help this poor Italian girl all we can.” “I will do my best, Miss Barton,” said the lord. “Rhett, I am wild to see the Arkansas Strong Girl, whom they say is the star of this wonderful troupe,” continued Grace. “I shall feel proud of her because she is a Southerner. Imagine, Lord Apohaqui, a girl as strong as a lioness and as handsome as a goddess— that is the way Rhett describes her.” “She must be wonderful!” said the lord. “America is a grand country and produces grand people.” “Of course, America is a grand country. Good-night, Rhett. We shall see you to-morrow.” After Lord Apohaqui had escorted Grace to the foot of the stairs, he repaired to the deck to smoke his pipe and reflect upon the day’s developments. He told him¬ self that Grace was absolutely lacking in “good form;” were an English girl to promenade alone with him on deck at. night he would not consider her a matrimonial possibility. But Grace was so lovely! It was a thousand pities she had not been reared with at least some knowl¬ edge of European manners! CHAPTER VI. MR. GREEN GASSAWAY OF LOUISIANA. The following morning when Mr. Rhett Calhoun took his seat at breakfast he saw across the table a young man in a German blouse, whom the day before he had noticed among the crowd on the lower deck. Rhett had been engaged only a few minutes in conversation with the passenger at his right, when he was interrupted by the person in question. ‘‘This is luck/’ cried he, with cheerful satisfaction. “Not only out of the steerage into the cabin, but I am put opposite a first-class Southern gentleman.” Rhett stared at the young fellow; he was homely but looked honest; his eyes were gray and glinting; his hair red and stiff and straight; he was short and stout and sturdy; he wore a blouse such as is worn by work¬ ingmen in Germany. “Do you allude to me as the ‘first- class Southern gentleman’?” Rhett asked in a friendly way. “Exactly so,” returned the other, emphatically. “I haven’t seen any other Southerner on this ship.” “How do you know that I am from the South?” “By the accent, sir. I’d know a Southern accent if I heard it in the catacombs. I reckon you hail from Alabama or Mississippi? Sister states, you know, and accent pretty much the same. I’m from New Orleans.” “You must have a keen ear for sounds,” laughed Rhett. “At any rate you hit it exactly right when you guessed _ a “Reckon, reckon,” corrected the red-headed young man quickly. “I never use the word guess unless really guessing. I would just as soon say ‘hadn’t oughter’.” “I accept your correction,” said Rhett, good-humor¬ edly, “though, really, I thought it was a guess when ( 49 ) 50 MR. GREEN GASSAWAY OF LOUISIANA you asked if I was from the South, but you certainly reckoned right when you said Alabama. That’s my native State,” and he added, “I should never take ‘you’ for a Southerner, or even for an American; that is, if I judged from your costume. It is only your voice that savors of our beloved Southland.” “You couldn’t tell from my costume?” said the red¬ headed young man, his face beaming with pleasure. “Good! I am glad to hear you say that. I am going on a pedestrian trip—going as a ‘Handwerksbursche’. It’s gratifying to know that my disguise is a success. They’ll take me for a native and not overcharge me. Moreover, I’ll get closer to the people. Did you ever travel as a Handwerksbursche?” “No, I don’t know even what that means.” “Not up in German, eh?” “My education in that line has been sadly neglected.” “I’ve posted myself for a purpose. There’s no use learning a language unless you mean to do something with it. I’ve had this trip in my mind since I was fifteen years old. A Handwerksbursche is a strolling journey¬ man—a mechanic who wanders about from place to place picking up jobs. The woods of Germany are full of ’em. They dress like this. Picturesque, isn’t it?” “Well, no,” returned Rhett, critically surveying the blue blouse worn by his table neighbor, “I can’t say it is picturesque, though I dare say it is comfortable.” “Cert, it is comfortable; it gives the wind a chance to get around a fellow. They have a jolly time of it.” “The Handwerkers?” “Yes, they haven’t much money, but neither have they much work; they see the world and study the peo¬ ple. That’s what I mean to do. What else does a fellow travel for? I wouldn’t give a dried fig for old tumbledown ruins. What I want to get at is the toiling, moiling mass of humanity. I want to get at the core of their hearts and know how the downtrodden slaves of the century think and feel.” The red-headed man talked hard and fast, but that MR. GREEN GASSAWAY OF LOUISIANA 51 did not prevent his eating hard and fast at the same time; they finished their breakfast at the same time and left the table together. As they walked away, Rhett’s new acquaintance confidentially informed him that it was a desire to study human nature which had led him to start from New York in the steerage. “Are you in the steerage?” “I was, but the purser has just transferred me to the second cabin. I was in the steerage three days. That is enough, I know all about it. Besides, I wish to get glimpses of all phases of life. I want to study cabin as well as steerage passengers, high as well as low life. Even the sweeping vision of an eagle is not too broad for the G. A. N.” “For the what?” asked Rhett, a little dazed at the young man’s grandiloquent metaphor and gesture. “The G. A. N.,” repeated the young man, leaning closer to Rhett and speaking in a low tone. “I don’t mind telling you, a Southerner, that I am the author of the G. A. N. I am at work on it now.” “What is the G. A. N.?” asked Rhett, a vague suspi¬ cion coming upon him that his companion was slightly demented. “Between Southerners there need be no secrets,” said the young man confidentially. “But it must go> no further. The G. A. N. is the Great American Novel. Do you annex?” The young man drew back and eyed Rhett as if he expected an explosion of admiration. Before Rhett could answer, the red-headed young man continued in a burst of enthusiasm, “It is a tremendous work—comprises scenes and characters throughout the length and breadth of magnificent America. A tremen¬ dous work, but I’m compassing it. I’m going to knock the persimmon from the highest limb of the tree of fame. The G. A. N. will shake the literary world to the core. It will have no Howellism, no Jamesism in it; it will be Gassawayism all the way through.” With this he looked at Rhett as if he expected soul- felt sympathy in his great undertaking. 52 MR. GREEN GASSAWAY OF LOUISIANA “It is a great ambition, 1 ” said Rhett in response to the look, “but what is Gassawayism?” “Ah/’ exclaimed the young man pulling out his hand¬ kerchief and moping his brow, “excuse me—I omitted to give my name—Green Gassaway, at your service— representative of two ancient stocks, the Greens and the Gassaways, both first families of the South, scholars on both sides, poets and politicians, men of learning, women of beauty—at present reporter on ‘New Orleans Day¬ light’, and author of the G. A. N. There’s my hand.” “I am glad to make your acquaintance, Mr. Gassa¬ way,” said Rhett, shaking the proffered hand warmly. “My name is Rhett Calhoun.” “Rhett Calhoun?” repeated Mr. Gassaway. “A good Southern name. I am glad to know you, Rhett.” “Calhoun, if you please, I prefer to be called Calhoun by strangers.” “Oh, come,” exclaimed Gassaway, again moping his forehead, which had a way of looking hot and sweaty on the slightest provocation, “come, my dear Rhett. That’s all right between strangers, but between South¬ erners, between men of the first families of the South, there is no need of formality, not the least.” During this speech Rhett made an attempt to assume an air of dignity, but it would not stand. Dignity wilted under the spontaneous warmth of soul manifested by Mr. Gassaway of New Orleans. “Formality had not been entirely done away with up to the time I left Alabama,” said Rhett, laughing. “How¬ ever, it is of no moment. I trust the G. A. N. may prove worthy of its name and—and author.” “Thank you, thank you, sir, for the sentiment. And you need have no fear. I am getting pointers every day.” “Is it a difficult task?” “Difficult? To the uninspired, yes, extremely difficult. But to me, writing is child’s play. Ever see a juggler throw balls up in the air? Tosses up one, then another, and still another—and so on, until he gets a dozen whirl- MR. GREEN GASSAWAY OF LOUISIANA 53 ing at the same time? Just so with novel writing. Get in one character, then another, and so on; the juggler has only to turn his wrist and keep his eyes peeled to keep the balls going. Same principle in writing. You have only to hustle on your characters from chapter to chapter.” “l see/’ said Rhett, when the man of genius paused to take breath. “The G. A. N. is a grand idea. When will it be published?” “Some time in the future. Of course a work like the G. A. N. can not burst into being in a day or a week. I am getting pointers on every hand. Mean¬ while I earn my bread by writing for the Daylight. The Daylight sends me to Europe to write up the seamy side of life. The labor question in Europe is,—hello, I reckon these ladies are heading for us.” The ladies who caused this interruption were Mrs. Barton and Clara. “Mrs. Barton, Miss Clara,” exclaimed Rhett, stepping forward to greet them, “how glad I am to see you.” “How are you, Rhett?” Mrs. Barton said, cordially reaching out her plump white hand to be shaken. “You are the last person I ever dreamed of meeting here. Clara and I thought Grace was joking when she told us you were aboard.” “Yes,” added Clara, “it seemed too good to be true, your bobbing up this way in midocean.” “Clara, my dear,” reproved Mrs. Barton, “let me beg you not to use Yankee slang. You know Rhett must have come aboard when we did, consequently he did not ‘bob’ up in midocean.” “Well, mamma, we did not see him until we were midway—that’s what I mean. Were you hiding, Rhett?” “No, I have merely kept on my side of the ship.” “You foolish boy. The idea of your keeping away because you are in this part of the ship. We’d go to you anywhere, Rhett, and this place certainly seems as good as our quarters.” “Oh, it’s good enough,” laughed Rhett, “and it suits 54 MR. GREEN GASSAWAY OF LOUISIANA my purse better than your part of the ship That’s why I came this way.” “Very sensible of you,” said Mrs. Barton. “Your mother and I have seen days when we would have thought this way of traveling as fine as a fiddle. You don’t remember when we used to ride to town in a rickety old wagon? And when the wagon was hauling cotton I mounted Colonel Barton’s old gray mule and your mother rode behind me.” “I remember that old gray mule very well,” added Clara; “I thought it was the finest steed in the world and used to feel very proud when Colonel Barton let me ride behind him.” During these reminiscences Mr. Gassaway was not altogether idle; he looked at the ladies and the ladies looked at him. Rhett for the moment forgot his new acquaintance, but the author of the G. A. N. was not one to be left long in the background. Taking out his note-book he jotted down a few lines, then looked up, ran his fingers through his hair and said, with delight¬ ful bonhommie: “Ah, Southern ladies? eh, Rhett. Introduce me!” Somehow, there was that about Mr. Gassaway which inspired perfect confidence. It never occurred to Rhett to suspect that Gassaway was not exactly what he claimed to be, therefore he had no hesitation in intro¬ ducing him to the Barton ladies. “I beg your pardon, Mr. Gassaway, I was so glad to see my old friends that I forgot you.” “All right, Rhett, never too late to mend,” cried Gassa¬ way, doffing his hat and making a profound bow to the ladies. Before the less impulsive Calhoun could effect the introduction, the author of the future G. A. N. intro¬ duced himself. “I am Green Gassaway, at your service; most delighted to meet Southern ladies. I take it, madam, you hail from Alabama?” “Why do you think that?” “Ah, Mrs. Barton,” said Rhett, laughing, “Mr. Gassa¬ way has a wonderful ear for niceties of sound. It is MR. GREEN GASSAWAY OF LOUISIANA 56 nothing for him to< detect the State one hails from. If he tries, he can tell your city and even your street and number.” “My friend indulges in chaff, as you must know,” said Mr. Gassaway with another courtly bow. Taken with his personal appearance—his short, thick-set figure, his round head, stiff red hair and homely, honest face. Mr. Gassaway’s courtly manners were striking indeed. “Were you ever in Birmingham, Mr. Gassaway?” asked Mrs. Barton. “Birmingham?” cried Mr. Gassaway, with the liveliest interest. “Are you, madam, from Birmingham?” “That is our home now. We are originally from Talledega.” “Well this is luck!” cried Gassaway, his face beam¬ ing with joy. “Rhett, I am in the favor of the gods—I am, for a verity.” Mr. Gassaway laid his short, thick-set right hand flat on the spot beneath which his heart was beating, made a deep and reverential obeisance to the two Barton ladies, recovered his perpendicular position, then said in an almost solemn tone; “Mrs. Barton, of Birmingham, form¬ erly of Talledega, widow of the' brave, the chivalrous soldier Colonel Barton, I salute you! I ought to have known you. I’ve seen your picture a hundred times. My mother treasures it in her finest album. My father treasures Colonel Barton’s picture in his finest album. Mrs. Barton, I am delighted to meet you, to know you, to shake you by the hand—how are you?” With this Gassaway briskly took his hand away from over his heart, grasped Mrs. Barton’s hand and shook it with great friendliness. Mrs. Barton, who had no memory whatever of the Gassaway name, gazed at the young man with open-eyed amazement. “Your mother has my picture?” she murmured, sink¬ ing down on the bench. “She has, madam,” replied Gassaway, with another bow so grave, so courtly, that Clara Barton had to bite her lips to preserve her gravity. “She treasures it as . 56 MR. GREEN GASSAWAY OF LOUISIANA a memento of girlhood days. My mother and you were at the same boarding-school. You were Miss Sophy Ballington, my mother was Dolly Green.” “Oh, are you Dolly Green’s son?” “I have that honor. My father, Judge Gassaway of New Orleans, was in the army with Col. Barton. Possi¬ bly you may know Judge Gassaway?” “No, I don’t believe I do. I never knew whom Dolly Green married.” “Dolly Green, Mrs. Barton,” said Mr. Gassaway gravely, “married Judge Gassaway of New Orleans. It is admitted by the whole New Orleans bar that my father’s mind is deep, logical, profound. I grieve to say his health is now poor—very poor. Nervous pros¬ tration, Mrs. Barton—nervous prostration from too arduous application to his profession—entirely too ardu¬ ous.” Mrs. Barton said she was sorry to hear it, she hoped his mother was well? “My mother?” exclaimed Mr. Gassaway, a broad smile lighting his face. “Yes, God bless her! She enjoys the best of health. She is one woman in a million.” “I am sure she is blessed in having a son who loves her so.” “Loves and honors her; to honor my mother,” said Mr. Gassaway, with great courtliness, doffing his hat as though to some invisible queen, “is to honor myself. Has it struck you, Mrs. Barton, what a coincidence is this midocean meeting? It is worthy of the G. A. N. When the Daylight published an account of the Barton family’s good luck in Birmingham my mother cried, ‘Hurrah for Sophy Ballington’ and showed me your picture in her album.” “You did not recognize me from that old picture, Mr. Gassaway?” “Green, Mrs. Barton, Green, not Mr. Gassaway. I am no Mister to the school-girl friend of my mother.” “Well, Green, then. I gave your mother that old daguerreotype long before you were born.” The little drummer put one arm around the magnet’s waist. MR. GREEN GASSAWAY OF LOUISIANA 57 “But it is still a good likeness—an excellent likeness, Mrs. Barton, only you look younger and better-looking, positively better-looking.” “You don’t resemble your mother, Mr.—Mr. Green?” said Mrs. Barton, not knowing exactly how to take the young man’s fervent compliment. “No, indeed, not at all. Mother is one of the most beautiful women I ever saw, you know that of course. I’m a Gassaway and the Gassaways never run on their beauty. On my mother’s side women of beauty—on my father’s side men of brains, writers, orators, soldiers, statesmen. You never saw an ugly Green woman nor a fool Gassaway man. Brains and beauty are united in our family.” Rhett and Clara walked to the railing, where they stood looking down at the steerage passengers. “Did you say he belonged down there?” asked Clara. Clara. “He started in the steerage. Now he is in our cabin; I suppose when he has finished taking pointers about us he will move still further up the line and take pen- photos of you people in the first cabin. He is writing a novel.” “If they let him go about among the different classes, why don’t they let you go too, Rhett?” “Because I don’t care to pay the difference in the fares, Miss Clara; I save money here, so as to see as much of Europe as possible.” “I almost envy you,” replied Clara. “You seem to have all the amusing people in this part of the ship; the passengers in the first cabin are too stiff and formal to be interesting. We are anxious to see your Mr. Blower and his Prodigies. Will they perform to-night?” “Yes, and the Italian girl for whose benefit the show is given is in great want, so don’t fail to come—make everybody come that you can.” “Grace has already attended to that. She has interested that English Lord; and all the snobs in our part of the ship will do anything he does. Mrs. Packer and her 58 MR. GREEN GASSAWAY OF LOUISIANA daughter are coming, so is Mr. Morton and lots of others.” “Who are Mrs. Packer and Miss Packer? Friends of yours ?” “Friends? on the contrary I don’t think they like us; they are from Chicago and as Grace would say, are ‘zvickedly’ rich. Grace has such ideas about wealth. There are times when she feels as if we ought to divide our money and give most of it to poor people. She says we never earned it, so why should we have so much more than other people who work ever so much harder than we ever worked?” “But you haven’t near as much as the Packers,” re¬ marked Rhett. “I have heard of them, they are said to be among the richest people in Chicago.” “Yes, I reckon the Packers are lots richer than we are, but -that doesn’t reconcile Grace to* our newly- gotten money. She has a sort of leveling spirit in her, a feeling that we have not earned bur wealth. She says that there is enough in the world to make every¬ body comfortable if things were evenly divided.” “And Mrs. Packer of Chicago does not like such socialistic ideas?” “I don’t think Grace has ventilated her ideas before the Packers.” “Why then do the Packers dislike the Bartons?” “A sort of natural antagonism. I saw it in Mrs. Packer at our very first meeting.” “It seems to me the most natural thing in this world would be to like the Bartons,” said Rhett. “The Packers must be curious people.” “Not curious—only pompous. They are so proud of their money that they cannot forget it and will not allow anybody else to forget it. Their raiment is simply im¬ mense—Russian sables, big diamonds, gorgeous gowns. We wear plain traveling dresses and the Packers look down on us. Lord Apohaqui sits on our side of the table next to Grace. The Packers are as sweet as sugar to him; to us they are as sour as lemons.” MR. GREEN GASSAWAY OF LOUISIANA 59 On their way back to their own quarters, Mrs. Barton replied to Clara’s question as to who “that Gassaway man was” by saying, “He is Dolly Green’s son.” “Yes, I heard him say that. But who> is Dolly Green? Was she really so very beautiful?” “Beautiful! She was as homely as a mud fence!” “Then this young man’s mother must be some other Dolly Green?” “No, there never was but one Dolly Green, there couldn’t be but one. Everybody knew her. Such a tombdy was never before seen, riding horses astraddle like a man, climbing trees and doing everything else like a lad. She used to be the talk of Talledega. But that was years before you were born. Only a blind man could have thought Dolly Green a beauty.” “That funny Mr. Gassaway isn’t blind and he thinks Dolly Green is still beautiful.” “You must remember, dear, that she is his mother. To a loving son all mothers are beautiful.” CHAPTER VII. LORD APOHAQUI MEETS THE AUTHOR OF THE G. A. N. The next afternoon Mrs. Barton and Clara agaift visited Rhett on the afterdeck. As they sat chatting in the cosy nook they saw Lord Apohaqui approaching with Miss Packer leaning on his arm. “Is that your English lord?” asked Rhett. “He is not our lord,” laughed Clara; “much more likely he is Miss Packer’s lord.” “He’s very handsome,” remarked Mrs. Barton. “Umph!” said Rhett rather cynically. “Do you think so?” “Yes, and he has good manners.” Another “Umph” from Rhett. “Don’t you like Lord Apohaqui?” asked Clara. “Oh, yes, as well as I like any titled man. But I don’t like the institution of lords.” Lord Apohaqui and Miss Packer were now quite near. Miss Packer’s round cheeks glowed like a red peony, her eyes sparkled and she tossed her head back proudly as she recognized the Bartons. “My!” she muttered in disgust, “there’s that Southern girl talking to a second- class passenger.” “Second-class?” said the nobleman. “I did not know that you had classes in your country. Are not ail people equal in the States?” “Oh, no, my lord!” cried Miss Lobelia, earnestly, “that is a great mistake. We have first-class people in America, just as you have in England; the only differ¬ ence is we don’t have titles. No first-class Chicago girl would lower herself like this!” It was evident to the young Englishman that Miss Packer wanted to turn back without speaking to the Barton ladies, but affecting not to* perceive her wishes ( 60 ) LORD APOHAQUI MEETS AUTHOR OF G. A. N. 61 he came to a stop before the party on the other side of the rope, exchanged greetings, and in a minute or so Miss Packer and the Englishman were over the line, hobnobbing with the plebeian second-class passengers. Calhoun was introduced to Miss Packer and Gassa- way to the Englishman. Mr. Gassaway’s eyes beamed. “Pm glad to meet you, lordl You’re the first live lord I ever saw. How are you?” With this he seized Lord Apohaqui’s hand and shook it with such heartiness that the astonished nobleman winced with pain. “I say, my good fellow, that’s enough,” he muttered, withdrawing his crushed digits. “Not used to the politician shake, eh?” grinned Mr. Gassaway, delightedly. “Perhaps it is too strong for an English nob, but it is just the thing for our country. The political shake is an art very much in vogue among republican people. Americans are the champion hand¬ shakers of the world. Not long enough in America to learn it, eh?” “No, I have not learned it yet,” said the Englishman, ruefully rubbing his injured fingers. “This is my first lesson, and I don’t care for another.” “Ah, I see! Lords born to legislate don’t have to court the rabble. American shake means American votes. Every politician is a hand-shaker, from the Presi¬ dent down. It’s a matter of business. A good shaker is a good mixer and a good mixer in politics generally gets there. But, great Jehosaphat! the idea of being born to the purple, born to power. No reflection on you personally, lord, but, by George Washington, it’s a terrible system. I’d like to talk with you at length on this subject. I see in it some splendid pointers for the G. A. N.” “We had better return to our saloon?” whispered Lord Apohaqui to Mrs. Barton. “That fellow talks a little wildly!” “I agree with you,” said Mrs. Barton. “Mr. Gassa¬ way is not fair to the English Government. It is not half as tyrannical as the Yankee Government.” 62 LORD APOHAQUI MEETS AUTHOR OF G. A. N. “Two wrongs don’t make a right,” cried the undaunted reporter, running his fingers through his stiff hair. “Democratic principles are always dangerous to tyranny. There is nothing in our government, imperfect as it is and must be, being the work of imperfect men, that is half as bad as hereditary lawmakers. Why, bless my soul, madam! any half-witted lord, if he has only got sense enough to say ‘yes’ and ‘no’, can stop the wheels of progress, turn back the tide of time and nullify the great House of Commons. Such things must make anarchists of the people.” Retreating a few feet, Mr. Gassaway intently eyed the Englishman, but as no answer eame he continued in the same vein of high feeling. “I am willing,” he cried, “that the world should know that I, Green Gassaway, of the two houses of the Greens and the Gassaways, best Southern blood in America, am now, ever have been and ever shall be, a foe to aristoc¬ racy in all its shapes and forms. That’s my platform, and long may it stand to the honor and glory of Democ¬ racy!” Thus Mr. Gassaway delivered himself. And we will hope he felt better thereafter; his audience had melted away at the first words. Lord Apohaqui offering his arm to Mrs. Barton, leaving Miss Packer to Clara Bar¬ ton. The fact is, the young peer thought the time had come to give the mother a hint as to the requirements of good form and the dangers attending young girls who' are allowed to go unchaperoned. As they walked forward to the saloon cabin he asked if he might venture to speak a word of warning? “When he sees a lady travel¬ ing alone, a friend may venture to speak, may he not?” “The lady ought to feel grateful for such kindness,” said Mrs. Barton. “You know, madam,” continued the lord somewhat hesitatingly, “ladies not accustomed to traveling some time fall in with—with travelers not exactly their equals socially.” LORD APOHAQUI MEETS AUTHOR OF G. A. N. 63 “Of course. That is to be expected/’ assented Mrs. Barton. “Now those second-class and steerage passengers— for instance that fellow in the peasant’s blouse-” “Dolly Green’s son?” interrupted Mrs. Barton. “Why, sir, that young man’s father is a Southern Judge, and Dolly Green came from an old Southern family. I knew his folks. Mr. Gassaway is not a real tramp, he wears a blouse because he is traveling to study the people.” Lord Apohaqui inwardly resolved that if the Barton girl did become Lady Apohaqui, his mother-in-law should be kept on the American side of the Atlantic if he had the power to do it. Such a woman, he told himself, had no right to be the mother of as beautiful a girl as Grace Barton. “Would a wise man scatter diamonds among a vulgar crowd? Would a wise mother put pretty girls among rude men eager to snatch them up?” “That is true/’ admitted Mrs. Barton when Lord Apohaqui expressed these views in the mildest way he could, “but I can trust my girls, anywhere and with anybody. They were raised in the South where men have the highest respect for women and where women learn how to command respect. Grace, you know, is twenty-one and can do as she pleases.” “An English girl, that is, a daughter of the upper classes, is under her mother’s wing until she is transferred to her husband?” “Dear me! What if a girl does not marry until she is thirty or forty*years old?” “Thirty or forty or a hundred, it is not godd form for a well born lady to. go about alone; she must be protected, guarded; of course the lower classes do as they please.” “How strange!” murmured Mrs. Barton, placidly. “Our girls are quite independent.” One evening after Mr. Morton and Mrs. Packer had dwelt upon the superiority of English customs and ways, 64 LORD APOHAQUI MEETS AUTHOR OF G. A. N. Lord Apohaqui asked Grace her opinion as to the ad¬ vantage of a country having titles and an aristocracy. “I do not care for titles/’ replied Grace, “at any rate, not enough to live in England to get one.” “You do not dislike the English?” said the young lord, reproach in his tone and look. “No, but I love my own country and would not live in England for any title, unless perhaps for one-” “Oh, dear me!” scornfully cried Miss Packer. “What is that one?” asked Lo-rd Apohaqui. “That is the title of Queen. I would not live in any land with people held by law above me.” “My, what a stretcher!” exclaimed Miss Packer, add¬ ing in a whisper to her mother: "Any one can see, ma, she’s making a dead set at that lord. It’s perfectly shameful!” “I beg jour pardon, Miss Barton,” said Lord Apoha¬ qui, almost with a gasp, “but don’t you think your ambition is rather high?” “Perhaps,” replied Grace calmly, “but I would not take even the title of Queen unless with it was the power to turn every thing topsy-turvy, to wipe out old laws and make new ones, to level up, and then level down. Oh! it would be such delight to straighten out all the tangles and iniquities of the ages.” “And you think you are competent to do all this?” queried Lord Apohaqui, looking at Grace with wonder and amusement. “Well, at all events I should try. I should have the wisest people make the laws. Would it be possible to make matters worse than they are now?” Mrs. Packer sat bolt upright in her chair, raised her tortoise shell lorgnettes to her eyes and looked at Grace, a deep frown on her brow. “Such sentiments are anar¬ chistic,” she said. “I hope, my lord, you do not imagine the society people of America have such shocking opin¬ ions.” Triumphantly Mrs. Packer took her departure, followed by her daughter. “Mrs. Packer is so fond of titles,” said Grace, “I feai LORD APOHAQUI MEETS AUTHOR OF G. A. N. 65 that she thinks ill of me for not agreeing with her. It is the hereditary part that I don’t like. In the South the men are all titled and the women are all American Princesses, but this homage is offered as a sort of tribute to individual manhood and womanhood.” “I don’t mind your disliking titles as long as you don’t include the owners of them,” said Lord Apohaqui. “I promise not to do that,” laughed Grace. ”1 like the English. I feel near kin to them. My great-great¬ grandfather came over from England.” “In the Mayflower?” “Mayflower?” scornfully. “I beg your pardon. I fancied that the Mayflower was a kind of Holy Ark to Americans.” “It is to Yankees.” “Are you not a Yankee?” The look which Grace gave by way of reply to this question startled the Englishman. “I beg your pardon, Miss Barton,” he stammered. “In England we think of all Americans as Yankees. I did not know there was any difference.” “The Yankees are proud of the Mayflower and cele¬ brate every anniversary of its arrival at Plymouth Rock, but Southerners are not interested in that old boat at all, not in the least.” “You make me ashamed of my ignorance,” remarked Lord Apohaqui. “I had no idea there was such a differ¬ ence between the Mayflower people and the people of your State. I shall get an American history the moment we land.” “Do,” coolly assented the girl, “and be sure you get a Southern history. The Yankee histories are too one¬ sided. If you depend upon them you will never get the truth about the war.” “What war?” “Why our war, of course,” said Grace who forgot that England always has some war on hand and that consequently the expression “The war” conveys no such definite meaning to an Englishman’s mind as it does 66 LORD APOHAQUI MEETS AUTHOR OF G. A. N. to an American’s. “Didn’t you ever hear how the Yan¬ kees fought us for four years and ruined our country?’ 1 “I—er—I believe I have.” “Well, you don’t suppose they would have treated us that way had we been Yankees? You have no idea how terribly they treated us. Papa was a cotton planter. The war ruined him and nearly everybody else in Alabama.” This sweeping sketch of history dazed the Englishman; he comprehended little of the history, but he understood well the beauty of the historian, and the more this beauty impressed him the more he deplored the terrible de¬ mocracy in which she appeared to revel. “Do you agree with Mrs. Packer in thinking me an anarchist?” asked Grace, instinctively, realizing the nature of Lord Apohaqui’s thoughts. “Why do you imagine such a thing?” “I see that you think me very—very—what shall I say? Bold?” “Oh, no, not that! I have never thought you bold.” “Well, unconventional. English girls don’t go out on deck alone?” “No, they do not,” replied Lord Apohaqui reluctantly. “You say that as if you wished they did.” “It would be very pleasant if they did.” “You mean pleasant for men?” “Yes.” “But not for women?” “•For those who like it—yes.” “American girls have decided ideas. If English girls like to play baby, we won’t complain, but we don’t mean to coop ourselves up. When we want fresh air we are not afraid to go and get it. Why should we be? No savages on this ship?” “One’s mother or sister might go too,” hazarded the young lord. “Of course it would be pleasanter if the mother or sister wanted to go. But it would be very hard on a mother to follow a grown-up daughter about as if she LORD APOHAQUI MEETS AUTHOR OF G. A. N. 67 were a three year old child liable to slip through the railings/’ “Democrat—Anarchist—whatever she is,” said the young Englishman to himself, “she’s the brightest girl I ever saw. If I thought my mother could tone down her Americanisms I’d offer her myself and title to¬ morrow!” CHAPTER VIII. MR. BLOWER’S PRODIGIES. Lord Apohaqui tried in the most delicate way to in¬ duce Mrs. Barton to exercise a more careful control over her daughters, but in spite of all he said—and he said enough to frighten any English mother into the most circumspect behavior—the Bartons persisted in their determination to attend the performances of Mr. Blower’s Prodigies in the second cabin. “It’s a deuced bore,” muttered Mr. Montrose Morton as they stood in the cabin waiting for the ladies; “the whole set over there are a common crowd or they would¬ n’t be traveling second-class. I don’t see how refined women care to mix with them.” “I suppose it amuses them,” said Lord Apohaqui, who did not care to express his disapproval to 1 Mr. Morton. In a few minutes Mrs. Packer sailed in, followed by her daughter, both regally arrayed, diamonds blazing in their ears and at their throats. “My dear Lord Apohaqui,” cried Mrs. Packer, tugging at her glove, “I hope I haven’t kept you waiting! Shall we start right off?” “The other ladies will be in soon. We may as well all go together,” said the Englishman. Mrs. Packer would have been better pleased if she and her daughter could have gone on with the two men, leaving the others to follow as they liked. After ten minutes the three Bartons strolled in, calm and serene as if they had not wickedly kept people waiting. Mrs. Packer was indignant. “You are not very punctual, Miss Barton,” she said to Grace who happened to be nearest. ( 68 ) MR. BLOWER’S PRODIGIES 69 “Oh, yes, Mrs. Packer,” replied Grace, smiling sweetly, “I am considered a very model of punctuality.” “I never saw a more brazen piece of impertinence,” thought Mrs. Packer; aloud she said, with dignity; “My lord, will you lead the way?” Lord Apohaqui was standing near Mrs. Packer who consequently was not a little surprised and disappointed when the Englishman stepped forward and offered his arm to Mrs. Barton. Mr. Morton offered his arm to Mrs. Packer; the three young girls were left to look after themselves. Following them came Agnes Allan, Mrs. Barton’s maid, and a dozen, or two other first-class passengers who wanted to see Mr. Blower’s wonderful “Aggregation of Prodigies.” The saloon of the second cabin was filled with rows of chairs occupied for the most part by the second-class passengers; one row was reserved for the visitors from the other part of the ship. At the far end of the cabin, partially screened by the piano, was Mr. Richard Blower and his prodigies; near by stood Green Gassaway, his eyes glowing with excitement. He no- longer wore the German workman’s blouse. In honor of the occasion he had donned an ordinary gray^ suit which, as Mrs. Barton rightly observed, made him look more like a decent Southern gentleman. Mr. Blower, manager of the American Prodigies, was fully forty-five years old but unlike Mr. Moreton he neither showed nor felt the signs of approaching age. Hale, hearty, robust, Mr. Blower was dark skinned; his coarse hair was long and coal black; both skin and hair seemed to exude oil; his prodigies said it was the oil of jollity, for Mr. Blower carried jollity wherever he went; he was the natural foe to melancholy; always sanguine, though not always suc¬ cessful. He was now on his way to Europe for the pur¬ pose of exhibiting his “Prodigies” before “the Dukes and Duchesses and crowned heads.” “Not,” said Mr. Blower confidentially to Mr. Green Gassaway, “not that I value the opinions of crowned heads more than I do the opinions of any of America’s 70 MR. BLOWER’S PRODIGIES seventy million sovereigns; but Mr. Gassaway, the world is still full of snobs; snobs run in the wake of kings; kings applaud; ditto snobs; ergo, the thing is to gain the good will of kings. That is what I am going to do now. As soon as the Dukes and Duchesses and Queen of England run after my Prodigies the rabble will run too.” “There’s the English lord,” whispered Gassaway. Mr. Blower stepped forward. “Welcome, my lord! I am honored and delighted to see you.” When all the party were seated Mr. Blower rubbed his hands and beamed; each one of the audience was good for at least fifty cents and Mr. Blower determined that a collection should be taken at once. “Ladies and gentlemen,” he cried in stentorian tones, “the Arkansaw strong girl will now act as Charity’s maid. Each lord and lady is expected to contribute from fifty cents up to—There is absolutely no limit to the upward rise of the contributions, the higher you go the better for the poor Signora Satoli and her sick and starving parents in Milan.” From the stool on the other side of the piano majestic¬ ally arose a female form; and slowly, as became majesty, there stepped to the front a woman upon whom all eyes at once became fixed. It was as if some grand goddess from the old Pagan world had come down from her pedestal and stood before that assembly, beautiful, per¬ fectly moulded, kindliness beaming from her face. Mr. Gassaway seemed as much interested in the success of the show as Mr. Blower himself; he keenly enjoyed the sensation which the sight of the Arkansaw Strong Girl caused. His eyes exultingly flashed from the woman to the crowd and back to the woman again. Mr. Blower’s face shone and his jovial eyes twinkled as he marked the effect his “Prodigy” created. “My lord, ladies and gents,” he cried, “the Arkansaw Strong Girl will now take up a collection. Go ahead, Sail!” “Honor me,” cried Mr. Gassaway, with a courtly bow, MR. BLOWER’S PRODIGIES 71 as he offered the Prodigy his soft felt hat. The Arkansaw Strong Girl took the hat with the grand composure of a queen and proceeded to pass it from one spectator to another. “Juno herself,” muttered the English lord as the monocle fell from his right eye. “Magnificent,” chimed in Mr. Morton. “A flower from the glorious South,” cried Mr. Gassa- way with a burst of pent-up patriotism. “The greatest country on earth! Land of fair women and brave men! Arkansaw takes the cake, she does!” “Takes all in sight and holds all she can,” muttered a sneering voice in the rear. Rhett Calhoun and Grace Barton glanced over their shoulders and saw a pair of envious eyes glinting satirically at the author of the prospective G. A. N. “Who is he?” asked Grace in a whisper. “Oh,” laughed Rhett, “he is a snappy little drummer for an electric belt or something of the kind.” “What is there between him and Mr. Gassaway?” “A natural antagonism, I suppose. Gassaway’s brag¬ ging about the South irritates the little drummer, who thinks his part of the earth the hub of the universe.” “From Boston?” “Yes, at any rate from New England. He snarls and snaps whenever he gets near Gassaway. I was afraid yesterday our friend would grab him by his hair and toss him overboard.” “Six feet if she’s an inch,” burst out Gassaway, ad¬ miringly, as he watched the Strong Girl’s slow, stately movements. “Strapping backwoods wench!” muttered the drummer of electric belts. “Did you speak, sir?” demanded Gassaway sharply. “I guess I’ve a right to speak on this ship,” said the drummer. “I’ve paid my passage and have as much right here as anybody.” “Oh!” cried Mr. Gassaway, “you have paid your pas- 72 MR. BLOWER’S PRODIGIES sage, eh? I am glad to hear it. Some fellows try to beat their way.” The electric belt drummer frowned but made no reply. The coins jingled musically as the hat went around. Lord Apohaqui dropped in a sovereign. Mr. Morton, not to be outdone, put in a five dollar gold piece. Whether fifty dollars or fifty cents went into the hat seemed to make no difference to the Arkansaw Strong Girl; the calm self-possession of her grand face remained undisturbed by smile or frown. Mr. Blower counted the collection and, with delight in his face, announced the result; it passed fifty dollars. “My lord, ladies and gentlemen, you have done well, exceedingly well. In the name of Signorina Satoli and her dependent parents I thank you a thousand thanks for your generosity. And now our Prodigies will try to entertain, edify and instruct you. The Magnetic Mag¬ nolia from Georgia will distribute the programmes.” From behind the piano shyly came a slim little maiden, apparently not more than seventeen years old; her hair, tied with blue ribbon, hung down her back, her blue eyes were soft and, as Mr. Gassaway put it, “extremely fetching.” The programmes distributed by this dainty specimen of femininity, had been written by no less a person than the author of the G. A. N., read as follows: BLOWER’S UNRIVALED AGGREGATION OF AMER¬ ICAN PRODIGIES. 1. Miss Sal Horton, the Arkansaw Strong Girl:— Miss Horton can lift 1,000 pounds as gracefully as you can lift a kitten. $1,000 to any man on the ship who can out- lift the Arkansaw Strong Girl. 2. Jake Nye, Wyoming’s Western Wonder:— $1,000 to any man or woman in the world who can out- laugh Jake. Jake’s laugh shakes the Rocky Mountains’ tops; the most thunderous, wonderful laugh mortal man ever conceived. 3. Miss Magnetic Magnolia, of Georgia:— Miss Magnolia challenges the power of any five men on the ship to budge her one inch when she is properly in¬ sulated. $1,000 to any man who can resist this wonderful human magnet. MR. BLOWER’S PRODIGIES 73 hf. Sam, tke Human Gorilla, from the Sierras:— The only living Gorilla who speaks the English language. $1,000 to any man who can produce Sam’s equal. 5. Miss Mandy Tandy, of Texas:— The only woman in the world who completely hides her¬ self in her own hair; a cataract of capillary appendage. 6. Alta-Ma-Toxa, last of the Cave Dwellers; captured in the wilds of Arizona; himself a dwarf, and king of the Dwarf Cave Dwellers of Arizona. 7. Wal-wal-lah, Chief of the Apaches:— Wal-wal-lah, like David, has slain his thousands; the 'fiercest Indian ever captured; for each of his victims slain Wal-wal-lah wears a feather in his cap; the cap, with 1,209 feathers, is on exhibition. $1,000 to any crowned King or Queen in Europe whose cap contains more feathers than Wal-wal-lah’s. There was much laughing and talking over this re¬ markable programme. The electric belt drummer showed a disposition to belittle the whole affair, especi¬ ally that portion relating to Miss Magnetic Magnolia. “Five men, indeed?” he said, as he eyed the slim little maiden from Georgia. “I’ll stake my bottom dollar I can lift her out of her boots the first pop.” “You must go for that $1,000, then,” laughed Rhett. ‘Til for it if the fellow has got that much, which of course he hasn’t. It’s clear as day the whole show is a fake.” “Hides herself in her own hair, I don’t believe it, do you, ma?” cried Miss Lobelia. “Of course it is a trick,” returned Mrs. Packer, tartly; she had not quite gotten over the nobleman’s bad taste in taking Mrs. Barton under his protection. “What I want to see,” said Mr. Morton, solemnly, “is the laughing man. I never before heard of a Cham¬ pion Laugher.” “My lord, ladies and gents,” resumed the genial show¬ man, “we are to-night honored by the presence of a member of Britain’s proud aristocracy, the first heredi¬ tary peer of the English House of Lords in the presence of whom we have ever had the honor to perform; but I may confidently predict by no means the last. In fact, 74 MR. BLOWER’S PRODIGIES I may state that my principal purpose in taking the Prodigies to Europe is to show them off before the Queen and the crowned heads of the Continent. In addition to England’s nobleman we have to-night the proud honor to number in the audience Mr. Montrose Morton, that distinguished member of New York’s famous 400; also the well-known Mrs. Packer and daughter, widow and daughter of the King Pork Man of Chicago'; there are also with us three distinguished representatives of a famous old Southern family, the Bartons of Alabama, the very flowers of Southern aris¬ tocracy, the widow and daughters of the renowned General Barton, the first millionaire produced by the New South.” “Millionaires?” muttered Mrs. Packer, “I don’t believe one word of it.” “Of course not,” returned Miss Lobelia. “You can see from their clothes they ain’t much. That oldest girl looks exactly like a school teacher.” “Who can have told that man about us?” asked Grace, in a whisper to Rhett. “Certainly not I,” said Rhett, laughing. “You have got a good send-off as an heiress and now the fortune^ hunters will swarm about you like flies.” The performance was begun by the magnetic girl from Georgia who softly glided to the middle of the floor, slim, shy, blushing beneath the eyes fixed upon her. The Arkansaw Strong Girl stepped to the side of the little Magnet. “Miss Horton,” said Mr. Blower, “see if you can lift Miss Magnolia.” The Arkansaw Strong Girl lifted the slim Georgia girl as easily as she would have lifted a kitten. She carried her back and forth two or three times, then set her down and the two girls stood side by side, as strongly contrasting each other as two young women possibly could. “Now,” said Mr. Blower, with a deep roll of voice that carried conviction wherever it reached, “Miss MR. BLOWER’S PRODIGIES 75 Magnetic Magnolia possesses the curious, and I may say the unrivalled, power of putting on and off at will that strange and subtle fluid called magnetism 1 . At present, not having put on the fluid, she can be handled easily by Miss Horton or by any one of ordinary strength. But observe the difference when in her mag¬ netic state. Proceed, Miss Magnolia.” . The process of insulation seemed simple; all the girl I seemed to do was to stand still a moment as if collecting her thoughts; then a faint shudder crept over her. “Ready?” asked the manager. The Magnet nodded her head. “Now,” continued Mr. Blower, “Miss Horton will try to lift the magnet from the floor; proceed, Miss Horton.” The Arkansaw Strong Girl placed her shapely hands under the slim girl’s arms and tried, or appeared to try, to lift her; the slim girl stood like a post. “Put out all your strength, Miss Horton.” Miss Horton appeared to do her best. The veins in her Juno-like neck swelled, her face flushed but the little, slim girl stood as firm as an iron post driven deep in the earth. “I know I could lift that little thing,” said Miss Packer. “Of course you could,” assented Mr. Montrose Mor¬ ton. “It’s all a trick, you know.” “Very clever,” said Lord Apohaqui. “Getting money under false pretenses, I call it,” said the little electric belt drummer. “I’ve a mind to expose >_„ >> em. “Do,” encouraged Rhett, glancing over his shoulder at the bagman who seemed to have a personal spite at the manager as well as at Gassaway. “I’ll bet,” said the drummer, “the fellow won’t let any outsider try to lift that little thing. He knows it’s dead easy!” The Arkansaw Strong Girl was still struggling to lift the human magnet. “Can’t you do it, Miss Horton?” asked Mr. Blower, with a proud smile. “It can’t be done,” returned the Strong Girl in the 76 MR. BLOWER’S PRODIGIES strong sonorous tones of the backwoods of the West. Everybody stared; it was the first time they had heard her voice and somehow it seemed as strange to them as if a goddess had spoken in vulgar English. “Stuff and nonsense/’ muttered the traveling man. “Any fool knows that giantess can swing that little girl around with one finger if she really wanted to.” The Arkansaw Strong Girl gave him a glance of calm, goddesslike scorn. “Mebbe the gentleman can do it himself,” she said with a grand indifference that put the little drummer on his mettle. “I guess I can, dead easy,” he replied. “Kindly try it, sir,” said Mr. Blower softly. “Do try, sir.” The little drummer stepped forward, put one arm around the magnet’s waist and tried to lift her from the floor. To his surprise her feet did not move a hair’s breadth; then he took a fresh grip with both hands. His face turned red, he tugged and pulled, but to no purpose. Finally when quite out of breath, he stood still panting and eying the girl angrily. “There’s a trick in it somewhere,” he said mopping his face. “I’m sure there’s a trick and I’ll bet I’m the man to get at it.” With that he began again, so roughly that the manager cried out sharply, “Don’t hurt the girl. I won’t have her rudely treated.” “You’ve got her feet fastened to the floor,” said the fellow, sulkily. “Miss Magnolia,” said Mr. Blower, “kindly move a few feet and let the gentleman see that you are not rooted to the spot.” The girl moved and the little drummer, taking a long look at the slim form, went at it again, but he only grew redder in the face and still more out of breath. “I know there’s some trick,” he said gloomily, as he wiped his perspiring forehead. “Gentlemen,” said Mr. Blower, triumphantly, “on the honor of a showman it is no trick, but a powerful, MR. BLOWER’S PRODIGIES 71 mysterious magnetic force. Any of you can try for yourselves.” “Magnetic nonsense!” muttered the traveling man. “It’s a fraud. He wouldn’t be allowed to get money in my State under such rank false pretenses. “What is your State, sir?” asked Mr. Blower, suavely. “The great State of Massachusetts, the Old Bay State, sir.” “Ah, indeed? Massachusetts? I had the pleasure of exhibiting my Prodigies in Boston last year. We had a very successful season there, sir. The magnetic Mag¬ nolia was a universal favorite. And so was the Arkansaw Strong Girl. How many offers of marriage did you get in Boston, Miss Horton?” The Juno-like girl from Arkansaw smiled, showing a set of unrivalled white teeth, but she disdained to reply. “Now,” continued Mr. Blower, eyeing the little drum¬ mer good-humoredly, “I guess you’re about the strong¬ est man present. Miss Magnolia is the smallest lady. What will you bet she can’t drive you around this saloon with her little finger?” “Ten to one! Stake your money,” promptly cried the doubting drummer. “All right, and the winnings to gO' to the Sailors’ Fund.” The money was placed with Lord Apohaqui, then Blower called for a chair and requested the drummer to be seated. “Miss Magnolia, try your powers. Are you in good condition?” “I think so,” answered the little Magnet shyly. “All right. See if you can lift the gentleman.” Miss Magnolia clutched one of the chair rungs with her little right hand and lifted it with the drummer on the seat about eight inches from the floor, then let it drop with a bang so sudden that its occupant tumbled out on the floor on his all fours. Everybody laughed. “Oh!” cried the Magnetic Girl in an apologetic tone, “the chair slipped. I’ll do better next time. Get on again, sir. I’ll set you up on top of the piano.” 78 MR. BLOWER’S PRODIGIES The drummer scrambled to his feet and refused to sit on the chair again. “It’s a trick/’ he muttered. '‘She’s got a confederate concealed somewhere.” “Miss Magnolia,” said the manager in great good humor, “since the gentleman doesn’t wish the chair ex¬ ercise again, perhaps you will be good enough to lead him around the saloon.” “I’ll be blowed if she does,” cried the drummer, start¬ ing to make off; but the Magnet pointed her finger at him and he stood still. “Don’t let her get away with you like that, sir,” said Mr. Blower. “Don’t let a little girl like that hold you. Go on, sir! Take your place among the audience. Do, sir! Don’t mind that little girl’s finger, it’s so very little.” The drummer’s desperate efforts to escape, and the Magnet’s little finger controlling him like a magic wand, were both so ridiculous that everybody roared with laughter. “Well, well,” said Mr. Blower, pityingly, “she’s treat¬ ing you badly, sir. Now do, Miss Magnolia, drop your finger and let the gentleman return to his seat.” Miss Magnolia, however, walked round and round the saloon, beckoning with her little finger to the drummer to follow; and follow he did amid roars of laughter. After one or two circuits the girl motioned to the center of the room and there he stood. “Well, well, sir,” exclaimed Blower, compassionately, “can’t you break away? Try, sir. Exert yourself, do. Don’t let her trot you about in that way! Brace your¬ self firmly on your feet! Look her in the eye! That’s it. Now you’ve got her!” Thus encouraged, the victim planted himself firmly on the floor, his feet half-a-yard apart, and glared at the slim little magnetic girl with a resolve so desperate and angry that everybody again broke into a laugh. Gassa- way clapped his hands and shouted, “Hurrah for the Georgia girl!” The Magnet stole shyly up to her un¬ willing slave, laid the rosy tip of her little forefinger on his shoulder and back he went despite the most furious MR. BLOWER’S PRODIGIES 79 struggles to stand still; back he went, all around the saloon. “My! my!” said Blower in a deprecating voice. “Why do you submit to such a little creature? Why don’t you exert your strength? Brace up! do brace up!” The audience was convulsed with laughter. The vic¬ tim was furious; indeed, his anger was so great, his struggle to resist so apparent, many thought he was only acting a part. “Come now,” said Rhett, when finally the electric belt drummer was released from the Little Magnet’s power, “confess, are you not one of Mr. Blower’s set?” “Of course he is,” said Mr. Gassaway. “Didn’t you see Blower wink at him?” “Wink, the devil!” exclaimed the irate drummer. “It’s the d-est fraud I ever saw in all my life.” Just then the Strong Girl, catching a look of scorn¬ ful skepticism in his eyes, stretched out her hand, clutched the little drummer’s waist band and before he had time to realize it she whirled him above her head, his arms and legs sprawling wildly in the air. The little man’s intense rage and violent but futile resistance were so comic that the suspicion that he was a confederate was loudly proclaimed, in spite of the wretched fellow’s indignant protest. One after the other of the “Prodigies” came forward. The girl who hid herself in her hair was of course the wonder of the Jadies. A committee examined the hair and the head to see if the two belonged, naturally, to each other. The hair was pulled to see if it could be detached, the scalp was critically eyed and when all was pronounced genuine, the girl stood in the center of the saloon, shook out her mass of chestnut hair and really did hide herself completely underneath its flowing folds, so that she looked like a small hay stack. Next^Mr. Blower introduced Jake Nye, the champion laugher* of the world. The man looked not only as if he had never laughed in his life, but as if he could not even smile. He was tall, lank, cadaverous, his jaws 80 MR. BLOWER’S PRODIGIES were leathern and hollow, his eyes deep set and small, his whole aspect was dismal, to the extreme. “Mr. Nye,” said Mr. Blower, addressing the Prodigy, “please favor us with a laugh, not one of your strongest specimens—the saloon is too small. A large sized laugh might have an unfavorable effect on the motion of the ship. A third-class laugh will do.” The laugher began to open his mouth; it was a slow, deliberate operation. The laugh began as Mr. Blower requested with a moderate sound but wider and wider opened the mouth and louder and louder came out the laugh until the man’s face seemed to become all mouth, and the sound issuing thence seemed to fill all space. At first people stared, then they stopped their ears and gazed awe-struck at the curious Prodigy. Mr. Blower’s eyes twinkled with delight. “My lord, ladies and gents,” he cried. “This is Mr. Nye’s third-class specimen. In a large hall he would disdain to call this a laugh. Mr. Nye’s first-class efforts are something unique, but a first-class laugh in a third- class room—really it wouldn’t be safe, there’d be an ex¬ plosion and the woodwork would be torn and splintered. And with this hearty laugh, my lord, ladies and gentle¬ men, let us close the show. It is late. Many thanks, and good-night.” CHAPTER IX. LADY APOHAQUI CALLS ON THE BARTONS. Before the Etruria’s voyage ended, Lord Apohaqui had many misgivings as to- whether Grace possessed that plastic nature which might be moulded into English good form. Notwithstanding this drawback, he did not relinquish the idea of making her his wife; in fact he discovered to his dismay that it would go hard with him tO' give her up. Her beauty was something extra¬ ordinary ; and beauty is power, especially when combined with wealth and social station. She had the wealth; he could give her the social station. In one of his con¬ versations with the Barton family he expressed a desire to have them visit his country seat. “Not that it is any¬ thing grand,” he said, “but Falmouth is in a pretty bit of country, and you might like to see how they built houses three hundred years ago. It has been in our family since 1595.” “1595?” cried Grace. “We never have seen a house that old. America was filled with Indians when your house was built, and the few white people in our country had to live in forts to keep from being scalped.” “It will be quite an experience for the girls to' see such an old house,” said Mrs. Barton. “You have never been out of America before?” “Never before the day this ship sailed out of New York,” replied Grace gaily. “Well,” continued Lord Apohaqui, “after you have seen ruins three thousand years old you will think Eng¬ lish houses quite modern.” “We have plenty of old ruins in our own country,” asserted Grace, “ruins ever so many thousand years old.” “Indeed? I did not know America had ruins.” “Yes, of an unknown people, the mound makers and ( 81 ) 82 LADY APOHAQUI CALLS ON THE BARTONS the Cliff Dwellers. Many strange relics have been dis¬ covered in their mounds and cliff houses.” “Very interesting,” said Lord Apohaqui, although in truth he took not the slightest interest in American antiquities. “The old castle I will show you is rather rickety, still we have a few rooms that are habitable. My mother is now in London and will be happy to chap¬ erone you down for a few days.” On his arriving in London, as soon as he had seen the Bartons safe to the Metropole hotel, Lord Apohaqui sought his mother’s apartments on Great Barrington Square. It often happens that first sons, heirs to English titles, have an overweening estimate of their own importance and in consequence come to feel themselves the natural superiors of the other members of the family. From earliest infancy the first son is made conscious of the fact that everything is for him; his is the title, his the estate, his the high honors without the least effort to win them. Younger brothers and sisters know that some day they will have to pack up, bag and baggage, and leave their ancestral home as unceremoniously as an im¬ pecunious guest is made to leave an hotel. Even the mother who bore him knows that her station is inferior to his. Mother and brothers and sisters are all mere sojourners in the family castle. What wonder then that eldest sons too often become puffed up with the idea of their own superiority? What wonder that they show too scant respect and affection to mothers and brothers and sisters? Lord Apohaqui was njot naturally hard or unfeeling. Had he been bom a plain, untitled man, doubtless he would have been as good if not better than the average specimen of manhood. He loved his mother, but, like a Turk, he was somewhat ashamed to show affection for a creature not born his equal. His naturally kind nature had remained dwarfed through the unnatural position of superiority to which he had been born. It was not yet the first of June, and the air was a LADY APOHAQUI CALLS ON THE BARTONS 83 trifle sharp. Lord Apohaqui stood with his back to a glowing fire, his hands under his coat tails, enjoying the warmth after his drive from the Metropole to his mother’s apartments on Great Barrington Square. His eyes were fixed on a picture that hung on the opposite wall, painted years ago when the original was in the full bloom of her proud beauty. “The American girl,” he mused, “is fully as beautiful, though of course not so grand looking. What will she •say of Grace Barton I wonder? A year’s training under my mother’s care would make her the equal of any Duchess in the kingdom—that is if she will only take the training.” At this moment the door opened and the original of the portrait entered arrayed in hat and gloves and semi-evening dress. “Ah, you have come at last?” said Lord Apohaqui stepping forward and pressing his lips to his mother’s cheeks. “Yes,” returned Lady Apohaqui, laying her hat on the table and beginning to remove her gloves. “I was at Lady Critten’s. Have you waited long?” “Since five o’clock; it is now nearly six.” “I am sorry. You should have sent me word. I did not know you were coming.” “Of course not. I did not know myself. We only got in at two.” “Got in where?” “Charing Cross Station. The steamer threw her anchor at nine this morning; rather late, still I managed to catch the Liverpool Flyer, so here I am. You knew I had been in America?” “Yes, I knew,” replied Lady Apohaqui, tossing her gloves on the table by the hat and seating herself in a big Turkish chair. “I knew, but no thanks to you. Mr. Alonzo Wookey came to ask about you; he said he had not had a word from you since you left. You may imagine how pleasant it: was for me to be obliged to say that I did not even know you had gone.” “That’s just like that fool Wookey! Why couldn’t 84 LADY APOHAQUI CALLS ON THE BARTONS he hold his tongue? Did he think I meant to cut and run?” “Then you owe Wookey also?” said his mother, coldly. “Of course, but that is no' reason why he should think I meant to clear out. Did he tell you why I had gone to America?” “Certainly not. When he found you had kept it secret from me he pretended it was all a mistake—said you were merely joking when you mentioned America to him and were probably having a lark in Paris.” “I repeat it, Wookey is a fool. Why the deuce should he think I meant to keep it a secret from you?” “His supposition was quite natural,” replied Lady Apohaqui, dryly. “If you did not mean to keep it a secret, why was it kept a secret?” “There wasn’t time to tell. I left suddenly.” “It must have been sudden indeed—as sudden as your return. You have not been away six weeks. You have run through your money; you pay no< debts. Do you not know that these erratic trips cost pretty sums? It seems to me, Charles, as if your last shred of common sense has departed. Where will your folly end?” “In marriage to an American heiress if you will only give me a lift, mother.” “So that is your game, is it?” “Yes, that is my game. You said I must marry money. If possible I would like the money I marry annexed to a young and pretty girl. My run to America was on business.” “You have done so many foolish things, Charles, I naturally thought this American jaunt-” “Yes, I admit all the folly charged; but you know, mother, I don’t love Yankees enough to travel among them merely for pleasure; I was in search of an heiress.” “Have you found her?” “I have found her—young, lovely, rich; but I need a lift to go in and win.” “Your ‘lift’ means money?” LADY APOHAQUI CALLS ON THE BARTONS 85 “Of course. You know what straits I am in. If I succeed you will never be bothered by me again.” “I forestalled two quarters’ allowance for you once before,” said Lady Apohaqui. “Yes, two years ago. You’ve done precious little for me since. If it hadn’t been for Alonzo Wookey I should¬ n’t have been able to go to New York. I owed him three thousand pounds then and to make it five he loaned me two more.” “What a fool he must be!” “On the contrary, he showed pretty shrewd sense, in this case. He threw the last two thousand to get back the first three. I expect you to be as wise as Wookey. I owe you £1,500. I must have £1,000 more or my chance is gone. Stand by me and you will get back every shilling I owe you.” For a moment Lady Apohaqui gazed at her son in silence. “You know my resolve,” she said. “If I thought you really capable of being helped I would again pinch myself to help you, but I won’t throw my money into a sieve.” Leaving this fling unheeded, Lord Apohaqui pro¬ ceeded to relate what he knew about the Bartons and the relations with them which he had succeeded in establish¬ ing aboard the Etruria. Lady Apohaqui’s interest in¬ creased as her son’s narrative progressed. When he concluded by stating that he had left the Barton family at the Metropole, she leaned back in her chair to think the situation over. “I don’t like American girls,” she said finally. “They are too forward, too aggressive.” “That is certainly a drawback,” assented her son, “but we cannot expect perfection and money too. This girl is young enough to become Anglicized if you will only take her under your wing.” “Some Americans are incapable of ever acquiring good form,” observed the Countess. “I read a book by one of those people, a book by a man named Henry Jones or James or some such name. The Duchess of Bar- 86 LADY APOHAQUI CALLS ON THE BARTONS borough got it when Lord Defreese, her third son, was about to marry an American. The Duchess wanted to see what American girls are like; I don’t understand how she ever consented to Lord Defreese’s marriage after reading that book.” “Why so?” “The novel—it is a novel—shows so plainly how vul¬ gar and loud American girls are. The American heroine does all sorts of terrible things, boating and driving and promenading at midnight in the Coliseum with Italian adventurers. And Jones or James, or whoever the author is, says that is the way all American girls behave. As the author is an American, I suppose he knows.” “What is the use rubbing it in on a fellow in this way?” testily asked Lord Apohaqui. “Of course I know American girls are not reared like the English. They have never been taught what we call good form. I dare say they despise it, republicans naturally do; but a man would rather marry youth and beauty and—and money than all the good form England ever saw.” “A woman wouldn’t,” retorted the Countess. “I know. You women attach more weight to manners than to morals.” “Charles!” cried his mother, reprovingly. “Well, some of you do, you won’t deny that. At any rate, as I am to do the marrying I presume I may be allowed to do the choosing.” “But you ask me to receive her, to take her about, to introduce her into society. Think of my feelings if she be one of those vulgar creatures. I am told that one day at dinner, Lord Defreese’s American wife actu¬ ally asked for a toothpick. Think of it—a toothpick!” Lady Apohaqui shuddered at the dreadful recpllection. “I have not seen anything so vulgar as tliat in Miss Barton’s table manners,” said her son in all seriousness. “My seat was next to hers in the dining saloon. There was nothing unusual in her behavior.” “Perhaps the girl was on her best behavior,” returned the skeptical mother. “I dare say at home she picks LADY APOHAQUI CALLS ON THE BARTONS 87 Her teeth and eats peas with her knife. All Yankees do.” A shudder went over the aristocratic lady’s shoulders. “Miss Barton does not do that,” returned her son with so moody a countenance that his mother naturally thought if he had not actually seen her eat peas with a knife he had, at any rate, seen something equally as ill bred. “If it was not that, what was it? In what did she differ from an English girl? I suppose she does differ?” “Decidedly.” “How? I must know before I advance one step to¬ ward seeing her.” “She is so deuced independent. She takes care of herself as though she were a bov—she was on deck, day and night.” “No chaperone? A young girl on deck at night alone?” Lady Apohaqui’^ voice and manner indicated incredu¬ lous horror. “I saw her one night promenading with one of the second-class passengers while her mother and sister were in the saloon.” “And you tell me she is a respectable character?” asked the lady in an awed whisper. “I haven’t the least doubt as to her respectability. That i-s only the American way. You must see her and judge for yourself. And if it is to be a go, you must help me mould her into good form. She is young enough to forget that America even exists.” “Charles,” said his mother, with the air of one mak¬ ing a great sacrifice, “I shall do anything in reason to pull you out of the hole you are in. If you really mean to marry the girl I shall see her and if she is plastic we may polish her and make her 'passable.’ When the matter is settled I’ll present her at Court, that will bring her at once into society. It’s quite a fad, these days, to take up Americans.” Then it was settled that Lady Apohaqui should call on the Bartons and invite them for a day or two to 88 LADY APOHAQUI CALLS ON THE BARTONS Falmouth. 'That will give us a chance to get ac¬ quainted,” said her son. “But think of the condition of Falmouth, almost in ruins.” “That is exactly what they will like to see—ruins. The west wing is habitable. A house like Falmouth, even though half in ruins, is a big thing to Americans; it is old and they have no old houses over there.” The next afternoon Lady Apohaqui and her son drove to the Metro-pole and sent their cards “to the American family, the Bartons.” Word was brought back that the ladies would be down in a moment. The moment was a long one. At last they heard the sound of silken skirts and Lord Apohaqui rose to greet—Miss Lobelia Packer, who bounced in with a gushing little giggle. “Why, Lord Apohaqui!” she cried, putting out her' hand, “how awfully good of you to come so soon to see us! Mamma will be down in a minute and delighted to see you, and so glad to know your mother. Lady Apohaqui, I’m so happy to meet you.” Seizing the lady’s hand she pressed it warmly between both of hers. “I hope you are quite well, my lady. Lord Apohaqui did not tell us he meant to bring you or we would have been ready to come right down without keeping you waiting. It’s a delightful surprise. Nobody but you English lords would do such nice things—so out of the common, I am sure.” Miss Packer smiled archly and shook her head at the Englishman in a way that made cold shivers creep up Lady Apohaqui’s spine. “Has Charles taken leave of his senses?” she silently but sternly asked herself. “That big, bouncing, chambermaid creature! Train her into good form? I would as soon train an elephant!” “It’s very good of you to say all this,” said Lord Apohaqui, supposing the young woman’s presence in the drawing-room merely accidental and not wishing to be rude. “I hope your mother is quite well?” “Oh, mamma’s all right. She is never sick. I was LADY APOHAQUI CALLS ON THE BARTONS 89 in the corridor when I met the % bell boy with your cards and so I ran right up and showed them. to> mamma, and she’ll be down in a minute. Mamma will be delighted to make your acquaintance, Lady Apohaqui. Mamma is very fond of aristocracy, in fact the main reason we came over to Europe is to see the aristocracy. You know we haven’t got any real titled people with us, except colonels, majors and judges; of course, they don’t count alongside of lords and dukes and princes. Ma and I are just wild to see the dear Prince of Wales, we’ve heard so much about him. I will run up and see why ma don’t come.” With this Miss Packer bounced herself off, and Lord Apohaqui rang the bell with great energy. “Good heavens, Charles!” cried his mother, rising to her feet, “are you demented? How could you dare bring me here to see that creature?” “I didn’t.” At this moment the bell boy entered and Lord Apo¬ haqui entrusted him with two cards and urged 'him to make no more mistakes. “The daughter is enough—and too much,” haughtily said the lady. “I do not care to see the mother. Let us go at once before they come.” “Sit down,” commanded her son in a vexed, imperative tone. “Don’t you see the boy made a mistake? He gave our cards to the wrong woman.” “She’s an American.” “Your maid is an Englishwoman.” “By that do you mean to say there is as much differ¬ ence between Miss Barton and that girl as there is be¬ tween me and my maid?” “I mean just that,” returned the young peer, and his mother resumed her seat just in time to see Miss Packer re-enter with her mother gorgeously arrayed in the stiffest of purple silks almost covered with passementerie of a golden hue. “Sorry to keep you waiting, marm, and you too, Lord Apohaqui,” said Mrs. Packer, after the presentation had 90 LADY APOHAQUI CALLS ON THE BARTON'S been accomplished by her daughter. “I really couldn’t get into my clothes sooner. You see, I had just come from a bath and you know how it is yourself-” “Pray, madam/’ interrupted Lady Apohaqui with icy politeness, “pray do not trouble yourself tO' make an apology. We called to see Mrs. Barton and her daugh¬ ters.” “Yes,” added Lord Apohaqui, with the good-natured intention of being as polite as possible. “Until we saw Miss Packer we did not know that you were at the Metropole.” “Oh,” cried Mrs. Packer, “you want to see those peo¬ ple from Alabama? Well, I’m surprised to hear they’re here. I didn’t think they’d put up at such an expensive hotel. Anybody can see from the way they dress that they are not used to first-class places. Didn’t you think so-, Lord Apohaqui? You saw how common they dressed.” Before Lord Apohaqui replied Miss Barton came in, and Lady Apohaqui thawed at once; the simple dress, the quiet grace, the refined beauty of the young Alabama girl made an extremely pleasing impression. As soon as Mrs. Packer realized that a mistake had been made she shrewdly determined to put the best possible face on the matter. The mistake was gall and wormwood to her but the gall and the wormwood would be more bitter were the mistake known to the Bartons; so she smiled as she arose to her feet and shook hands with Lady Apohaqui. “We’re so charmed to meet you, marm,” Mrs. Packer began, “and it’s so good of Lord Apohaqui to bring you. Your son was a favorite with every one on the ship. Good afternoon, my lord. Lobelia and I have an engagement, so sorry to leave you. Come, Lobelia! Good afternoon, Miss Barton.” With this the two resplendent Chicagoans sailed out with smiling faces but hearts boiling with rage. Lady Apohaqui smiled graciously upon Grace Barton. “My dear,” she said, “I am indeed charmed to see you* “ I’m Jenny, mum, my lord told me to wait on your ladyship.” LADY APOHAQUI CALLS ON THE BARTONS 91 the more so as your coming relieves me of a serious alarm that had come upon me.” “An alarm?” said Grace with puzzled look. “Yes, my son had told me ot a lovely American girl whom he met on the ship coming from America. We sent up our cards and then in came that elephantine young person who just left us. She imagined we called to see her and I thought she was the girl my son had described as lovely! Do you wonder I thought him suddenly stricken with lunacy?” Grace hardly knew what to say; she felt that a com¬ pliment was intended. She blushed prettily as she re¬ marked that “some people on the ship thought Miss Packer a very fine looking young lady.” “I detest what people call fine looking women,” re¬ plied the lady with an amiable smile; “they always look like housemaids.” Soon Mrs. Barton and Clara came in and it was not long before Lord Apohaqui perceived that they were also creating a favorable impression on his mother. Then the visit to Falmouth was proposed. “It is very kind of you to think of us,” said Mrs. Barton as placidly as though she were accustomed all her life to receive such invitations. “If the girls have no other engagement we will accept with pleasure. Grace, do you think we can go?” Grace said yes, and Clara added that of all things she wished to see an old English country place. And so the matter was settled. CHAPTER X. LORD BUNGER OF WENDHAM CASTLE. The British Museum is a center of attraction to tour¬ ists but it is no longer in the fashionable quarter of London. The squares and streets in the vicinity of this great pile are now given up to boarding houses. In one of these houses on Montague Place, just back of the Museum—the same little place where lived Mr. Pick¬ wick’s lawyer—comfortable and inexpensive quarters were secured by Rhett Calhoun and the author of the embryo “G. A. N.” As soon as they were settled, Mr. Gassaway started off to explore the “seamy” side of London life. “The writer of the genuine G. A. N.,” he said, “must get down among the people, where he can absorb their spirit and atmosphere!” Accordingly, he lost no time in setting forth for Houndsditeh and Whitechapel. Rhett found the people about him inter¬ esting enough and spent his first morning in London in the sitting room of Mrs. Ruggles’ house on Montague place. Mrs. Ruggles numbered among her guests a dark Mahomedan from Hindoostau, Signorina Della Plata, a concert singer, Mrs. Maraton, a little, worn, gray-haired old lady, Monsieur Farbleau, a French- teacher, and a florid man with chop whiskers, a noisy laugh, and a ditto suit of tweed clothing. Mrs. Maraton, the gray-haired little woman, forlorn and friendless, sat in Mrs. Ruggles’ parlor to avoid the solitude of her own apartment. The widow of an officer who had died in India, her rather meager pension doomed her to live in plebeian Montague Place; but in imagination, Mrs. Maraton dwelt among the nobility. She was never without “The Court Journal”; she never failed to discuss royalty when she found any one good enough to listen to her; and she was better posted than (92) LORD BUNGER OF WENDHAM CASTLE 93 the Queen herself as to the daily movements of the aristocracy, as to who was the guest of the Duke of this, who was with Lord that at Monte Carlo, or who was going with the Earl of - on his next yachting trip. Partly from compassion, partly from interest, Rhett walked over to the fireplace where the old lady sat, Court Journal in hand, and engaged her in conversation. “I dare say,” said the old lady in response to a remark from Rhett, “you Americans have no Court Journal?” “No,” returned Rhett, smiling, “we have not that good fortune.” “What a pity! English people could not get along without the Court Journal.” “Sut, madam, we have no Court.” “That is true, I had forgotten that; but you ought to have one. The influence is so refining! You will find all about the Queen and the Princes on the second page. We are devoted to the Royal family.” Turning to the second page of the Journal which Mrs. Maraton handed him, Rhett read as follows: “The Queen drove out yesterday accompanied by their Royal Highnesses Princess Beatrice and the Prince of Battenberg.” “The Prince and Princess of Wales, accompanied by the Princesses Maude and Victoria, proceeded yesterday to Kensington.” “The Prince and Princess Christian visited Windsor yesterday.” c “The Duke and Duchess of Fife leave London to-day for Duff House.” “H. R. H. Prince George of Greece left town yester¬ day on a visit to H. R. H. the Prince of Wales.” There were columns of similar notices. “Isn’t it de¬ lightful?” asked the nice old lady. “Immensely so,” returned Rhett with gravity; “I saw the same important items in yesterday’s ‘Times’.” “Yes, all the daily papers tell about our Royal family, but it’s so much nicer to read it in the Court Journal. Don’t you think so?” 94 LORD BUNGER OF WENDHAM CASTLE “Very much nicer/' agreed Rhett. “It is not so com¬ mon/’ “That’s it,” the old lady cried out, highly pleased. “The Court Journal is the most exclusive paper in the world. Americans do not always comprehend these things; I am so glad you see them; and Mr. Calhoun, if you will give me your address I will send, once in a while, a copy of the Court Journal to your home in America. It has such a refining influence.” When Mrs. Maraton arose with her Court Journal and tiptoed herself out of the room, the florid man with the tweed suit and the mutton chop whiskers came over to Rhett and congratulated him on being rid of the “old bore”. “I have found Mrs. Maraton very interesting,” said Rhett with dignity. “Your interest won’t last long,” retorted the florid man. “She’s always the same 1 —always harping on her Court Journal—it gets to be deuced tiresome.” Then sinking his voice to a whisper he added in a mysterious way, “There’s a reason for me being hot, that others haven’t got.” “What do you mean?” The florid man looked about the room to see that no one was within earshot before he whispered, “I came here on purpose to get away from Royalty; so naturally it makes me mad to hear that old woman al¬ ways talking about the aristocracy.” Rhett stared at the speaker, who seemed quite satis¬ fied with the surprise he excited. “A young fellow like you,” continued the florid man, “must know how deuced monotonous the upper circles get. I am Lord Bunger, of Wendham Castle, so I know what I’m talking about. The Nobility live half the time in a strait-jacket of form and ceremony.” “I see—I see,” said Rhett, a little doubtfully, but politely. “So you are in reality a lord?” “H—sh!” interrupted the florid man, glancing around LORD BUNGER OF WENDHAM CASTLE 95 to see if they were overheard. “Call me Mr. Bunger here. I’m going it incog, at Mrs. Ruggles.” “I was about to say, Mr. Bunger,” resumed Rhett, accepting the suggestion, “that I can easily see how any one would want to jump out of a strait-jacket. Were I an aristocrat living in a strait-jacket of ceremony, I should certainly get out as quickly as I could.” “To be sure, and that is why I confide in you. Being an American you understand my feelings. It’s awfully jolly, going it incog., I do just as I please and let the upper set go to the devil.” From English novels Rhett had received the idea that, as a rule, the English nobles are well-bred gentle¬ men; the only live lord he had ever seen was Lord Apohaqui and his appearance and manners certainly agreed with the American idea of the way a gentleman should appear and act. These preconceived opinions were rudely disturbed by the appearance and manners of Lord Bunger who, Rhett thought, looked more like a butler or a footman than the hereditary owner of a castle and a title. However, Rhett reflected that, al¬ though most lords are gentlemen, exceptions are possi¬ ble. Some of the titled characters in Trollope’s novels represent noblemen who have no conception of what the word gentleman means; a more despicable creature could hardly exist than the lord whom Trollope pictures in “Is He Pop enjoy?” “Lords don’t go it incog, in America?” said the Eng¬ lishman, looking at Rhett with a satisfied chuckle. “No. We have no lords in America.” “Oh, I forgot. America is a beastly republic where a butcher and a butler are as good as a lord. We could¬ n’t stand that in England. It would turn our blooming island upside down!” During the next two or three days, Rhett saw much of this florid gentleman, who seemed never to weary talking of his high rank and the grandeur of his ancestral castles. One evening, after giving a description of Wend- ham Castle for perhaps the tenth time, Lord Bunger 96 LORD BUNGER OF WENDHAM CASTLE declared he was becoming tired of London and had a mind to run down to one of his country estates. “How would you like to go with me, Mr. Calhoun? You’d see a bit of pretty country, and Wendham, though it isn’t in the best condition, is an historic old place—very different from your new houses in America.” Rhett had felt all along that Bunger was a fraud; but would a fraud extend an invitation the acceptance of which would inevitably expose his deception? “If he is a lord,” thought Rhett, “he is a queer one; if not a lord, what does he mean by inviting me down to his castle?” Finally, and just to satisfy his curiosity, Rhett ac¬ cepted Lord Hunger’s invitation, and it was arranged that Mr. Gassaway should be included in the party. The date for the trip was postponed until the following Sat¬ urday to give Rhett time to carry out a plan already made of visiting Windsor Castle. When Rhett men¬ tioned the plan as his reason for desiring to postpone the trip, to his dismay Lord Bunger volunteered to ac¬ company him. “I am heartily sick of Mrs. Ruggles,” he said, “a day’s outing at Windsor will be jolly good fun.” Rhett did not wish to knock about in public with this ill-bred fellow 1 —that would be quite different from a trip with the man to his own castle. But having ac¬ cepted BUnger’s invitation, how could he with good grace decline the proffer of his company to Windsor? The upshot was, they set forth together on the following morning. While walking along the platform of the Paddington Station looking for a vacant compartment, Rhett heard the sound of familiar voices and in a moment found himself face to face with the Bartons. “When we meet like this,” said Miss Clara, “London seems quite small.” “But it is not small,” said Rhett. “It is tremendously big! And yet it sometimes seems as if everybody wanted to go exactly to the same place you are bound for.” “No, not everybody,” said Clara. LORD BUNGER OF WENDHAM CASTLE 97 “Well, at any rate, it looks as if all London is down here at Paddington Station. The train is. jammed, I have not been able to find a single vacant section.” “How English you have become!” laughed Grace. “Americans don’t mind other people and do not insist on a whole section.” Rhett looked at Grace with a solemn face but with a twinkle in his eyes. “Do you see that man?” pointing to Bunger who was some distance down the platform bribing a guard to reserve a section. “I am traveling with him to Windsor; he is a Nabob who doesn’t like to be wedged in with the common herd. He insists on a whole section.” Mrs. Barton had just remarked that her party was also on the way to ^Windsor, when Bunger came up. “I have fixed the guard-” he began. “Excuse me,” interrupted Rhett, “these ladies are friends of mine. I shall go with them and shall meet you at Windsor.” “The guard has secured me a compartment,” said Lord Bunger, making an obeisance to the Bartons. “I am happy to offer you seats, ladies.” “Thank you,” said Mrs. Barton, coldly. “We will not intrude upon you. Rhett, do not bother about us, we can attend to ourselves.” At this moment the guard called to passengers to take their places. There was no time to find a vacant compartment and before the Bartons realized it, in the hurry and bustle Rhett had helped them into the section which Lord Bunger had reserved. Scarcely had Rhett and the nobleman taken their places when a commotion was heard on the platform. “You say that compart¬ ment is reserved?” exclaimed a determined feminine voice. “Yes, madam,” returned the guard. “Well, what of it?” demanded the determined feminine voice. “The other sections are filled. Do you mean to say that I’m not to go on this train? I’ve bought a ticket with as good gold as anybody’s got in England!” 98 LORD BUNGER OF WENDHAM CASTLE Uttering this breezy protest, the owner of the deter¬ mined voice (who was no other than Mrs. Packer of Chicago, and her daughter) climbed up into the com¬ partment; “Does his lordship permit?” said the guard, looking at Bunger. “There’s plenty of room, Mrs. Packer,” said Grace, moving closer to her sister. “It is all right, guard,” said Lord Bunger politely, and reached out to help the Packers in. “I perceive you are friends of my American friends, permit me to introduce myself, ladies.” With that he gave each of the Chicago ladies a card on which was printed: Lord Bunger of Wendham, Wendham Castle, Wendhamshire. The Chicago woman flushed with pleasure. “Dear me!” cried Mrs. Packer, “I’m glad to make your ac¬ quaintance. Lobelia, let me introduce you to Lord Bunger. I am Mrs. Ford Packer of Chicago, my lord, and this is my daughter.” “Daughter?” cried the lord with a gallant grin. “Bless me, madam, if I didn’t take you to be sisters. Step¬ daughter I suppose?” with a knowing wink first' at the mother, then at Miss Lobelia. “No, indeed!” cried Mrs. Packer, delighted at such a compliment from such a source, “I do assure you, Lobelia is my own and only child, though I had one other but he was drowned in the lake. That was two years ago, and it worried poor Packer so he took sick and died too.” “Well, well,” said Lord Bunger, “who’d have thought it? You don’t look a day over thirty!” “Thirty, you hear that, Lobelia? But I guess that’s the way with you lords! I’m a good deal past thirty!” “I should say she was,” whispered Rhett to Grace; they were sitting by the window at the other end of the compartment. The train was crossing the Thames, and the turrets and towers of Eton College stood out clearly in the LORD BUNGER OF WENDHAM CASTLE 99 cloudless noonday sky. “When the train reached Wind¬ sor the party drove up tO' the Castle in two divisions, Mrs. Packer, Miss Lobelia and Lord Bunger in one carriage, Rhett and the three Barton ladies in another. “Do you know those people?” asked Mrs. Packer as her carriage drove off. Lord Bunger said he had met Mr. Calhoun at his “hotel”; the Barton ladies he had never met before. “Umph,” said Mrs. Packer, signifi¬ cantly, “I shouldn’t imagine you would know much of such people. They are not the sort you associate with, I’m sure.” “They’re Americans, ain’t they?” asked Lord Bunger. “Yes, they are from America. I can’t deny that, but not from our part of America. They’re from the South, and you know, my lord, American Southerners are poor; they lost everything they had by their wicked rebellion. Why, that young man came over in the second-class, and them ladies, though they did have rooms in our part * of the ship, were in the second cabin most of the time, j They’re a common lot, anybody can see that—very common indeed.” “Dear me! You don’t say so?” said Lord Bunger. “I thought all you Americans were rich.” “Some Americans are,” said Mrs. Packer, proudly; “my husband made his pile; but every American hasn’t got the sense Packer had. I don’t believe you’ll find in the whole South a man worth five millions and that’s what Packer left when he died.” Five millions! The sum sounds large even to an English nobleman! Lord Bunger rolled the figures over in his mind and wondered if she meant pounds sterling or some foreign money not worth a penny, like the Portuguese reis. When he looked at Mrs. Packer’s dazzling diamond ornaments, and when he recalled the reputation Americans have for being fabulously rich, he concluded it was pounds the lady meant, and this con¬ clusion resulted in redoubled attentions to both mother and daughter. In the meantime, as the other carriage bowled along, 100 LORD BUNGER OF WENDHAM CASTLE Rhett amused the Bartons by descriptions of the board¬ ers at Mrs. Ruggles. “Mamma/’ cried Grace, “do let us take lodgings at Ruggles. I am sure that nice old lady with the Court Journal must be charming.” “And Lord Bunger?” laughed Rhett. “Don’t you count him charming?” “Yes—at a distance.” “He has invited me to run down with him Saturday to his castle.” “We have been invited to a castle, too,” said Grace. “Lord Apohaqui wants us to spend a couple of days at his place. We are going Monday.” “I thought Lord Apohaqui was a bachelor,” said Rhett in some consternation. Grace smiled. “So he is, but he has a mother and she goes down to receive us.” “Has Lady Apohaqui called on you?” persisted Rhett, still anxious lest the proprieties had not been fully com¬ plied with. “You don’t suppose we would go to Lord Apohaqui’s house on his invitation, do you?” asked Grace. “We don’t do such things in America, and certainly shall not here. As to Lord Bunger, do you believe his absurd story? I don’t. He hasn’t a castle any more than I have.” “I am rather doubtful about it myself, and that’s the main reason why I go with him. I want to see how he will get out of his castle in the air.” “What if your pretended lord inveigles you out of sight and holds you for ransom.” “What, play the brigand in England? No danger of that,” laughed Rhett. “Brigandage in England would be no more absurd than that a man like your Bunger should be a gentle¬ man with an ancient castle.” When they stopped in front of the castle gate they found the first section of their party already engaged in animated controversy with the guard. “He won’t let LORD BUNGER OF WENDHAM CASTLE 101 us in!” Mrs. Packer was exclaiming. “How is that, my lord? Can’t you arrange it? Lobelia and I have set our hearts on seeing Her Majesty’s palace. Do try to fix it.” Thus appealed to, Lord Bunger looked very pompous and asked the guard to summon his superior officer. This individual was in the gate lodge near by, but his coming did not mend matters. “Very sorry, m’lud,” said the sergeant, giving a mili¬ tary salute by touching the tips of his fingers to the little pill box of a cap that was tied to the side of his head just over the left ear, “very sorry, m’lud, but orders can’t be broke. Her Royal Majesty’s in the castle and we couldn’t pass the Prime Minister without special command.” “Very well, my good man,” replied Lord Bunger, loftily. “I understand and don’t blame you, though it’s provoking, very. These ladies have come all the way from America to see Her Majesty’s castle.” Mrs. Packer and Lobelia turned sadly away. “If I’d had time,” said Lord Bunger, “I’d have written the Queen, but my visit is quite impromptu and so there was no time to arrange matters.” “Would she have let us in if you’d written?’.’ asked Mrs. Packer, anxiously. “Of course she would. The queen is awful proud, but the friends of the nobility are her friends and when she hears how you stood at her front gate, and the guard not letting you in, she won’t mind telling you she is sorry that it all happened.” “Oh, Lord Bunger,” cried Mrs. Packer, tearfully, “I do hope you will write to the Queen and let us come some other day. Lobelia and me don’t want to go back to America without laying eyes on the Queen and see¬ ing how the house is furnished inside.” While the Bartons sat in their carriage awaiting the outcome of Lord Bunger’s negotiations, to their aston¬ ishment they saw a well-known figure approaching from the interior of the castle inclosure. I 102 LORD BUNGER OF WENDHAM CASTLE “As I live there’s Blower!” cried Rhett. Every American eye turned toward the genial show¬ man who came down the gravel walk at a swinging gait flourishing a slender cane in his hand, his face beaming, his whole demeanor as happy as though he himself were the lord and master of that magnificent castle. “Hello, Blower!” cried Rhett. “How does it happen you are lucky enough to enter the grounds of this en¬ chanted castle? We can’t budge an inch beyond the gate.” “Special commands from the Queen,” said Mr. Blower airily, as he bowed to the ladies. “Commands from the Queen?” repeated Lord Bunger, in surprise. “Yes, Her Majesty wants to see my Prodigies. The Georgia Magnet, the Arkansaw Girl, the Girl who Hides in her Own Hair—in fact, all my prodigies will have the honor of appearing next Saturday before the Queen and the Royal family.” Lord Bunger, imagining that Mr. Blower must be of considerable importance to receive a command from her Royal Majesty, drew a card from his pocket and pre¬ sented it to the showman. Blower in his turn was im¬ pressed with the title of his new acquaintance. “Ah, my lord, Pm happy to meet you, I shall be glad to have you patronize my prodigies, the most marvelous aggre¬ gation of wonders the world ever beheld. The ultra swells of both hemispheres patronize me. Do you know Lord Apohaqui?” “Lord Apohaqui?” stammered Lord Bunger. “Yes, Lord Apohaqui, a very elegant gentleman in¬ deed, I met him in America.” “Oh, in America?” said Lord Bunger, the ruddy hue coming back to his cheeks. “I see. What of him?” “Nothing particular, my lord. I merely mentioned his name because he happens to be one of my friends and patrons. You'll readily understand that Blower’s Prodigies are able to knock the persimmon when such men as Lord Apohaqui patronize them, and when Her LORD BUNGER OF WENDHAM CASTLE 103 Majesty herself commands them to perform at Windsor.” Mrs. Packer eyed Blower with a look of mingled envy and disgust, envy at his good fortune—disgust at his low station in life. “And have you really seen the Queen?” she asked scornfully. “Not yet, madam,” returned Blower, jovially. “I ex¬ pect to have that pleasure next Saturday. The Queen ! herself doesn’t transact her amusement business—too many state affairs for that. Her secretary laid her com¬ mands upon me and my dealings are with the Grand Master of the household.” On the way back to London, Lord Bunger devoted himself entirely to the Packers. Mr. Blower went in the same compartment with Rhett and the Bartons and entertained them with an account of the wonderful success of his prodigies at the Alhambra theatre. After seeing the ladies to the Metropole, as the English Lord and the American democrat walked down High Holborn in the direction of Southampton Row and Montague Place, Lord Bunger seemed interested in Mr. Blower and asked a number of questions about his show. “I tell you what,” he said, “Pm thinking of having that fellow down at Wendham Castle. My people would like his show immensely. I’ve already invited your friends to come.” “Are they coming?” cried Rhett astonished, thinking of the Bartons. “Yes. They’re going down with us Friday.” “The Bartons?” “No, the others, that stunning lady with the diamonds and the jolly daughter. I’ll be blown if I haven’t half a mind to go in for her. She is perfectly stunning.” “Which one, the mother or the daughter?” “Both of them, but I mean the daughter. That’s the one for me. I wonder if they are really worth five millions?” “Can’t say. It’s likely, though.” “You know,” said Lord Bunger, meditatively, “we 104 LORD BUNGER OF WENDHAM CASTLE noblemen have to look out for money when we marry. The aristocracy has to be kept up.” “And marriage is a good way to keep it up?” “Sometimes it is a very necessary way; did you know the Packers in America?” “No, I never heard of them until I met them on the steamer.” “You didn’t?” exclaimed Lord Bunger. “How then can they be worth five millions?” “That’s not surprising,” laughed Rhett. “America is a big country. I dare say it has hundreds of millionaires of whom I have never heard.” When they arrived at Mrs. Ruggles’ it was understood that Mr. Blower and his Prodigies should be invited to Wendham Castle. CHAPTER XI. LORD BUNGER’s CASTLE. In view of the fact that there had been no intimacy between the Bartons and the Packers, that on the con¬ trary their intercourse had been of the most formal and distant kind, the Bartons were surprised one day at luncheon to see Mrs. Packer and Miss Lobelia sail to¬ ward them down the central aisle of the Metropole’s big dining-room. “Can they be coming here?” whispered Clara as the Chicago women approached in their rustling silk gowns. The Packers paused when they reached the Bartons. “We thought we would come over to say good-bye,” said Mrs. Packer, affably. “We are going away to-day.” “Do you leave London?” asked Grace in a friendly way. '*‘For a short while,” answered Mrs. Packer, bridling up , with pride. “We are coming back in the season. I suppose you know, Mrs. Barton, that this is not the season for London?” “No, I did not know that,” said Mrs. Barton, coolly. “The season seems all right to me. I never saw lovelier weather.” “I ain’t speaking of the weather,” said Mrs. Packer, with a grand air. “I refer to the season of nobility and fashion. The aristocracy never visit London except in the season. All the aristocracy are out of town now, at their country houses. Lobelia and me are going to Wendham Castle.” “Indeed?” said Grace, politely. “That will be delight¬ ful. I suppose you will have a charming trip.” “Of course. I never saw anybody so anxious to have us as Lord Bunger. Even if it wasn’t the season for going to the country, I really think we should have (105) 106 LORD BUNGER’S CASTLE to go. Lord Bunger said he couldn’t let us decline the invitation. Lord Bunger is one of the most elegant gentlemen I ever saw, so intelligent, so— so —perfectly elegant. Don’t you think so, Miss Barton?” “I have had too short an opportunity to form a judg¬ ment,” was Grace’s guarded reply. “Short? Umph!” responded Mrs. Packer, with a toss of her head. “It doesn’t take a lifetime to see that a nobleman is superior to commonfolks. There is some¬ thing about a lord you can’t help noticing the very first time you lay eyes on him—a greatness, a highness of character, that is natural to aristocracy. Even that Lord Apohaqui has it, although nothing equal to Lord Bunger. Lord Apohaqui’s too vain, and too fond of low society. It’s a great pity he ain’t like Lord Bunger.” The announcement of their intended visit to Wend- ham Castle was the pleasantest performance Mrs. Packer had undertaken since leaving Chicago. “It’ll set ’em down a buttonhole lower,” she said to Lobelia after they had retired to their rooms. “They’ve been giving them¬ selves airs just because that half blind Lord Apohaqui paid ’em some attention, which of course he wouldn’t have done if he could have seen further than his nose. You mark my words, Lobelia, Lord Apohaqui will be on his knees to you when he finds other lords running after you. It’s the way with men. They’re just like sheep, they follow after one another. It’s a good idea to let them people know how thick we are with Lord Bunger.” Rhett, Gassaway and Lord Bunger were at the station when the Packers drove up. Their two enormous trunks were stored in the luggage van, and at 3:30 the party was speeding towards the south of England. The first ten miles of the journey after passing Croydon were through a charming region. At South Downs the train entered a mile-long tunnel; soon after, at Hayward’s Heath, they changed cars, and half an hour later passed Horsted Keynes and were let off at the flag station used by persons going to Wendham Castle. There was LORD BURGER’S CASTLE 107 no station master at this place, and on the present occa¬ sion there were no servants to meet Lord Bunger and his guests. “How provoking!” Bunger exclaimed. “How bloom¬ ing provoking—leaving us to cool our heels in the air! I’ll discharge the lot of them, the impudent beggars! I’ll teach ’em how to disobey my orders!” Mrs. Packer attempted to pour oil on the troubled waters of the lord’s temper. “I guess, my lord, they did not receive your telegram. They weren’t expecting you by this train, were they?” “No, that’s a fact. They were looking for us by the train that left London at noon, and may be my telegram didn’t reach ’em in time. Mr. Calhoun, you and Mr. Gassaway take care of the ladies while I walk over to the Castle and bring a carriage. It is not far. I’ll be back in half an hour.” Lord Bunger was not quite as good as his word. More than an hour passed and his guests grew weary enough before he drove up in a landau followed by a luggage wagon for Mrs. Packer’s big trunks and for Rhett’s and Gassaway’s modest valises. “Sorry to keep you waiting,” said Lord Bunger as they drove away, “sorry, ’pon my word, but it was just as you suspected, Mrs. Packer. The telegram mis¬ carried. They weren’t looking for me, and everything was out of order. I hope you’ll pardon all this, ladies, I really do. Wendham Castle isn’t what it used to be.” “Don’t mention it, my lord,” said Mrs. Packer. “We see enough newness in Chicago. The old things are what we want to see in this country.” “The older your castle, the better we’ll like it,” added Miss Lobelia. “We are perfectly wild about ruins and tumble-down places.” “Delighted to hear you say that,” said Lord Bunger, with a grin. “And I mean it, too, my lord, every word,” continued Miss Lobelia nodding her blonde head. “We’ve got plenty of castles on the lake front in Chicago, but they 108 LORD BUNGER’S CAISTLE are all new and in such apple-pie order that it’s quite distressing to look at them. I dote on castles with moats and turrets and walls tumbling down, covered with ivy. I paint them that way always.” “You do?” exclaimed Lord Bunger, eyeing her with admiration. “Well, you must paint Wendham Castle. I don’t spend much of my time there now, and it’s as near to being a ruin as any place you ever saw, con¬ sidering that people still live there.” “Lord,” said Mr. Gassaway, from his seat on the driver’s box, “do I understand that you live in a ruin from sentiment, not necessity? If so> I’ll make a note of that. In the Southern states of America many people dwell in tumble-down ruins, but not on account of senti¬ ment. Bless you, no! It’s because they haven’t any better houses to« live in and no* money to fix their old houses up. You were never south were you, Mrs. Packer?” “Never!” replied the Chicagoan in a severe tone; Mrs. Packer could not help secretly wondering why Lord Bunger invited such common fellows as Rhett and Gassa¬ way to visit Wendham Castle. “That’s too bad,” observed the reporter. “The South is a glorious land—a land of blue skies, brave men and beautiful women. I hope some day, lord, you will visit the sunny South.” They drove through a big gate with a keeper’s lodge on one side, and entered the park at the further end of which stood the castle. The walls were moss-grown, the place had a deserted aspect, the lawn was ill kept; still, there was an air of grandeur about the castle and park that was impressive. “To think,” mused Rhett, “to think that a coarse creature like that is the descend¬ ant of a long line of noble men and women! It’s enough to shatter one’s belief in the law of heredity.” The half dozen servants assembled on the steps in front of the castle as the carriage drove up made obse¬ quious bows, and one of their number stepped forward. LORD BUNGER’S CASTLE 109 opened the carriage door and assisted the travelers to alight. “James,” said Lord Bunger, “see that the ladies , luggage goes to the blue room, and tell Slayton to serve tea at once. I dare say we can all stand a bite, eh?” turning toi Mrs. Packer. “We are in no hurry, my lord.” “No, not in the least,” said Miss Lobelia. “This lovely old place makes me forget such worldly things as eat¬ ing.” “Very good in poetry, not worth a goober pea in practice,” cried Mr. Gassaway, running his fingers through his sandy hair. “Lunch after a railway trip is always the thing, lord.” “That’s my way of thinking,” assented Lord Bunger. “James, hurry up lunch. Tell Slayton not to dawdle.” “Yes, m’lud,” returned the dignified lackey addressed as James. The other servants took care of the visitors’ luggage. Mrs. Packer’s trunks were carried to the castle’s state apartments—two< large rooms, the furniture of which, once splendid, was now faded, tattered and moth eaten. Rhett’s and Gassaway’s valises were taken to two smaller rooms, also somewhat dilapidated as if uninhabited for some time. In comparison with Rhett’s quarters the blue rooms assigned to the Packers seemed cheerful as well as grand. The hangings, although faded, were fine; the oak and mahogany furniture two cen¬ turies old was imposing. “I don’t see why they keep such old fashioned things,” said Lobelia. “If I had to live here I’d split ’em up for kindling wood, wouldn’t you, ma?” “They do look dismal; so dark and gloomy like,” returned the mother. “And just see that carving, ma. It ain’t pretty To my notion.” “Pretty? It’s hideous. The English ain’t got no taste at all. They ought to come to Chicago and see American style!” “Did you notice that dreadful old chair in the hall? 110 LORD BUNGER’S CASTLE So stiff and high backed? And not a single rocking chair! How a body’s to get any comfort in this place is more than I can see.” “It would take a good pile of money to fix this old castle up,” said Mrs. Packer, glancing about the stately but dingy room. “An awful big pile, Lobelia, but money could do it.” “My money won’t,” said the young woman, tossing her head. “May be it will and may be it won’t. I don’t advise you to be in a hurry, Lobelia. But things might be worse than to be Lady Lobelia Bunger. Your pa left a pile of money, so there’s no< need of your marrying for that.” “La, ma! How you talk,” cried the daughter, again tossing her head. “The lord’s mashed on you, Lobelia, that’s plain as anything. It wouldn’t sound bad to be called Lady Lo¬ belia Bunger! It’s an aristocratic name and this is an aristocratic old castle—and won’t those common Barton people turn green with envy! They made such a dead set at that Lord Apohaqui. But he’s only flirting with ’em. That Barton girl can’t compare with you. Lobelia.” The two Lake Shore ladies proceeded to array them¬ selves for dinner. Lobelia let down her long, blonde hair, seized a brush and set to work vigorously. A gentle tap on the door arrested her attention. “Who can it be?” asked the mother in a whisper. “Come in!” called out Miss Lobelia, when the tap was repeated. A comely, red-cheeked damsel with a white cap on her head entered. “I am Jenny, mum, my lord told me, mum, to wait on your ladyships.” “That’s very thoughtful of his lordship,” said Mrs. Packer, who for the first time realized that she should have brought her own maid. The fact was, that all her life, Mrs. Packer had been accustomed to wait on her¬ self, and did not care for the personal attention of a maid; she preferred to do her own hair, so did Miss LORD BUNGER’S CASTLE 111 Lobelia, and they had left their two maids at the hotel in London. “Maids are so* inquisitive,” Mrs. Packer was wont to- say. “They’re always spying out what you doC’ “We left our maids in London/’ said Mrs. Packer to Jenny. “They wasn’t well enough to come. You can do Lady Lobelia’s hair.” “Lady” Lobelia! The words slipped out of Mrs. Packer’s mouth almost unconsciously. “It’s the aris¬ tocratic atmosphere,” she explained to Lobelia after Jenny had gone. “It comes so natural to- say lord and lady in a castle like this. It’s quite catching.” t To the ears of the young Chicago woman the words “Lady Lobelia” were as soft and sweet as milk and honey. During the remainder of their stay, Mrs. Packer always addressed her daughter as “Lady” Lobelia; Lord Bunger called her by no other name, while Jenny gave her that title from the honest belief that it was hers by right. “You must wear your finest gowns, Lady Lobelia/’ said Mrs. Packer. “It’s the way to pay proper respect to Lord Bunger. I suppose, Jenny, his lordship is al¬ ways particular about dressing for dinner, eh? I’ve heard the English nobility always dine in full dress.” “Yes, mum, so they do,” replied Jenny, dropping a courtesy. “Shall I lay out Lady Lobelia’s gowns, mum?” Jenny went to the trunks, took out the silk and satin creations of Worth and laid them carefully on the bed. As she did this, numerous were her exclamations of wonder and delight. “Even his lordship’s mother hasn’t never wore no gowns like these,” she said. “His lordship’s mother?” It was the first time Mrs. Packer heard that Lord Bunger had a mother. She would like to have pumped the maid, but did not wish Jenny to> know how little she knew of his lordship and his family. “Is her ladyship here?” she asked. “Oh, no 1 , mum, she lives in London. It isn’t often we see her—not more than twice since his lordship’s 112 LORD BUNGER’S CASTLE father died. Which gown will your ladyship wear?” While Miss Lobelia was making her selection Mrs. Packer asked herself puzzling questions about Lord Bunger’s mother. Why had he not mentioned her? Why had she not come to the castle to receive her son’s guests? Was this bachelor reception—this playing host by a bachelor one of the nobility’s many peculiarities? “Yes, it must be,” mused Mrs. Packer. “The aristocracy is so awful eccentric.” With this she dismissed the subject and assisted Lobelia in selecting the most becoming gown from among the half dozen brought from London. Rhett Calhoun, having no> “full dress” on hand, quickly made his simple toilet and was downstairs before the Packers had decided in which of Worth’s “dreams” they would appear. The more Rhett saw of the lord of the castle the more he was astonished that such a man should be one of the hereditary peers of England. “I don’t understand it,” he mused, looking along the paneled walls at the portraits of the old dead and gone lords of the castle. Until his arrival at Wendham Rhett had had little faith in Lord Bunger’s pretentions. Here was a castle, however, and here were servitors addressing his host as “my lord” and so, perforce, Rhett was obliged to own that his suspicion was unfounded. Lord Bunger met Rhett coming out of the portrait gallery and the two went into the drawing-room together. Gassaway was already there, jotting down notes in his G. A. N. book. A few minutes later in swept Mrs. Packer and Miss Lobelia splendidly arrayed, two yards of silk and satin trailing behind them, diamonds gleam¬ ing on their necks and arms and ears and on their large white fingers. “Egad!” exclaimed Lord Bunger, nudg¬ ing Rhett, “ain’t she a stunner?” “You beat the Queen herself,” he whispered to Lo¬ belia. “There ain’t a queen in Europe as can come up to you. I mean what I say, Lady Lobelia.” The glisten of Lord Bunger’s admiring eyes attested his honesty. LORD BUNGER’S CASTLE 113 “La, my lord,” simpered Lobelia, intoxicated by the flattery, and blushing like a peony, “you do talk so!” “I talk the truth, Lady Lobelia, every word the truth,” he returned in a whisper. “I hope we didn’t keep you waiting, my lord,” said Mrs. Packer, smilingly. “It took some time to* unpack our things. Of course, we know too much of the nobili¬ ty’s ways to think of coming to dinner in our traveling dresses.” “It’s worth while to wait,” said Lord Bunger, eyeing Mrs. Packer’s diamonds admiringly; “well worth while waiting to see ladies got up so splendid, it really is!” “You are very flattering,” said the delighted Mrs. Packer. “Not a bit, not a bit,” returned the lord. “On my word, Mrs. Packer, the Queen herself couldn’t beat you, and that’s saying a good deal, for her Majesty has mil¬ lions in diamonds.” In a perfect flutter of delight the ladies were led into the dining-room, Lord Bunger with Lobelia on his arm, Rhett with Mrs. Packer; Gassaway followed alone. Mr. Blower and his Prodigies were to arrive by the midnight express from London. The dining-hall was large enough to seat a hundred people and the square table at which the party took their seats was proportioned to the size of the grand old hall; on state occasions the table was capable of being extended forty feet. While sipping her soup Mrs. Packer was mentally calculating how many American dollars it would require to fit and fur¬ nish such a big room and make it look home-like and habitable. The solemn James stood behind the chair of his master and stared at the ceiling when not busy serving the dishes which another servant, Hansard, brought in from the kitchen. Mrs. Packer, thinking it well to impress the servants with her intimacy with Lord Bunger and his lordship’s family, took occasion to remark just as Hansard came in with the second course: “I believe, my lord, your mother the Dowager resides in London?” 114 LORD BUNGER’S CASTLE It was a simple remark, yet it had a noticeable effect on Hansard as well as on the solemn James, but even more so on Lord Bunger. He squirmed in his seat as though a pin had risen up and pricked him. “My—my—mother?” stammered Bunger. “Do- you know her?” “Oh, no, though of course I know of her, as does every one who knows anything of England’s aristocracy. I am told she seldom resides here since the death of your lordship’s father.” Hansard and James exchanged glances and grinned. “Hansard, you may leave the room,” said Lord Bunger, severely. Hansard immediately went out; James followed with a tray of plates. “Old family serv¬ ants,” said Lord Bunger, visibly annoyed, “sometimes put on airs. They know we won’t turn ’em off after they’ve been in the family, father and son, so long. Yes, Mrs. Packer, the Dowager lives in London. She likes society and don’t like Wendham Castle—too- lonesome, you know, and—and—I’m sorry to say we had a few words and we’re not just in with each other.” “Oh, indeed, I beg pardon, I didn’t know,” cried the lady, contritely. “Don’t mention it, ma’am. Of course you didn’t know. I am happy to say I am at peace with all my other ancestors. I suppose you saw some of them in the hall as you came through?” “Yes, of course. You mean those queer men in iron breeches and jackets?” asked Mrs. Packer; “Me and Lobelia were looking at them and wondering what on earth made ’em wear iron clothes.” “Ma,” remonstrated her daughter, “I told you they wore ’em to keep off bullets and swords.” “So you did, Lobelia, but men don’t wear suclx things any more. When the war was going on I saw thousands of men starting down- South and not one of ’em wore iron things.” “Iron clothing,” remarked Rhett gravely, “has gone out of fashion.” LORD BUNGER’S CASTLE 115 . “And a good thing for us,” blurted out Gassaway, his mouth full of roast beef. “I’m sure,” said Lobelia, “it’s mighty lucky for us girls that the queer dresses the women used to wear have gone out of fashion. I didn’t see one in your hall, Lord Bunger, that wore gowns half so pretty as Worth’s.” “All of us dress better than our ancestors did,” said Gassaway, putting another piece of beef in his capacious mouth; “at any rate better than the ancestors of us common folk. I won’t speak for the nobility, but I am quite sure our ancestors wore skins or went naked.” “Speak for yourself, sir,” said Mrs. Packer, proudly. “Your ancestors may be all you say, but everybody knows the Packers is a very old family, the first in the country. Before he died, Mr. Packer had a book telling all about the Packers. We’ve got it in our library in Chicago.” “I haven’t a doubt,” said Gassaway, perfectly oblivious to the lady’s displeasure, “not a doubt in the world but that our ancestors two' thousand years ago- were stalk¬ ing over England in skins or ploughing and grubbing the fields for their Roman masters. You see, Mrs. Packer, Julius Caesar conquered this country and made her people slaves. What do you say, Rhett?” “My ancestors,” said Rhett indifferently, “do not inter¬ est me half as much as my posterity. We can do noth¬ ing whatever for those who came before us; we may do something for those who come after us.” “My sentiments to a ‘T’,” said Gassaway jovially. Mrs. Packer looked proudly severe. “My lord,” she said coldly, “I hope you will not fancy no Americans have family pride. I do assure you, we of the North have a great deal, and Packer just before he was taken away was about to have his arms painted on his carriages. We always have them on our note paper.” Lord Bunger expressed pleasure at this, and said he had at once perceived that Mrs. Packer and “Lady” Lobelia belonged to the American aristocracy. Then the 116 LORD BUNGER’S CASTLE conversation turned to plans for the morrow. Lord Bunger proposed a drive to the Long Man of Wilming¬ ton, thence to Beachy Head. “We’ll take ’em both in,” he said. “The view at Beachy Head can’t be beat no- where—bluffs rise nearly a thousand feet out of the sea. Blower and his Prodigies ’ll be here to-night— we’ll pack lunch hampers and make a picnic of it; we’ll take the whole bloomin’ crowd from the castle.” After dinner they adjourned to the drawing-room; the men did not stay behind to smoke and drink, Lord Bunger being gallant enough to say he preferred the society of beauty to wine and tobacco. It was the purpose of the party to sit up for Mr. Blower and his Prodigies, and Rhett rather feared the wait would prove tedious, but with Lord Bunger’s gossip about the noble English families and Mrs. Packer’s account of the way she had smuggled her Worth gowns into New York, and how Lobelia had been the belle of the last Washing¬ ton season, the time managed to pass quickly. No one realized, that it was late until there were sounds of wheels on the drive without, then there was a noise and medley of voices and finally an announcement from the solemn James that Mr. Blower and party had arrived. The announcement had hardly been made when the jolly Mr. Blower himself appeared in full dress with am enormous chrysanthemum in the buttonhole of his coat. “Here you are, eh?” he cried joyfully. “Natural as life and twice as sweet! My! but ain’t this like old times on the ship! Mrs. Packer and her beautiful daughter, and the great author and the great lawyer that are to be! My! I’m glad to see you! How are you all?” “How are the Prodigies, Blower?” asked Gassaway. “Stand the trip all right?” “All well and hearty as trivets, Mr. Gassaway, but a little sleepy. They’ll be down in a minute. I came right in; you see I was already in full dress—I didn’t change after the performance, and my! what a performance it was! The audience went wild, positively wild, Lord LORD BUNGER’S CASTLE 117 Bunger. I tell you, sir, Blower’s Prodigies are shaking this old island up!” “Glad to hear it, Blower,” said Lord Bunger, affably. “We want you to shake us up before you go back to London, for it’s rather dull here for the ladies.” “Leave that to me, my lord. I’ll give you the special performance I gave the Queen, and you can invite the nobility and the county.” “Oh, no!” returned the host, hastily. “I don’t care to turn my castle into a public show place. I prefer a quiet performance in honor of my lady visitors.” “My lord,” said Blower, looking crestfallen, “I must own I had expected some reputation out of this trip.” “If it’s advertisement you want,” returned Lord Bunger, pleasantly, “I’ll make that all right. I’ll see that the papers have a full account of your visit to the castle.” CHAPTER XII. LORD BUNGER PROPOSES. Despite the lateness of the hour at which the residents and guests of Wendham Castle retired that night, Rhett Calhoun arose early the following morning to take a ramble through the park before breakfast. As he walked to the rear of the hall for his hat he saw and heard something that surprised him. The door at the end of the hall opened into a smoking-room with tables for card-players and a sideboard provided with decanters and glasses. The door of this room was ajar and within the room, seated at one of the tables sipping a brandy and soda, was Lord Bunger. It was not the tipple that astonished Rhett; he had observed in London his lord- ship’s fondness for strong drink. What surprised him was the presence in the smoking-room of Jenny, the red-cheeked maid, and the familiar relations that ap¬ peared to exist between her and her master. Both were so engrossed with each other that they did not hear Rhett’s approach. “You can just put this in your pipe and smoke it, Bunger—I ain’t agoing to- let you marry her after all that’s passed betwixt you and me. That’s flat!” Thus spoke the maid as Rhett Calhoun walked to- the rear of the hall. “Now, Jenny, darling,” returned Lord Bunger, coax- ingly, “what’s the use of running on like that? You know I mean to marry you and I don’t mean to marry her. She ain’t my sort. Do behave yourself like a good girl, now do!” “Behave myself? And you dancing and prancing around that yellow-haired girl! I know she paints it. I Seen the roots of her hair all dirty ash color. Behave myself? It ain’t in flesh and blood!” (118) LORD BUNGER PROPOSES 119 Rhett coughed aloud and pushed the door wide open. “Hello. Is it you? Up rather early, eh?” said Lord Bunger, seeming quite put out by Rhett’s unexpected appearance. “Yes, I thought I would take a stroll about the park before breakfast.” “Capital idea. I’ll take a turn myself. Jenny, you can go.” At sight of Rhett Jenny had retreated to the further end of the room, where she stood looking sullen and angry. When ordered to leave she walked slowly away. “Take a drink,” said the lord, shoving a decanter and glass toward Rhett. “Thanks, only a little seltzer if you please.” Lord Bunger eyed Rhett intently as he touched the lever and sent the foaming seltzer into, his glass. Pres¬ ently he said: “You caught us, eh?” “I saw you and the girl, yes.” “And heard-?” “Something. The door stood open.” “Plang it all,” blurted out the lord, “a fellow can’t help getting into mischief when a pretty girl’s around, and Jenny isn’t half bad looking. Batching’s deuced lonesome, you know.” Rhett was silent. Had he given utterance to his thoughts he would have said things not agreeable to his host; but it was not his business to lecture this English lord on the iniquity of deceiving a poor servant girl. Something of this appeared in Rhett’s face. “Hang it all, Calhoun,” said the lord, “don’t pass for a bloomin’ parson. You don’t belong to the cloth.” “No, I am not a preacher,” said Rhett, coldly. “Well, then, you ought to know that a fellow with warm blood in him don’t see no harm in flirting with a lass like Jenny.” “The girl spoke of marriage, Lord Bunger. That goes beyond flirting.” “Oh, that was a joke, Jenny knows that was a joke. 120 LORD BUNGER PROPOSES I don’t mean her no harm, Jenny knows I don’t. She’s just a trifle saucy, but for all that we’re good friends.” Rhptt did not think it worth while to express his thoughts, so he allowed the subject to drop. As they walked through the park Lord Bunger pointed out the various objects of interest. “There ain’t much now to look at,” he said apolo¬ getically. “The old place’s run down. His late lordship —I mean my father—was a terrible fellow for spending money. Everything he could lay hands on, trees, old pictures, horses, went for money,—and the money ran like water. I count myself lucky the old lord couldn’t cut up the land and sell that too. See those stables! There’s no more horses to put in ’em. We couldn’t scare up more than a dozen head on the place, cart horses and all; and we used to keep sixty.” “Sixty,” repeated Rhett. “What did your father want with sixty horses?” “My father?—oh, ah—yes, I understand; his late lordship loved to mount his friends. He was master of the hounds in this county,—great fox-hunter, you know. There wasn’t a season but saw twenty or thirty guests at the castle, and every one of ’em hunters. Them times have all gone, though. We couldn’t mount a dozen hunters now.” “I should fancy a dozen horses quite enough for one man’s establishment,” said Rhett. “One would be enough, and more’n enough, for me,” returned the lord. “I ain’t at all partial to riding my¬ self; still, when a fellow has his friends down from Lon¬ don he likes to give ’em a mount. But it can’t be done now, and I never think of it without saying to myself, What a shame his lordship didn’t do the square thing.’ I tell you, Calhoun, common people don’t know what troubles the aristocracy have.” “I suppose not.” “You can guess how things are going here when I tell you that even the servants talk of leaving. Rats don’t run out of a ship till she’s sinking, and servants LORD BUNGER PROPOSES 121 don’t quit a place like this until they see matters turning blue,—a beautiful, bloomin’ blue. Egad! even the Jews in London are down on his lordship.” “His lordship?” “Oh—ah—yes, I mean me. They’ve refused to lend me another bob. 'You see now how I’m fixed and you needn’t wonder I’ve made up my mind to marry money.” “No, I do not wonder,” answered Rhett, thinking of Mrs. Packer and her millions. They stopped a moment at the gate and Rhett tried to make out the Latin inscription. “I used to be fairly good in Latin,” said Rhett, “but those letters are half- effaced; I can’t make them out.” “His lordship can read it easy, sir,” said the gate keeper, coming out of his lodge and bowing and grinning. Rhett fancied his look and manner were de¬ risive. “Hold your tongue,” said Lord Bunger, angrily. “You forget yourself.” “Oh, no, my lord,” with an obsequious bow, “I re¬ members who I be and who you be.” “Then go about your business.” Although both spoke in low tones, Rhett heard the remarks passed between the lord and the gatekeeper. “His servants do not like him,” was the conclusion the young American drew. “Can you read the inscription, Lord Bunger?” asked Rhett. “I can’t make it out.” “No,” replied the lord, “the letters are too old to make out, but I remember about the inscription. There’s a sword up in the middle and a lion and a unicorn fighting for the crown, which means for Charles I. It was King Charles who elevated us to the peerage.” “Us?” said Rhett, smiling. “I mean my ancestors. The Bunger family, sir, is the very first in this country,—the very first, although it has run down; but if Lady Lobelia and me can hit it off,—ah! then you’ll see this place as it was in old 122 LORD BUNGER PROPOSES times. American money and English nobility make a fine combination, now don’t they, Mr. Calhoun ?” When Rhett and Lord Bunger returned to the castle, they found all the guests, except Mr. Gassaway, assem¬ bled in the drawing-room ready for breakfast. The jovial reporter did not make his appearance until summoned by a special messenger. “Don’t think I was napping,” he said, grinning and bowing and looking as awkward as a chubby fat bear, “it wasn’t that at all, lord. I was pickling pointers for the G. A. N.” “Gassaway aims high,” said Rhett; “he is writing a great novel.” “Umph!” said Mrs. Packer. '‘What’s a novel but a lot of trash? I never heard of a man getting rich writ¬ ing stories.” This remark aroused Mr. Gassaway to an eloquent pitch. “Mrs. Packer,” he said, “letters rank above all other arts. An author of genius is greater than any monarch! To write a great book is the highest ambi¬ tion the human heart can hold. That ambition, Mrs. Packer, is in my heart. I am writing a novel that will picture life, high and low,—a reflex, a focusing of the humanity of the present day!” “A noble ambition,” said Mr. Blower, jovially, “a grand ambition, Mr. Gassaway, and I want to see it succeed. After breakfast you must give us a specimen of your work?” “You mean of the G. A. N.?” asked Gassaway, beam¬ ing with delight. Lord Bunger who was anxious for a tete-a-tete ramble with Miss Lobelia through the park, did not receive Mr. Blower’s proposition with enthusiasm. The Packer ladies also frowned on it, but Mr. Gassaway was not a gentleman who needed urging. Immediately after breakfast he rushed to his room and returned with a bulky MS. from which he proceeded to read copious extracts. I wish I could give here the chapters from the G. A. N. which the talented author read aloud to Lord Bunger LORD BUNGER PROPOSES 123 and his guests. For these chapters, though few in com¬ parison with the whole of the great work, illustrated most graphically Mr. Gassaway’s genius. But tO' re¬ produce them in these pages would be a violation of the copyright-laws as well as a breach of confidence. Suffice it to say that the extracts presented by Mr. Gassaway in the drawing-room of Wendham Castle, that Sunday morning, were intensely realistic, intensely exciting, in¬ tensely saturated with Gassawayism. Pathos, comedy, tragedy,—in short, all the qualities which the most ex¬ acting critic could demand were there. The reporter- author was interrupted several times by warm plaudits, clapping of hands, stamping of feet, cries from Lord Bunger of “Hear! Hear!” and from Mr. Blower of “Bravo! Bravo!” The generous applause from the host, considering how deeply occupied he was with the charm¬ ing young woman by his side, was more than Rhett expected. “That will please Labor,” said the noble lord, slyly giving Miss Lobelia’s hand a squeeze. “That’s good; I see you’re a friend of the laboring people.” “Friend?” returned Gassaway, with great enthusiasm, “I am their champion. I am ever on the side of the weak as against the mighty, and it does me good, lord, to see you harbor the same feelings. You find nothing of Howells or James in my style, eh, Rhett?” “No, my dear Gassaway, it is safe to say neither Howells nor James ever wrote anything like that.” “What do you think of it, Mrs. Packer? I am not one who despises woman’s opinion. I shall count the suffrage of the fair sex as my greatest glory.” “I don’t believe*in woman’s suffrage,” returned Mrs. Packer, stiffly. “Pm not one of your strong-minded women. I don’t think any lady is.” “But, madam, what think you of the sentiments ex¬ pressed in my G. A. N.? How do they strike you?” “Not at all favorably,” returned Mrs. Packer, with increased severity. “Chicago hasn’t any use for Anar¬ chists.” 124 LORD BUNGER PROPOSES “Anarchists, Mrs. Packer?” “Yes. It is just such stuff as you’ve been reading that puts cranky notions into workingmen’s heads and sets ’em against Capital. They gave Mr. Packer an awful lot of trouble when he was alive.” For a moment Mr. Gassaway looked nonplussed; then his face recovered its jollity. “Mrs. Packer, you aren’t up to the spirit of the times. But don’t be discouraged; you will grow. You’ll catch up with the procession. The tide of progress will sweep you on. Did you notice, lord, how paragraphic my style is?” “How what?” asked the noble lord. “How paragraphic. Many novelists overlook the fact that the average reader turns over the pages to see if there are open spaces, short sentences. - If the book is solid the reader fears it is dull. Observe how paragraphic is my style.” Opening the MS. at random, Mr. Gassaway read: “Is the Senator at home?” “He am,” returned Flunkey. “Where is he?” “In de study.” “I must see him.” “Hit am impossibul.” “Why?” “De Senator am wid Gineral Highead.” A frown contracted the Congressman’s brow. “Flunkey, listen.” “Yes, sah.” “I must see the Senator. Do you hear? Must!” Flunkey quailed before the Congressman’s gaze. “Sah, come dis way to de Senator’s study.” “Now that,” commented Gassaway, “is open work— only a few words to the line. Novel readers will buy and read a book like that.” “You must be a student of Gibbon,” remarked Lord Bunger. “You know Gibbon, the great historian; he is famous for that sort of thing.” “I assure you the idea is perfectly original,” cried LORD HUNGER PROPOSES 125 Gassaway, radiantly. “I have never read Gibbon’s nor anybody else’s history.” “Well,” said Lord Bunger, “Gibbon’s tiptop; you ought to read it before you visit his tomb. He’s buried near Wendham.” In view of the fact that it was proposed to visit Gib¬ bon’s tomb that same day on the way to Beachy Head, Rhett thought there was scarcely time for Mr. Gassaway to read the great history. Mr. Blower, however, un¬ familiar with the number and size of Gibbon’s ponder¬ ous tomes, told Lord Bunger if the work was in the castle library he would like to look it over before they started. Lord Bunger was about to reply to Mr. Blow¬ er’s request when his attention was attracted by the sud¬ den appearance of Jenny, the waiting maid. Jenny’s usually red cheeks were somewhat paled, her hair and manner indicated suppressed excitement. Glancing around the room her eyes rested on Lord Bunger in the alcove in close and agreeable proximity to Miss Lobelia Packer. A frown contracted Jenny’s brow. She took a step forward. “My lord!” she called, growing still paler. “What do you want?” he asked harshly. “You are wanted outside,” replied the girl, somewhat abashed but still resolute. “Can’t you see I am engaged?” said her noble master, irritably. “It can’t wait—my lord,” replied Jenny, with renewed resolution. Though visibly angry and annoyed, the lord arose and went out into the hall. “Did you see that, Lobelia?” whispered Mrs. Packer to her daughter. “I wonder how his lordship puts up with such impudence.” “I wouldn’t stand it a minute,” returned Miss Lobelia, pettishly. His lordship had been called away at a very interesting point in their conversation. “Of course you wouldn’t,” retorted Mrs. Packer. “I hope you won’t never be such a fool as to let a thing 126 LORD BUNGER PROPOSES like her run over you. Has Lord Bunger said anything to you, Lobelia?” “Said anything? Of course; he’s saying things all the time. Did you suppose he was dumb?” “You know what I mean,” the mother returned, re¬ proachfully. “It’s a bad girl that keeps things away from her mother.” “I ain’t keeping anything, ma.” “Then tell me what he says. He looks as if he was courtin’ you every minute.” “Maybe he is, ma. He says I am the girl he wants to marry.” “What’s that but courtin’? Now, Lobelia, you listen to me; don’t you get engaged too tight. He’s a lord and he’s got this old castle, but it’ll take big money to fix it up, and my opinion is he’s awful short of cash, and hard cash, as your pa used to say, is what makes the mare go.” “Suppose he pushes me, ma, and will have yes or no?” “Why, then, Lobelia, you play shy. When a girl’s pushed she can pretend like she can’t leave her mother so sudden. Men are the easiest things fooled if you only do it right. What with your pile of money and your face and Agger, Lobelia, you ought to catch a dock.” When Lord Bunger returned, his cheeks looked more florid than ever, and to Rhett it seemed as if he must have been engaged in unpleasant altercation. He apolo¬ gized for his absence, and announced that the vehicles were ready for their trip to Beachy Head and to the Long Man of Wilmington. The lord and Miss Lobelia drove together in a four-seated trap; the extra seat was heaped up with lunch hampers. The other members of the party rode in a carryall, a vehicle so commodious that it easily accommodated the driver and seven pas¬ sengers, some of whom were by no means feather weights, k Mrs. Packer, the Arkansaw Strong Girl and Mr. Blower each weighed in the neighborhood of two hundred pounds. LORD BUNGER PROPOSES 127 When it was discovered that Gibbon’s tomb was a few miles to the left of the road to Beachy Head, Mrs. Packer objected to making the detour. “We aren’t out looking for graveyards,” she said, “and if we were, what’s Gibbon’s grave anyway? I wouldn’t give a fig to see it. I never heard of his doing anything but writing that old history. Who reads it, I’d like to know?” “Some few read him, madam,” said Rhett, solemnly, “and as we may never again be so near his burial place we ought to see it.” “Graveyards always make me feel creepy,” insisted Mrs. Packer. “But as Lord Bunger and Lobelia have drove straight on, we’d better follow ’em.” At Beachy Head James got out the luncheon while the lord and his guests strolled along the edge of the steep precipice and looked down at the foaming breakers dashing against the rock seven hundred feet below. By straining their eyes they could dimly discern the coast of France across the Channel. Lunch was spread al¬ most at the very edge of the chalk cliff, and as each bottle was emptied Lord Bunger tossed it over into the sea. When well warmed by frequent libations he began to toss over some bottles that had not been opened. “Paying tribute to old Neptune, eh?” said Gassaway, grinning. “Oh, my lord, don’t be so wasteful,” cried Mrs. Packer. “What’s the use of throwing good wine into briny water?” “It’s quite poetical, ma; a tribute to Neptune, as Mr. Gassaway says.” Miss Lobelia had not graduated at the Union Institute without learning something of Greek mythology. “Poetical?” murmured the noble host, a little boozy and quite red in the face. “A fellow can’t help being poetical in the presence of—of beauty like I see before me.” Lobelia, who was also a little heated by wine, blushed rosy red at the lord’s compliment and the glance that 128 LORD BUNGER PROPOSES accompanied it. The mother, always practical, main¬ tained her opinion. “Poetry/’ she insisted, “is well enough in its way, but common sense is better. That’s what your pa used to say, Lobelia. If Packer hadn’t had a lot of horse sense he wouldn’t have left us no five millions. I dare say, Lord Bunger, that wine you threw away cost three or four shillings a bottle?” “Three or four shillings!” repeated his lordship, grin¬ ning. “More like half a guinea a bottle. How much did you pay for that Malmsey, James?” “Ten and six a bottle, my lord.” “Ah, I thought so, exactly half a guinea a bottle. But who cares? What’s the odds? A shilling more or less ain’t nothing to—to—a lord, you know.” When lunch was over, they started east, for the Long Man of Wilmington, that remarkable figure two hundred and fifty feet high, known to have existed before the Christian era. It was mentioned by Julius Caesar. Then they drove on to Pevesney Castle, where an hour was spent rambling around the massive Roman walls and through the courts of the old Norman castle. This castle had been built in the twelfth century, but it seemed quite modern in comparison with the Roman wall erected two thousand years ago. The drive, the view of the ocean at Beachy Head, the rambles through Pevensey Castle were so delightful that Lord Bunger was given a vote of thanks which he received with grins and loud good humor. When once more alone in the trap with Lobelia, driving back to Wendham Castle, he told the young Chicago woman it was her approval he most cared for; the others might be pleased or displeased, but if she were pleased he, Lord Bunger, was the happi¬ est man in England. “La, my lord,” murmured Lobelia,, blushing, “how you do talk!” “I can’t help it, Lady Lobelia, upon my word I can’t. My feelings get the better of me, on my soul they do! LORD BUNGER PROPOSES 129 You couldn’t help talking either if you had lost your heart as I have.” “Lost your heart?” “Yes, lost my heart. It’s gone, Lady Lobelia, and who do you suppose has got it?” “La, my lord, how should I know?” “Nobody but you ought to know, for you have got it, Lady Lobelia,—you have got every little piece and splinter of it. What are you going to do with it? Won’t you keep it, and give me yours in return?” “La, Lord Bunger!” cried the young woman, bearing in mind her mother’s practical instructions, “this is so sudden. You take my breath away.” “But it is your heart, Lady Lobelia, your heart I want to take away. I shall die a miserable, broken¬ hearted man if you won’t let me have it.” Lord Bunger transferred the reins to- his right hand and proceeded to put his left arm around Lobelia’s waist. “Lady Lobelia!” he cried, giving her a good squeeze, “you’re an angel—a lovely blonde angel! The happiest day of my life will be the day you become Lady Bunger.” With this he leaned over and gave the girl a kiss smack upon her ripe red lips. Lobelia threw herself back and playfully slapped at the audacious lord’s face, but the slap was as gentle as a zephyr’s blow. “Lord Bunger, I haven’t said ‘yes’ yet!” “But you have looked it,” the lord retorted, proceed¬ ing to again encircle the fair Lobelia’s waist. As he went no farther Lobelia remained quiet, reflecting that she had complied with her mother’s advice neither to accept nor reject but to' keep her suitor dangling while she awaited future developments. If a duke appeared she would feel herself free to take him; if no duke came, why then it might be well to let part of her fortune go toward repairing Wendham Castle and endowing her with the lovely title of “Lady Lobelia Bunger.” What a furore she could make with her wealth and title when she revisited Chicago! From what a proud height would she look down on certain fashionable dames who had 130 LORD BUNGER PROPOSES held themselves above her and her millions! And how envious and crestfallen would be those Barton women! These pleasing reflections wreathed Lady Lobelia’s face in smiles; indeed, so perfectly charmed was she with the prospect, she would not have resented it had Lord Bunger repeated the squeeze and the kiss. She was too happy to be displeased at anything. That evening in the privacy of her chamber she told her mother what the lord had said and done. Mrs. Packer commended her prudent course. ‘‘Keep things just as they are,” she said. “If he wants to think himself engaged to you let him do it, but, Lobelia, don’t tie yourself too tight. Give yourself a good loose rope, so if a dook does come along you can just tell Lord Bunger you never promised anything.” Then they went* down to dinner. When dinner was over and when the ladies had with¬ drawn from the dining-room, leaving the nobleman and his male guests at table with their wine and cigars, one of the servants came in and told Lord Bunger he was wanted outside by a messenger. Said the lord haughtily, “I can’t leave my guests for messengers.” “It’s most uncommon important,” said James; then he leaned over and added something in a whisper which discomposed his lordship in a remarkable degree. “Oh—ah,” he stammered, the ruddy glow leaving his face so that he looked absolutely pale. Then slowly rising to his feet he muttered an apology to his guests and followed the sedate James out of the room. “Something’s up,” remarked Gassaway, cheerfully. “A dun, I reckon. His lordship looked terribly pestered. What a go ’twould be if the messenger was a bailiff with a writ to serve!” “That would be decidedly unpleasant for the lord of the castle,” said Rhett, at the same time thinking that possibly Jenny, the housemaid, might have something to do with the perturbation Lord Bunger manifested. “Ancient castle sold for debt; ancestors in armor auc- LORD BUNGER PROPOSES 131 tioned off,—bought in by rich American visitor from Chicago,—what a striking commentary on English high life! Don’t you think so, Rhett?” queried Gassaway. Meanwhile Lord Bunger was in close confab with the sedate James in the privacy of the billiard-room to which they had retreated. “Don’t it say when he’ll come?” asked Bunger, anxiously. “Not a word, just a telegram saying to put the rooms in order for guests.” “Curse it all,” muttered Bunger, grinding his teeth. “If he’d only give us another week we’d be safe,—our fortunes would be made. The very devil’s to pay now.” “Rush the thing,” said James. “Get the knot tied fast before he comes; then you’ll be all right.” For a moment Lord Bunger seemed lost in deep reflection. “That’s your only chance,” continued James, eagerly. “She’s powerful stuck on you. Get the knot tied and you’ll be all right no matter what comes.” “James, you’re a trump. I’ll try it. I’ll rush it! If we make it a go you’ll be set up for life,—you and the rest as has stood by me. I dessay we’ve got a few days to go on. He ain’t one of the rushing sort. Scotland’s the place for us, but I say, James,” sinking his voice to a whisper, “keep Jenny quiet or she’ll fling all the fat in the fire.” When Lord Bunger returned to the dining-room his face had recovered its ruddy hue and his air was again almost cheerful. “Shut off his creditor,” thought Gassaway. “Pacified the housemaid,” thought Rhett. “Well, gentlemen,” said Lord Bunger, cheerfully, “if you’ve drunk enough we’ll join the ladies. What do you say?” “But you haven’t had your cigar,” said Blower, “we’ll wait for your lordship.” “I’m deuced fond of the weed,” replied their host, “but I’m deuced fonder of the ladies.” “Ladies?” said Blower, with a wink. “We ain’t blind, 132 LORD BUNGER PROPOSES my lord. Anybody with half an eye can see it is one lady that has captivated you, and a devilish fine one she is, too. Her father was a great man, self-made, left a big pile. She’s his only child. The man who gets her will be a lucky fellow, I don’t care who he is.” On returning to the drawing-room Mr. Blower col¬ lected around him all but one of Lord Bunger’s guests to listen to-stories of the dangers by field and flood that beset an American showman. The one exception was Miss Lobelia Packer, and the reason she did not join the others in listening to Mr. Blower’s thrilling tales was because her host invited her to examine some pho¬ tographs that lay upon a table at the end of the room. They had not been there five minutes before the lord proposed a stroll in the park. “Oh, my lord,” Lobelia objected, coyly holding back, “it is so dark out there.” “Dark, Lady Lobelia? The stars are shining.” “But it’s damp, Lord Bunger.” “It’s dry as a bone,” protested the lord. “I do believe you’re afraid of me, Lady Lobelia.” Even while protesting the girl suffered herself to be drawn out of doors. Tucking her stout, strong arm within his, the two walked on a minute in perfect silence. It was Lobelia who broke the silence by exclaiming, “La, my lord, how pretty it is out here!” “Not half as pretty as you, Lady Lobelia. Nothing in all the world is half as pretty as you.” “Goodness, gracious, my lord! How you do flatter,” simpered Lobelia. “It ain’t flattery, you know it ain’t,” protested the lover, putting his arm around her waist and pressing her close to his side. “Lady Lobelia, I love you to distraction, you know I do. Name an early day or you’ll see me pine and die at your feet. You ain’t that hard hearted, are you? Say you’ll be mine and I’ll be the happiest man in the whole world, positively the very happiest!” Lord Bunger gave another squeeze to the waist of LORD BUNGER PROPOSES 133 the too, too solid angel; her head drooped on his shoulder, an act which the wooer construed as consent and forthwith proceeded to manifest his delight after the fashion peculiar to lovers. Lobelia looked very hand¬ some in the moonlight, and as the florid lord gazed at her golden hair, her fair face and full form, he felt for the moment that he wanted her as much as he wanted her money. But Lobelia did not forget her mother’s good advice. Withdrawing from her noble lover’s em¬ brace she exclaimed, “La, mv lord, how you do muss my hair!” Lord Bunger protested that it was her own fault —she was so lovely it was impossible to resist the temp¬ ting tribute to her beauty. He declared that he loved her to that degree he could not bear a minute’s separation; he wanted her to be his at once,—moreover, there would be danger in delay, even a week’s delay might make their marriage impossible. “What’s to prevent it?” asked the maiden, who by no means liked the idea of a secret marriage; half the glory in marrying a lord would be in the newspaper accounts of the ceremony, in their description of the bride’s dresses and of the distinguished people attend¬ ing the wedding. “My darling Lobelia,” said the lord, “you don’t under¬ stand English laws. I’ve got a mother.” “What can she do. You’re of age, ain’t you?” asked the practical girl. “That’s nothing in this country. Mothers have strict rule over their sons until they’re thirty. She’s got an eye on a rich old maid she wants me to marry. I’ve got nothing but my title. If my mother wants she can leave everything, even this old park and castle, to some orphan asylum, and she’ll do it, sure pop, if I marry without her consent. My plan is to run up to Scotland and get the knot tied before the old lady knows one word about you. After the thing’s done she’ll forgive and make up. I am her only son, see?” Lobelia saw, but not in the way her lover desired her to see! She liked her noble wooer, but not enough to 134 LORD BUNGER PROPOSES forego the glory of a public wedding. On the other hand she was loath to give him entirely up, and it seemed she would be obliged to do this unless she married him off hand in Scotland. “You are awful impetuous, Lord Bunger, ,, she finally said, “I don’t want to make trouble between you and your mother and you mustn’t make trouble between me and my mother.” “Lady Lobelia,” insisted the lord, “I don’t want to make trouble between you and your mother. When we lay the case before her she will certainly consent, if she is at all the lady I take her to be. She ain’t hard¬ hearted, she ain’t a murderess, she won’t say no when she knows it will kill me to lose you! Now, my darling, one more kiss before we go into the house and see your mother!” The reader who sympathizes with a pining lover will no doubt regret to learn that when the case was -sub¬ mitted to Mrs. Packer, she did not prove as tender¬ hearted as Lord Hunger expected. In fact, the prospect of her daughter’s lover pining and dying produced no effect at all upon the practical Chicagoan. “A Scotland marriage!” she cried indignantly. “No, indeed! I’ve heard tell of them kind of marriages. I don’t take no stock in ’em. When Lobelia gets married, Lord Bunger, it shall be in church. I’m thinking of St. Paul’s or Westminster Abbey!” Her host’s face dropped into such sudden and deep gloom that Lobelia thought the pining process had al¬ ready begun. “Ma,” she pleaded, “Lord Bunger’s mother will for¬ bid the marriage if she hears of it. She don’t like Ameri¬ cans and she wants Lord Bunger to marry a rich old maid that he fairly despises.” “Hates, Lady Lobelia, hates,” muttered the lord. “It’ll be the death of me, Mrs. Packer, it will indeed, if you don’t consent to me and Lady Lobelia getting married. I can’t survive it.” “Don’t be so hard, ma,” pleaded Lobelia, deeply LORD BUNGER PROPOSES 135 affected by the devotion of her noble lover, and also perhaps by the thought that a bird in the hand might be worth two in the bush. She could get this lord and it was possible that no suitor with a higher title might present himself. “You can come to Scotland with us,” she added by way of offering her mother a convincing argument. Lord Bunger cast an ineffable look at his lady-love. “Do say yes,” he urged, seizing Mrs. Packer’s hand and squeezing it warmly. “Make us both happy. We can take the twelve o’clock train to-night and have it tied tight and fast to-morrow before the old lady knows a word about it.” When Mrs. Packer thought of the glories of Wend- ham Castle, despite its fallen fortunes, and of the ex¬ quisite delight she would enjoy when gloating over her Chicago friends and referring to her son-in-law as a Lord and Peer of the Realm of England, she weakened and partially consented that the Scotland marriage might take place, but she was firm in refusing to take any midnight train. She would not run away like a thief in the night. All of Lord Lunger’s guests were to take the train for London at 3:30 after Blower’s performance the next afternoon and it was finally agreed that the two Chicagoans and their host would arrange at Waterloo Station to get away from the others, take the Scotland express and have a quiet wedding on Wednesday morn¬ ing. CHAPTER XIII. MR. GASSAWAY’S BURGLAR. Early Monday morning, while Mr. Green Gassaway was quietly in bed dreaming of the good luck which had dropped him into the very thick of English high life, in an ancient castle with a hospitable English lord as his host,—James, the solemn valet, let himself softly into the room to brush and arrange Mr. Gassaway’s clothing. James had performed this function a hundred times for visitors at Wendham Castle, and always deftly and without disturbing the guest’s slumbers. But Fate ordained it otherwise on the present occasion. In the right hand pocket of the reporter’s trousers was a large and curious knife which the ingenious Mr. Gassaway had purchased with a view to service on his tramp through Europe. The main blade, six inches long, was intended not only to cut bread and cheese, but in an emergency to serve as a weapon of defense. There was also a spoon, a fork and a corkscrew,—all designed to assist Mr. Gassaway in his modest housekeeping ar¬ rangements. None of these articles, however, was the solemn valet accustomed to find in gentlemen’s pockets, consequently when James drew this multi-bladed knife from the depths of Mr. Gassaway’s pocket his first thought was that it was some sort of an infernal machine. James had a vague idea that all Americans carried such nefarious contrivances and exploded them on short no¬ tice and slighter provocation. Afraid to grasp the thing firmly, James let it slip from his fingers, and as it fell on the floor it made a loud noise. James turned to see if the noise had disturbed Mr. Gassaway; apparently it had not. At any rate there was no movement on the part of the slumberer and James proceeded to remove ( 136 ) “Come,” said the man, “You are wanted .’* MR. GAS SAW AY’S BURGLAR 137 the rest of the contents of the reporter’s pockets prelimi¬ nary to giving his clothes a thorough brushing. Now as a matter of fact the “dull thud” of the knife as it struck the hardwood floor did arouse Gassaway; he opened his eyes and in a moment dreams of the G. A. N. were put to flight. Mr. Gassaway warily watched the man who was making so free with his pockets and property. Having more experience with the humbler side of life than with lords who supply their guests with valets, and making no doubt but that a burglar was prosecuting his nefarious trade within the sacred precincts of Wendham Castle, the author reached stealthily under his pillow, drew forth the self-cocking revolver he had placed there on retiring, and just as the solemn James was fishing up a lot of loose silver and a bunch of keys from Mr. Gassaway’s trouser pock¬ ets, the author of the future G. A. N. suddenly sat bolt upright in bed, presented his revolver and sternly said, “Drop it!” So noiseless had been the reporter’s movements, James did not notice them until he heard the words “drop it!” At sight of the revolver the valet gave a yell that was heard of the furthest end of the castle, and made a wild rush through the door. The bullet which Gassaway let fly whizzed past his cheek and buried itself in the wall. The collector of pointers leaped Qut of bed and started in hot pursuit; the terrified servant flew down the stairs and through the halls and drawing-rooms, yelling at every step, Gassaway in his night gown almost at his heels, the smoking pistol in his hand. It was six o’clock in the morning. The pistol-shot, the clatter of flying feet, the overturning of chairs and tables, James’ ag¬ onized howls for help, Gassaway’s yells of “Stop thief!” —all this aroused every inmate of the castle. Heads, the owners of which were in varying degrees of appre¬ hension and curiosity, protruded from slightly opened doors, and the owners of the heads screamed out to know what was the matter. “Matter?” yelled Gassaway. “There’s a burglar in 138 MR. GAS SAW AY’S BURGLAR the house. I just shot him. Come on! We’re bound to catch him. He darted up into this hall a moment ago!” At this the maids began to scream. Mrs. Packer put her head out of her door and announced that Lobelia was about to faint. Lady Lobelia jerked her mother back and told her not to talk silly ; the male portion of the castle’s occupants were not in a hurry to come out and help catch the thief, no doubt thinking it more proper to first put themselves in presentable garbs. Thus the valiant reporter found himself alone in liis scant attire in that dimly-lighted baronial hall, the enemy no longer in sight. Despite his absorbing love of literature, Mr. Gassaway was not ignorant of the arts of war. He had participated in more than one border affray, and knew how unpleas¬ ant it is to have an enemy “get the drop” on you. Ac¬ cordingly, at the instant that the doors opening into the hall were slammed to and every head had retired from sight, Gassaway stepped quickly back against the wall to guard himself from attack in the rear; then he peered intently around in the semi-darkness and at length got a glimpse of the unlucky valet crouching under a table at the far end of the hall. Poor James’ condition was not pleasant; his teeth chattered, his frame shivered, he was almost in a state of collapse. “I give you just one minute to git out of there,” cried Gassaway, leveling his revolver. “For God’s sake don’t shoot, sir,” implored the un¬ happy valet. “It’s only me, James, sir,—his lordship’s valet. If you won’t shoot I’ll come out, sir, I will indeed.” “Come right out and hold up your hands,” commanded Mr. Gassaway. The fellow crawled out and held up both hands; he did not care for another bullet from the doughty reporter’s pistol. While James shivered with cold and fright, his hands stretched up as high as he could hold them, Gassaway yelled at the top of his lungs, “I’ve got him, lord. Tell MR. GAS SAW AY’S BURGLAR 139 the ladies not to be afraid. I’ve got him at the muzzle of my gun.” There was a partial opening of doors and thrusting out of heads, and finally Lord Bunger stepped into the hall robed in a long dressing-gown; he moved cautiously at first but when he saw through the dusky light the alarming predicament of the usually sedate and well- behaved James, he peered around to discover the bloody burglar who was holding him up; perceiving no one but his guest, the author-reporter, the noble host stepped boldly forward and frowned severely. “What is all this?” he demanded with an air of pom¬ pous authority. “What’s the matter, Gassaway? What have you been doing, James?” “What have I been doing?” cried James in an injured, indignant tone, letting both arms drop to his side. “Not a bloomin’ thing except what we agreed on, and I’ll be damned if I do it any more if I’m to be fired on and shot in the back and hunted about the castle like a wild beast. If this is what’s to come of our game, Bunger, the sooner we’re out of it the better!” “You idiot!” cried the noble master, hoarse with rage as he rushed up to the injured servitor, “I’ll kill you myself if you don’t hold your tongue! I will, by G-! You know me. I won’t stand no fooling!” James, pale with a new fear, retreated against the wall. Lord Bunger subdued his anger and turned to the re¬ porter. “Mr. Gassaway,” he said, wiping his brow, “what has James been doing?” “James?” echoed Gassaway, beginning to realize that something was wrong. “Is that James? I didn’t recog¬ nize him in the dark.” “You see it’s James,” said the host, gruffly. But, whether from prince or pauper, gruffness never disturbed Mr. Gassaway’s equanimity. “Well, whoever he is,” responded the reporter, cheer¬ fully, “I caught him just now in my room going through my pockets. I ordered him to drop my things; at sound 140 MR. GASS A WAY’S BURGLAR of my voice he made a rush to the door, and—I let fly at him a shot from my gun.” “And a pretty mess you have made of it,” retorted the lord with angry disgust. “James is a blooming good fellow, he’d no more steal your things than the Prince of Wales would. He was obeying my orders—getting your things in trim as valets always do at Wendham Castle, and you try to kill him for it. You must have been dreaming you were out among the bloody Injuns of America.” “Not a bit of it,” replied Mr. Gassaway. “On the contrary I was sleepily thinking over a chapter for the G. A. N. when in creeps your valet. It was rather dark in my room; I did not recognize James. I’m not up to this valet business anyway; at home I brush my own clothes. So when I see a man taking money out of my pockets before it’s quite day I take him to be a burglar. That’s the up and down of it, lord. If I’d shot James I’d have been awfully sorry, but no harm’s done and ‘All’s well that ends well’.” “I am not so sure about that,” growled Lord Bunger. “His bullet blowed along my cheek,” moaned the in¬ jured James. “Miss an inch is as good as a mile,” replied the cheer¬ ful Mr. Gassaway. “Come to my room, James, and you shall have a sovereign for your scare. I reckon it’s worth that much to you and I’m sure it’s worth that much to me. It’ll make a special chapter for the G. A. N. I’ll go to my room and pickle the pointer while it’s hot.” CHAPTER XIV. THE BARTONS DINE IN GREAT BARRINGTON SQUARE. While the Packers were enjoying the glories of Wend- ham Castle the Bartons were given a dinner by Lady Apohaqui in London. The American ladies would have found the dinner dull except for the fact that they were meeting members of the English nobility and taking note of the manners and customs of a class altogether new to them. There was a stout, elderly rector, —very heavy, Grace thought—an old lady with lorgnettes, the Dowager Countess of Loughboro, a ruddy faced Colonel who looked as though his collar was gradually choking him into a fit of apoplexy, Mr. Montrose Morton and their host. Lady Apohaqui was quite affable. She informed Mrs. Barton that she had obtained cards for her and daughters to Lady Defeese’s ball, and that they would see theje many of the English uppertendom. “I am sure, madam,” rejoined Mrs. Barton, “it is very kind of you. When we came over we had no ex¬ pectation of seeing any great people. We are so demo¬ cratic in our country. We have been quite lucky meet¬ ing titled gentlemen. Grace, who was that lord we met at Windsor?” “Lord Bunger.” “Lord Bunger?” repeated Lady Apohaqui. “I do not remember any Lord Bunger. Charles, do you know Lord Bunger?” “Never heard of him before,” replied the young peer. “We were disappointed,” said Grace, “in not being permitted to see Windsor Castle. It seems the Queen was there.” “Visitors are never allowed to* enter when her Majesty is there.” “If that is so,” said Clara, “then a countryman of ours ( 141 ) 142 THE BARTONS DINE OUT was more favored than usual. As we stood at the gate we saw Mr. Blower walking about inside, looking as pleased and proud as though he owned the place.” “Blower, the showman?” asked Lord Apohaqui. “Yes, our cheery fellow-passenger. Grace and I have half a mind to apply to Mr. Blower for a place in his show. His Prodigies are to perform before the Queen and the Royal family. If we could only take a part we would get a good look at her Majesty.” “It is hardly necessary to make yourself a Prodigy to see her Majesty,” returned Lord Apohaqui; “the Ameri¬ can Ambassador can get you cards to a drawing-room.” “It isn’t worth the trouble,” remarked Mrs. Barton, serenely; “I’ve read about the Queen’s drawing-rooms and what an awful undertaking they are. It wouldn’t pay us to go through with one.” “But, mamma,” said Clara, smiling, “think of the splendor! Grace and I would be delighted, were it only possible for us to be presented.” “It is quite possible,” graciously remarked Lady Apo^- haqui. “Many American women are presented to the Queen.” “It must be dreadful for old ladies,” observed Mrs. Barton. “Why dreadful?” asked the Dowager Countess of Loughboro, eyeing the American through her lorgnettes. “I call it dreadful for old ladies to wear low neck dresses and short sleeves,” calmly replied Mrs. Barton. “I wouldn’t do it, not for—not if the Queen were to make me a Duchess. You English do look at things so differently from the way we consider them.” “In what do we differ?” asked the Dowager Countess, her glasses still in position. “Why, pretty nearly every way,” returned Mrs. Bar¬ ton, sweetly. “What is the use of such great high walls around your grounds? In Alabama we don’t have walls around our yards. We want every one to see our pretty lawns and flowers. It is very dismal to drive about and see only brick walls. And then, rich as the Queen is, THE BARTONS DINE OUT 143 I’m astonished she lives in such a place as Windsor Castle.” “What!” gasped the Dowager Countess of Loughboro, “isn’t Windsor Castle grand enough for you Ameri¬ cans?” “It’s entirely too grand,” replied Mrs. Barton. “It looks like a great big prison. Americans shut up lunatics and murderers in places with high walls like those at Windsor. I don’t see how the Queen contents herself with such a gloomy place.” “Oh, mamma,” cried Grace, with a smile and a blush, “I thought Windsor Castle a magnificent old building, just suited for a Queen.” “My dear,” replied her mother, “I don’t say it isn’t suited for a Queen; Queens, I reckon, are not allowed, or supposed, to live like other people. But you know, Grace, no matter how rich an American woman is, she doesn’t shut herself up in a walled castle as if she ex¬ pected enemies to plant cannon in front of it to besiege her. Of course though,” added Mrs. Barton, reflectively, “people so old-fashioned as to have Queens will have castles to keep ’em in. But I wouldn’t like it if I were Queen.” “I am sure. Lady Apohaqui,” said Mr. Montrose Morton, wishing to make amends for his countrywoman’s gaucherie, “we Americans might profit by adopting many of your English customs. We are too democratic; every year brings a new proof of how desirable it would be for the United States to possess a solid aristocracy.” “How do you mean solid?” asked Lord Apohaqui. “I mean fixed by law,” explained Mr. Morton. “We have our four hundred, the aristocracy of New York, and so recognized by all people of fashion; but, my lord, such is the power of demagogism in our country that there is as yet no legal recognition of titles nor of the Four Hundred.” Grace and Clara looked at Mr. Morton, a comical little smile quivering on their lips. Lord Apohaqui, 144 THE BARTONS DINE OUT curious to understand that smile, asked Grace how she viewed the question of an American Aristocracy. “Oh!” replied Grace lightly, “we are from the South, where there isn’t even a sign of a Four Hundred. We are plain, old-fashioned democrats who believe in equal rights, as Jefferson did.” “Of course,” said Mr. Morton, reflectively, “aristoc¬ racy must have wealth to support it. There is not much wealth in the Southern States of America, consequently one finds there little of the spirit of an aristocratic leisure class. Miss Barton is not to be blamed for failing to advocate the Four Hundred, although,”—with a graci¬ ous bow,—“no one would more adorn the charmed circle.” Grace’s eyes danced with merriment, but she assumed a serious air as she said: “Mr. Morton, your compli¬ ment, coming from a member of New York’s famous set, is more than I expected. Were I not hedged in on both sides I would rise and make you my very best dancing-school courtesy. Please take the will for the deed.” “Humph,” thought Lady Apohaqui, who all along had been critically observing Grace. “She is too sharp. I fear she is self-willed and opinionated.” “She’s as bright as she’s beautiful,” thought Lord Apohaqui, glancing at his mother to see how she was affected. Mr. Morton now drew a comparison between the vulgar crowds which push their way into the White House receptions, and the elegant drawing-rooms of the Queen. “Is it possible,” asked Lady Apohaaui, “that anybody may go to your President’s receptions?” “Yes, anybody, whether a millionaire Senator or a street-sweeper. No costume is prescribed, no courtesy required. The wife of a millionaire may be elbowed by her own cook.” “How extraordinary,” muttered the Dowager Count¬ ess, across the table. THE BARTONS DINE OUT 145 “How perfectly monstrous!” chimed in the hostess. “Of course it’s monstrous,” assented Mr. Morton; “we ol the Four Hundred know that, but the common rabble outnumber us, consequently we seldom attend the Presi¬ dent’s receptions.” “Fancy Buckingham Palace or Windsor Castle over¬ run by the mob!” exclaimed the Dowager Countess. “It would kill her Majesty. She could not stand it a single night.” ‘‘As long as the rabble have the same right to vote as men of wealth and social position,” said Mr. Morton, “we cannot hope for anything better, unless, indeed, the Senate comes to the rescue. The Senate is largely composed of millionaires, of men who' understand and appreciate the responsibilities of wealth and who know the dangers inherent to democracy.” “How could the Senate remedy matters?” ashed the ruddy-faced Colonel. “I think sooner or later the Senate will take the ques¬ tion in hand and use its confirming power to give the great political positions to those whose wealth entitles them to such prominence. It is absurd to allow as much political power to a beggar who hasn’t a dollar as to a railroad president who has millions.” Grace kept her eyes downcast and her lips tightly closed. Once or twice Lord Apohaqui thought she was about to break out with impetuosity, whether of approval or disapprove he could not tell. Presently he said: “Miss Barton, do you agree with Mr. Morton, or have you never given such subjects attention?” “If I thought Mr. Morton’s predictions would come true,” replied Grace, “I would emigrate to'—to Africa, or to any other benighted land, rather than live in a country so false to its principles as America would be should she establish an aristocratic class.” “Don’t talk of emigrating,” said Mrs. Barton, “I don’t wish to leave Alabama, and there isn’t the least danger of the Senate doing such dreadful things. Mr. Morton knows New York is the only city that has a Four Hun- 146 THE BARTONS DINE OUT dred; no other city wants such an organization, vague and unwritten as it is. Grace, you heard Mrs. Packer say how Chicago tried to get up a Four Hundred but couldn’t do it. New York’s uppertendom can’t make dukes and lords any more than I can make boots and shoes.” Everybody laughed, even Mr. Montrose Morton; then the Four Hundred were dropped and peace reigned un¬ til, in an unlucky moment, the Dowager Countess across the table asked Mr. Morton if there was any probability of Church and State being united in America as they were in England. Mr. Morton didn’t know; that was a subject he had not turned his attention to. “It is a very important question,” said the Dowager Countess, who was a staunch Church of England woman. “Yes,” said the portly rector, “it is a very important question. A people without an established Church must greatly suffer for want of true spiritual instruction.” “I don’t think,” said Mrs. Barton, placidly, “that an established Church would suit our country. You have no idea, Lady Apohaqui, how shocking it seems to Americans to see people buying and selling the right to preach the Gospel of our Savior. That’s what happens under your system. Only yesterday Grace saw in the London “Times” an advertisement of an advowson for sale. Some lord had a church living to dispose of. The advertisement said that the present rector was old and likely to die at any moment and the lord of the manor would sell the right to preach to the highest bidder. I don’t think anything in America can seem as odd to you as this seems to us.” Then Mrs. Barton proceeded to mention two or three other English, customs that struck her as peculiar. One was that of people in mourning going to balls and dancing. “This is not so odd as it seems,” said Lord Apohaqui, smiling; “whenever a foreign potentate dies, our Court orders thirty days’ mourning. Nobody really grieves when the King of Siam dies, or when the Shah of Persia THE BARTONS DINE OUT 147 is assassinated; some prince or princess is always dying, and if people stopped dancing because they have to go into mourning for them, they would have to give up dancing altogether.” “In that case,” said Mrs. Barton, “I would not stop dancing, but I would stop putting on mourning for peo¬ ple I don’t know and don’t care for. The President’s receptions may not be all they should be, as Mr. Morton says, but there you don’t see people in mourning, Lord Apohaqui, and you don’t see people sticking each other with pins.” Lord Apohaqui inwardly groaned. He knew Mr. Montrose Morton’s eulogy of English society could not bear too close inspection; the young nobleman himself had witnessed disgraceful scrambling in some of the most aristocratic drawing-rooms in London, and he only hoped that Mr. Morton’s strictures of the President’s White House receptions might be forgotten. But in her innocent way, Mrs. Barton was merciless. “Stick each other with pins?” feebly asked—almost gasped— the Dowager Countess across the table. “Yes, they do that in London, I’ve heard. Maybe the London papers don’t print such things, but Grace saw it in the Talledega ‘Appeal’. There was an awful crowd at one of the Queen’s drawing-rooms and a titled woman tried her best to see what was going on, but couldn’t because in front of her sat a stout woman with bare arms and neck and shoulders. The ‘Appeal’ said that after leaning first to one side, then to the other, the great lady deliberately took a long pin out of her hair and jabbed it in the fat woman’s shoulder.” “Yes, I remember reading that,” admitted Grace. “The paper said the large woman gave a scream that was heard all over the room.” “What puzzled me,” continued Mrs. Barton, “was the aggressor’s motive. The large woman didn’t get out of her way and I don’t suppose the other woman ex¬ pected her to. She was wedged in so tight there was no 148 THE BARTONS DINE OUT getting away, and the excitable person could not see a whit better after using that pin than she did before.” The English people at the table were polite enough, or curious enough, to give their guests full play in their exhibition of democratic enthusiasm and lack of respect for other people’s saints and loves. When finally the dinner party was over and Lord Apohaqui found him¬ self alone with his mother, she declared herself unequivo¬ cally opposed to the match. “She won’t do at all,” she said. “Miss Barton is not the girl for a British noble¬ man’s wife.” “What is the objection?” asked the son. “She has entirely too much temper; she has had her own way too much. Her opinions are not those of a girl in our station; besides, her mother-” “I don’t propose to marry the mother,” interrupted the young man frowningly. “The girl is young and pretty, in fact by long odds the prettiest girl I know.” “With your title and your appearance, Charles,”—be¬ gan the mother. The young man laughed. “Mother, I don’t find my appearance as attractive as you seem to suppose. As to my title, every woman in England knows that a title and a dilapidated castle are all I have got. What English girl will give youth and beauty and money for a title?” “Plenty of them would,” asserted Lady Apohaqui. “However, Charles, since the trip to Falmouth has been planned, we shall see more of the girl and her family before we utterly abandon the alliance. I must say, though, that, from the way things now look, a marriage with Miss Barton would involve you in disaster. Both mother and daughter seem little short of being anar¬ chists ” CHAPTER XV. LORD BUNGER IS EXPOSED. On the Monday following the dinner at Great Barring¬ ton Square, Lord and Lady Apohaqui, accompanied by their guests, the Bartons and Mr. Montrose Morton, started for Brighton. “The weather is so beautiful,” said Lord Apohaqui, “that instead of going direct to the castle we shall go to Brighton and then, after tak¬ ing luncheon on the hotel piazza in full view of the sea, we shall drive to Falmouth. It is only twelve miles from Brighton, and the road runs through a pretty bit of country.” Lord Apohaqui had written his steward ordering carriages sent to Brighton, but William, the solemn valet, neglected to post his master’s letter until that same Mon¬ day morning, consequently when the party arrived at Brighton the lord’s carriages were not there. “Perhaps they went to the wrong hotel,” suggested Lord Apoha¬ qui, and directed William to inquire at the leading hostelries. When he returned it was with a mixture of good and bad news. “They haven’t sent no carriages, m’lud, but Mr. Covey of the Royal Oak says as he’ll be happy if your lordship will take his carry-all which has four seats and will hold everything quite comfort¬ able, sir.” This untoward incident annoyed Lord Apohaqui; he did not like his guests to think the servants at Falmouth so indifferent to his orders. However, there seemed to be no help for it and they started off in the long carry- all of the Royal Oak Hotel. In winter, saturated with fog and mist, England is dreary beyond expression; but it is brilliantly beautiful in the crisp, invigorating air of a cloudless June day. As the young lord and his party drove along the road ( 149 ) 150 LORD BUNGER IS EXPOSED leading north from Brighton they gave themselves up to the enjoyment of nature. Only once was there anything like a discussion; that was when they were passing a grand old country-seat surrounded by a deer-park and shaded by stately oaks. Mr. Montrose Morton, who occupied the middle seat with Miss Clara, said sedately: “Don’t you admire a castle and grounds like that?” “They are beautiful, indeed. Nobody could help ad¬ miring a castle with trees and a deer-park.” “Then,” continued Mr. Morton logically, “why do you not admire the system that produces such beautiful re¬ sults?” “What do you mean?” asked Clara. “Why, haven’t you and your sister condemned the English system of titles? Why are the counties in America not dotted with parks and p.alaces? Because we have no hereditary nobility. In our democratic country property is cut up after a man’s death into small portions; every child, no matter if there be a dozen, may be given an equal portion. This continual leveling process pre¬ vents the erection of stately country houses.” “Such a system as obtains here must cultivate selfish¬ ness,” said Clara. “I’d rather live in a cottage and see all my brothers and sisters also in cottages, than live in a grand castle while they lived in poverty. People had better be poor than unjust, and it is unjust for one child to inherit all, or nearly all the property.” Mrs. Barton and Lady Apohaqui were on the seat behind Mr. Montrose Morton and Clara. On the last seat sat William with folded arms, as upright as though he had swallowed a poker. Grace was on the front seat with Lord Apohaqui who was driving. Mrs. Barton interrupted her conversation with Lady Apohaqui to lean forward and observe: “I think Clara is quite right, Mr. Morton. It does make men selfish,—no doubt of it. Only last winter, when Cecil Haverton, the half-brother of Lord Harleigh, was at Mrs. Pine Knickerbocker’s ball in New York a cablegram was brought in. Mrs. LORD BUNGER IS EXPOSED 151 Knickerbocker was with Mr. Haverton when he read the dispatch, and what do you suppose he said?” “Can’t imagine,” said Mr. Morton, with a bored air. “He reached out his hand and said: ‘Congratulate me, Mrs. Knickerbocker, I have just become an earl!’ The cablegram was from England telling of his brother’s sudden death, and Cecil Haverton rejoiced because it elevated him to the peerage. I call that heartless selfish- Mr. Morton.” Mr. Morton bowed and Mrs. Barton continued, “This way of giving everything to the eldest son makes men mercenary. Mrs. Knickerbocker says Lord Haverton made no secret of his desire to marry money; he ad¬ mitted he was looking for an American heiress. There are some American men mean enough to do this, but they hide it all they can. We don’t approve of mer¬ cenary matches: do you, Lady Apohaqui?” “I don’t think we English are quite as sentimental as you Americans,” returned the English lady, smiling.' “We believe in arranging suitable matches between suit¬ able families. Prudent mothers are more successful than rash daughters. The young people can learn to love after marriage.” “But if they don’t—how awful!” persisted the senti¬ mental Mrs. Barton. Grace put an end to the discussion by attracting her mother’s attention. “Look, mamma! Lord Apohaqui says the place yonder is Falmouth Castle.” The turrets of the castle could just be seen above the foliage of the trees in the surrounding park. When they reached the gate no keeper came out to meet them. “William, see what is the matter with Hodgers,” com¬ manded Lord Apohaqui, impatiently. The dignified William unfolded his arms, clambered down from his high seat and knocked at the door of the lodge house. There was no response. William pounded on the door, but still no Hodgers. “Upon my word,” muttered the young lord angrily, 152 LORD BUNGER IS EXPOSED “these beggars are sailing with a high hand! I wonder if they have deserted the place.” “Only idling, Charles,” suggested his mother, “or frol¬ icking—perhaps intoxicated.” A few minutes later the carry-all drew up in front of the castle entrance. Strange noises came from within— loud laughter, hand-clapping, stamping of feet, shouts and yells. “They must be demented,” exclaimed Lady Apohaqui. “It sounds like a lunatic asylum.” Her son’s face became stern. The party alighted and stood before the door, the knocker of which William was pounding vigorously. Only the lunatic noises re¬ sponded,—the loud guffaws, the stamping of feet and the clapping of hands. William continued to beat the huge iron knocker, until at last a maidser-vant appeared. At sight of Lord Apohaqui she gave a piercing scream and fled down the long hall as if she had seen a ghost. Perfectly dumbfounded, Lord Apohaqui entered, fol¬ lowed by the entire party. A moment later they stood at the threshold of the great oak dining-hall whence issued the boisterous sounds. The scene before them was astonishing. In the center of the room, holding a billiard cue, was a slender girl; surrounding her were six burly menservants, apparently using their utmost strength to wrest the cue from the girl who seemed to hold on without the least exertion. The excited crowd was composed of the castle servants and Lord Bunger’s visitors, among whom, to the amazement of the new¬ comers, they saw Rhett Calhoun, Green Gassaway and the Packers. The hilarious crowd did not perceive the new arrivals. Mrs. Packer, resplendent in a gorgeous Worth gown, was the first to see them. “Goodness gracious me!” she exclaimed, with a pat¬ ronizing smile at the Bartons. “When did you arrive at the castle? And Lord Apohaqui too? This is truly a surprise. Lord Bunger—sly man—never told us he expected you!” “Well, I declare,” cried Gassaway, jovially, bustling LORD BUNGER IS EXPOSED 153 up with a beaming face, “we had no idea you’d be down. How are you, lord? This is a jolly crowd, isn’t it?” “What is going on?” demanded Lord Apohaqui. “Has the place become converted into an insane asylum?” “Insane with mirth, lord, that’s all; innocent amuse¬ ment, Blower’s Prodigies—quite the fad now to see Blower’s Prodigies. Lord Bunger brought ’em down for the special benefit of his guests.” “Lord who?” sharply questioned Lord Apohaqui. “The lord of this castle, over there in the corner. Between you and me, lord, he’s dead gone—sure case, —splendid girl—rolling in wealth,;—good catch, even for a lord.” Apohaqui looked in the direction Gassaway indicated. There, snugly apart from the herd of excited servitors, sat Lord Bunger and Lady Lobelia, apparently as happy and serene as if they were entirely alone. “Is that Lord Bunger?” asked Lord Apohaqui. “Yes,” whispered Gassaway. “Hasn’t he seen you and the ladies yet? I’ll call him. ‘Lord Bunger,’ he shouted, in stentorian tones that went entirely over the hubbub of the crowd. “You’re wanted here, Lord Bunger.” Lady Lobelia’s lover lifted his eyes from the lily-white fingers he was caressing, and cast them toward the sound of Gassaway’s voice. As he looked, a strange, deadly illness seemed to attack him; the ruddiness of his cheeks gave way to ghastly pallor; he dropped the fingers of his adored; a shudder went over his body and he fell flat to the floor. Lobelia screamed and knelt by his side. Every eye turned to see what was the matter, and —the whole crowd of laughing, shouting servants made a rush for the doors. The silence they left behind was broken by Lobelia’s wails over the prostrate Bunger. “Oh, please send for a doctor!” she cried. “Don’t let him die! Send for a doctor!” The sudden disappearance of his audience puzzled Mr. Blower; the performance came to a standstill; and when, looking about for an explanation of the phenomenon, he espied Lord Apohaqui near the door, a grin over- 154 LORD BUNGER IS EXPOSED spread his face. Striding up to the nobleman, he made a theatrical obeisance. “De-lighted to see you, my lord! This is a most un¬ expected pleasure! You should have come sooner,—the performance is now about over.” The noble lord did not receive this in the friendly manner expected. “How dare you degrade this Hall with your vulgar performance?” he demanded angrily. At this insulting question Mr. Blower’s western blood took fire. ‘Til have you know, sir,” he cried, “that I’m an American gentleman; and an American gentleman, sir, is a sovereign; and an American sovereign, sir, is the equal of any white skinned lord that ever hopped around on two feet!” “Crazy as a Bedlamite!” muttered the lord, staring at Blower in amazement; then he strode across the hall to the distant corner where Lobelia was kneeling by the side of her prostrate lover. Mrs. Packer stood by look¬ ing on with an anxious face. Rhett Calhoun was feeling Lord Bunger’s pulse. A little to one side stood Mr. Gassaway, note-book in hand, surveying the situation. “Don’t be alarmed, Mrs. Packer,” said Rhett, as he ceased his examination. “Nothing serious is the matter. He will be all right in a few minutes.” Lord Apohaqui paid little attention to Bunger on the floor, but he eyed Mrs. Packer and her daughter in no pleasant way. “Madam,” he said to the elder woman, sarcasm in his tone, “may I ask how it happens that I find you and your daughter in this house?” All the pride of the Packers and the Packer millions was aroused at this question. “You may ask all you please,” she snapped, her heart swelling with indignation, “but I’ll answer as little as I please. Mr. Calhoun,” she added, turning to Rhett, “the lord of this castle being struck down by the hand of God, so to speak, as your countrywoman, I claim your protection from insolent intruders in this castle.” Rhett assured her that Lord Apohaqui had no inten- LORD BUNGER IS EXPOSED 155 tion of insulting her; Gassaway also spoke up: “Of course he doesn’t mean to insult you, Mrs. Packer. It’s all a little comedy. We haven’t quite caught on to the game, lord, but I’m taking notes. An interesting situa¬ tion, very!” “Don’t let him die, ma!” wailed Lobelia, stroking her lover’s hand. “Oh, can’t you do something, somebody?” “We can put him in a chair,” said Gassaway, briskly. “That’ll bring him around. Rhett, just give him a lift; I’ll take his head, you take his feet,—there, heave away.” Despite Lord Bunger’s heavy weight they succeeded in lifting him into an arm-chair, where he sat, a pitiable object, his head hanging on his breast, his arms limp by his sides. “What’s the matter with him?” asked Lord Apohaqui. “I haven’t the slightest idea,” answered Rhett. “He appeared in perfect health until a few moments ago when he suddenly fell to the floor.” “Mr. Calhoun,” said Lord Apohaqui, “you talk and act like a sane man, though I find you here with a set of lunatics. Can you explain how these people came to this house? Plow came you here?” “That is easily answered; we are all here by the invi¬ tation of Lord Bunger.” “Who is Lord Bunger?” “The gentleman you see there in the chair. We are his guests. He invited us to visit his castle, and here we are.” “Does he claim to be master here?” “That’s about the size of it, lord,” Gassaway answered, cheerfully. “He a lord? Why, he’s my valet! The infernal scamp! I’ll send him to jail for this.” An anxious, pale little face had been peering in at a side door watching the proceedings. The owner of this face now bounded forward, fell on her knees at Lord Apohaqui’s feet and burst out into an agonized prayer to the angry nobleman. “Oh, my lord,” cried Jenny, “don’t be too hard on 156 LORD BUNGER IS EXPOSED Jim! It’s only a lark, m’lud, indeed and indeed nothin’ else but a lark. He never meant no harm to nobody. Oh! dear m’lud, don’t send him to jail. Me and Jim’s been promised in marriage these two years!” “Leave the room,” commanded Lord Apohaqui, stern¬ ly, “I’ll attend to Bunger.” At this speech Miss Lobelia’s face turned very pale, but, to show her scorn and her disbelief in the cruel statements about her lover, she leaned over the uncon¬ scious Bunger and took his hand and held it tightly. While this was going on, Lady Apohaqui and her guests had returned to the drawing-room. Lady Apo¬ haqui' treated the disturbance lightly. “It is nothing serious,” she said. “Not expecting their master—he so seldom appears among them,—the servants were hav¬ ing a little frolic. They will soon subside into their proper places.” “We are surprised,” said Grace, “at seeing Mrs. and Miss Packer here. When they left the Metropole they told us they had been invited by Lord Bunger to visit Wendham Castle. Is that castle in this neighborhood?” “There is no Wendham Castle about here,” returned Lady Apohaqui, “and I never heard of Lord Bunger until you mentioned his name. Perhaps the Packers can explain.” After a few words between Lord Apohaqui, Rhett and Gassaway, the two Americans undertook the task of explaining matters to Mrs. Packer. “You mean to say,” demanded that lady, “that he’s no lord at all?” “That is what Lord Apohaqui declares; he’s only a valet.” “I don’t believe it. It’s spite work. Some people,” darting a glance at the Bartons, “envy my daughter. It’s envy as is at the bottom of this!” “As you please, Mrs. Packer,” returned Rhett coldly. “We have warned you,—that is all we can do.” “But he’s engaged to Lobelia. He wanted Lobelia to marry him right away.” “Miss Packer’s money,” insinuated Gassaway with a LORD BUNGER IS EXPOSED 157 grin, “would be a great windfall to a valet. No wonder he wanted to hurry up the marriage.” “I’ll have the law on him!” indignantly screamed Mrs. Packer, when at length she realized the situation, “I’ll have him arrested this very day.” However, Rhett and Gassaway had but little trouble in convincing the irate Chicagoan that silence was the wisest policy, and when Lord Apohaqui understood matters his good humor returned; he made peace with Mr. Blower and his Prodigies, as well as with the Chi¬ cago ladies, and invited them all to prolong their- visit until the next day. The invitation, however, was de¬ clined; and they all returned to London that evening. Investigation disclosed the fact that Hunger’s “lark” was far from being as innocent as Jenny declared. True, his trip to London was originally for the sake of a lark during his master’s absence in America. Then, upon meeting Rhett Calhoun, he pretended to be of the nobil¬ ity merely for the foolish fun of astonishing the Ameri¬ can with his lordly airs. But when he met the Packers, more serious designs of deceiving took possession of his brain. He bribed the servants at Jfalmouth Castle to call him “my lord” by promising fabulous sums when he captured his American heiress; and it was conclu¬ sively shown that he meant to elope to Scotland with Lobelia. In spite of all this, and to avoid further scandal, his punishment was limited to dismissal from service at Falmouth Castle. The Packers, doubtless, felt suffi¬ ciently sore over the events of the past few days; would they not suffer greater humiliation were the affair made public? And how could it help becoming public if Bunger were taken to jail and tried? “Of course it couldn’t help becoming public,” said Lord Apohaqui. “You are right, Miss Barton. I’ll simply turn the fellow out, though he richly deserves severe punishment.” This was said as they drove back to the castle after biding adieu to the Americans at the station. It was a beautiful June day; the sun had sunk below the western 158 LORD BUNGER IS EXPOSED hills but the afterglow was so brilliant it seemed to give a tinge of red to the grass and flowers and trees. Grace was bright, gay and interested in the objects around her; but when Lord Apohaqui endeavored to draw the conversation back to personal matters she was either silent, or else she abruptly broached some other subject. Notwithstanding these indirect rebuffs, Lord Apoha¬ qui felt delighted with his drive. If not effusive, Grace was at any rate friendly and cordial; this led the young Englishman to believe that when the time came for him to pluck his pear, the pear would prove, just then, ripe and ready to be plucked. CHAPTER XVI. FROM PALACE TO PRISON. When the train from Falmouth reached Paddington station Mr. Blower and the Prodigies drove off for the Alhambra theater in a procession of hansom cabs; the Packers, greatly crestfallen, their pride deeply wounded, repaired to the Metropole with the intention of immedi¬ ately leaving England and seeking on the Continent to forget their cruel humiliation. Rliett and Gassaway re¬ turned to Mrs. Ruggles on Montague Place. The author of the future G. A. N. urged Rhett to join him on a tramp trip through Germany, but Rhett declined, de¬ claring he meant to remain some time longer in Lon¬ don. “Ah! I see,” grinned Gassaway. “I appreciate the sentiment that prompts you to forswear Germany; lovely woman always carries the day, even against the charms of tramping.” Rhett laughed at this, but he felt SO' guilty that he turned his head away to hide the flush that flew to his face. Had it come to this, that he was blushing about her? Had it come to be a fact for him that there was a “her”—a one particular “her” in the world? “No,” continued Gassaway, pleasantly, “I don’t blame you, Rhett. But you had better keep an eye on that lord; he’s a good-looking chap, and you know it’s the fashion for American girls to marry lords when they get a chance.” “You think then that she will get a chance?” asked Rhett with an air of indifference, although he had to keep silent a moment to stop the fast beating his heart set up at Gassaway’s remark. “Get a chance? Of course she will. Even a blind man can see he’s dead gone on her; moreover, he doubt- ( 159 ) 160 FROM PALACE TO PRISON less has an eye on her money. From all appearances, he needs cash. Many of these lords do.” “The shame of it is that they have the impudence to come to America to look for that cash,” said Rhett, angrily. “It’s a degradation to American womanhood to—to put itself in the European markets to be bought by titled paupers.” “Humph!” returned the reporter, jovially, “that view of it is especially exasperating, considering the many nice young men in America they might choose from. But my dear boy,” reflectively, “there’s another view to take of it. These rich American girls do not go to European matrimonial markets to sell themselves,—they go to buy; they want a title and they buy the best man they can find who has a title to sell.” “Titles be blown!” exclaimed Rhett, fiercely. “When you talk of American girls buying to themselves a title I feel like pitching the whole nobility into the sea. Such things are enough to make a fellow an anarchist!” “Oh! that reminds me,” interrupted the reporter, “that we are to meet a real, flesh-and-blood, anarchist to¬ night.” And so they were, although the name of anar¬ chist could hardly be applied, in all fairness, to the man in question. During the course of his explorations in the East End of London, Gassaway had made the acquaintance of a certain labor agitator named Robert Racketts. This man invited Gassaway to attend a demonstration of the unemployed at Trafalgar Square, and the author of the future G. A. N., anxious to see every phase of London life, accepted the invitation. During the day he had asked Rhett to accompany him. “You know, my dear fellow, variety is the spice of life, and you’ll find plenty of variety at this labor demon¬ stration. Agitator Racketts, who is going to speak, will make you forget all about your troubles with Lord Apo- haqui and Miss Barton.” They went. Racketts began his speech by an attack on the higher classes. He spoke of the pensions work- FROM PALACE TO PRISON 161 ing men and women are obliged to pay to men who never worked a day in all their lives; then he branched off to the House of Lords, telling how it thwarts the will of the people. These stock complaints, dear to the heart of the British agitator, were vociferously applauded; but he was very differently received when he began praising America and spoke of the great Republic as an infinite improvement over the British monarchy. The English workman is as proud and jealous of his country, as the most rabid, boastful and offensive jingo is of his. He will complain and complain of taxes and oppression, but the minute you tell him that in America or elsewhere this or that is better than in England, he begins to look black and—you had better quit. Well! It’s human nature. At first the crowd refrained from hooting and listened out of curiosity; but when they heard continued depre¬ cation of England and praise of America, they com¬ menced to whistle and howl. “What’s the bloke givin’ us?” shouted a brawny coal-heaver. “Why don’t he stay in America and be d-d!” shouted another. The mob surged forward, sweeping Rhett and Gassaway off the curbing. Gassaway’s blood was up in a jiffy, he turned around and glared at the mob. The coal-heaver made a pass at his head. The agile reporter dodged and like a flash planted his fist in his assailant’s face. The fellow staggered, then rushed at Gassaway and in a moment both men were rolling on the ground. Rhett sprang to his comrade’s assistance; some of the mob then pitched in to help the coal-heaver, and in a moment the melee was general. There was a cry of “The bobbies! the bobbies!” quickly followed by the arrival of the police, who laid lustily about with their clubs until the crowd melted like snow under a summer sun. Rhett and Gassaway remained and despite their pro¬ tests were taken into custody. Appearances were cer¬ tainly against them. Rhett had an ugly cut on. his cheek and Gassaway’s face was bruised and bleeding. Inasmuch as the police had no means of knowing that 162 FROM PALACE TO PRISON they were not the aggressors, their arrest was in truth not the outrage Rhett imagined. “We shall demand redress,” he hotly exclaimed, as the officers marched them along the street. “American gentlemen, assaulted by a lot of ruffians, are arrested while the ruffians go free. We demand instant release.” “If you don’t step lively we’ll release you with a pair of handcuffs!” retorted the policeman, gripping Rhett’s arm tighter. “Oh, come now,” 'interposed Gassaway, gaily. Even in the thick of the melee he had not lost his good humor. “Come now, Mr. Officer, you’re laying it on a little thick, I reckon. Handcuffs would be carrying the joke a little too far.” “What’s that?” demanded the officer, sharply. Mr. Gassaway’s cheerfulness under such circumstances aston¬ ished the policeman. “I said, Mr. Officer, and I say it again,—‘no handcuffs, if you please.’ We are Southern American gentlemen. We submit to law; you see that. But we do not sub¬ mit to indignities! no, not while life lasts. When we give our word of honor that we will accompany you, that is sufficient. Southern gentlemen, Mr. Officer, never break their word.” The London “bobby”, amused at this genuine speci¬ men of a self-advertising American “gentleman”, felt re¬ assured, and did not produce the threatened bracelets; but neither did he relax the tightness of his hold on his prisoner’s arm. “If you only knew it,” continued Gassaway in his usual cheerful manner, “apart from my word of honor as a Southern gentleman, there isn’t the slightest danger that I, Green Gassaway, of New Orleans, La., U. S. A., will try to run away. My friend may not have the same interest that I have, yet even Rhett can not regret this experience; for me, Mr. Officer, it is simply invaluable. I haven’t the slightest notion of running away from it; it’s too full of the richest sort of pointers.” Gassaway instinctively reached toward his pocket to see if his note- FROM PALACE TO PRISON 163 book was there, whereupon the policeman, supposing that he intended to seize his pistol, grabbed him and gave him a sharp jerk and cried: “None of that, if you don’t want to get into trouble.” “Zounds,” exclaimed the reporter, rubbing his arm, “this fellow actually wants to rob me of my pointers. But you can’t do it, Mr. Officer. I’ve got a photo of the affair in my think-tank; and, lord! what a chapter it’ll make!” The “bobby” made no reply to this outburst, regard¬ ing his prisoner as half-witted as well as a disturber of the peace. Rhett, deeply disgusted at the course events had taken, walked on in moody silence, but the irrepressible Gassaway kept up his bantering. “What luck!” he exclaimed, as the key turned on them in a cell at the Holloway Police Station. “Who’d have thought, Rhett, that law-abiding people like you and me would be locked up in a police station? A sensitive old lady, the Queen. If a fellow defends himself from ruffians and thugs it disturbs her peace and the bobbies run him in. Just let me have that stool, Rhett, I want to pickle my pointers.” CHAPTER XVII. LORD APOHAQUI AND GRACE BARTON GO SHOPPING. In the meantime Grace Barton was making consider¬ able headway in Lady Apohaqui’s good opinion. There was no mistaking the innate refinement of the girl, nor was there doubt as to her grace and beauty. “Had she only been reared in England,” sighed the Countess, “she would have adorned a dukedom.” And then the high lady would take a hopeful view of the case; the girl was young enough to be reformed, to be anglicised. “She will do, Charles, with a little coaching. And thank Heaven! her dreadful mother and all her kin live on the other side of the ocean!” Such was Lady Apohaqui’s comment as she drove with her son to Great Barrington Square the morning of their return from Falmouth. This comment from her lips gave the young peer great satisfaction, for he felt convinced that with his mother’s assistance there would be smooth sailing. The Dowager could invite the girl out, could chaperone her to parties and in a dozen ways create opportunities for him to see her alone. Finding his mother so favorably impressed, he asked what she thought of a trip to Richmond?” “Charles, is it wise to be so impatient?” “I hardly think I am impatient.” “I wonder what you call impatience! We have been barely separated from your Americans, yet already you plan other trips with them.” “If the thing is tO' be done, what is the use shilly¬ shallying? They will be going to the Continent soon. I want matters settled before they leave.” “You mean you want her engaged to you before she goes?” (164) LORD APOHAQUI AND GRACE GO SHOPPING 165 “Yes. I have resolved to ask her to be my wife be¬ fore she leaves England.” After a silent study of her son’s face, Lady Apohaqui asked, “Are you really in love with the girl?” The young man laughed in a confused sort of way. “Well, what if I am? Isn’t it right for a fellow to be in love with the woman he wants to marry?” “Yes, if you are certain the woman will do,” admitted the mother cautiously, “but we must know more about this girl before we can be certain.” “The best way to be certain is to see more of her, and how can that be done unless we seek them? They won’t seek us.” By dint of such arguments Lord Apohaqui induced his mother to write an invitation for a boat trip to Richmond. The next day he went to the Metropole. Grace came down to the drawing-room with her hat on and putting on her gloves. “Mamma and Clara are asleep,” she said smilingly. “They will be sorry to miss you. I would ask you to stay, but I have some shopping to do that cannot be postponed.” “I have heard you say you detested shopping,” said the lord in a disappointed tone. “So I do> but shopping is sometimes a matter of busi¬ ness. Just look at this string of things that I have to buy!” exhibiting a sheet of paper whereon was written a long list of articles. “Are you going alone?” asked Lord Apohaqui with some anxiety. “Yes, mamma and Clara do not feel equal to the exer¬ tion.” “May I accompany you?” “You?” laughed Grace. “Do you not know what a task shopping is? The shops are so vast, there are so many counters, such piles and piles of goods, and so many clerks wanting to sell you something, it is perfectly dreadful. I would rather plow than shop!” “Plow!” exclaimed the young nobleman. 166 LORD APOHAQUI AND GRACE GO SHOPPING “Yes. Plowing behind a gentle, sleepy old mule, under blue Alabama skies, the soft earth beneath your feet, is far healthier, far more agreeable than tramping through the crowded aisles of a big shop!” In spite of this forbidding picture, Lord Apohaqui declared that if Grace had no objection, he would take a lesson in shopping that very afternoon. “I haven’t the slightest objection,” laughed Grace. “If you have committed a sin and feel the need of severe penance, a shopping trip will be as good a penance as you can find.” “I am sure it will be a pleasant one,—with you,” was the prompt answer. “Are you not afraid to go alone?” “I might be afraid in Africa or Asia, but not in Eng¬ land.” “Even in England there are thousands of savages as dangerous as those of Africa or Asia.” “But they dare not manifest their dangerous proclivi¬ ties in broad daylight. I see plenty of women on the streets alone. They do not seem to be afraid.” “They are not in your walk of life, Miss Barton. Young English women of the higher class seldom go about without a chaperone.” “But if it is not dangerous for the lower class of women surely it is not for the higher.” “Perhaps not as to real physical danger, but if young girls of the higher class are not strictly guarded, disagree¬ able comments might be made.” “Oh, disagreeable comments. Is that the danger chaperones are intended to prevent?” “Precisely,” replied the lord, with a feeling of relief that at last he had been able to make the American girl understand why she should not run about London with¬ out her mother or some other older woman to lend re¬ spectability to her outing. “Lord Apohaqui,” said Grace, seriously, “if the aris¬ tocratic English girls like that sort of—of—espionage, of course they can submit to- be treated like children, led around by some old woman; but since there is no LORD APOHAQUI AND GRACE GO SHOPPING 167 real danger I wonder at them! And how hard on the old woman! No elderly person can like running around with young girls. Girls are quite free with us and no one makes disagreeable comments. If they did-” “Well, what if they did?” “Why, the girl’s big brother or father or uncle would make them know better,” laughed Grace. “If she wishes, an American girl may travel all over the United States by herself: But here is a hansom. Please call it up.” What daughter of the aristocracy would thus ride in a hansom? Did not all London know that for a girl to ride in a cab with a man not her father or brother was to lay herself open to severe comment? Of this Grace was serenely unconscious, but Lord Apohaqui knew if people in his set saw him in a hansom with that ex¬ traordinarily pretty girl they might form the most un¬ pleasant ideas, and dare to jest in a way in which the future Lady Apohaqui must not be jested about. “If you don’t mind,” he said, “let us go in a bus. I don’t like hansoms.” “You don’t? I thought everybody liked them. That’s one English custom I think ought to be adopted. It’s so nice bowling along, the driver perched up behind you, nothing in front to obstruct your view. However, it is just as nice on top of the busses. From those lofty seats the streets and crowds of people moving about seem like a panorama.” “But my dear Miss Barton, English women never riiie on top of ’busses.” “Do they think it dangerous? The ’busses do look top-heavy. I’ve often wondered why they don’t topple over.” “It is not the physical danger that deters them.” “Disagreeable comment again?” laughingly queried Grace. “Well, yes. A lady is out of place among working¬ men. You always see workingmen and workingwomen on top of the ’busses.” “I am glad they have such pleasant places to ride on, 1C8 LORD APOHAQUI AND GRACE GO SHOPPING but I am selfish enough to go up there myself, even if thereby one workingman is obliged to ride in the stuffy inside.” “I am horrified at such selfishness!” “I excuse myself on the ground that I shall not be long in London and must see all I can, whereas work¬ ingmen and workingwomen know London by heart.” With this Grace climbed to the top of the ’bus, seated herself and looked about delightedly. The young lord hardly believed she really meant to do it until the deed was done. Grace sat down by a ruddy-faced woman with a pipe in her mouth and a basket in her lap. Around her were coarse men and women, coarse but decent. Lord Apohaqui found a seat near her. The rough background, although objectionable to his sense of pro¬ priety, certainly seemed to set off the girl’s beauty and refinement. When they were comfortably seated Grace said: “Isn’t it lovely up here? I like it even when it rains. I put up rriy umbrella and defy the water. At first I was afraid I would be shaken off, but the driver said there wasn’t the slightest danger.” “I believe it would be safer inside,” replied the lord. “Were I your mentor I would not permit you to come on top.” “Why not?” “I would not wish you to—to be so much out of place. Had I a sister she would certainly not ride here.” “Do you mean it is not proper?” “Women of the higher classes do not do it. Being American, you are not expected to know these distinc¬ tions.” “Were I English and myself—just as I am now, I would not pay the slightest attention to such rules. If these women on top of the ’bus are respectable I see no objection to riding with them.” At these words his mother’s warning came to his mind,—“Self-willed—opinionated—too American ever to acquire English forms.” But Grace looked so lovely that her beauty almost erased the adverse words from LORD APOHAQUI AND GRACE GO SHOPPING 169 his mind. When they got down from the ’bus, per¬ ceiving that they were not in the vicinity of the fashion¬ able shops where ladies usually went, Lord Apohaqui asked if she had not made a mistake? “Oh, no. I have been here before—not to shop but just to see the place. We heard of it in America. This is the great Co-operative store with half a million mem¬ bers. An Englishman in Talladega gave a lecture about Co-operative stores. He said you could buy anything here, from a needle to a haystack.” “Good heavens!” thought her companion, “are all her proclivities downward? To come to a shop estab¬ lished especially and solely for the laboring classes!” “I beg your pardon, Miss Barton,” he said hesitat¬ ingly, “but I don’t think this is the sort of shop you want, I really don’t.” “Why not?” asked the girl, preparing for another bout with his aristocratic notions. “Why—my impression is that only working people, the common classes, deal here. I rather fancy you would like Regent or Bond street better. No ladies shop here.” “Only working people patronize this place?” “I think so.” “In that case your working people must wear nice things, and costly things too. When I was here/ the other day I priced a lovely sealskin sacque and intend to get it to-day for mamma. I did not know that Eng¬ lish workingwomen wore sealskin sacques!” After procuring from the manager a ticket permitting her the shopping privileges for one day, Grace proceeded to make her purchases. First she selected the sealskin sacque for her mother; then she went to the bargain counters in front of which was quite a throng of plainly dressed women of the middle classes. “Lord Apohaqui,” said Grace, laughing, “if you value your peace of mind you had better take a walk whtfe I am purchasing these things. Even to look at the bargain counter crowd will give you nervous prostra¬ tion.” 170 LORD APOHAQUI AND GRACE GO SHOPPING “Since I can’t talk to you or help you with my in¬ valuable advice, I shall accept your kind suggestion. When must I return for you?” “I think I shall be through in half an hour. You will find me here at this same counter.” At the appointed time Lord Apohaqui returned, but Miss Barton was not where she had promised to await him. He waited some minutes but the American girl did not appear; then he wandered around to other coun¬ ters. Up and down he went, returning every few minutes to the bargain counter. An hour spent in search convinced him that Grace had left the store. Probably she had finished her shop¬ ping sooner than she expected and had grown tired of waiting for him. A little nettled at such inconsiderate treatment, the Englishman abandoned the search and returned to the Metropole to see if she had safely re¬ turned. Mrs. Barton had seen nothing of her. “Where can she be?” asked Lord Apohaqui, uneasily. Mrs. Barton smiled placidly. “You don’t know Grace or you wouldn’t worry. Grace never gets lost or con¬ fused. She knows how to take care of herself better than any girl I ever saw.” “But where can she have gone?” persisted the lord. “When I left her she had no intention of visiting any other store. She expected to come straight back to the hotel. She said she would wait for me.” “I dare say,” replied Mrs. Barton, serenely, “it was very impolite not to wait when she said she would. I reckon she could not get all she wanted at the Co¬ operative place and so went off to another store. Or, may be—but really we can’t tell what Grace will do. She may have gone off with some starving person. She will turn up all right.” Mrs. Barton glanced down at her novel, still open in her hand, in a way that made Lord Apohaqui feel she wanted to resume her story. He left, anger in his heart at Mrs. Barton’s indifference. “She deserves to lose LORD APOHAQUI AND GRACE GO SHOPPING 171 her daughter,” he thought. “Fool! Idiot! to let a girl like that roam alone about London.” While Mrs. Barton was serenely enjoying her novel, Grace was passing through a most disagreeable expe¬ rience. Not long after Lord Apohaqui went off for a turn in the fresh air, a heavy hand laid upon Grace’s shoulder caused her to look around. Was it possible that Lord Apohaqui had taken such a liberty? No, it was not the young lord who stood over her eyeing her sternly. It was a rather shabbily dressed man with hard features and steely eyes. Grace’s first thought was that she was mistaken for an acquaintance. “Come,” said the man, “you’re wanted.” “What do you mean?” “The manager wants you.” It flashed across Grace that- the manager who' gave her the permit to make purchases at the Co-operative store wished to change it, perhaps revoke it. Rising to go, she looked for her parasol which she had placed by her side against the counter. The man understood her glance. “I ’ave it,” he said; “come on.” Grace followed in silence thinking of what Lord Apo¬ haqui had said as to ladies never shopping at the Co¬ operative store. “Certainly,” she thought, “if their floor¬ walkers are all as ill-mannered as this one I do not wonder that ladies never come here.” She offered to relieve the man of her parasol, but he held it firmly, a disagreeable grin coming over his face. “Lord Apo¬ haqui was right,” she thought; “these people are unac¬ customed to ladies.” Her guide led the way into a small office where sat a thin, wrinkled man at a desk, examining a lot of card¬ boards on which were pasted small pieces of different kinds of cloth. “Ahem!” coughed the hard-faced man by way of an¬ nouncing his entrance. The little dried-up specimen of humanity wheeled around in his chair and eyed Grace 172 LORD APOHAQUI AND GRACE GO SHOPPING with a pair of dull, tired eyes which also seemed to be drying up. “What is it, Hawks?” he asked in a husky tone. “Ahem, sir,” with a side glance at Grace, “hanother shoplifter, sir.” Shoplifter! For a moment Grace was as stunned as if the words had been blows. The insult of the term overwhelmed her; all the blood in her body seemed to rush to her heart and filled it to the bursting point; she was absolutely speechless as she stared at those dread¬ ful men. Shoplifter! “Dear me!” said the little man in a tone of utter in¬ difference, “another?” “Yes, hanother, Mr. Dusty, see!” Hawks turned Grace’s parasol upside down, letting fall from its silken folds a lot of gloves, a bolt of ribbon and a piece of fine lace. “We’ve got it dead on this one. We can fix ’er, certain. This his ’er parasol.” “Dear me!” repeated Dusty wearily. “Caught in the very hact,” said Hawks with a grin of triumph and another side-glance at the almost faint¬ ing girl. “You can make han example hof ’er and frighten hoff the hothers—see?” “Dear me. Yes, of course,” assented Dusty, turning to his desk and his cardboards with the bits of cloth pasted on them. Grace realized the horror of her position and that she needed all her powers of mind to meet it. Shaking off the faintness that oppressed her she stood firmly on her feet, the color returned to her cheek; the pressure on her heart was relieved; she looked her accuser calmly in the face. “Do you mean to say I stole those things?” she de¬ manded with an air of great dignity. “Oh, come, now, don’t try that dodge. Hain’t this your parasol?” “Yes, it is my parasol, but I did not put those things in it.” LORD APOHAQUI AND GRACE GO SHOPPING 173 “I s’pose not. I s’pose they just flew hinto it,” said Hawks, facetiously. “I am an American traveler. I can give you refer¬ ences. There is some mistake,” said Grace. Mr. Dusty wheeled around in his chair and looked at Grace again. “Dear me!” he muttered, apologetically, “we’ve lost so many articles lately—very sorry, very sorry, indeed, but—you’ll give her in charge, Hawks.” “What do you mean by giving me in charge?” asked Grace. “Well, I call that gall,” said Hawks, grinning with great enjoyment at the scene. “She’s a hold ’and, Mr. Dusty,—a hold, hexperienced ’and, you can see that with ’alf an eye.” “Dear me!” murmured Dusty. “Yes, that’s what she is, or my name hit haint ’Awks. I never see so much coolness in a young ’and. Mostly the new beginners busts hout a-crying when they’s caught, but she”—glancing at Grace admiringly—“she took hit as cool has a cucumber.” “Dear me! Too bad! too bad! A decent looking girl too.” And Mr. Dusty turned again to his desk and his cardboard samples. Hawks tapped Grace on the shoulder. “We must be goin’,” he said. “Where do you mean to take me?” asked the girl aghast. “Oh, you know, you’ve been through hit hall afore. You’ll feel hat ’ome at the Police Station, hand likely find a lot of friends there too.” “At least let me stay here and send for my mother and sister. They will satisfy you that I could not possi¬ bly steal. Sir,” turning to Dusty, “will you not permit me to sit here until my friends come to me?” “It haint reg’lar, Miss; we must be reg’lar,” said Hawks not waiting for Dusty to- reply. “You come ’long with me, quick, hand don’t raise no row hand you can send for hanybody you mind to at the Police Station. Business is business, hand we must be reg’lar, Miss.” 174 LORD APOHAQUI AND GRACE GO SHOPPING Feeling that it was useless to remonstrate further, Grace obeyed without another word. She felt keenly the position she was in but she persuaded herself that it could not last; that as soon as her mother, her sister, her friends came to her she would be released. Hawks informed her she could have a cab if she herself would pay for it. “Some of ’em prefers cabs,” he said, “hand some of 'em walks along has bold has you please.” By this Grace understood that “some of ’em” meant shoplifters and that she, Grace Barton, of Birmingham, Alabama, was ranked among the number. She made no reply except to tell the detective she wanted a cab. “’And hout the bobs, Miss, hand you’ll ride like a lady. We must be reg’lar, Miss : hand hits reg’lar to pay afore you ride. Two bob six is the fare.” Grace drew from the outside pocket of her jacket a small, cheap purse containing only a few silver coins and copper pennies. Hawks keenly watched her move¬ ments, and when he saw the cheap purse, he drew there¬ from confirmation strong as Holy Writ of the girl’s guilt. American travelers did not go about with such scanty supplies. She was a poverty stricken creature, yet had ordered costly goods; surely the facts were strong against her. The truth was Grace carried the bulk of her money in a secret pocket, and at that very moment had on her person nearly a thousand dollars out of which she had expected to pay for her purchases. But the detective had no suspicion of this and delivered her up at the Holloway Station with an inward chuckle of satisfaction at having nabbed a professional thief. As soon as she could get pen and paper Grace wrote the following note to her mother: “Holloway Police Station, Tuesday, 5 o’clock. Dear Mamma:—Do not be alarmed. I am safe, but detained here on account of a mistake. You and Clara come to me as soon as possible. Don’t be alarmed— the mistake will be fixed when you come. Give the “Drop it!” said Gassaway. \ LORD APOHAQUI AND GRACE GO SHOPPING 175 bearer a sovereign if he takes you this without a mo¬ ment’s delay. Lovingly, Grace. P. S. Do not be alarmed; I am perfectly well.” Detective Hawks agreed h> deliver this note. “If hit haint a trick,” he mused, “hif ’er people be really hand bodily a-boardin’ hat the Metropole they hain’t beggars. Beggars don’t board hat the Metropole. A sovereign! That’s fair. Beggars don’t pay no> sovereign for carry¬ ing notes.” A bright idea struck the detective. “She’s a klepto- many, Mack,” he said, slapping the police sergeant on the shoulder, “a kleptomany if hever I see one. ’Er people are hat the Metropole.” The sergeant smiled sarcastically. “I’ll bet my boots you don’t find no such people there. The girl’s up to tricks. She’s a smart one. Hawks, you’ll have a walk to the Metropole right enough, but you just let me know if you have any sovereign for your trouble.” “Maybe so, Mack, maybe so, but there hain’t no hend to the things a kleptomany’ll do when the fit’s on ’er. Give her the white room and treat ’er nice till I get back.” Then. Hawks started for the Metropole. CHAPTER XVIII. GRACE BARTON’S TRIAL. Notwithstanding her serene confidence in her elder daughter’s ability to take care of herself, when night came and Grace still failed to appear Mrs. Barton felt uneasy. “What can keep Grace out after dark? I don’t like it, Clara. Grace ought to be more punctual. She makes me nervous. I feel quite weak in my knees. Oh, I wish she would come!” “Pray, mamma, don’t worry. She will come soon. You will make yourself sick if you worry.” Prone to be advised by others, Mrs. Barton tried to believe, as Clara said, that Grace would come soon, but when another hour went by and Grace still failed to appear Mrs. Barton’s nueasiness increased. “Mamma,” said Clara, “you know how Grace is. May¬ be she met some workingwoman in distress and has gone to help her.” “If it were daylight,” sighed Mrs. Barton, “I wouldn’t feel so badly, but I don’t like Grace to be out in London at night. London is too big.” f “London is big, mamma, but what does that matter to Grace? She has a map and can find her way about as well as if she had been born here.” At this moment a servant entered and presented a card, not of unblemished whiteness, bearing the inscrip¬ tion,— “William Hawks, Private Detective.” “This can’t be for us,” said Clara, “returning the card to the servant. “He asked very perticler, ma’am, for the American lady named Mrs. Barton,” replied the bell-boy. “He said as he had a message from your daughter, ma’am.” ( 176 ) GRACE BARTON’S TRIAL 177 “From my daughter?” gasped Mrs. Barton, turning white and clutching the back of a chair. “I will run down and see the man, mamma,” said Clara, vague fears of evil flashing through her mind. Mrs. Barton followed Clara down the steps into the small parlor where Mr. Hawks was standing, hat in hand, looking at the elegant furnishings about him. “Are you the h’American lady named Mrs. Barton?” asked Hawks. “My mother is Mrs. Barton,” replied Clara, hardly able to speak at sight of the detective. “What do you want? Where is my sister? What has happened to her? Oh, speak, quick!” “Your sister’s all right, ma’am,” said Hawks, grinning as pleasantly as his rusty, gridiron face permitted. “She ain’t ’urt noways, not hat all, ma’am. She’s in a little scrape, that’s hall.” With this Mr. Hawks fished from his pocket Grace’s note and handed it to Clara. By this time Mrs. Barton’s knees were so weak she could not stand and sank down on a chair. Clara read the note aloud. The first sensation that came tO' both women was a feeling of relief. Grace was safe, unhurt—what mattered the rest? How small a thing was detention in a police station compared to the vague fears they had conjured about her? “We shall go at once,” cried Clara. “Wait here, mamma, I will run and get your wrap and bonnet. Will you show us the way?” she asked Hawks. “Call a car¬ riage and take us there as fast as you can and you shall have an extra sovereign. Mamma, Mr. Brighton, the hotel proprietor will go with us.” Up to the moment of meeting her mother and sister, Grace maintained an outward show of calmness. She could not bear to have strangers witness her distress, but at sight of her loved ones—of those who would sympathize with her, she fell into her mother’s arms weeping and laughing in the same breath. “Oh, mamma!” she cried as soon as she could speak. “It is so dreadful to be accused of—of—stealing. And so 178 GRACE BARTON’S TRIAL —funny, so very funny, mamma, isn’t it? Your daughter, papa’s daughter, accused of stealing a few paltry things!” And she wept and laughed in her mother’s arms. “My darling Grace,” said Mrs. Barton, “they can’t really think you did such a thing! It’s a horrible mis¬ take. We’ll tell them who you are. Don’t cry, darling. I am so happy to find you well and whole; when you did not come I thought you had been run over in the crowded streets? This is nothing compared to being run over, Grace.” When the girl was able to speak calmly, her sister entreated her to tell how it had all happened. “Had you paid for the things you bought?” Clara asked. “No. They arrested me before I could pay for any¬ thing. My parasol leaned against the bargain counter. A crowd of women were pressing around me; all of a sudden I felt a hand on my shoulder and when I had followed the detective into' the private office he turned my parasol upside down and out fell a lot of things, gloves, lace and ribbons which they think I put in my parasol to steal.” Mr. Brighton of the Metropole Hotel, did his best to persuade the police sergeant that it was out of the question for one of the Metropole guests to pilfer small articles. He spoke of the great wealth of the Bartons, and declared it would be an outrage to keep the young lady locked up over night in jail. “I will go bail for Miss Barton in any amount,” concluded Mr. Brighton. “Very sorry, sir,” returned the sergeant, “but I have¬ n’t the power to- let the young lady out; it’s my business to take ’em in but not to let ’em out except in the reg’lar way, by order of the magistrate.” “Where is the magistrate?” asked Mr. Brighton. “There will be no court until morning?” “No, there won’t, sir,” replied the sergeant, laconically. “And Miss Barton will be kept locked up all night?” “That’s it, sir. She’s been committed reg’lar.” Mr. Brighton, reported the fruitless results of his inter- GRACE BARTON’S TRIAL 179 view with the sergeant, and was astonished at the quiet¬ ness with which the Bartons received the announcement. “We will stay with Grace,” said Mrs. Barton. “We won’t go back until she is released.” I don’t care now that I have you and mamma with me,” said Grace smiling, “but it was dreadful, too dread¬ ful to be here alone.” When Mr. Brighton was gone, cots were brought and Mrs. Barton and her daughters made themselves fairly comfortable. On the following morning while the Bartons were at breakfast in the Holloway Jail, Lord Apohaqui was breakfasting at the Victoria Club, being up two hours earlier than was his wont because of the contemplated trip to Richmond. While sipping his coffee he glanced at the “Times”. An item in the local column caught his eye—“An American Arrested.” He gave a second glance at the heading, then he read the item through, his face growing pale as he read. The item was as follows: AN AMERICAN GIRL ARRESTED. Yesterday a young American girl was caught in the act of pil¬ fering from the glove and lace counters of the London Co-opera¬ tive store. Her parasol was loaded with gloves, ribbons and lace. The arrest was so quietly made that few in the store were aware of what was occurring. The girl protested her innocence and de¬ clared she had no knowledge as to how the articles came into her parasol. She gave the name of Grace Barton, of America, and is stopping at the Hotel Metropole. She was lodged at the Hollo¬ way Police Station. Lord Apohaqui dashed off a note to his mother, telling her the Richmond trip was postponed, then he rushed down the stairs, two steps at a time, hailed a cab and drove post-haste for Holloway street, stopping en route to get Mr. Simon Griddles, a noted criminal lawyer with whom he was acquainted. At the police station, just as Lord Apohaqui and Mr. Griddles alighted from their cab, another cab dashed 180 GRACE BARTON’S TRIAL up and another man alighted; the other man was the showman Blower. Catching sight of Lord Apohaqui, Mr. Blower rushed up, seized him by the hand and ex¬ claimed, “Ah, my lord, so you have heard? I knew you would come—it’s an outrage, a damnable outrage! Enough to bring two countries to war!” “It is an outrage,” returned Lord Apohaqui, “an idiotic blunder of an idiotic policeman.” There had been a time, and that but a few weeks ago, when the fastidious nobleman would have coldly resented such effusive warmth on the part of the showman, but a common sympathy brought Lord Apohaqui and Mr. Blower together and the nobleman actually felt a degree of pleasure at the other’s indignation. The police court was filled with the usual lot of idlers who crowded every available space without the railing. Lord Apohaqui handed his card to one of the policemen on duty and at sight of the title engraved on the piece of pasteboard the officer opened the gate so that his lordship and companions might enter within the area reserved for counsel. As he emerged through the dense crowd into the open area Lord Apohaqui’s brow con¬ tracted and his heart suffered a spasm of pain. He had secretly flattered himself that his zeal in hastening to Miss Barton’s assistance would in a measure win him her regard. He had rushed thither without a moment’s delay, and it was bitterly provoking, to find after all that he was not the first of her friends to reach her; there by her side sat Rhett Calhoun .and Mr. Gassaway, as well as her mother and sister. “Miss Barton,” said the lord as soon as he reached the bench, scarcely waiting to exchange greetings, “I have brought Mr. Griddles to look after your case. He is the best lawyer in London for cases of this sort, and you know even the innocent must have a lawyer.” “I am the victim of a cruel mistake,” replied Grace, “but how can I prove it? I can testify to the truth, but even were I guilty people would expect me to assert innocence.” GRACE BARTON’S TRIAL 181 “Mr. Griddles is famous for untangling skeins, Miss Barton. Explain the whole case to him.” Mr. Griddles after rising in court and informing the magistrate that he represented Miss Barton, was ac¬ corded permission to retire with his client to a private room for consultation. Lord Apohaqui, Mrs. Barton and Clara accompanied them, and Rhett watched the party with a heavy heart as they disappeared in a small room adjoining the court. There were a number of minor cases on the docket which had precedence of the charge against Miss Barton, but all these, including the cases of the Trafalgar Square rioters, were made to give way to the hearing of the charge against the American girl. The first statement was made by Hawks, the Co-opera¬ tive store’s private detective. He stated, in very moder¬ ate language, that he had arrested the prisoner because in her parasol were found articles belonging to the store —articles not usually carried in parasols and which evi¬ dently had been surreptitiously placed there by the prisoner. “Mr. Hawks,” said Mr. Marley, the attorney employed by the Co-operative store to prosecute, “please tell his worship how you happened to discover that these articles were in the prisoner’s parasol.” “One of the clerks told me as a piece of lace ’ad dis¬ appeared. I went quick hup and down the aisles, keep¬ ing a sharp heye on hall the ladies in that part of the store. Presently I see the parasol leanin’ agin the variety counter a hend of a ribbon ’anging hout plain to be seen, so I grabs the parasol and the lady, and takes ’em to Mr. Dusty’s office and turns the parasol hinside hout afore ’er face.” “State what the parasol contained.” “Four pair of gloves, a roll of ribbon and a piece of lace.” “Take the witness,” said Mr. Marley to Mr. Griddles. Mr. Griddles had a way of fixing his eye on a witness which made the victim wriggle in his seat and feel that 182 GRACE BARTON’S TRIAL the lawyer had discovered some dark secret of his life which he meant to drag out into the light of day. At the beginning of his examinations, Mr. Griddles was invariably soft and pleasant so as to lull the witness into the belief that he was as commonplace as his shabby coat and common appearance indicated. But when Mr. Griddles showed his claws, which he was swift to do the moment there was no further point to be gained by softness, the average witness was apt to feel that he was a very unpleasant man indeed. “Did I understand you to say, Mr. Hawks,” said Mr. Griddles, softly, “that the prisoner was taken in the very act of purloining the goods?” “Yes, sir,” glibly responded the detective. The next instant he turned red in the face, fearing that he might have fallen into a trap; he had seen many witnesses fall into Mr. Griddles’ traps. “You saw the accused at the very moment she took the articles and dropped them into her parasol?” “I—I—didn’t say that,” stammered the witness, “not exactly that.”. “Ah, not exactly that? Well, will you kindly state what you did say?” “I said I saw the prisoner at the variety counter; her parasol by her side with a ribbon hend ’anging bout; then I hafrested ’er and took ’er to the manager’s private office.” “But you did not see her in the very act of putting the things in the parasol?” “No, .sir, I did not.” “You had been warned to look out for a shoplifter?” “Yes, sir.” “And you had an eye on this lady, the prisoner here?” “Yes, sir, I ’ad my heye hon ’er.” “Yet you did not see her put anything into her parasol?” Hawks’ face again turned red. “They does this sort of thing very quick-like. Hit hain’t hoften you see the GRACE BARTON’S TRIAL 183 goods lifted. She was fingerin’ laces and hactin’ suspi¬ cious-like.” ‘•Ah, acting suspiciously? In what way, Mr. Hawks? Describe how Miss Barton was acting suspiciously.” “Why, sir, while fingerin’ the laces she was actin’ suspicious-like—nervous, lookin’ round as hif to see hif she was watched.” “Miss Barton was looking around, was she? For a friend, as we can show, and on that frivolous ground you arrested her?” “It wasn’t on that ground hat hall, sir,” said the detec¬ tive sullenly. “I harrested ’er because ’er parasol was filled with things as didn’t belong to ’er.” “But you admit, Mr. Hawks, that you did not see Miss Barton take those things; you say you think she took them, and when asked to> state your reason you reply that she was looking around.” “I thought she was lookin’ ’round to see if she was watched,” said the badgered witness. “That was honly one reason I suspected ’er.” “Oh, that was only one of your reasons? Are the rest of your reasons as frivolous as this one, Mr. Hawks? Things have come to a pretty pass when a lady expecting a friend cannot look around to see if that friend has come without being accused of stealing.” Then, having done all he could to confuse the detec¬ tive and indeed having made it in some sort appear that Grace’s arrest was due merely to her looking around to see if Lord Apohaqui had arrived, Mr. Griddles told the witness to stand aside, and Dusty, the dried-up little manager of the Co-operative store, took the stand. He described what had taken place in his private office. He made no claim to having seen Grace place the articles in her parasol; consequently Mr. Griddles waved his hand and nodded negatively when the magistrate in¬ quired if he wished to question the witness. Then Grace took the stand and made her statement. She bore her¬ self with such quiet dignity and looked so youthful and lovely, that every eye was fastened upon her with interest 184 GRACE BARTON'S TRIAL and admiration. She told her story plainly—straight¬ forwardly. She had gone to the Co-operative store with Lord Apohaqui; his lordship grew tired of waiting and went out to return in half an hour. “There was a crowd about the counters,” continued Grace. “I leaned my parasol against the counter and a few minutes afterwards that man said I was wanted by the manager. I had obtained a ticket allowing me to purchase at the store and thought the manager wished to see me about the permit. In the manager’s office they turned over my parasol and those things dropped out of it. I have no idea how they came there. I think,” and there was a suggestion of tears in her voice, “I think that anybody who knew me would—know—” here there was a pause to choke back the pushing tears; then in a perfectly steady voice she finished, “would know that I am in¬ capable of stealing.” The earnestness of this speech and the extreme beauty of the speaker produced an impression which Mr. Marley attempted to remove by bringing the case back to the one really vital question as to how the stolen goods got into the prisoner’s parasol if the prisoner herself had not placed them there. It was not for him to say that the accused did steal, or could steal; it was his duty to point out the fact that the articles had been stolen, that they had been found in the prisoner’s parasol, and that no explanation was offered as to how they had gotten there. After paying a compliment to Grace’s personal beauty and declaring that he did her no such wrong as to suppose she was a thief, Mr. Marley proceeded to show that he did think she had placed the stolen articles in her parasol. Exhibiting the pearl-handled parasol, he asked Grace if it was hers. “Yes, I bought it in New York.” “In New York?” repeated Mr. Marley, gently. “Did you ever have such an—an—accident happen to it be¬ fore?” “What do you mean?” asked Grace, growing a shade paler. GRACE BARTON'S TRIAL 185 “I mean,” said the lawyer very softly and gently, “did you ever in New York or elsewhere find your parasol filled with such articles as were found there yesterday?” “Never!” replied Grace with dignity. She retained her presence of mind and, except by her increased pale¬ ness, gave no sign that she understood the insult implied by the lawyer’s question. Mr. Marley asked more ques¬ tions, but nothing new was elicited. Grace admitted that the parasol was hers, that it was filled with the goods which Mr. Marley held before her, but she insisted that she had not placed them there and did not know who had. “Could they have fallen in from the counter?” queried Mr. Marley, politely. “Could they have been accidentally brushed off the counter into your parasol?” Mr. Marley expected Grace to jump at this plausible theory;.then he meant to overwhelm her by pointing out that the articles found in the parasol were from different counters, hence could not have been accidentally brushed into the parasol. But Grace’s truth and clear judgment saved her from the trap. “If you wish my opinion on that subject, I must say that I do not think the things fell by accident into my parasol. It would be hardly possible for two or three such accidents to occur at the different counters.” “You think, then, they were all dropped in together, at one time?” “It must have been that way. I was not at the .glove counter at all. I only purchased a sacque and things at the variety counter.” “Ah, you purchased things in the fur department, did you, Miss Barton?” “Yes.” “May I ask,” Mr. Marley had been told about the slender purse—“if you paid for the sealskin sacque?” “No, I was arrested before I paid for anything.” “Before you paid for anything?” Mr. Marley’s tone indicated plainly that in his opinion the prisoner never intended to pay for the articles; she had evidently se¬ lected them for the purpose of duping and deceiving 186 GRACE BARTON’S TRIAL the clerks. “That will do, Miss Barton,” concluded the lawyer. Then Lord Apohaqui took the stand. He knew the Bartons, they were wealthy and had no motive for petty theft; in his judgment it was impossible that Miss Barton could have placed the goods in her parasol. Mr. Marley asked how long he had known the prisoner’s family. “About fc six weeks,” replied the lord. “You did not know them in America?” “No; that is, not exactly. But I heard of them in New York and I met them" on the steamer returning to Liverpool.” “And they told you they were wealthy?” “Certainly not,” replied Lord Apohaqui, irritated at the question. “How then, my lord, did you learn of their great wealth?” “I heard of it,” replied Lord Apohaqui, his face flush¬ ing red. “How was it that their wealth was discussed? Was there any question as to their solvency?” “None whatever. They are absolutely spotless; they have the highest standing in America. That detective has simply made an idiotic blunder!” Grace shot the witness one radiant glance that went far toward repaying him for what he was undergoing. To Lord Apohaqui a stuffy police court, filled with vul¬ gar people, was bad enough in itself; but to be obliged not only to be in such a place, but actually to pose in a conspicuous role in the court and publicly tell of the inquiries he had made in New York regarding the Bartons was little short of torture. It was a cruel alter¬ native; if he told the magistrate of his New York detec¬ tive’s investigations what would the Bartons think? On the other hand, if he did not tell of these matters would the magistrate attach weight to his testimony regarding the Bartons’ wealth and high social standing? When Mr. Marley asked how he, a mere traveling acquaintance, could speak so positively, Lord Apohaqui determined to save Grace at whatever hazard to himself, and told the GRACE BARTON’S TRIAL 187 court that he knew from mutual friends that the Bartons were people of great wealth and high social standing. After Mr. Brighton had testified that Grace was stop¬ ping with her mother and sister at the Metropole and that the family appeared to have ample funds at their disposal, Mr. Marley addressed a few words to the magistrate. He had no personal feeling against the prisoner; he was there merely in the interest of justice. There had been too many of these shoplifting cases; it was necessary to serve warning on light-fingered persons, young or old, high or low, rich or poor, that their crimes would be punished. Who really knew anything of the character or antecedents of the accused? It had been shown that her family was stopping at an expensive hotel, but how often does it happen that designing rogues assume the appearance of wealth? Lord Apohaqui, than whom there was no more credible witness in England, testified in the prisoner’s behalf, but what did his lordship really know of the matter? He was only a traveling acquaint¬ ance. Admit, however, that all his lordship said was correct, did that affect the issue? Did that explain how the accused’s parasol was filled with stolen goods? Did that relieve the prisoner from the necessity of offering some reasonable explanation of this very remarkable occurrence? Mr. Marley thought not, and if no ex¬ planation were forthcoming was it unreasonable to pre¬ sume that the accused herself had stolen the goods? The question of her alleged wealth was immaterial. Mr. Marley was aware that his learned brother, Mr. Griddles, usually had much to say of kleptomania in cases of this kind; but the dignity and the justice of English law does not, and should not, discriminate between the felo¬ nious abstraction of goods by the rich and a similar trans¬ gression by the poor. If there was any comfort, any solace to Mr. Griddles or his client in the term klepto¬ mania they were welcome to such comfort and solace; but the punishment for kleptomania was the same as for common thieving. At this point Grace arose arid to the astonishment of the magistrate and lawyers, said: 188 GRACE BARTON’S TRIAL “Will you let me say one word?” Before anybody had time either to assent or dissent she continued: “I want it understood, that I make no plea of being affected with kleptomania. I am not insane—insanity must not be offered in excuse. I did not take the things. That is all the plea I make. I did not take them. It is as utterly impossible for me to steal as it is for your own Queen to steal.” Then she sat down, trembling all over. Mr. Marley raised his hand deprecatingly. “Of course,” he said, “every one understands the prisoner’s plea; it is the usual one of ‘Not Guilty’. Were that sufficient no guilty person would ever be punished. I ask your worship to commit the prisoner to jail to stand trial.” Mr. Gassaway had listened with ill-repressed anger to Mr. Marley’s harangue, and now that he talked of send¬ ing Grace to jail the reporter could no longer contain himself. Forgetting that he was confronting the majesty of the law, forgetting that he himself was a prisoner, Mr. Gassaway sprang to his feet and shook his fist at the astonished Mr. Marley. “You are no gentleman, sir!” he yelled at the top of his lungs. “You don’t know a lady when you see one! And, by the Eternal, if you don’t stop insulting this Southern girl I’ll break every bone in your body!” Mr. Gassaway looked eager and fully able to execute his awful threat, but circum¬ stances prevented the attempt. “Seize that man,” said the magistrate sternly. An officer advanced to obey the command. Supposing that respect for the law would overawe the offender, the officer made no special effort in the line of self-defense; result: he got promptly knocked down the moment he came within the range of Mr. Gassaway’s fist. Instantly the court-room was in an uproar. Of course the doughty reporter was overpowered, but though seized by three brawny officers he breathed threats and defiance. No matter what the odds, a Southern woman should not be insulted in his presence. “Insult to woman is some- GRACE BARTON’S TRIAL 189 thing no Gassaway can stand and, by the Almighty! if this magistrate had a soul as big as a peanut he wouldn’t sit there on that bench listening to a brutal lawyer’s assault on a defenseless woman.” These chivalrous sentiments were shouted out by the fiery reporter as the three brawny officers dragged him from the court-room. When he was under lock and key the proceedings of the court were resumed. The magistrate handed down his opinion to the effect that the evidence was of such a nature as to oblige him to remand the prisoner to jail there to await trial at the next term of court. Lawyer Griddles, who all along expected this result, was about to make the customary motion for bail, when again the proceedings of the court were disturbed, this time by a young woman with a thin, haggard face who hitherto had been unnoticed among the crowd of spectators. Holding out her hands with an appealing gesture toward the magistrate, she begged to be sworn as a witness before the case was finally decided. “What does that person say?” asked the magistrate angrily, then looking over his spectacles at the officer on duty in the court, he added—“It seems singularly difficult to preserve order in court to-day.” The officer, smarting under this rebuke, hurried to the young woman and gruffly ordered her to leave the court-room. “No!” she almost screamed, shaking off the officer’s hand, “I cannot bear it. I want to tell the truth. That girl never stole. You may lock me up! You may put me in prison! I cannot bear to see her punished! I took the things! I put them in her parasol. I am the one! Let her go! I did it! I did it!” Her voice was raised to a hysterical shriek; every eye was turned to her. She was a tall, extremely thin young woman, clad in a black gown much the worse for wear, yet there was something about her which indicated that she did not belong to the illiterate classes. Mr. Griddles was the first to comprehend the import of this woman’s words. “It may be irregular, your 190 GRACE BARTON’S TRIAL worship/’ he said, “but this whole case has been charac¬ terized by irregularities. The interests of justice, if not the rules of law, require that this young person be sworn and allowed to testify.” The magistrate demurred to this; the case was closed. The place for the introduction of new testimony was at the trial at the next term of court. It was contrary to the rules and precedents to re-open a case and admit new testimony. But Mr. Griddles persisted, and as Mr. Marley inter¬ posed no objection the magistrate at length consented to do “this very irregular thing.” The testimony of the young woman, Helen Beck by name, put a totally different aspect on the case. Her father, a curate in one of the poorest quarters of London with a salary of £70 a year, had died ten months before, leaving his two daughters to earn their bread by sewing. Her elder sister had fallen ill with a slow fever, and was now at the point of death, dying for lack of food and medicine. This hard necessity had driven the younger one to steal. She had gone to the Co-operative store to seek work; none was given her, and as she was making her way back to the street, filled with despair, the sight of all the wealth around her and the recollection of her sick sister’s wretched condition tempted her to take a few things which she intended to pawn for food and medicine. She had just succeeded in taking something from the variety counter when she saw the clerks whispering to a man whom she suspected was a detective. Alarmed and agitated, she slipped the stolen goods into a parasol that leaned by her side against the counter. At the moment it did not occur to her that she would bring trouble to an innocent woman. She walked hurriedly to the door; there she gave one glance back and saw the detective walking off with the owner of the parasol. All night her conscience tortured her; she examined the papers and found when and where the trial was to be; had the prisoner escaped she would not have spoken, GRACE BARTON’S TRIAL 191 but not to save even her sister’s life could she bear to have an innocent person sent to jail for her crime. This story the young woman poured out in the most excited manner; her words and looks inspired belief in her veracity. The magistrate listened attentively, then summoned Mr. Marley to his side. As the result of their con¬ sultation Mr. Griddles was told the court felt convinced that Miss Barton had been erroneously accused; she therefore stood released without further form or cere¬ mony. Mr. Griddles bowed politely to the magistrate and congratulated Grace. '‘You have had a narrow escape,” he said. “Appearances were certainly against you. I did not expect to get you off without a term at Newgate.” “Oh!” replied the girl, shuddering, “how awful to condemn the innocent! The law is so strong it ought to be merciful. I can never thank you enough for your efforts in my behalf.” “Don’t thank me,” returned the lawyer, drily. “There’s your deliverer,” with a glance at Helen Beck. “But for her courage in confessing you would have been remanded to Newgate.” “I realize how much I owe her,” said Grace. “At bottom she must be a good woman with a good heart. Don’t you think those men who tried to send me to jail ought to be willing to* do me a favor?’ k “Indeed they ought. What favor will you ask of them?” “Not to prosecute that poor girl. Speak to them, Mr. Griddles, and you too, Lord Apohaqui. You have influence. Beg them not to prosecute her.” Grace slipped a ten pound note into Mr. Griddles’ hand and asked him in a whisper to give it to the poor curate’s daughter. This was rather more than the lawyer expected. True, the poor girl had saved Grace by her confession, but Mr. Griddles remembered that but for that same girl Miss Barton would never have been in jeopardy. How- 192 GRACE BARTON’S TRIAL ever, he undertook Grace’s commission and succeeded in inducing Mr. Dusty, on the part of the Co-operative store, to drop the prosecution. Mr. Marley formally announced that his client had no charge to make; whereupon the magistrate nodded at the policeman, who, in his turn, nodded at the young woman. The unfortunate young vicar’s daughter was to go free. CHAPTER XIX. LADY APOHAQUI DISAPPROVES OF THE BARTONS. Where the defendent is a beautiful girl with a lord as her witness and the celebrated Mr. Griddles as her lawyer, the ordinary run of police magistrate’s cases are dwarfed into insignificance. From the moment Grace was brought into court the other prisoners were for¬ gotten except, of course, by the officers whose duty it was to watch over them. Thus Calhoun and Gassaway, although not overlooked, were yet not known to their friends to be prisoners. If Rhett mentioned the fact it escaped Grace’s recollection; her mother and sister, Lord Apohaqui, Mr. Griddles and Blower were all there because she was there; naturally she attributed the pres¬ ence of her other friends to the same cause. But when she rose tO' leave and asked Rhett if he was not com¬ ing, she learned at last that some of her friends were in the same boat that she had just been in. “How selfish of me to think only of myself,” she said. “I quite forgot about poor Mr. Gassaway. They have locked him up! They are very swift to lock up people in this city. Will you also be locked up, Rhett?” “I have already been locked up,” he said with a smile, “but as I have transgressed no> law I hope to be free as soon as my case is called.” Then he related what had happened at Trafalgar Square. “Humph!” grunted Mr. Griddles, “if you put your case correctly you’ll have no trouble with the magistrate.” “And what of Mr. Gassaway?” asked Grace. “Who is Gassaway?” queried the lawyer. “He is the man who knocked down the policeman. His family and ours were friends before the war. I do hope he won’t be hardly dealt with.” The lawyer looked grave. “The laws of England al- ( 193 ) 194 DISAPPROVES OF BARTONS low all men to defend themselves; on establishing 1 the facts about the Trafalgar Square affair you will be liber¬ ated; but the laws of England allow no man to resist an officer; therefore, on that score, I fear it will go hard with your friend Gassaway.” The event proved the correctness of this opinion. It did not take ten minutes to satisfy the magistrate that neither Rhett nor Gassaway were rioters; and the former was immediately released, but the unlucky reporter was made to suffer for his well meant but injudicious chiv¬ alry. At first the magistrate sentenced him to six months imprisonment, but against this Mr. Griddles protested, reminding the Court that the Reporter was an American, unacquainted with English forms; that he had been greatly excited over the impending peril of the young lady of whose innocence he was convinced; that his im¬ prudent action had been the result of his too impetuous zeal in defending distressed beauty, not meant as dis¬ respect for the honor of the magistrate or the peace and dignity of England. By dint of such arguments the magistrate at length reduced the sentence to £10, or ten days in Newgate. Grace, knowing Gassaway’s impecunious condition, wished to pay the fine. “You know, Mr. Gassaway, this is my debt. It was incurred in my behalf and it is my duty to pay it.” “I can’t see that, Miss Grace,” said the reporter with a jolly grin, “I can’t see it at all. I couldn’t think of letting you pay the fine.” “But it was for me you had the row in Court.” “Only in a way, Miss Grace. It would be nearer the mark to say it was in the cause of the fair sex in general that I lifted my voice and dashed out my fist. The Gassaways cannot stand still and see a woman insulted. The blood runs too hot in our veins for that. But even were the trouble wholly and solely in your behalf, I couldn’t let you pay that fine.” “Why not?” “Because I want to see this matter to the end. If I wanted to I could pay my fine in a minute. I’ve got DISAPPROVES OF BARTONS 195 more than £10 sewed up in my shirt. But, I’d rather pay £10 not to pay it. It isn’t every fellow who gets ten days in Newgate! Zounds! It’s a bonanza, a mine of pointers for my G. A. N.” Argument had no effect upon Mr. Gassaway. It was not every American to whom Her Majesty furnished free board and he, Gassaway, would rather perish than decline so signal a mark of hospitality. As he marched off to Newgate the author of the future G. A. N. looked as pleased as if he were on his way to the Queen’s castle at Windsor. Mrs. Barton invited Rhett to dinner at the Metropole and when it was seen that the carriage ordered by Lord Apohaqui did not have enough room for the whole party, Grace insisted on accompanying Rhett in a hansom. “You know, mamma, Rhett has been in jail too, and we want to compare notes. You and Clara and Lord Apo¬ haqui go in the carriage, we shall come right on in the hansom.” As Rhett and Grace started off in the hansom their conversation turned upon the poverty that was terrible enough to lead an educated girl, the daughter of a clergy¬ man, to steal that she might buy food and medicine for a dying sister. “Rhett,” said Grace thoughtfully, “I have half a mind to take lodgings in this part of London and see how the poor live. What a sham it is to say you have seen London when you only visit the wealthy and fashionable districts. This is the real, the awful London one ought to see.” Since their escape from the court-room, Rhett Cal¬ houn had been sunk in sad, not to say gloomy, thoughts in which the good-looking English lord played a very prominent and disagreeable part. Rhett’s reply showed the trend of his musings. “I fear,” he said, “your new and noble friends would not approve of anything so eccentric.” “Are you trying to be satirical, Rhett?” asked Grace. 196 DISAPPROVES OF BARTONS “Not at all. I merely warn you how English aris¬ tocrats would view so unusual a move.” “We did not come to England tO' imitate the aristoc¬ racy, or to regulate our movements to suit their views, consequently we need not consult them as to what we do.” “Oh, of course not, still you may have a reasonable desire to please the noble classes.” “What is the matter with you, Rhett? Something seems to trouble you. Have you had bad news from home?” “No. All at home are well, thank you.” “Then what is the matter? You are not the same Rhett who came over with us on the Etruria.” “Yes, just the same, except a little older. Age brings gravity, you know.” “Nonsense! A few weeks couldn’t make you as solemn and serious as a man of fifty.” “Students of human nature say men may grow old in a single night,” returned Rhett, gloomily. “You must have been reading Byron. He makes one of his miserable but adorable characters feel himself to be a thousand years old. I know what is the matter with vou.” “What?” “You are disappointed.” “How so?” “You wanted me to get ten years in prison. I ob¬ served you. As soon as I was set free your face grew as black as a thunder-cloud. I did not think you were so malicious. That noble lord—you may sneer at nobil¬ ity as much as you like, but, all the same, he was de¬ lighted when I was let off. I shall always like him for his sympathy in my troubles.” “Confound his sympathy! You did not need it. You had your mother’s afid sister’s and Gassaway’s.” “But not yours? Well, that is the unkindest cut of all.” After a moment’s silence, during which Grace was thinking of the poor curate’s daughter, she said. DISAPPROVES OF BARTONS 197 “Rhett, it would not do for me to live in England/’ “Why not?”—his heart gave a glad bound. “If T lived in London I would become a Nihilist, an Anarchist, a Fenian—or something of that sort; I would take to throwing bombs under the Parliament House, or the throne, or something, that would blow things up, or blow them down, and divide shelter, food and cloth¬ ing a little more equally. It is terrible to see such suffer¬ ing; it makes us who have everything we need feel so selfish, so mean. The old Queen must be very unhappy, knowing so many of her people are hungry while she feasts every day of her life.” A dense fog had settled down on London and the window of the hansom became opaque. Grace reached her hand out toward the window. Rhett fancied she wanted to wipe off the moisture in order to look out and was about to offer his handkerchief for the purpose when to his surprise she traced some letters with the tip of her forefinger. The letters formed a name- A-P-O-H-A-Q-U-I. “Is it not an odd name?” she said, leaning back in her seat and eyeing it with a smile. “You must be very fond of it to write it on all the glass windows in London,” returned the young man rather curtly. “All the glass windows in London?” exclaimed the girl, with a happy laugh. “What a romancer you are, Rhett. I was thinking what an odd name it is. The idea of a man going about with such an odd name be¬ cause one of his ancestors killed some poor Apohaqui Indians in Canada two hundred years ago! I don’t suppose Lord Apohaqui would kill a mouse, much less an Indian, he is so tender-hearted.” “I have never observed evidence of tenderness of heart in Lord Apohaqui,” replied Rhett, sarcastically. “I dare say, however, his grand title sets a sort of halo around his head.” “There wasn’t any halo around Lord Bunger’s head, 198 DISAPPROVES OF BARTONS or rather Mr. Bunger when he was posing as a Lord. I thought him perfectly horrid.” This reply of Grace made the matter all the worse for poor Rhett. He could not conceal from himself that it was not the Englishman’s title which had won Grace’s respect; no one knew better than the young American that the young lord had personal and mental qualities well calculated to please both men and women. This fact acted as an irritant to Rhett’s feelings and he with¬ drew into himself and became morose. Was Miss Barton unsuspicious of the cause of her friend’s changing moods? Or was it. that wicked instinct of coquetry, so natural to the female heart, which made her mention so often and so favorably the name of a man she felt he disliked? “I can’t see why you disapprove of Lord Apohaqui. I am sure he seems very nice, considering he is a lord,” she finally said. “I don’t like lords, I don’t like the institution of aris¬ tocracy. I detest the whole system! The idea of a few men being hereditary law makers, living in luxury on the labor of others—but there! I have done. A fellow has no business to come to Europe and find fault with all he sees. No doubt they do as well as they can over here, only don’t ask me to love your lords and aris¬ tocrats.” That night, as Rhett sat in his room in Montague Place thinking over the day’s events his heart sank within him. True, Grace had chosen to accompany him from the Holloway Station, but was not that out of mere sympathy for his lonely condition? fctad she not even while alone with him in the hansom, turned her thoughts to Lord Apohaqui and written his name on the glass pane? Then too, at dinner, Rhett fancied the English nobleman was accorded unusual deference. They had been very kind and very polite to their old Alabama friend but the treatment" shown to him had not been the treatment shown Lord Apohaqui. “People will be blinded by the glitter of a title,” thought Rhett, DISAPPROVES OF BARTONS 199 bitterly. Then he resolved to leave England at once. But he did not leave until he had written and posted the following letter: Montague Place, Wednesday Night. “Dear Miss Barton:—When I said good-night a few hours ago I should also have said good-bye, for I am on the point of leaving England. Why did I not tell you? Because I had not the heart to say good-bye to such dear friends as you and your mother and sister. I have al¬ ready given more time to England than I intended. After a short run on the Continent I shall have to start for home. As you know, my trip was planned to cover less than two months: going about with you and your sister is such sweet pleasure that, if I do not tear my¬ self away with a sudden wrench, I might hang on indefi¬ nitely and give myself no time for the Continent, which, of course, would never do, you know, all good Ameri¬ cans must go at least once to Paris. I trust, dear Miss Barton, you will have no more disagreeable adventures like that at the Police Station, but if any mischief does occur, may you be fortunate enough to secure again so influential a champion as Lord Apohaqui. I may have seemed ill-natured about him, but I assure you I do think him a gentleman as well as a nobleman. Remember me kindly to your mother and sister. Your friend and schoolmate, RHETT CALHOUN.” Grace read this twice to herself. Then she read it aloud. “Who would expect such cranky conduct from Rhett Calhoun?” cried Clara. “He is always so frank and straight. The idea of his running off that way!” “Why didn’t he tell us good-bye?” said Mrs. Barton. “I suppose he never thought of it,” suggested Grace. “It’s a man’s business to think of his friends!” said Clara. “To run off without a word is downright mean.” “Clara,” said Mrs. Barton in a calm, reflective way, “I don’t think that Rhett is mean. I don’t see how he 200 DISAPPROVES OF BARTONS could be mean. His mother was my dear friend and his father was a good rebel soldier, so you see Rhett couldn’t be mean.” Grace made no comment; she put the letter in her desk and still pondered over it. “Why praise Lord Apohaqui to me?” she asked herself. “Why drag his name in at all? I know Rhett does not like him—and to hope, if I get into another scrape, that Lord Apoha¬ qui will get me out! As if—as if Lord Apohaqui be¬ longs to me! As if,” she went on slowly in her musings, “as if he wanted to get rid of us and turn us over to a —a stranger. It’s unkind of Rhett, not at all like the friend he pretends to be. Well, he may go ; we can get along without him, the mean selfish thing!” These were the words of her secret thoughts; but were there no thoughts deeper yet which she dared not clothe in words? Did she really think her old friend a “mean, selfish thing”? Had she no vague suspicion as to the real cause that had driven Rhett from the field? Who can read the secrets of a young girl’s heart—the vague, first dawn of feelings altogether unknown even to herself? The experiences in Holloway jail were enough to give the average tourist at least a temporary dislike for the English capital; moreover, the Bartons had already seen the principal sights of London and therefore,. shortly after the trial, they decided to go over to Tyrol. In the meantime, while they were reaching this deci¬ sion, Lord Apohaqui’s frame of mind was not pleasant. Grace’s conduct during the trial had won his highest respect,—but why had she gotten herself into so unusual, so unpleasant a predicament? “Were she only under the restraint usual for English girls,” he thought, “she would be all I could desire, but to run over London as free, as unprotected as a street flower-girl-” It was this sort of thing that was beginning to prey on the Englishman’s mind. “Of course,” said Lady Apo¬ haqui, when her son related the affair of the trial, “of course that ends your project of marriage?” DISAPPROVES OF BARTONS 201 “Why should it end it?” said Lord Apohaqui. “Would you marry a woman who has been tried for stealing?” “She did not steal—the fact is as clear as day.” “But she suffered the degradation of a trial.” “Any one may be accused and tried. You are not fair, mother.” “Miss Barton’s offense is not so much the trial as putting herself in the way to be tried. A well-behaved girl would not run over London without a chaperon, risking to be insulted in this wise. This is a social crime, and my son cannot afford to marry a social outcast!” “Good God, mother! You have no right to call that girl a social outcast.” “She is—and should be—from the society you and I move in. At any rate I shall have nothing more to do with her.” “You are very, very unfair. An accident like that might happen to any one,—to a duchess.” “But they do not happen to duchesses, and they would not have happened to this American girl had she gone under the wing of a chaperon, as all decent girls do. Are you so in love with this Miss Barton that you are loath to let her go?” “Suppose I am in love with her, what of it?” demanded the young man fiercely. “She is a woman no man need be ashamed to love.” “I thought this was a case of mere business, to replen¬ ish your empty purse?” “Business be d-d!” blurted out the son, angrily. “Charles!” “Sometimes,” he said, by way of apology, “a fellow’s feelings get the better of his manners.” “So it seems,” returned his mother coldly. Lord Apohaqui arose, thrust his hands into his pockets and took a turn up and down the floor before speaking. “The fact is,” he said, stopping in front of his mother and leaning against the mantel, “although at first it was a mere business affair, it is so no longer. The more I 202 DISAPPROVES OF BARTONS see of Miss Barton the less I think of her money,—the more I think of herself. If this be love-” “It resembles it,” interrupted the mother, “and the sooner you get out of the scrape the better.” “But I don’t want to get out of it. You should have seen her in the court-room, calm, dignified, lady-like; no queen could have been more so,—and then the sweet¬ ness of her nature! No resentment against the unfortu¬ nate woman who had placed her in that humiliating position. Mother, if you cannot find in this something to admire, to love-” “Charles,” said Lady Apohaqui, with emphasis, “all this is nonsense! Certainly, beauty and good nature count for much, but as long as we live in Society—and you and I do not propose to get out of it—obedience to outward forms is of more importance than good nature or good looks. It would not be morally wrong for a lady to walk on Regent Street barefooted, but your wife had better break a moral law in private than outrage the rules of good form in public. Were Miss Barton the only rich girl in the world, you might be excused for marrying her, but as long as England has many girls who do not act so insanely as to go slumming in the East End you will be mad, positively mad, in marrying her.” “At any rate there is method in my madness,” said Lord Apohaqui. “You yourself agreed that it is neces¬ sary for me to marry an heiress.” “I seriously doubt if she is as rich as reported. Such things are always exaggerated. A rich girl would have had opportunities, even in America, to acquire at least the appearances of propriety.” “There is no doubt as to her wealth,” replied Lord Apohaqui. “American girls are reared differently from English girls; they are permitted more freedom. Miss Barton has taken up what are called humanitarian ideas; she has a generous, impulsive heart and her mother never tries to restrain her.” “I should say she has a foolish, reckless nature; and DISAPPROVES OF BARTONS 203 of all creatures a self-willed, opinionated wife is the most unendurable. I never wish to see any of the family again!” “You have an engagement to take them to Lady Defreese’s reception,” said Lord Apohaqui, coldly, “and to Richmond. Do you mean to offer them a decided insult?” “Those engagements were made before this last abom¬ inable affair. I have the right to break with such persons.” “How will you do it? What will you say?” “I shall have a headache. Headaches are invaluable to ladies in Society.” The outcome of this conversation was that Lord Apo¬ haqui himself became the bearer of a politely worded note expressing Lady Apohaqui’s regrets that a very severe headache prevented, etc., etc. Mrs. Barton smiled as she read this note. “This is quite a coincidence,” she said serenely. “Clara, give Lord Apohaqui that note Grace wrote. We were just about to send your mother word, Lord Apohaqui, that we are feeling too shaky to leave the hotel.” Notwithstanding the polite wording of Lady Apoha- qui’s note, Grace suspected that this sudden canceling of engagements was due to the jail episode. There was a certain embarrassment in Lord Apohaqui’s manner, a slight trace of anxiety; above all there was an absence of any reference to future engagements. But she mani¬ fested no sign of her suspicions as she expressed the hope that his mother’s indisposition was not serious. “Not serious, but vexatious, especially to me,” re¬ turned the young Englishman. “I had looked forward to the pleasure of showing you something of London society.” “You are very kind,” said Grace. “When we came to England it was with no expectation of seeing anything of the social world, and our stay will be so short we could not prpfit by Lady Apohaqui’s kindness even were 204 DISAPPROVES OF BARTONS she well enough to chaperon us. We leave London to-morrow.” 'To-morrow?” voice and eyes both indicated genuine disappointment. “Yes. Mamma is not strong; the grief and anxiety she suffered while I was in jail have upset her nerves. We go to Riva in the Tyrol to stay until mamma gets over her shock. A sudden noise, a slamming door, the entrance of a servant when not expected startles her and gives her vague fears that some officer of the law has come to get me. That is why we are going to Riva.” “Riva?” said Lord Apohaqui, after expressing the hope that Mrs. Barton would soon recover, “I am told that is an extremely quaint old city. I have long in¬ tended to take a run to the Tyrol.” “You must let us know if you come while we are there,” said Mrs. Barton. Lord Apohaqui looked at Grace, but she did not second her mother’s invitation, and when the young Englishman took his departure it was with a heavy heart. He knew within himself that he would go to Riva, but whether his going would result in good was a question he could not answer. The next day the Bartons left England, but not be¬ fore they had called at Newgate to bid Mr. Gassaway good-bye. Grace again asked leave to pay the fine and thus restore the American to. liberty, but the author of the G. A. N. would not consent. “It would not be treating the Queen right,” he said. “You know I am her guest. She asked me to stay ten days and ten days I shall stay to oblige her and also to'finish pickling and preserving pointers of life in an English jail; you have no idea how interesting they are.” “Yes, I have an idea,” returned Grace, smiling at the recollection of her own jail experience. “My stay in Holloway was not as long as yours in Newgate, but it was long enough. It gave me all the idea I want of English prisons.” “That’s because you are not writing a G. A. N.,” said DISAPPROVES OF BARTONS 205 Gassaway, grinning. When they had gone he wrote this hurried letter to Rhett Calhoun: “Newgate Prison, July- Rhett Calhoun, poste restante, Paris— My Dear Rhett:—This morning I received your letter telling of your departure for Paris, and this afternoon I received a call from the Bartons who leave to-morrow for Riva in the Tyrol. What the deuce is the matter with you all? That English lord isn’t in it; at any rate he isn’t going to the Tyrol, and the Bartons are sick of English society under Lady Apohaqui’s wing. Were I you I should go to Riva, though there is no need of hurrying as she is to be there a month or more. I get out of this next Tuesday and start immediately for Lucerne. Meet me there. Then we’ll tramp over the mountains to Innsbruck and on to Riva. Ever thine, . GASSAWAY.” “P. S. My note-book is fairly bulging with G. A. N. pointers. Lucky thing, this Newgate business—wish you had been committed too; you would have enjoyed it.” Rhett was not inclined to admit that he would have enjoyed a sojourn in Newgate, but the rest of Mr. Gassa- way’s letter gave him unqualified delight. Surely Lord Apohaqui must have abandoned his pursuit of Miss Barton. Perhaps he had proposed and been rejected. At any rate it could not be that Grace really cared for the Englishman or she would not thus quickly leave England. Yes, Gassaway’s plan was a good one. He would go to Lucerne and then when the American joined him they would tramp together to Riva. Rhett was now a little ashamed of his sudden flight from Lon¬ don and resolved to write to Grace from Innsbruck. He felt that he would never have the courage to tell Grace the real reason of his abrupt departure from England, but he might manage to write enough of his inward hopes and fears to cause her to forgive him. CHAPTER XX. A COMEDY IN TYROL. The garden of the Hotel di Riva, on Lake Garda, is one of the most delightful spots in Tyrol. The waters of the lake stretch south to Italy and are hemmed in on either side by lofty mountains that in places break abruptly off at the water’s edge forming sheer prec¬ ipices three thousand feet high. The village of Riva is at the extreme north end of this deep, dazzling inland sea, and the garden of the hotel is at the extreme end of the village. Although beyond Italy’s northernmost frontier, it is so sheltered by towering mountains that orange and lemon trees flourish and fill the air with fragrance. On a certain afternoon in August, Mr. Louis Caroll, now of Rome, formerly of Georgia, sat in this garden on a bench near the water’s edge looking out over the beautiful lake, and reflecting on the business that had brought him to Riva. Three years ago his sister Marina had never tired of singing the praises of her school¬ mates the Bartons of Talladega; whenever Marina re¬ turned home on a visit it was with some new story about the two sisters, who were the belles of the Finisher Institute; and in those days Caroll had been romantic enough to correspond with Clara Barton and even to send her his picture. Clara did not send him her pic¬ ture, but Marina had told him that Miss Barton was beautiful. He knew from her letters that she was bright and vivacious,—and now he was to meet this paragon of whom he had heard so much during the past chree years. His friend Calhoun had telegraphed him from Paris that the Bartons were on their way to Riva and he had instantly come down from his summer camp m the Engadine to meet them. (206) A COMEDY IN TYROL 207 While revolving these things in his mind Mr. Caroll was looking out over the water, and as he looked he finally became aware of the fact that the Desenzano steamer was approaching. Picking up the field glass that lay on the bench by his side he focused it on the steamer. “By Jove!” he exclaimed, “she has a passen¬ ger.” Inasmuch as steamers are intended to carry passen¬ gers, Caroll’s exclamation may seem superfluous; but after the first of July the little boat that plies along Garda’s cliffs from Desenzano' in Italy to Riva in the Tyrol seldom carries anything but freight. On this August afternoon, however, the steamer actually did have a passenger who, to Caroll’s surprise, proved to be one of his Roman acquaintances, the Count Marto Volpi. “What the mischief brings him here?” wondered Caroll. “Chianti told me Volpi was too impecunious even to pay his board in Rome, much less to summer in Tyrol.” The dock was only two hundred yards distant, and Caroll was there before the boat anchored. When the solitary passenger on the upper deck saw Caroll his dark face lighted up, he waved his hand, laughed and blew kisses in the air. “Ah, Luigi mio! Dis ees Heaven! I look around, no friend, everybody stranger! Den your face appear! It ees too much! I am too happy!” “You gush as much as ever!” laughed Caroll. “I thought you kept that sort of thing for Italy. We are in Austria now.” “You Americans are wonderful!” said the Count, gazing at Caroll with admiration. “Last month you say addio, you go America! And yet now as soon again I find you in Riva! How you jump so quick?” “I have not jumped so quickly,” replied Caroll. “I have not been to America. Shortly after "saying addio to you, my dear Count, I received a commission to make a copy of my ‘Tide of Time’, which means another winter for me in Rome.” “Another winter in Rome, eh? Ah! how that my 208 A COMEDY IN TYROL heart rejoice! But, caro Luigi, tell me that you will not yourself envelop in art as you have done de two years past. Statues, paintings—ah yees, dey are grand! But, Dio mio! shall dey blind us to de—de—vat you call beauties of flesh and blood? One woman beautiful, filled with life, ees twenty statues worth!” “I see you have another love affair on hand,” said Caroll, smiling. “Who is she, Count? Who is the woman beautiful, filled with life, that brings you to Riva in August ?” Volpi’s handsome face lighted up as he twirled the ends of his dark mustache and told his story. “I haf not seen her. I not know if she ees beautiful, I only hope so. De Countess Chianti haf not seen her and so she not know. But she haf heard dat she ees as beautiful as she ees rich. I shall see her to-night.” That evening Caroll and the Count met in the garden on the edge of the lake. The night was dark, the lighted end of the Count’s cigar was the only visible object. “I haf see her,” said Volpi as he took a seat on the bench by Caroll’s side. “Ah, Dio mio! I haf see her, haf hear her speak!” “And she is beautiful?” “Beautiful? Diavolo! she ees plain like vat you Americans call one mud fence. Ah me! I not know what I do!” “A mud fence? That means downright ugly, Count,” laughed Caroll. “Too bad! Especially as you have come so far to see her.” The Count sighed and bewailed his hard luck. “What will you do, Count? Give her up?” “Gif her up? Nevaire! I marry her. I must marry de rich wife. Of myself I haf no money.” “But you who adore beauty—what a fate!” “It ees cruel, diavolo! Yes, vaire cruel, but she haf much money, caro Luigi, much money. My wife must haf de money, my sweetheart she must haf de beauty!” The Italian method of arranging matrimonial affairs was rather shocking to the young American’s ideas, A COMEDY IN TYROL 209 but he made no comment, having- often heard of it be¬ fore. “When did you first learn of this rich girl, Count?” he asked. “Yesterday. Chianti come to me with a letter in his hand. ‘Dis letter ees from Marie/ say Chianti; den he tell me I must to Marie go immediate. I ask, ‘If she ees sick why not you, her husband, go immediate?’ Chianti shrug his shoulder. ‘It ees for you, not for me, dat you go immediate.’ Den he gif me de letter he haf got from Marie and I understand why I must go to her in Riva. See for yourself, Luigi.” The Count took a scrap of'paper from his pocket and handed it to Caroll, who struck a match and by its flickering light read the following fragmentary lines: “-quiet here but pleasant and in a few days will be pleasanter .still, as some of my countrywomen are coming. The Padrone tells me they have telegraphed for rooms. I have heard of them—a fine American family, the Bartons of Alabama, very rich and only two daughters.” “The Bartons of Alabama?” said Caroll, handing the scrap of paper back to the Count. “Are they the people you have come to see?” “Yes. When my cousin read Marie’s letter he say, ‘Here ees a chance for Volpi to himself establish com¬ fortable and pay moneys he me owe so many year, what you call kill de two bird wid de one stone.’ Chianti know vat good ting for Italian Count to marry rich American girl. Before he marry Marie he all time borrow money. Now he no more borrow, he lend to me, he haf good income from de American wife. See?” Caroll saw; indeed, even a blind man might have seen after so lucid an explanation; Caroll was too familiar with the matter-of-fact way these things are talked of in Italy to receive any new shocks, or to express his own opinions on the subect. “Dis American ees vaire rich,” continued the Count. “She haf travel wid two maids and her mamma. And de maids—ah, Dio mio! You should dem see, Luigi 210 A COMEDY IN TYROL —as lofely as Venus. I haf dem see in de salon and my heart go out to dem!” “If that is so,” said Caroll, “take one of the maids and pass by the ugly mistress.” “Lofe in a cottage ees good for Americans, but not for Italian nobleman,” said the Count. “Nobleman must haf palace, carriages, horses, money—vat you call de luxuries.” “Yes,” replied Caroll. “You are the helpless and unhappy victim of your class. What a misfortune to be born noble!” “Dat ees true, vaire true,” assented the Count. “I tell you in one rhyme, Luigi, in one rhyme dat I see in your paper English how it ees wid de nobleman. Before I one girl to marry can ask Dere must be a vision of tings Which de hard cash brings: A winter at Nice, Wid a servant apiece, A long yachting cruise, Two Napoleon shoes, Plenty of wine, Two hours to dine. Dere must be all dis when I von girl request me to marry.” How strangely was fate working! Here was Caroll at Riva to see a young girl of whom he had heard much; and here was another man on the same mission. Both had been told the girl was beautiful; the one had seen her and pronounced her plain, not to say ugly. How could his sister Marina have so misled him? Why did his friend so mislead him? Was it merely a sorry joke to induce him to go out of his way to see a girl “as ugly as a mud fence”? While turning these matters over in his mind the two men slowly walked back to the hotel. As soon as the sound of their footsteps died away there was a noise as of rustling silken skirts in the rear of the bench on “Ah, Dio mio! I haf see her ! ” said count Volpi. * 4 A COMEDY IN TYROL 211 which the Count and Caroll had been sitting, and two figures rose up in the darkness and turned and looked in the direction the two men had taken. “These stupid foreigners,” said one of the two, “must be as blind as bats. The idea of calling us as ugly as mud fences— the crazy old Dago!” “I do not think he is old, Clara.” “Maybe not; but he is blind or he couldn’t call us ugly. Did he mean you or me, Grace?” “Oh! I’ll take it all to myself, dear,” laughed Grace. “He is welcome to call me ugly.” “But to call you ugly would show he’s the craziest lunatic in Europe.” “Clara,” said Grace, in a reflective tone, “a mistake has been made.” “How?” “Agnes had on her best gown, the one mamma gave her. She looked really stylish in it, but you know the poor girl is not pretty,—she’s too sallow and thin and sad.” “What has Agnes to do with it?” “The Count has made a mistake. At dinner to-night Agnes wore her new silk gown; you and I had just come in from the long ride in the cars. We were in our old gray traveling gowns and were too lazy and too hungry to dress for dinner. Don’t you see?” “Oh, I see! I see!” cried Clara clapping her hands joyously. “The hotel people took Agnes for a rich girl and you and me for her maids, and they have put the Count on the wrong track. That is fun.” “It will be fun—if we can keep it up,” said Grace. “I wish we could keep it up! I would like to pass as a poor servant-maid just once to see how these for¬ eigners behave to us.” “You heard him say he would marry the girl no matter how ugly she is? Well, I’ve got a plan that will work beautifully if only Agnes will help us and mamma won’t betray us.” “Mamma can’t very well betray us since she can’t 212 A COMEDY IN TYROL speak a word of French, Italian or anything but her dear old English/’ said Clara. “What do you propose?” “Agnes must take your place; there is no one to take my place so it can be given out that I stopped in Dresden to study German. You and I will play lady’s maids; you shall be Agnes Allan, I will be Lucy. I am mamma’s maid, you are Agnes’ maid. It is thus we must become acquainted with this Italian nobleman who has come to ask one of us to marry him.” The two girls stole back to the hotel and up to their mother’s room. Agnes was called, the episode of the garden was told, Grace’s scheme detailed and after some difficulty Mrs. Barton’s and Agnes’ objections were over¬ come. “The acting will all be ours,” said Grace. “We will assume a rather humble air and style of dress, walk¬ ing a little behind mamma and Agnes and carrying shawls and books. All you will have to do, mamma, will be to remember about the changed names. I am Lucy and Clara is Agnes; Agnes must be called Clara.” When the little drama was arranged to her satisfaction, Grace took out her writing materials and began scrib¬ bling. “Jotting down ‘pointers’, a la Gassaway?” asked Clara. “Yes, a little pointer. I saw it in an English paper the other day. I mean to throw it into the enemy’s camp to offset that doggerel he repeated. Listen: When a girl says ‘No’! It’s so different—oh! There’s a vision of things That poverty brings- A winter complete On Uneasy Street, A temptation to rob, A two Napoleon job, A boarding-house meal And a brand new deal, For it’s different—oh! When a girl says—‘No!’ ” A COMEDY IN TYROL 213 “How will you get it to him?” asked Clara. “Oh, I shall find a chance. When the Count is in the very hottest agony of making love to Agnes I’ll throw it at him; or maybe I may send it at once before the play begins. At any rate he shall get it, Clara, have no fear.” The day after his arrival at Riva when Count Volpi joined Caroll at breakfast in the garden, three letters lay on his plate. The first two were duns, forwarded from Rome; these the Count coolly tore into bits and tossed in the air, letting the pieces flutter down on the grass, like flakes of snow. The third missive brought a frown to the Italian’s swarthy brow. “Anything wrong?” asked Caroll. “Wrong? Yes, it ees wrong,—vaire wrong, though maybe you t’inlc it ees a goot joke.” “I?” said Caroll, lifting his eyebrows. “Wid me it ees no joke; it ees vaire serious; it ees one grand passion.” “Of what are you talking. Count? What is your grand passion?” Volpi pushed the letter across the table It was the doggerel verse Grace had written. Caroll laughed. “You accuse me of this?” “Certainment—I haf talk only to you.” “I assure you that it is not my work. I never saw these lines before. Possibly you have repeated your lines to Miss Barton and this is her reply. Bright girl, even if she is ugly.” Volpi was positive he had not repeated the rhymes to any one but Caroll, but the latter had his own opinion of the Count’s accuracy. “It is to be hoped, Count, that this is not her final answer to your suit.” Volpi smiled complacently. “I haf no fear. Wid de ladies Italian I haf goot luck; why should I not haf goot luck wid de ladies American? Chianti haf marry a lady American; he haf no difficulty. Chianti say American girls come to Europe to make matrimony; American girls lofe titles and you haf no titles in your country.” 214 A COMEDY IN TYROL “We have plenty of judges and colonels/’ laughed Caroll. “Yees, but no noble titles, and dat force de rich Sig- norinas to come to England, to Italy to make de noble marriage.” During the afternoon Count Volpi remained closeted with his cousin’s wife, asking questions about the Bar¬ tons and planning a matrimonial campaign. Caroll put in his afternoon climbing one of the neighboring moun¬ tains, while the Bartons sat out in the garden on the banks of the lake, reading and inhaling the soft breath of the winds wafted northward from Italy across the Lake of Garda’s cool and peaceful waters. Agnes was dressed in one of Clara’s handsome gowns; there was so little difference in the height of the two girls that the gown fitted Agnes quite as well as Clara. Mrs. Barton and Agnes sat together on one bench reading; Grace and Clara, as befitted poor traveling companions,' were on a bench some distance in the rear, sewing. While the party was thus disposed, the Countess Marie de Chianti came sauntering down from the hotel, a book in one hand, a big red parasol in the other, and close at her heels an ugly pug dog with bow-legs and a tail that was twisted as tight as a corkscrew. The Countess was a little creature; she had a worn appearance, her cheeks were thin and sallow. But apparently she was still alive to all the coquetries of her sex. On each sallow cheek was a little round spot of rouge; there were dark rings under her eyes and incipient crows-feet were visible. Neither the wrinkles nor the loss of flesh seemed the result of bad health or age, but rather of worry. A casual acquaintance of the Countess Marie might ask, “What has she to worry about? Her highest ambition has been attained, why is she not satisfied and happy?” When in Rome her outward life is one long round of amusements, balls, receptions, teas, dances—but her in¬ ward life! ah! what is that? The noble Count who be¬ fore marriage had seemed to her a second Romeo did not permit even the honeymoon to wax and wane before he A COMEDY IN TYROL 215 showed the cloven hoof and let her feel that he was her lord and master. Within ten days after their marriage in New York, while on the steamer en route for Italy, he roundly slapped his bride on both cheeks. From that time on he had often “corrected” her by even more heroic means. Intimate friends acquainted with these domestic episodes did not marvel that ten years of mar¬ ried life had sufficed to transform a bright butterfly of a girl into a miserable woman with rouged cheeks and crows-feet around her eyes. It was this painted reminiscence of the once pretty Marie Van Cortlandt, native of New York, that came up to the bench in the Garden di Riva and bowed and smiled and presented Mrs. Barton a square bit of paste¬ board whereon was engraved the Chianti monogram and her name, “Marie, Countess di Chianti.” “Of course you would never guess from my name that I am Ameri¬ can,” said the little Countess with affected gayety, “but I am just as American as though my name were Smith or Jones. That is why I have come out to see you. The Padrone told me you were from America and that you have been out in the garden since breakfast. It is lovely here, is it not?” “Yes, it is beautiful,” murmured Mrs. Barton, with a troubled look in her usually honest eyes. It was utterly contrary to the instincts of her nature to conceal things; she was too frank, too candid to play a part, and when this native American introduced herself, Mrs. Barton at once thought of the little comedy her daugh¬ ters had induced her to sanction and consequently of the fibs she would have to tell when speaking of her family. Naturally, the Countess would ask if she were alone. How could she, who never in her life had attempted to prevaricate, say that she had one daughter when she had two? How could she introduce a plain, melancholy woman of twenty-five as her daughter and her own bright, happy girls as mere traveling companions? Agnes came to the good lady’s assistance and took upon her¬ self all the sin of fibbing. 216 A COMEDY IN TYROL “Mamma,” she said, “introduce me to the lady.” When the introduction was over Agnes resumed: “Mamma and I both think this is the prettiest place we have seen in Europe. I almost fear we shall become weaned from dear old America. Do you think that possible, mamma?” “Never! There is no place as good and sweet to me as Alabama,” replied Mrs. Barton with a sigh of relief. She felt that she had crossed a very difficult place indeed. “I suppose, Countess,” said Agnes, “that you are en¬ tirely European by now?” “No, no! I never speak of my home to the people here, but I never forget it. My heart is always there.” “You go back on visits, do you not?” “I have not been back once since my marriage.” “Not once? Do you dread the ocean?” “Oh, no!” replied the Countess, with a short, bitter laugh. “But my husband does not like America.” “Not like America?” repeated Mrs. Barton, opening wide her mild eyes. “What is the matter with him? Any one who finds fault with America must be light¬ headed. Don’t you think so, Countess?” “As it is my husband who finds the fault,” said the Countess, with the same bitter little laugh, “I suppose I must not say he is light-headed. You know a wife must agree with what her husband says.” “No,” returned Mrs. Barton, seriously, “not if he abuses your country, because, my dear, you must know if any man prefers Europe to America there is something wrong about him—very wrong!” At this moment Count Volpi came sauntering up and was introduced by the Countess to Mrs. and Miss Bar¬ ton, “of America.” “From Alabama,” added Mrs. Barton with gentle pride. “We are from the South, Count. You must not take us to be Massachusetts Yankees who talk through their noses.” Volpi bowed with the profoundest respect and gallantly observed he would have known at a glance that the Signora Barton and her lovely daughter were A COMEDY IN TYROL 217 from a land over which bent blue skies and where the air was fragrant with flowers. “You talk just like a poet, Count,” said Mrs. Barton with a smile. “Agnes —I mean Clara,—don’t you think the Count looks like a poet?” Grace and Clara, as befitted their pretended positions, sat silently on a bench some distance behind that on which Mrs. Barton and Agnes and the Countess were seated, and before which stood Count Volpi. Grace and Clara could not hear Volpi’s words, but the defer¬ ence, the courteous attention, the sympathetic, respect¬ ful glances which the Italian bestowed upon the poor preacher’s daughter were plainly visible to the two American girls and excited their indignation. “Just look, Grace,” whispered Clara. “See how grand and polite he is—what splendid manners—and all be¬ cause he thinks Agnes is rich! He doesn’t even see us!” “Because we are the poor traveling companions,” said Grace. “Clara, any woman who marries a man, know¬ ing he courts her for her money, ought to be locked up in an asylum. What can she expect but unhappiness?” “Were I a lawmaker,” said Clara, “I would have a law to head off these titled paupers.” “How can that be done?” “They shouldn’t be allowed to get their income from America. If they sold out their American goods and land, all right; but this thing of letting people live in Europe and draw their incomes every year from America isn’t right.” The bench on which Grace and Clara were sitting faced the lake; to their left was a thicket and Louis Caroll, winding his way through this thicket, emerged into the open garden at the water’s edge not five yards from where the two girls sat. He saw them, and in fact overheard Clara’s remark. “I beg your pardon, ladies,” said Caroll, “I thought I heard the sound of my native tongue.” “Yes, we speak English,” said Grace calmly. “American, I think?” 218 A COMEDY IN TYROL “Yes.” “I am always so glad to see my countrymen and women,” continued Caroll, still holding his Alpine hat in his hand, “that I cannot resist the pleasure of a word with them. Have you been long in Europe?” “About two months.” “And I, alas! nearly three years.” “If it is ‘Alas’, why do you stay?” “A man’s business is his master; my business holds me here, but my heart is always in America. By the time you have been abroad as long as I, you also will rejoice to hear your native tongue and possibly, as boldly as I, will venture to speak to compatriots.” “We have not been away from home as long as you,” returned Grace, “but we also are glad to see and speak with people from our own country. May we ask what State you are from?” “Georgia.” “Oh, you are Southern? I am glad!” cried Clara. “We are from Alabama, which you know is a sister State of Georgia’s.” “The children of sisters are cousins,” said Caroll seri¬ ously. “I am happy indeed to find two such lovely cousins.” “Perhaps,” said Grace, with simple gravity, “when you know the position we at present occupy you may not be so ready to acknowledge kinship.” “What do you mean? What position do you occupy?” “My sister and I are merely traveling companions for Mrs. Barton and her daughter.” “Mrs. Barton, from Alabama?” “Yes. Why do you seem astonished?” “To tell the truth, I am a little astonished; yet there is nothing to astonish me. I came here on purpose to see the Bartons.” “Do you know them?” “Only from hearsay. My sister Marina was a school¬ mate of the Miss Clara Barton, and painted her picture in such lovely colors that I naturally wished to see her. A COMEDY IN TYROL 219 Since I have heard conflicting accounts of her I am more anxious than ever to see her and judge for my¬ self.” “Conflicting accounts?” “Yes. Marina described her as lovely—indeed Marina thought both sisters lovely,—but an acquaintance has recently told me that one of them is not pretty at all.” Caroll presented Rhett Calhoun’s letter of introduction to Mrs. Barton that evening in the hotel parlor, and was duly introduced to Agnes still masquerading as years I shall begin at once to save. I shall work day and COUNT VOLPI PROPOSES 233 night and be supremely happy in the thought that you will be mine at last.” “I don’t think I could be happy,” she said, timidly, ‘'to think you were working so hard for me.” “But I wouldn’t mind working. It would make me happy.” “Would—would you like to have me with you while you work? I wouldn’t mind the figs and grapes. I adore figs.” “Do you mean it?” cried Caroll, a rapture in his voice and eyes. “I only asked you if you would like it?” “Don’t tantalize a fellow. You are not cruel and it would be cruel to jest about my love for you. If you could be happy sharing my Bohemian life it would make that life a heaven!” “Then I will share it,” she said. It was immediately after this speech that Grace look¬ ing through her field glass from the Ponal Strasse a thousand feet above the lake, saw—or thought ishe saw— Caroll arise from his place in the boat, go over to Clara’s seat and clasp her in his arms. An hour later Caroll and Clara beached their little sail boat and slowly walked up to the hotel garden to where Mrs. Barton sat on her favorite bench near the water’s edge deep in her new novel. Clara looked very demure as Caroll, after not a little hemming and hawing, said: “Madam, Miss Allan has been good enough to promise to be my wife. As she is under your protection, I trust you will have no objection and will kindly give us your blessing.” Mrs. Barton, whose mind was still concerned with the people in the novel she was reading, was so startled and confused by this sudden announcement that she clean forgot the comedy her daughters were playing. She glanced inquiringly at Clara before she said: “What are you saying, Mr. Caroll?” “That this little girl here has promised to make me the happiest man on earth.” So astonished was Mrs. Barton,, and so absorbed in their own romance were 234 COUNT VOLPI PROPOSES Caroll and Clara that none of them noticed the Count, Agnes and Grace who had approached to within a few feet of Mrs. Barton’s bench, just when Caroll was speak¬ ing of his being the happiest man on earth. “Pardon, amico mio, caro Luigi,” cried the Count Volpi, pushing to the front with a charming smile, “a thousand pardon, but what you haf say ees impossible. The Signorina Allen cannot make you de happiest of men for dat man, behold! I am de happiest!” “How is that, Count?” said Caroll. “It ees so, because de Signorina Barton haf me promised to marry. She haf referred me to de signora mamma and my heart it ees too big to carry!” Between the people standing around her and the peo¬ ple in her novel Mrs. Barton’s mind grew more and more bewildered; finally she said, in total oblivion of the char¬ acters her daughters were acting: “My daughter referred you to me? Impossible, Count. My daughter hasn’t the slightest idea of getting married in this country. I never brought her here to settle down in Italy. In Alabama the Counts wait on hotel tables; if my girls had wanted to marry Counts they might have done so in Birmingham. What does the man mean, Grace?” “The Count has made a little mistake, mamma, that is all. He meant Agnes, not me. Agnes, did you promise to marry the Count?” “No, Miss Barton. I never promised him anything. I only told him to speak to Mrs. Barton and let me alone. I was tired of his love making.” Volpi stared in bewilderment. “Ees not dis lady Mees Barton?” pointing to Agnes. “No,” replied Grace, “I am Miss Barton.” And in a few words, quiet but decisive, she made clear the little comedy that had been enacted. Clara shot a glance at her lover to see the effect of Grace’s announcement; his face was grave. Clara, a httle frightened, timidly put her hand in his; Caroll clasped it—what man could have refused? But the gravity did COUNT VOLPI PROPOSES 235 not vanish. However, no one else seemed to think of him, for every eye was on the Count, who, although at first considerably puzzled, was by no means lacking in his usual self-assurance. It mattered little to Volpi that he had courted the wrong girl; some time was lost, that was all, a mere inconvenience which he would at once set about correcting. “I haf you admire all de time,” he said to Grace. “I haf t& myself many time repeat ‘a vaire lofely lady’ and it me no surprise make to find dat you are de Signorina Barton.” This was five minutes after announcing to Miss Bar¬ ton his engagement to Agnes Allan; but the Count was ready to transfer his “lofe” to Grace on a moment’s warning. From that time on he merely bowed politely to Agnes when they chanced to meet, and poured all the passion of his soul into the genuine Miss Barton’s ears. To Volpi’s way of thinking this was no more than honorable. He had offered himself to Miss Allan under the mistaken idea that she was Miss Barton. As an honorable man, he would stand by that offer and confer his hand and title upon the real Miss Barton. To. Grace, unaccustomed to seeing men so facile in changing the objects of their “affection”, the whole scene was like a stage comedy. But, though amusing at first, it soon became intensely wearying and at length Grace told her mother she could stand it no longer. “Clara and Mr. Caroll keep so much to themselves, mamma, I ^am left completely at the Count’s mercy. He doesn t mind Agnes in the least; even in her presence he talks to me the same sort of nonsense he talked to her a week ago.” “What will you do, Grace?” asked Mrs. Barton. “We must run off and hide. Another week of Count Volpi would drive me wild. I can’t shut myself up in the hotel and he is always on the watch for me.” Mrs. Barton sighed. If there was anything she hated it was traveling. She had settled herself so comfortably at Riva; why did that wretched Count come and drive her away? “I wish,” she said petulantly, “that Congress would pass a law confiscating every dime a woman has 236 COUNT VOLPI PROPOSES when she marries a European. Maybe they’d let us alone if we had that law.” ‘‘But we haven’t any such law, mamma, so we must move on.” “Where shall we move to?” “Anywhere where Volpi is not.” They called Clara and Caroll into counsel and it was decided to go to Siena. “If you go to Switzerland,” said Caroll, “the Count can easily find you, but he will not dream of anybody going to Italy in August. In Siena Mrs. Barton can rest just as well as here in Riva. Siena is on the top of a mountain and not at all a bad place in summer. I spent the month of July there once and found it delightful.” It was pleasant for Louis Caroll to drop into the role of a son and brother to Clara’s mother and sister; he took charge of them, bought their tickets, shipped their luggage and gave them general advice. The luggage was sent as far as Desenzano at the southern end of the lake; there Caroll purchased railroad tickets and re¬ shipped the luggage to Siena without anyone in Riva knowing their destination. The girls took leave of the Countess, but though feeling that they could trust her not to betray them they did not tell her where they were going. To no one at the hotel did they give the slightest intimation that they contemplated a longer journey than a trip by lake to Desenzano. Just before they started, at eight o’clock one morning, Grace received two letters; one was from Rhett Calhoun informing her that he and Gassaway were having a de¬ lightful tramp, that they had proceeded as far as Inss- bruck and in three days more would arrive in Riva. “How provoking!” said Grace, when she had finished reading Rhett’s letter. “How provoking that we shall have to miss him. I must leave a note for Rhett, mamma.” “Of course,” said Mrs. Barton. “Tell him to come at once to Siena.” “Yes,” said Caroll, “but unless you want Volpi to COUNT VOLPI PROPOSES 237 come too you had better warn Calhoun to say nothing in Riva as to where you are. Volpi is amusing but we have had enough of him for the present.” “For all time, I think,” said Grace. Grace kept silence as to her second letter, which in truth gave her much to think of. She put it in her pocket and at the first opportunity took it out and re-read it carefully. It was not a proposal of marriage nor yet a declaration of love, but it looked as if it might be a pre¬ liminary step in that direction. The writer said he wished to come to Riva to ask an important question. What could this mean? Her short acquaintance with Lord Apohaqui had not given her the impression that he was a trifler, that he would speak on any subject lightly. What important question did he mean to ask her? When a man makes a plain proposal a woman can accept, or she can refuse; but when he talks, or writes, vaguely, yet significantly, what can a girl do? She dare not appear to encourage him; he might say she had mistaken his meaning. For the same reason she dare not discourage him. After thinking over Lord Apohaqui’s letter, Grace went into the cabin of the little Desenzano steamer and wrote her reply, which Louis Caroll posted for her as soon as the boat landed. Soon after this the train from Venice rolled in and the three Barton ladies, accom¬ panied by Caroll and Agnes Allan, set out for Siena. CHAPTER XXII. THE FLIGHT TO SIENA. About thirty minutes before noon on the day of the Barton’s departure from Riva, Count Marto Volpi de¬ scended from his room to the garden, took his seat at one of the tables and ordered his breakfast. A few hours earlier he had had coffee and rolls served in his room, but that did not appear to impair his appetite and he ordered the usual elaborate Italian breakfast of soup, two kinds of meat, a salad and fruits, nuts, coffee and wine. When the order was given he asked the waiter if the Signor Caroll had breakfasted. “No, il signor e partito—the signor is gone.” “Gone? Do you mean that he has left Riva?” “Si signor—yes, with the American family. They took the Desenzano boat.” “Diavolo!” exclaimed Volpi, springing to his feet. “Will they not return?” When Grimaldi, the padrone, to whom Volpi hurried for information, explained that Caroll and the Bartons had paid their bills, taken all their luggage and had said nothing of returning, the Count realized that if he was to become master of Miss Barton’s millions it would be necessary to change his base of operations. But whither should he go? Whither had this American fam¬ ily gone? It was absurd to suppose that they intended remaining in Desenzano. Grimaldi shrugged his shoul¬ ders and expressed a thousand regrets at his inability to inform his excellency. The Americans had not taken him into their confidence. They had gone to Desenzano. That much he knew, because they had bought tickets for that place and had had their trunks put on the steamer. But beyond Desenzano it was impossible for him to speak. They might have gone on to Venice or ( 238 ) THE FLIGHT TO SIENA 239 to Milan, more likely the latter, for August was not the ♦ season for Venice while it was possible for travelers to go to Milan with the intention of starting thence for Switzerland. This suggestion afforded the Count but little comfort. A million people might be going to Switzerland in August; by visiting all the hotels and resorts in the little republic he might accidentally find this particular Ameri¬ can family, but he had neither time nor money to pursue so vague a chase. Why had not the padrone found out where the Americans were going? “The Signore Americane did not honor me with their confidences,” replied Grimaldi, with a sorrowful look. “I am sorry, your Excellency, but it is so. They did not tell me, I did not ask them and so I do not know.” “What has become of the Countess Chianti,” asked Volpi, after ten minutes of angry maledictions. “Has she also disappeared? I suppose everybody has gone —everybody has abandoned me. Why don’t you speak, brigand? Where is the Countess?” “Her Excellency has not yet come to breakfast,” answered Grimaldi, humbly. An American hotel keeper would never stand such bullying; he feels himself any ordinary man’s equal; in fact, many hotel clerks in the States wear dazzling diamonds and look down upon the generality of mankind. But Italian or Swiss inn-keep¬ ers resent nothing unless it be failure to pay bills. You may abuse a European padrone to your heart’s content and still be treated with obsequious politeness as long as you pay your score. Volpi grumbled and scowled and ordered Grimaldi to inform Her Excellency, the Countess Chianti, that he wished to see her immediately; then he went out to his breakfast in the garden. In half an hour the Countess came to him with her big red silk parasol and her bow-legged dog. “Do you know what has happened?” said the Count ignoring her amiable greeting. He spoke in Italian, as was his custom when talking to his cousin’s wife. “No, I have heard nothing in particular,” replied the 240 THE FLIGHT TO SIENA Countess. “1 have just had my breakfast/' She dropped the point of her parasol on the ground and looked at Volpi inquiringly. “The American signorina has gone, Luigi Caroll has gone, everybody has gone while we were sleeping!” “Where have they gone?” “Diavolo! That is what I want to know and what you must find out. In another week I should have won that American signorina. She is like all the rest—wants a little coaxing. I must find her. I won’t give her up. She is the only pretty and rich girl I know, but she is coquettish—she plays with me. I woo her—she runs! Have you no idea where they went? Did they not talk to you of their plans?” “Oh, often,” answered the innocent Countess. “Mrs. Barton said she loved Riva, that she wanted to stay here until they went to Milan where Miss Clara will study music. Something must have happened to change her plans.” Volpi sullenly smoked his cigar; the Countess amused herself tracing figures on the ground with the tip of her parasol. Presently Grimaldi came out and told Volpi in a low voice, with an air of mystery, that he had just learned of a letter which might possibly be of interest to His Excellency. The letter was addressed to Mr. Rhett Calhoun and had been left by the American sig- norinas at the hotel to be delivered when called for. “How the d-1 does that interest us?” demanded Volpi, snappishly. “This Signor Calhoun, your Excellency, is a friend of the American. Her letter will doubtless give him her new address.” Volpi was quick to see that this shrewd guess of the padrone was probably the correct one. At any rate it would not hurt should that letter be delivered to him, Count Volpi, instead of to Rhett Calhoun; a coin slipped into the padrone’s hand resulted in the coveted missive being placed in his possession. Grace’s letter was brief. She merely expressed her pleasure at hearing from her THE FLIGHT TO SIENA 241 old friend, and hoped he would find it possible to come to Siena whither she and her mother and sister were going—“at once for very urgent reasons.” “Ah, Siena,” muttered the Count. “So that is where the bird has flown. Well, the hunter can go there too.” The next morning found the Count on the way to Siena; on the same afternoon Rhett and Gassaway ar¬ rived with clothing worn and travel-stained but otherwise none the worse for their long tramp through Tyrol. Though buoyant as air when they entered the town, Rhett Calhoun’s spirits fell to zero when told that the Bartons were gone. “She must have received my letter before going,” he thought, gloomily, “and if she received it she must have gone to avoid me. Why else should they rush off just as I am expected? Very well! If they wish to dodge me, they shall have no trouble in doing it. I’ll keep as far from them as they can desire.” In the course of the day, Rhett learned from the Count¬ ess Chianti that a letter had been left for him at the hotel, but the most diligent and persistent inquiry of the padrone failed to produce any letter. “De Countess Chianti say dere ees letter for you? Ah! Den de Count¬ ess Chianti one gran’ mistake haf made. De signorina American haf left only one letter—dat letter haf already gone to Ingfeterra.” The Countess Chianti, who had gathered some inkling of the truth from Volpi, did not believe a word of this statement of the padrone’s, but poor Rhett thought of Lord Apohaqui and said to himself: “No, there was no letter for me; the Countess is mistaken. I shall go back to America and try to forget her.” Then when, on the same unlucky day, Mrs. Packer and her daughter Lobelia and maid arrived in Riva from Munich and told him among other things, that Lord Apohaqui’s engagement to Miss Barton had been announced in London and that she had heard it direct from Mr. Montrose Morton, who had run back to England on a few days’ business, Rhett’s soul sank into still deeper gloom. The Packers had gone to Munich from London, 242 THE FLIGHT TO SIENA thence they had crossed the mountains to Tyrol and thus accidentally stumbled across Rhett and Gassaway in Riva. Love seems to have a more resisting kind of life than the body; once knock the body dead and it stays dead. No medicines, charms or conjurations revivify a dead body; but Love—bless you! It may lie perfectly breath¬ less one minute, and the next minute it leaps up into vigorous life! There was an experience of this sort vouchsafed our friend Rhett. His love lay dead, he bade it farewell forever and went about with a heart like lead, until one morning a blue envelope was handed him containing the following telegram: “Siena, August 23rd:—We are at the Albergo di Siena. If possible join us at once. Grace Barton.” It was these few words which, quick as a flash, resus¬ citated the hope which had fainted and died in Rhett’s breast; the dead hope sprang to life, to eager, inspiring life. The horizon expanded, the heavens became more beautiful and blue, an electric current seemed to course through the young man’s veins. She—she, the one woman in the world —had not tried to shun him; he would go to her at once he would—but curse the English Lord! Could it be true that he was engaged to her? “Well,” said Gassaway, after reading the telegram, “this knocks me out of the pointers I might have secured while playing the detective and hunting over Europe for the Bartons. There is no chance now for the old sleuth detective act.” “Hang your sleuth detective act. We’ll set out at once for Siena.” “Siena?” remarked Mrs. Packer. “That’s the very place Lobelia and I mean to go to.” The two young men showed no particular elation at this, but Mrs. Packer continued, serenely: “Siena is quite a show place, isn’t it?” “On the contrary,” returned Rhett, “I am told it is rather out of the tourists’ usual route—not at all fashion- THE FLIGHT TO SIENA 243 able. The Bartons are stopping there to have a good rest I suppose.” “That’s exactly what Lobelia and I need. We’ve been on the go so much we must take a rest and I guess Siena’s the very place to rest in until Mr. Morton comes back from London. Lobelia, dear, tell the maid to put up our things. We’ll go on the same boat with Mr. Calhoun and Mr. Gassaway. It’s so comfortable to have gentlemen along to protect us.” There had been a time when the Packers treated both Rhett and Gassaway with fine Chicago scorn, but that was before the affair of Lord Bunger; it was also before Mr. Morton had left them and before they had come to the continent where they could not understand a word of what was said around them. They were more con¬ descending now. Of course, they would not stoop so far as to travel second class; but while they rode in state in the first class car it was some comfort to know that there was somebody on the train with whom they could talk English in case of an emergency. Mrs. Packer was good enough to explain these reasons for her patronizing kindness, but it is doubtful if either Rhett or Gassaway appreciated them. However, what could they do? They could not prevent the Packers from going to Italy and thus it was that the two young Ameri¬ cans and the Chicagoans took the same train for Siena. CHAPTER XXIII. MR. WOOKEY’s SOCIAL AMBITION. “Out of sight, out of mind/’ according to the popular adage, but this does not always prove true. After the Bartons’ departure, each day that passed seemed to in¬ crease Lord Apohaqui’s desire to see Grace and his determination not to give her up. The more he re¬ flected, the more he congratulated himself on having found that unusual combination, youth, beauty and fortune. The faults of bad form, of American manners shrunk in size until it almost seemed that those very faults had grown into charming qualities. For the first few days after the girl left London, Lord Apohaqui honestly endeavored to forget her; he told himself it would be a misfortune to be at war with his mother and from what Lady Apohaqui had said he knew there would be war if he refused to give up the American. Lady Apohaqui was not altogether blind to the strug¬ gle going on in her son’s mind. With a desire to help him forget Grace Barton she looked about to find some suitable English girl whom her son could marry. Mar¬ riage, thought the Dowager, would be the safest cure; it was unfortunate that no girl in the aristocracy could be found available; but young ladies possessed of both wealth and rank are not anxious to wed a penniless Lord, consequently Lady Apohaqui was driven to con¬ sider wealthy English girls who were not of noble blood. Her son could take his pick from among half a dozen rich commoners’ daughters, and that at any rate would be better than to marry this American. Even the most vulgar English tradesman’s daughter would have sense enough to keep out of Whitechapel and out of jail. As for wealth, there were any number of English merchants who had as much money as this eccentric American. ( 244 ) MR. WOOKEY’S SOCIAL AMBITION 245 There was old Wookey, the vinegar king; he had a daughter and a handsome one too. It will be remembered that Mr. Alonzo Wookey was admitted to membership in the Victoria Club in conse¬ quence of divers loans to Lord Apohaqui and other titled members of that aristocratic, Piccadilly resort. The young noblemen who gave their “I. O. U.s” in exchange for Mr. Wookey’s checks on a Lombard Street Bank felt a hardly-concealed contempt for the vinegar king’s son, and said to themselves, “A fool and his money are soon parted.” They altogether failed to understand the purpose toward which their plebeian “friend” steadily moved. This purpose was to push himself and his sister into fashionable society and to get her, and to get him¬ self, married to nobility. Thus far Mr. Alonzo Wookey had failed to induce Lord Apohaqui to introduce him to any of his mother’s noble acquaintances. While the Bartons were in London, Lord Apohaqui was so atten¬ tive to Grace that Wookey gave up the project of using the Lord as a social lever and contented himself with the prospect of getting his money back as soon as Lord Apohaqui was safely married to the American heiress. When the Bartons suddenly left London, Wookey con¬ cluded the match was off and renewed his attentions to his debtor. One morning he called on the young nobleman with an unusually solemn face. “You seem a bit seedy, Wookey. Is anything the matter?” inquired Lord Apohaqui. “Yes, a great deal is the matter,” grumbled Wookey. “No fellow likes to be put off for all eternity. Those I. O. U.s of yours are getting mildewed. I must say, Apohaqui, that I expected you to do something before this. You said you would, you know.” “Hang it all! I thought you agreed to let things go until I—I—” Lord Apohaqui’s face flushed; since he had come to know the heiress by whose money he hoped to extricate himself from financial ruin it was sorely against his grain to speak of her in a mercenary way. 246 MR. WOOKEY’S SOCIAL AMBITION “Until you married the American heiress,” said Wookey, finishing the sentence for him. “Well, yes; I did consent to wait until that happy event, but since the lady’s cut and run it don’t look well for my money, now does it?” Lord Apohaqui could have murdered his undersized creditor; this reference to the one woman who now filled his heart and thoughts was gall and wormwood to his pride as well as to his better feelings. Yet what could he say? Had not he himself licensed freedom of speech on this topic? True, that had been before he knew Miss Barton, before any but mercenary desires had come into play, nevertheless he had licensed Wookey to speak as lie did, therefore, irritating as his words were, they had to be borne. For a moment, however, he made no reply; a frown contracted his brow, he sat silent, staring at the figures in the Persian rug on the floor. Wookey, who was eye¬ ing him, became convinced that his conjecture was cor¬ rect, that the match was off and his debtor at sea with no port in sight. In truth, the real object of Mr. Wookey’s visit was to discover the exact state of affairs regarding the American heiress; he had not come with any hope of getting his money; money was not what Mr. Wookey wanted. What he really did want, and what he now fancied there was a hope of obtaining, since Lord Apohaqui was in deeper water than ever before, was social success. When satisfied, from Lord Apohaqui’s words and manner and from the fact that the Bartons had left England, that the American alliance was not to come off, Mr. Wookey resolved to act with energy and forestall any new plans his debtor might have in view. His first move was to seek an interview w r ith Lady Apohaqui on Great Barrington Square. Mr. Wookey might not have inherited his father’s talent for making money, but he had inherited at least a portion of his father’s blunt ways in matters of business. His visit to Lady Apohaqui was strictly on business and he did not mean to beat about the b*tsh. “She may cut MR. WOOKEY’S SOCIAL AMBITION 247 up awful/’ he said to himself before entering the apart¬ ments of Great Barrington Square, “they say she’s blooming proud, but she cawnt eat me, and I’ll tell her what I’ve got to say or my name ain’t Alonzo Wookey.” And tell her he did with a directness that excited Lady Apohaqui’s astonishment. “It’s in reference to your son’s finances,” said Mr. Wookey, when Lady Apohaqui asked to what she was indebted for his call. “Your son owes me a goodish bit of money, and he don’t seem an inch nearer paying it now than he did when he first borrowed it.” “Why do you come to me about this matter?” said the Dowager, coldly. “Most ladies,” returned Wookey, eyeing her closely, “don’t like to see their only son sold out under the hammer; now do they, Lady Apohaqui? I put it to your ladyship. Do they?” “Whether they do or not,” replied the Dowager, haughtily, “is not to the point. I have no money to pay Lord Apohaqui’s debts. You may rest assured of that.” With this the mother of the young peer bent her head in dismissal with such an air of insolent pride that Mr. Wookey winced. “I beg your ladyship’s pardon,” he said, hastily. “Your ladyship don’t clearly understand. I do not ask you to pay your son’s debts in money!” “What do you mean?” “Just what I say, your ladyship, not in money.” “In what other way can debts be paid, sir?” was the curt answer. “If your ladyship will listen to reason we can settle his lordship’s debts satisfactorily to all parties.” “Proceed,” said Lady Apohaqui, while her son’s credi¬ tor paused as if to feel his ground. “It’s just this way,” proceeded Mr. Wookey, warming up to his subject. “Me and my sister Malvina were left pretty well fixed. Our Governor never had no opinion of giving boys more than girls, so it was share and share alike, and not a small share for each of us as may be 248 MR. WOO KEY’S SOCIAL AMBITION your ladyship may know through the papers. The papers reported it all when the Governor died.” “This does not concern me in the least,” interrupted Lady Apohaqui. “Begging your ladyship’s pardon,” continued Mr. Wookey, “I’m coming to the part that concerns your ladyship. Me and Malvina have got everything we want except one. What you’ve got, me and Malvina haven’t got, and what we’ve got, you and Lord Apoha¬ qui haven’t got. What I don’t see, my lady, is why we can’t trade around so we’ll all have everything we want?” This singular statement quite confused Lady Apo- haqui’s mind; she began to' fear her son’s creditor was not altogether sane. Mr. Wookey, after eyeing the lady to see the effect of his communication resumed: “To put it plainly, your ladyship, and not to beat about the bush, which is contrary to business and common sense, it is just this: you and your son have high society but you haven’t got money; me and Malvina have got all the money we want but we haven’t got high society. Turn about’s fair play. Lord Apohaqui agreed to pay me my money as soon as he married the American, but now that that’s off, where is the money to come from? That’s what his lordship can’t tell me. Now, my sister Malvina’s a finer young woman any day than that Ameri¬ can girl and has double, yes, more than double, her pile of money. Now what I say, my lady, is just this, why can’t your son and Malvina hit it off? That would make everything plain and smooth, a deal plainer and smoother than Lord Apohaqui’d ever get it by marryin’ that American heiress.” Lady Apohaqui’s first feeling was that she was insulted —grossly insulted, but her ladyship was not given to yielding to first impulses, and as Wookey progressed with his scheme she reflected that after all it might be worth investigating; at any rate there was no need to burn any bridge, no matter how poor a bridge it might appear. So in the end, Mr. Wookey was informed that MR. WOOKEY’S SOCIAL AMBITION 249 she would consider his proposition and communicate with him in the course of a few days. Soon after this interview, Lord Apohaqui received a note from his mother requesting him to. dine with her on Thursday evening “to meet a person who might prove financially valuable to him”. “What the deuce can she mean?” mused the Lord, who preferred dining at his club to dining at his mother’s, a fact of which Lady Apohaqui was well aware, hence her care to arouse her son’s curiosity and to assure against a declination of her invitation. The ruse was successful, and on Thurs¬ day at eight Lord Apohaqui found himself at his mother’s place on Great Barrington Square. In the drawing-room were Mr. Craven, a clergyman, Mrs. Broughton, the Rector’s sister, Lord and Lady Leland, his mother’s second cousins, poor as church mice, and Lady Defreese Critten. Lady Defreese Critten was the only one of his mother’s guests who had money, but she was notorious for her close-fistedness. What did Lady Apohaqui mean by getting together such people as these to help him out of his financial troubles? The parson and his sister helped men’s souls, not their pocket- books, while as for his mother’s cousins, the Lelands, they didn’t have, the two of them together, £500 a year. At the first opportunity Lord Apohaqui uttered some¬ thing of these sentiments to his mother. “Charles,” replied the Dowager, “you are too im¬ patient. I have asked these people merely to meet the person who' is in a position and who may be willing to help you. She will be here soon; she should be here now.” “So it is a woman who is to help me?” “Yes, a woman, young, good-looking, rich—and English. You know our class is willing to forgive a man for stooping to marry, providing the woman he stoops to get has money enough; but society despises a nobleman who condescends to marry a girl who is at once poor and socially his inferior.” “Mother, Miss Barton is not poor.” 250 MR. WOOKEY’S SOCIAL AMBITION “She is not rich enough to justify you in stooping, was the prompt reply, “while the young girl you will meet to-night is. Moreover, she is very good-looking. I strongly advise you to give yourself a chance to know her and see if you cannot like her enough to marry her.” “Who is she?” “Malvina Wookey.” “What! Alonzo’s sister? He is little better than a fool,” muttered Lord Apohaqui, frowningly. . “You won’t marry the brother; besides I did not find Mr. Wookey to be a fool. He is what Americans call ‘long-headed’. My opinion is that when he loaned you money he had it in his mind to bring you and his sister together. He is socially ambitious.” Lord Apohaqui agreed to “look at” the Wookey girl, but in his secret heart he felt that he could not bring himself to think seriously of her. He had not yet been able to banish the American girl from his thoughts. Miss Wookey was unlike her brother in person, be¬ ing rather stout, possessing a fresh, rosy color, a merry eye and joyous nature. Mr. Wookey kept his eye on his sister and the young nobleman and seeing them laughing and chatting freely together fancied his plans were progressing finely. “First thing you know, Vina,” he said triumphantly, as they drove away from Great Barrington Square, “you’ll be a real downright lady—a peeress of the realm.” “You get out!” laughed his sister. Nevertheless, Miss Malvina Wookey dreamed of Lord Apohaqui at night, and in her waking hours she built more than one castle in Spain. She and Alonzo were children of a man who had walked penniless into Lon¬ don, yet who had left them very, very rich; it was a triumph for the children of such a man to rest their feet under the mahogany table of the ancient Apohaqui fam¬ ily, and beyond this, Alonzo and his sister saw a long vista of mahogany tables belonging to other ancient families. The dinner at Lady Apohaqui’s was only an entering wedge which would result in their being in- MR. WOOKEY’S SOCIAL AMBITION 251 vited to the most exclusive houses in London, even if it did not result in a marriage between Lord Apohaqui and Malvina. The reflections of Lord Apohaqui after that dinner at his mother’s in Great Barrington Square were hardly as pleasant as were the reflections of the Wookeys; on the contrary the more he thought of Miss Wookey’s loud laugh and big red cheeks the more his heart yearned for Grace Barton; and at length he wrote her the letter saying he wished to go to Riva to ask an important question. This message, as the reader knows, was re¬ ceived just as the Bartons were starting for Siena. Grace’s answer, written on the lake steamer and mailed at Desenzano, awoke the young lord for the first time to the fact that there was not only the question whether he would marry Miss Barton; there was also the question, would Miss Barton marry him? Grace did not in so many words say that she would not marry him, it was clear, however, that her answer might bear that con¬ struction. Her letter was as follows: Riva in the Tyrol, August 20th. Lord Apohaqui:—Your letter reaches me just as we are leaving Riva for Italy. Of course, as much as we all should like to see you, we cannot expect you, now that we are going so far away; and, indeed, as far as answering important questions is concerned, I think I should ask you not to come even were we to remain in Riva. I am not good at answering questions,—at any rate I am sure that, as for the questions you hint at, my answers would not be worth coming to Riva to get. If you are fond enough of travel, of cathedrals, of monasteries and mountain scenery to induce you to come to Siena—whither mamma, Clara and I are going—we shall be glad to see you. But I pray you, do not trouble to come for the mere purpose of propounding questions. I write this hurriedly on the Lake Garda boat, and shall post it at Desenzano—in time I hope, to prevent your making a fruitless journey. Mamma and Clara 252 MR. WOOKEY’S SOCIAL AMBITION join me in kind regards to you and to Lady Apohaqui. Very sincerely, GRACE BARTON.” There had been a time when Miss Barton’s money had been to Lord Apohaqui her only attraction, but that time had passed, and as *the train carried him on to Italy the young Englishman was as deeply in love with Miss Barton as Romeo was with Juliet. He was on his way to Siena, and, in spite of Grace’s letter, had decided to ask the question he had intended asking at Riva. CHAPTER XXIV. COUNT VOLPl’s COUP D’ETAT. The second day after the Bartons’ arrival in Siena Louis Caroll ran over to Florence to secure a model for one of the figures of his great painting, the “Tide of Time”. Mrs. Barton and Clara were enjoying one of their “rests”, and Grace and Agnes decided to walk out to the city’s northern gate for a view of the Tuscan plain at sunset. The approach from the railway station just without Siena’s northern gate is up a steep and winding road. While Grace and Agnes were on the heights near the gate the train from Milan came in; ten minutes later the two girls recognized Count Volpi lean¬ ing back in one of the cabs that were coming up the steep road into the city. They remained only long enough to make sure it was the Count, then hurried back to the Albergo with their news. “Oh, if Louis hadn’t gone!” cried Clara, who had the feeling that Caroll could protect them from any evil. “I don’t see how Mr. Caroll could help me,” laughed Grace. “I can’t expect your particular possession to remain by my side and protect me from the Count.” “Louis, could order the Count to leave you alone.” “Thad would hardly do. Louis and the Count are friends. He must not insult him.” “But it is dreadful to have our trip spoiled in this way. Grace, can’t you make the man understand that you never, never, never will marry him?” “I think,” murmured Mrs. Barton, looking up from her novel, “if the Count is going to follow us about this way we had better go back to Alabama. If he follows us there, he’ll be sure to get into some hotel as waiter—they all do—and then they know how* to be¬ have. That Count in Talladega never went about try- ( 253 ) 254 COUNT VOLPI’S COUP D’ETAT ing to make young ladies marry him. He did his work like a man.” “Oh, mamma!” cried Clara, “we must not go home until we see Rome. Louis says Rome is wonderful and —and—Louis’ great picture is in Rome.” “Moreover,” said Grace, “Clara’s voice has to be culti¬ vated. No, mamma, the Count shall not drive us out of Italy. How do you reckon he learned that we came to Siena?” “Perhaps,” suggested Clara, “he saw Rhett and got our address from him.” “No,” returned Grace. “I cautioned Rhett not to give our address to any one. Perhaps—Clara, I wonder if that horrible Italian Count got hold of my letter to Rhett? It is singular Rhett does neither come nor write. I’ll telegraph him right away.” As the reader knows, Grace’s message was wired and duly received, much to the joy of the young man. After sending the telegram Grace declared her intention of going the next day to the old Benedictine Monastery about fifteen miles from Siena. Mrs. Barton and Clara decided not to take the journey; they were tired; more¬ over it would be well for them to remain in Siena to keep an eye on Volpi. Early next morning, Grace and Agnes set out in a carriage for the Monastery arranging to return before dark; by this course Grace hoped not only to see an ancient and interesting spot but also, for that one day at least, to escape Volpi’s unpleasant attentions. “If the Count calls, mamma,” warned Grace, “don’t tell him where I have gone.” “What shall I say?” asked Mrs. Barton. “Say I am sick. That won’t be untrue, mamma, I am sick unto death of him.” But poor Mrs. Barton was incapable of deceiving, and when Volpi called the following morning, an hour or two after Grace and Agnes had departed, he had little trouble in learning that the elder daughter was off on a jaunt to the Benedictine Monastery. COUNT VOLPI’S COUP D’ETAT 2l>5 “Oh, madam!” he cried, when at last he got the secret from Mrs. Barton, “it.ees most culpayable! So young a signorina, no chaperone! It ees most dangerous!” “Agnes is with her,” urged Mrs. Barton, “and every¬ body tells me there are no brigands in Italy now.” “It ees not dat de brigands harm de yoorig signorina, it ees dat de Societee eemagine harm. De noble Societee of dis country not permit de yoong signorina go out alone, no chaperone, no madre, no padre!” “Don’t worry about that, Count!” said Mrs. Barton, placidly. “Only real brigands with pistols can terrify Grace. She knows how to protect herself from impudent men.” “De bold vat you call villain man,” said Clara, imi¬ tating Volpi’s pronunciation, “had better not annoy Grace. She has her little gun, and the villain man might be sorry he ever saw her.” When the Count took leave of Mrs. Barton it was with supreme contempt for that lady. She was a fool, a pig, an idiot to let her young daughter take a fifteen mile ride up a mountain with only a young woman chaperone. Volpi told himself that Mrs. Barton de¬ served to lose her daughter; as to the daughter, she needed a master, and he resolved that he, Count Marto Volpi, would be that master and see to it that in future she behaved herself as became a lady! Under the stimu¬ lating influence of these reflections the Count’s brain conceived a bold coup d’etat—a Napoleonic stratagem —which would tumble the heiress into his power for the rest of her life. The young woman might possibly make a little outcry, try a little opposition to his plan, but what of that? Apart from her foolish coyness there was, of course, no doubt that she was willing to marry him. No American girl in her right senses could per¬ manently refuse a man of his personal attractions and noble name. He had heard much of the unruly spirit of American women—but should that deter him? Had not his cousin, Count Chianti, reduced his American wife to the docility of a kitten? 256 COUNT VOLPI’S COUP D’ETAT The road from Siena to the Benedictine Monastery goes down the south side of the mountain to Buon Convento; thence it turns to the northeast and winds up another mountain that rises like a precipitous cone out of the Tuscan plain. The main road after passing the village of Buon Convento leads south to San Quirico and unless the traveler is posted, he is apt to keep on this road and overlook the lesser highway that leads northeast up to the ancient monastery. Grace’s driver was, of course, familiar with both roads, consequently Volpi knew that there was no prospect of her going to San Quirico unless he, Volpi, could contrive to bring such a mistake about, and it was this very mistake which he meant should be made. He felt that if he could have five minutes’ private talk with Miss Barton’s driver before they started up the mountain to the monastery he could induce the Jehu to take the San Quirico road instead of the one leading to the monastery. How to get that five minutes’ interview was the question which for a moment puzzled the Count’s subtle Italian mind. The entire distance from Siena to Buon Convento is down so steep a grade that vehicles are obliged to make the descent at a snail’s pace; but even so, was it not likely that Miss Barton had already reached Buon Con¬ vento? Her carriage had started two hours ago; in two hours one can make even the descent from Siena; never¬ theless Volpi thought there was a chance for him to intercept the fair traveler. On reaching Buon Convento it is customary for pilgrims to stop at the wayside Tra- toria for refreshments, before commencing the steep ascent of the Monastery mountain. Might not half an hour’s delay be counted on at the village Tratoria? If so, and if there was any way by which he could make in half an hour the journey down the mountain which Miss Barton’s carriage had taken two hours to make there was a possibility of his seeing her before she left Buon Convento; that is, there was a possibility of inter¬ viewing the driver and laying the train for his coup d’etat! There was no way of making a horse accomplish that COUNT VOLPI’S COUP D’ETAT 257 steep descent in thirty minutes, but where flesh and blood dare not go, steel and rubber in the shape of the modern bicycle may safely venture. Count Volpi was a mem¬ ber of the Roman Wheel Club; the bicycle was then the fad in Italy and no large town was without its wheel club. Volpi lost few minutes in securing a bicycle and within less than a quarter of an hour after leaving Mrs. Barton he was speeding towards Siena’s southern gate. ! It was a long and splendid coast; the road was smooth, the grade steep. Volpi’s curly black hair streamed in the wind as he shot like a flash down the mountain slope. A horse or a buggy going at such a pace would have been dashed to pieces, but the bicycle whirls along safe as long as the machine does not break or the rider does not lose his presence of mind. In twenty-five minutes from the moment he shot through Siena’s gate the Count rolled in to Buon Convento’s one narrow, crooked street. A smile of triumph glittered in his beau¬ tiful dark eyes as he perceived the carriage in front of the village Tratoria. The Jehu was watering his horses, but at a signal from Volpi he lost no time in repairing to one of the dingy rooms of the inn. For five minutes the two men were engaged in earnest conversation; then Count Volpi with his usual elegant grace of manner, sauntered into the main room of the Tratoria just as Miss Barton and Agnes were rising from the table. “Ah, Dio mio! I have thought you nevaire to see again! Ees it possible I behold de lofely signorina Barton once more?” “Did you drop from the skies, Count?” asked Grace, both vexed and surprised. She surmised at once that the Count had trapped her mother into betraying her plan for visiting the Benedictine Monastery. “I not fall from de skies, what you call de heavens,” replied the Count with an adoring look. “No, I come from below into de heaven of de lofely signorina’s so¬ ciety,” elucidating his rather mixed metaphor by signifi¬ cant looks and gestures. “Ah!” he continued, “vat rapture! Vat happiness! I haf not hope so soon to 258 COUNT VOLPTS COUP D’ETAT see you. You disappear so sudden, de sun go out, night come. But, ecco! I see de signorina and de night ees ovaire.” There had been a time when this sort of stuff, accom¬ panied as it was by impassioned looks and actions, would have amused Grace; not so now. The Count’s heroics had become stale, flat and uncomfortable. “Pray, excuse us, Count,” said Grace curtly. “We have a long trip ahead of us.” Volpi placed his hand over his heart, made a profound bow and gave Grace a sad reproachful look as she passed out of the room. This was so much better than the girls expected that they felt elated at such an easy rid¬ dance of the Count. “I hope,” exclaimed Grace, as they drove away, “the poor Count is at last convinced that I am not anxious to become an Italian Countess. I wonder if he really did come to Siena on business?” “His sole business,” said Agnes, “is to see you. He means to follow you. That is my opinion.” “But you saw how easily he let us off?” “He is on a bicycle. He thought that that dash down the mountain to get one word with you would strike you as heroic. The Count has a theatrical turn of mind. He may intend to ride on to the Monastery.” “Even then he cannot annoy us—bicycles and car¬ riages do not go very well together, and when we reach the Monastery the reverend old Monks will suppress him.” The road continued to ascend, but the grade was not nearly as steep as Grace had been led to expect. It seemed, too, that they were going a great distance without seeing the Monastery. They questioned the driver; his answer was a shower of unintelligible Italian. “I fear he does not know the way,” said Grace, anxiously. “The padrone in Siena said it would take only three hours to make the trip.” “Yes, but we lost time in Buon Convento,” said Agnes. After gazing in every direction and seeing no signs of the Monastery Grace became seriously disturbed. “I COUNT VOLPI’S COUP D’ETAT 259 do not like the idea of being out on this lonely road at night, we had better turn back, Agnes.” “Perhaps it would be best,” said her companion. “The afternoon is already half over.” Orders were given to return to Siena, whereupon the Jehu stood up in his box and jabbered Italian so fast the girls could not understand a word of what he said, but from the ener¬ getic way in which he pointed ahead they concluded he meant to inform them that the monastery was not far off. “If that is so, we may as well go on,” said Grace. “Videte il monastprio? Do you see the monastery?” “Si, si! Yes, yes!” replied the Jehu, with a satisfied grin, “Monasterio,” pointing up the road. So the girls permitted him. to drive on for a while, but when fifteen minutes had elapsed and there was still no sign of the Benedictine Monastery Grace gave peremptory orders to return to Siena. The coachman was as voluble as before, but this time Grace was firm; she shook her head, pointed back towards Siena and made the driver understand that she did not wish to go another step forward. “Aloro— bene! All right,” he said when he saw that further re¬ monstrance was in vain. Then he leaped to the ground, went around behind the carriage, fumbled at the wheels and springs and straps; then, remounted his box and started back towards Siena. The road was very narrow and in making the short turn necessary to get the horses headed in the right direction it seemed as if one of the springs broke. At any rate, there was a sudden creaking and cracking sound, the next moment one of the wheels was wrenched off and the carriage came tumbling to the ground. No one was hurt, but the surprise gave a nervous shock to the two girls, who by this time, were extremely uneasy and anxious to get home as fast as possible. The Jehu with shrill cries rushed to the car¬ riage door; Grace and Agnes were both very pale, and vague suspicions added to their alarm—suspicions of the driver. Had he caused this curious collapse? If so, what was his motive? They looked up and down the road; not a soul in sight. The driver danced around 260 COUNT VOLPI’S COUP D’ETAT the ruins of his carriage, pulled at the wheels, the straps, the pins, all the while jabbering in the most excited manner; tearing his hair and wringing his hands as if overwhelmed with grief and dismay at the disaster. “I see nothing for us to do,” said Grace, “but to walk on. We must be more than twenty miles from Siena. Possibly we may be able to get a conveyance on the road.” They were still debating what course to pursue and looking disconsolately at the wreck of their carriage, when they saw in the distance a figure on a bicycle slowly ascending the slope. “I never thought,” said Grace, “that I could be glad to see the Count, but I am. He may be able to tell us where to get a conveyance.” As soon as he reached the forlorn group, Volpi leaped from his wheel with profuse bows and exclamations. “Dio mio! Vat haf happened? Vat haf hurt your car¬ riage? You haf say you go to de monastery. Vat for you on dis road?” “Is not this the road to the Monastery?” asked Grace. “Dio mio! No, signorina! Dis ees de road to San Quirico. Dis very spot is not more than one kilometer from San Quirico. Haf you not tell de driver to go to San Quirico?” “Certainly not. He knew we wanted to go to the Monastery.- The Albergo padrone in Siena told him.” “Ah, den he haf one grand meestake made! I vill gif him one talk. It ees vaire culpayable to make de grand meestake!” Turning to the driver, Volpi talked very fast and ap¬ parently very angrily; the Jehu danced about, gesticu¬ lated wildly, rolled his eyes and shrugged his shoulders. Grace and Agnes could only catch a word here and a word there; their knowledge of Italian was so limited that unless one spoke slowly they understood nothing; but the pantomine told them that the Count was violently scolding and the driver trying to exculpate himself. “He say he vaire sorry!” said Volpi, turning to Grace after ten minutes of pyrotechnical Italian conversation COUNT VOLPI’S COUP D’ETAT 261 with the coachman. “He ees vaire sorry he meestake de signorina’s direction. I haf told him he shall be prosecute, put in prison. He ees vaire culpayable, vaire.” “Count, can we get a vehicle anywhere about here?” asked Grace. “Dio mio! I not know. We walk on to San Quirico. Maybe one carriage ees dere but I fear me vaire mooch. San Quirico ees one town vaire small. In Italy de town small haf no carriage.” “No matter if we find only a market cart,” said Grace, “it will be better than nothing. Mamma will be miser¬ able if we don’t get back to-night!” They walked on to the Albergo in San Quirico, where Volpi ordered a room and refreshments. The two girls accepted the refreshments, but declined the room. “If there is no cab to be had,” said Grace, “perhaps we may hire horses. Be so good, Count, as to see if horses or donkeys or something can be had to take us home to¬ night!” Volpi withdrew and for ten or fifteen minutes the girls heard sounds of animated voices in the inn’s kitchen. Then the Count came to them with an air of deep regret, and said that there was not a horse or donkey in San Quirico. “We can ride the horses that brought our carriage,” said Grace. “Agnes and I will ride one horse. A guide can ride the other. Please see about it, Count. Mamma will be so wretched until she sees us.” The Count again went out and again the girls heard loud and rapid- talking in the kitchen; and then again the Count returned more sorrowful than before; this time there were tears in his eyes and voice as he cried, “Dad meeserable man haf gone! He haf taken de houses. No one can tell where he go to find de bladk- smit de carriage to mend.” The vague suspicions that had crept into Grace’s mind took more definite shape; was Volpi in league with the driver? If so, what could be his motive? Not robbery —surely, he must know that she had neither money nor jewels with her. Could he intend personal violence? 262 COUNT VOLPI’S COUP D’ETAT Whatever his motive, all show of resentment, of suspicion must be concealed. “Well, Count,” said Grace, with a smile, “if we cannot go we must stay. We will take a room and make ourselves comfortable.” Volpi was radiant; no sooner had Agnes gone in search for a room than he declared in his most melliflu¬ ous manner that “eel luck of de carriage was de good luck to him; it haf bring him de heavenly society of de lofely signorina.” In pursuit of her plan of wariness and apparent gratitude for his attentions in their di¬ lemma, Grace listened politely to Volpi’s rapturous flow of words, all of which so encouraged him that he went beyond the limit he had originally laid down and fol¬ lowed up his declaration of eternal love by falling on his knees and imploring her hand in marriage. “Rise, Count,” said Grace, with dignity. “This is no time or place to talk of marriage. Besides, I shall never marry without consulting my mother.” “De signora mamma,” said Volpi, complacently, ris¬ ing and brushing the dust from his knees with his white handkerchief, “de signora mamma weel not refuse her consent when she know de signorina daughter is fatally compromised.” “Compromised? How is that?” asked Grace. “You haf stay one night alone wid me at dis little Albergo. Dat fatally compromise de yoong signorina.” “Compromised? That is dreadful, Count. Do you mean to say that you would be willing to marry a woman so horribly compromised?” “My lofe is so big, so volcanic—I lay it wid my life and title and everyting at your feet!” “Such generosity,” replied Grace, gravely, “deserves its reward, but explain, Count, what you mean by com¬ promise. What is its effect?” “It ees vaire deesastrous tor de signorina to be com¬ promised. In Italia it vat you call ruin de signorina except she repair de compromise by one marriage wid de signore she haf compromised wid. Dat ees de social law in Italia.” COUNT VOLPI’S COUP D’ETAT 263 “I see, Count, it is a very serious matter. You must explain all this to mamma. Meanwhile I am tired and beg you to excuse me. Agnes doubtless had my room ready by now. If anything occurs I hope you will be good enough to have them call me.” “Yees, I will, signorina, I vill you wid my life defend, vat you call guard. Addio. Buona notte!” “She ees mine!” exclaimed the Count as soon as Grace retired. “I speak to< de signora mamma in de morning. She moost gif her to me to heal de com¬ promise! Dio mio! Ees it not grand? I pay my debts, I haf a goot income—always money to spend—eet ees grand!” When Grace entered her room she found Agnes ac¬ companied by a stout, honest-faced peasant girl, daughter of a farmer living a mile away in the campagna. The father owned a donkey. Agnes brought the girl to Grace with the idea of having her ride her father’s donkey to Siena and deliver a note to Mrs. Barton. “Would you like to earn fifty lire?” asked Grace, in a whisper. The girl’s eyes sparkled; of course, she would like to earn fifty lire. That was more than she ordinarily earned in half a year. “Very well,” said Grace. “Ride with this note at once to Siena, to the Albergo di Buona Sera—my mother and sister are there. They will hire a carriage and return with you to San Quirico. Be diligent and faithful and you shall have a hundred lire instead of fifty!” It was no little trouble to get all this into the girl’s head, but her eyes showed quickness, and her eagerness for the money sharpened her wits; moreover, Grace and Agnes reinforced their smattering of Italian by excellent pantomime so that at length the girl understood and softly set forth on her mission. Tucked away securely in the bosom of her cottage gown was the following note, addressed to Mrs. Barton: “Albergo, San Quirico, Thursday 4 P. M. Dearest MotherAgnes and I are detained at this 264 COUNT VOL PI’S COUP D’ETAT place by our carriage breaking down. You and Clara must get a man-servant from the Albergo and come to us at once. We are in no danger, but there is no way to get back to Siena until you bring a carriage, so come at once. The bearer will show you the way. Lovingly, GRACE. Agnes threw herself on the bed and fell fast asleep. Grace was still filled with vague fears and could not sleep. Her distrust of the Count was now absolute. She no longer doubted that the whole carriage catas¬ trophe was his work. What a fool he was to suppose that any fear of Italian “compromise” would drive her or her mother into giving a favorable answer to his suit! Was it possible the Count meditated other co¬ ercive measures? Grace locked her door, and, sitting down by the window, looked out over the hills toward Radicafine perched high on its mountairf top. The slow hours went by, night settled upon that quiet Italian village, but Grace dared not close her eyes. The slight¬ est noise startled her. True, she had a small pistol to use in the event of a terrible emergency, but a woman like Grace Barton will endure much before using a deadly weapon. A clock in the big kitchen tolled the hours; Grace wearily counted them—nine—ten—eleven—mid¬ night, then one—two—. She counted no further. Her head laid itself down to rest on the window sill; the next she knew she was roused by a clatter of wheels on the stony street and by thundering knocks on the door! CHAPTER XXV. AT MIDNIGHT IN SAN QUIRICO. It was seven o’clock in the evening when the train from Desenzano entered the Siena station. Rhett had not seen much of Mrs. Packer and Miss Lobelia on the journey; once at Bologna, and again at Florence, while the train waited, he had left his compartment to take a peep into the first-class coach and ask Mrs. Packer if he could be of service. Mrs. Packer graciously informed him that they were getting along nicely and felt satisfied in merely knowing they had male protectors on the train. When they arrived at Siena, Rhett looked after their luggage and helped both ladies into the car¬ riage which conveyed them to the Albergo. He and Gassaway took the cheaper method of walking. Both young men were in buoyant spirits. They called on the Barton ladies as soon as they had enjoyed the luxury of a bath and a change of linen. Clara joyously ran down to see them. If there was any young woman to whom at that time this world ap¬ peared a paradise that young woman was Miss Clara Barton. She was in the very first raptures of a first love, all the earth seemed lovely!—the heavens divine!—the future roseate! “Why were you so slow in coming to us?” she questioned. “We thought you would come right on, but, instead of you, that tiresome Count Volpi followed us. And Grace made us run from Riva on purpose to escape him! What on earth were you doing so long in Riva, Mr. Rhett?” “We started almost the very moment we learned where you were. Why did you not leave word at the Albergo?” “We were dodging the Count. We told no one, not even the little Countess Chianti. But Grace did leave a letter for you giving our address.” ( 265 ) 266 AT MIDNIGHT IN SAN QUIRICO “Her letter didn’t come,” said Gassaway. “And Rhett became as gloomy as a thunder-cloud. He fancied you were running away from us.” “Fancied we were running away from you?” exclaimed Clara. “How absurd!” “The letter never reached me,” said Rhett. “Then I believe that tricky Count managed to get it! When he came to Siena, Grace suspected he had been up to some sort of mischief and telegraphed you to come.” “Is the Count in Siena?” asked Gassaway. “Yes. He called this morning. Luckily, Grace was gone.” “Gone?” gasped Rhett. “Only for to-day. She and Agnes went to explore an old Benedictine Monastery. They’ll be back by eight o’clock. Grace went mainly to keep out of Count Volpi’s way.” “Zounds!” exclaimed Gassaway. “It’s come to a pretty pass when an American lady is run from place to place by a garlicky Italian Count. It won’t do; it’s enough to make a stuffed bird laugh to see the impu¬ dence of these foreigners. We must teach this Italian how to behave toward American girls.” Rhett and Gassaway called a cab and drove through Siena’s southern gate, down the mountain, to meet Grace Barton. They met peasants coming up from the cam- pagna on foot, on donkeys and in carts, but there was no carriage, no sign of Grace and Agnes. Night fell, still Rhett and Gassaway drove on. Occasionally they heard the jingling of bells and the creaking of wheels, but on stopping their cab and peering through the darkness they saw only some poor woman driving an ass loaded with fagots or a peasant in his cart; then they hurried on, Rhett’s anxiety constantly increasing. At last they reached Buon Convento, where they stopped to make inquiries. Rhett had a colloquial knowledge of Italian, and was not long in learning from the village padrone that the two Inglese had not gone to the Monastery at AT MIDNIGHT IN SAN QUIRICO 267 all, that they had taken the road to San Quirico. Was he certain of this? “Dio mio!” exclaimed the padrone, with many gestures and shrugs of the shoulders, “as certain as that the Blessed Virgin can save sinners!” There were not so many Inglese about but that he could keep an eye on those who passed his way., He had taken particular notice of the signorinas because one of them was so extraordinarily beautiful, and because she was as good and as amiable as she was beautiful. She had been very friendly to his daughter; had asked her questions and given her a present for her trousseau. The two signorinas had eaten lunch and then driven off on the San Quirico road. “Has their carriage returned this way?” “No, signor.” “Were the signorine Inglese alone?” “Si, signor, quite alone except for the driver.” “Has any one been here to inquire about them?” “No, signor, but while the two signorine Inglese were here a fine, handsome signor came, an Italian who knew the language of the Inglese. He talked much with the beautiful signorina.” “By the eternal, the Count!” cried Gassaway. “It looks that way,” said Rhett, frowning darkly, and then resuming his examination of the padrone. “Did this Italian signor go away with the two signorine Ing¬ lese?” “No, signor. The Italian signor was on a velocipede.” “In which direction did he go after leaving Buon Convento?” “To the South toward San Quirico.” “Ah, in the same direction the signorine were driven?” “Si, si, signor, but not with the signorine. The signor Italino started some hours later than the signorine.” The two young men pushed on. “I feel,” said Rhett, “as if I could twist that Count’s neck. I could do it as easily as I could stamp on a snake!” “Take care, my Hear boy,” said Gassaway, cheerfully, “take care and steer clear of Italian law. I shouldn’t 2C8 AT MIDNIGHT IN SAN QUIRICO like to see you landed in one of those dreadful Island prisons. Besides, there’s no need to be uneasy; Miss Grace is a girl in a thousand! She’ll know how to deal with that little dancing aristocrat. It’s my opinion Miss Grace is a match for a full dozen Italian Counts with a duke or two thrown into the bargain.” When they drove into San Quirico a few minutes after midnight their horse was jaded and worn and the driver declared he could go no further, even though offered all the money in America; for the Inglese he would do anything in reason, but to go further that night was impossible; his horse was broken' down. “If they are not here,” said Rhett, to his friend, “we will pusli on, cab or no cab. We cannot remain quiet.” “I’ll stand by you, my boy,” cried Gassaway, cheer¬ fully. “I’ll keep up with you to the end—although I have that confidence in Miss Grace that my mind is quite at ease about her—quite!” During this colloquy the Jehu pounded on the Albergo door; after a while a head appeared in the second story window and a voice called out through the darkness: “The devil take you and your noise! What do you mean by waking honest Christians at this hour of the night?” “We who stand outside your door are as good Chris¬ tians as any who ever stood within it,” replied the Jehu, hotly. “Make haste, mutton-head, and let us in. Here are two Inglese from Siena.” Rhett jumped from the cab. “Are two English ladies here?” he asked. “Diavolo, yes! Two signorine Inglese are here in bed as all good Christians should be,” said the padrone ; his irritation was much modified by the Jehu’s announce¬ ment that his “fares” were Inglese. Italian hotel doors are always open to Inglese—by which is meant Ameri¬ cans as well as English. Both nations are thought to be the geese which lay golden eggs for Continental inn-* keepers. They prefer to pluck the geese at reasonable hours, but they are willing to pluck them at one o’clock AT MIDNIGHT IN SAN QUIRICO 269 in the morning rather than lose a chance to pluck them at all. Unfastening the chain and drawing the bolt of the solid oak door, the padrone of the San Quirico Albergo conducted Rhett and Gassaway into the big room that served as kitchen, dining-room and lobby of the village inn. There, in reply to Rhett’s eager ques¬ tions, the padrone told how an accident had occurred to the signorine’s carriage, how the signorine had come to the Albergo on foot, escorted by his excellency, Count Marto Volpi, and how they were all now comfortably sleeping in their apartments. “I don’t trust this fellow,” said Rhett to Gassaway. “I shall not feel satisfied until I have seen Grace with my own eyes and know that she is safe and well. Padrone, you must take us to the signorine’s apart¬ ments.” “Come volete—as you like!” said the padrone, shrug¬ ging his shoulders and picking up his candle. The Inglesi were a strange people. If it was their custom to arouse young ladies in the middle of the night it was none of his business; they could do as they pleased; he conducted Rhett and Gassaway to the room in which the two girls were resting. “Who is there?” cried Grace starting from the sleep into which she had sunk, fully dressed, her head on the window sill. “It is I, Rhett Calhoun, with Green Gassaway. Are you safe? We must see for ourselves.” “Is it really you?” returned Grace. “Speak again that I may know your voice.” “Zounds! Miss Grace!” cried Gassaway, jovially, “don’t hurt our feelings by mistaking us for these danc¬ ing Italian dagos. Let us get a peep at your face to be certain you’re really safe and alive; then we’ll lie down here and sleep before your door and defy a regiment of brigands to get at you!” The door was unlocked and partly opened. “I can’t let you in,” said Grace, “Agnes is in bed, but you are welcome, oh! you can’t imagine how welcome you are! 270 AT MIDNIGHT IN SAN QUIRICO We felt out of the world up here in this lonely place, and mamma—I hope she is not miserable about us?”. The two young men were unable to satisfy her mind on this point, but they encouraged her to remember that it was not long before day and that they would re¬ turn to Siena as early in the morning as possible. Toward day, there was another hubbub in the narrow street in front of the Albergo, and springing to her feet and looking out of the window, Grace cried: “Is that you, mamma?” “Yes. And Louis and I are here. What has hap¬ pened? Are you all right?” This voice was Clara’s. Grace flew down stairs and was in her mother’s arms the moment the door was opened. “Dear, dear mamma!” she murmured. “I am so sorry you had so much worry. I’ll never leave you again, never, never!” “You may well say that,” laughed Clara. “Mamma is determined to start for Alabama to-morrow. She won’t stay in a country where you are always getting shut up in jails and places.” “But I am not shut up, mamma. The carriage broke down. You know, mamma, a carnage might break down in Alabama as well as in Italy.” “But they don’t—not that way,” returned Mrs. Bar¬ ton. “I can’t stand it any longer, Grace. It’s breaking me down worse than the carriage.” Notwithstanding Mrs. Barton’s placidity, her face showed that fatigue and anxiety had told upon her. Grace tenderly led her mother up stairs, where she made her lie down and rest during what remained of the night. It was high noon the next day before the little party assembled at breakfast in the Albergo’s kitchen. Louis Caroll was so bold in his love-making that he claimed the seat next to Clara’s, and was caught by Mr. Gassa- way’s eagle eye in the very act of surreptitiously pressing her hand under the table. Rhett and Grace sat side by side, but nothing so audacious could be charged against them. The padrone’s wife had cooked an enormous omelet and a pot of muddy liquid which she called coffee. AT MIDNIGHT IN SAN QUIRICO 271 “I can’t drink it,” moaned Mrs. Barton pathetically, as she eyed the suspicious mixture, “and after all I’ve undergone I know I’ll have a dreadful headache if I miss my cup of coffee.” “You shall not miss it, madam,” cried Mr. Gassaway, jumping up. “Of course, nobody in this garlicky country knows how to make coffee, but I know. The author of the G. A. N. must know everything. Just wait a mo¬ ment, ladies. I’ll brew you the best cup of coffee you ever tasted.” Taking the pot to the window, Mr. Gassaway poured its contents out into the street; then returned to the amazed padrone’s wife and asked for an egg and a supply of coffee. Then he walked over to the huge chimney under whose mantel in rural Italy, all culinary operations are performed, and began brewing the coffee which was to prevent Mrs. Barton’s headache. The coffee was not the best Java or Mocha and no doubt was well mixed with chicory; nevertheless Mr. Gassa- way’s efforts were pronounced successful. Mrs. Barton took two cups and said it tasted quite like Alabama coffee. Mr. Gassaway was as pleased as if she had com¬ plimented a chapter of the G. A. N. “I say, Miss Grace, he cried, as he attacked the omelet, “you don’t seem to miss your faithful friend, the Count? Didn’t^you ex¬ pect him to breakfast with you this morning?” “What has become of him?” “Ah, that’s my secret,” cried Gassaway, shoveling into his mouth another section of omelet. “I had an inter¬ view with the Count early this morning. He had. a bedraggled look; his feathers drooped. I struck him square between the eyes by asking if he hadn t put that Jehu up to wrecking Miss Barton’s carriage! By the Eternal! You ought to have seen his Countship shake. He jabbered so fast I couldn’t understand a word he said; then he mounted his bicycle and scudded away. The last I saw of him he was fairly flying along on the road to Siena.” At this moment a note was handed to Grace by the 272 AT MIDNIGHT IN SAN QUIRICO . padrone. “It is from the Count,” she said smiling. “He writes better English than he speaks.” “Zounds!” exclaimed Gassaway. “Has the Count had the cheek to write to you, Miss Grace, when he is the very fellow who got you into all this trouble ?” “What does the Count say, Grace,” asked Clara. Grace read Volpi’s letter aloud: “Adorable Signorina:—Your friends haf arrive so I not longer remain. I haf you always proteck wid my life; your honor I am now ready to proteck wid my sword. I haf de deelight to go seek de vaire culpayable coachman. I prosecute him to de jail. When I return to Siena I haf de honor to see your amiable mamma and deemand her of de hand of her lovely daughter.” “Do you call that an improvement on the Count’s talking English?” asked Gassaway grinning. “A very decided improvement,” answered Grace. “You see the word ‘lovely’ is spelled correctly. The Count always pronounces it as if it were spelled ‘lofely’.” “What does he mean by defending your honor?” asked Rhett, frowning. “Who dares assail your honor?” Grace had a suspicion as to what the Count meant, but at that moment she did not care to give informa¬ tion concerning the “compromise” scheme. “Don’t you think,” she replied carelessly, “that this is merely a piece of the Count’s grandiloquence?” “May I read his note?” said Rhett, still frowning. “Certainly. His chirography is very neat,” replied Grace, pushing the note across the table. The young man read it carefully, the frown on his brow deepening as he read. “No,” he said slowly, putting his finger on the line about “defending her honor with his sword,” this is not mere idle grandiloquence. An idea is at.the bottom of this boast. I would like to twist it out of his insolent head!” ^ “That would be hardly worth the while,” said Grace. “I don’t think the Count has a single idea worth that much trouble.” AT MIDNIGHT IN SAN QUIRICO 273 After the several excitements of the night they were so late in arising—and they lingered so long over Mr. Gassaway’s coffee—that it was almost noon before they set forth for Siena. CHAPTER XXVI. LORD APOHAQUI PROPOSES. It was ten o’clock Tuesday night when Mrs.. Barton received Grace’s note and set out for San Quirico; and when Lord Apohaqui reached Siena on the afternoon train Wednesday none of the party had returned.. The padrone of the Siena Albergo was voluble and obliging, but his intellect was poor; moreover, he possessed little information. One of the signorine Inglese had started with her maid early Tuesday morning in a carriage for the Benedictine Monastery. A message had come from her late Tuesday night and her mother and sister and a signor Americano, the fiance of one of the signorine Barton, had at once ordered a carriage and started for San Quirico, a village twenty-five miles to the south on the high road to Rome. The padrone’s remark about the signorina’s fiance gave Lord Apohaqui a start—which one of the sisters had gone to San Quirico? And which one had remained to greet her fiance? Who was the fiance? And how did the padrone know this gentleman to be Miss Bar¬ ton’s fiance? These questions the padrone could not satisfactorily answer. He shrugged his shoulders and rolled his eyes —love was not a thing to need words to tell its story; the American signor had been in Siena before his de¬ parture for Florence; the padrone had seen the signor and signorina together—was not that sufficient? It cer¬ tainly was sufficient to make Lord Apohaqui uncom¬ fortable and unhappy, but he did not despair. The padrone might be mistaken; even were he not mistaken, Miss Clara Barton might be the signorina referred to. At any rate, he would not falter in putting into execu¬ tion the purpose that had brought him from England. (2?4) * % t LORD APOHAQUI PROPOSES 275 He asked the padrone when the Americans would re¬ turn, but to this question there was no satisfactory answer; that they would return some time the padrone was certain because they had left their luggage in his Albergo. The whole state of affairs struck Lord Apohaqui as singular; he could not imagine why the Bartons should suddenly leave Siena in the middle of the night to go to a village twenty-five miles away; nor could he imag¬ ine why Miss Barton had landed in San Quirico when she had set out in exactly the opposite direction. In his perplexity the young nobleman continued to ply the padrone with questions, and at length the wearied Italian besought himself of the Packers. “There were other signore Inglese in the Albergo; they could inform his excellency of all things, they were friends of the signora Barton.” “Who are the other Signore Inglese?” asked the lord. When told that they were the Packers he sent his card up and presently found himself in the Chicago ladies’ private parlors where, as soon as greet¬ ings and exclamations of surprise at meeting in Siena were over, he asked questions about the Bartons. “Do I know anything about the Bartons?” said Mrs. Packer, secretly delighted at the opportunity to ventilate her opinion of that very reprehensible family. “Well, I can’t say I know much, my lord. They ain’t the sort of people to go in the high-up society in Chicago, and Lobelia and me don’t have much to do with people who ain’t in high-up society. Of course we don’t quarrel or nothin’ like that. We are polite when we meet but that’s about all.” “Thank you, madam,” said Lord Apohaqui, with difficulty subduing his impatience. “I wish to know if you could tell me the cause of Mrs. Barton’s setting out in the night to meet her daughter who had left in the morning?” “Goodness gracious!” cried Mrs. Packer, lifting her hands in surprise. “You don’t tell me that Barton girl has gone and got herself into another scrape? But 27G LORD APOHAQUI PROPOSES nothing she can do would astonish me. Only yesterday my maid was saying that the oldest Miss Barton is mighty thick with the Eyetalian Count. I guess that girl’s up to an elopement and her mother has gone to head off the marriage!” At this stage of the interview, Miss Lobelia came in and Mrs. Packer hastened to inform her daughter that the Barton girl had run off with the “Eyetalian” Count and that Mrs. Barton and Miss Clara Barton had rushed off in the middle of the night to catch the elopers. “Oh, that’s stale, ma,” said Miss Lobelia. “My maid heard that last night. The Count and Miss Barton disappeared almost at the same minute, but her stupid mother never suspected what was going on until near midnight; then she hired a carriage and started after them. The Count had it all arranged at Riva. Her mother run Miss Bar¬ ton off from Riva to get her away from the Count, but the girl sent him a telegram to meet her here.” “I don’t blame the girl half as much as I do her fool¬ ish mother,” said Mrs. Packer, complacently. “She sits day in and day out with a novel in her hands and lets her girls run around wild, no chaperone nor nothing. I never let Lobelia run around like that. I believe in English ways, my lord. I always like a chaperone to be about.” Lord Apohaqui, much puzzled by this confused ac¬ count of the Bartons, was a prey to dismal reflections as he left the Albergo and strolled toward the city’s southern gate. Was it possible he had so mistaken this girl’s character? Was it possible she could be so infatu¬ ated with this impecunious Italian Count? Disconcerted, discomforted, desolate, he walked along, hating the sight of men and women. He passed through the Roman gate and along the road. She had passed this same way only a few hours ago. Would she ever come that way again? Had she really ruined her life and blighted his by a rash, a fatal step? When wearied with walk¬ ing Lord Apohaqui stretched himself on a grassy bank by the wayside and gave himself up to melancholy mus- LORD APOHAQUI PROPOSES 277 ings. The sound of voices made him spring to his feet —Miss Barton and Rhett Calhoun were almost upon him. . “Lord Apohaqui,” exclaimed Grace, going up and greeting the young Englishman cordially, “this is, in¬ deed, a surprise! When did you arrive? We thought you were in England, and lo ! a turn in the road and we see you calmly reclining on a bank of daisies in Italy.” Rhett also gave the Englishman a courteous greet¬ ing. Although secretly hating each other, the two young men were outwardly friendly, so much has civilization accomplished. The civilized man is ashamed of his jealousy and seeks to hide it no matter how its fangs gnaw his heart. Grace explained that her mother and sister were coming in the carriage; and that she and Mr. Calhoun had left it a mile or so back to lighten the poor horses’ pull up the mountain. “And the Count— where is he?” asked the lord. “The Count?” queried Grace. “Yes, I was told that you and Count Volpi were married.” “Really?”. “I do not jest on such topics,” replied the Englishman, gravely. “Of course not—no gentleman would. But it seems too ridiculous. Who spread such a report about me?” “Your countrywomen, Mrs. and Miss Packer.” “Were mamma here,” laughed Grace, “she would re¬ sent the idea of the Packers being countrywomen of ours. Chicago is as far from Alabama as London is from Rome, although, I dare say there are plenty of very nice people in the Windy City. I trust, my lord,” —this was added seriously—-“I trust you know me too well to believe so foolish a story, no matter who told it.” “No, I do not think I really did believe it, though it annoyed me to hear it.” “I think,” said Rhett, a tone of anger in his voice, “that those Packer women are malicious. I hope, Miss Grace, you will be able to keep clear of them during the balance of your stay in Europe.” 278 LORD APOHAQUI PROPOSES “I won’t say they are malicious,” said Grace, “but they are a—a little peculiar. Mamma set them against us when we were on the Etruria. Mamma is so impru¬ dent when talking about the South that she often offends northern ladies.” Grace looked back every minute or two to see if the carriage was in sight. Feeling a little uneasy lest some accident might have happened, she asked Rhett to go back and see what had become of the party. She and Lord Apohaqui would wait for them there at the bend in the road. Rhqtt’s long, swinging stride quickly carried him out of sight down the mountain. No sooner was he gone than Miss Barton was sorry she had sent him. Something in the young lord’s eyes told her she had been imprudent and would regret it. She was seated on the stone parapet overlooking the picturesque moun¬ tain slope and valley, but her companion had no eyes for scenery. Feeling that she must make some effort to avert what she feared was impending, the girl talked on rapidly; she plainly saw, however, that Lord Apo¬ haqui was not listening. His own feelings mastered him at the moment and he heard not a word Grace uttered. “You know why I have come to Italy,” he finally said in a rather stern voice. Grace knew the crisis was upon her—there was no escape; she must nerve herself for the ordeal. If there is one thing more painful than another to a girl of true and delicate feeling it is to have a man pour out his passion to her when she is averse to it. The first weapon the woman seizes under such circumstances is a subter¬ fuge. She tries to find refuge in a pretended ignorance of what is meant—it is so terrible to be obliged to re¬ pulse a man’s soul, his nobler being. It was true that Grace, for some time after their acquaintance began, had not given Lord Apohaqui credit for any genuine feeling; she had good reason to believe that he was influenced solely by mercenary motives; but of late this view had weakened and she had come to suspect that the young lord’s interest in her was both deep and sin- LORD APOHAQUI PROPOSES 279 cere. The more this belief gained upon her the more difficult it was to refuse what he asked for. She could not boldly fly from him, but she might manage to let him see that his suit was hopeless without saying so in words. With this idea Grace lightly replied to his eager, impassioned words: “Of course, I know why you came to Italy,” she said, “at any rate I think I can guess. It is not difficult to guess why one visits this beautiful land of blue skies and ruins and romances.” “Miss Barton,” interrupted the lord, “do not meet earnestness with levity. It is unworthy of you.” “I beg your pardon,” she said, contritely. “I will not.” “You know all this,” with a waive of his hand toward the lovely panorama stretched out beneath them, “all this is nothing—nothing to me! You know—you can¬ not but know that you are the world to me. I have come to Italy because I am miserable away from you. I have come to ask you to give yourself to me, to tell you that if you will accept me as your husband my life’s object shall be to make your happiness perfect-” “I am sorry, I am grieved by what you say. My letter was intended to save you this—this disappointment. You received it?” “Yes, I received it; I understood its purpose, but you have taken such possession of me that I could not yield without a further effort. Oh, if you only knew how I love you!” “I beg you to cease—it is useless.” “I never,” he continued, white, agitated and not seem¬ ing to hear her, “I never thought I could love a mortal being as I do you. I have known many women, but you alone seem to me altogether lovely.” “I beg you to say no more. When I answered your letter I hoped to save you and to save myself the pain of this interview.” “You—you hate me, then?” he asked, something of anguish in his eyes and voice. “Hate? No indeed, I do not hate you; but there is a wide, wide space between hate and love.” 280 LORD APOHAQUI PROPOSES “What is it, then? Indifference? If that is all I shall not cease to hope. Indifference may be overcome. I will not give up. To abandon you is almost to abandon life itself. All will be lost—” “No, not all, not your life, only your time and—and expectations,” said Grace. The next instant she was ready to bite her tongue for the unkind taunt. An eager, questioning, reproachful look was in the eyes Lord Apohaqui fixed upon her. “What does that mean?” he asked with dry lips. “Do —do you doubt the honesty, the sincerity of my love?” “I—have doubted it,” she admitted, reluctantly. “Then you despise me. A nature like yours must despise deceit, trickery, false pretenses. Is it so? Do you despise me for a—a—” He hesitated, unwilling to use the odious term “fortune-hunter.” “My lord,” said Grace, gravely, “shall I be perfectly frank with you, even though frankness be displeasing?” “Though it cuts to the heart, have no concealments. I, too, despise deception. Proceed.” “When first we knew each other, and for some time thereafter,” she said in a low tone, “I had reason to believe your attentions to—to our family were entirely of a business character.” The young lord winced at the word and turned a shade paler. “Go on,” he said, biting his lips. “The agent of the Cunard Line is a native of our State. He is an old friend of my father’s. He wrote to mamma of—of—certain inquiries you made. For a while this letter was lost on its way, but it came to us at last.” “Ah—no wonder you despise me! No wonder you hate me! Wretch that I was!” He bowed his head and for a moment seemed overcome by the bitterness of his feelings. The action, the attitude appealed to the girl’s heart and evoked her strongest sympathy. What¬ ever she had thought she was convinced that his present emotions were sincere. “No,” she said, gently, “I neither despise nor hate LORD APOHAQUI PROPOSES 281 you, Lord Apohaqui. We are creatures of our environ¬ ments. Your environments have been so different from mine. The class to which you belong thinks it right to seek money in marriage. The public sentiment of the people with whom I was reared condemns money mar¬ riages. With us love alone makes marriage sacred. It is different with you. Your kings and queens, and princes and noblemen ‘arrange’ marriages where rank and wealth agree. Nor do I blame you for assuming that every American woman with wealth is ready and anxious to trade her money for a title. Too many of my countrywomen show this anxiety, but with me it does not exist. I am strongly imbued with democratic principles. I want no legal title to give me superiority over others. A woman with my opinions on these matters would be out of place among your people. This _did no other reason exist—would be sufficient to forbid a marriage between us.” , Lord Apohaqui lifted his head proudly; *his face was white and showed the violence of the emotions his soul experienced. Never had he appeared to better advantage in the American girl’s eyes. “You are right,” he said. “You and I are the out¬ growth of different civilizations. Yours is the truer, the nobler, because the more just. I admit it, although it brings to me the bitterest disappointment a man can feel. It is true that love, and only love, can make mar¬ riage sacred. I am the victim of my station. When family estates are encumbered, when money is wanted to rebuild ruined castles, the heir of a moneyless noble¬ man is expected to marry money. The opinion of his class demands this of him. It is noblesse oblige to main¬ tain the position of his family. My father was a spend¬ thrift. From my earliest boyhood I was taught that it was my duty to make a wealthy matrimonial alliance. “With us, a youth would have been taught that it was his duty to rebuild the family fortune by labor, with us, labor is honorable; with your class it is dis¬ honorable. This is the fundamental difference between us.” 282 LORD APOHAQUI PROPOSES “Labor? Ah, yes, but how? For generations noble¬ men have lived without labor—” “Therefore it is easier for them to marry money than to make it?” “Yes. But strange and difficult as labor would be to me, I swear to you I would gladly labor—I would go to the wildest west and begin life anew, could I be buoyed by the hope that some day you would be mine.” He looked at her eagerly, beseechingly. “That can never be,” she said. “Pray give it up. Remember how unsuitable our union would be—how extremely hazardous.” “I will gladly take the hazard.” “No, no, forget it. It can never be.” “If you tell me it is impossible for you to love me, that I am personally hateful to you, I will give it up— I will indeed despair.” “What if—if I prefer another?” asked Grace, softly, a rosy red flashing over her lovely face. “That?” groaned Lord Apohaqui. “Ah, yes, if that be so, madly as I love you, I resign you. Though at first it was the thought of your wealth that moved me, you know—you cannot but know—how all this has long since faded from my mind; how now you, and you.alone, fill it! But if your heart is another’s, though your dowry were a queen’s, I would give you up. Is it indeed so? Does that impassable gulf divide us?” “Lord Apohaqui, believe me, it can never be as you wish. Let us part friends. If I have caused you aught of pain and disappointment, forgive me. The carriage is coming. I will go to meet them.” But before she went, she reached out her hand to the saddened young man. He touched it with his lips. “You have caused me pain—pain and disappointment, oh so bitter! But there is nothing to forgive. The fault is entirely mine. Good-bye, good-bye, and God bless you!” Then he turned and after looking for a moment over the parapet down upon the Tuscan plain, he started slowly back toward Siena. CHAPTER XXVII, CONCLUSION. On the evening following their return from San Quirico as Mrs. Barton and Agnes sat on a bench in the Siena garden, Mrs. Barton reading Crawford’s “Paul Patoff”, Count Marto Volpi approached, smiling sweetly and looking handsomer than ever before. His dark locks waved in the breeze, his picturesque mustache beautifully shaded his soft and perfect lips, his poetic eyes beamed with triumphant love—at any rate, that was the way the beam struck Mr. Gassaway, who sat on a bench not far away, fanning himself under the shade of an orange tree. Mrs. Barton was in the middle of her novel and was impatient to read on and learn what became of Paul Patoff’s brother. “The Count is coming, madam,” said Agnes in a whisper. “Oh, dear!” sighed Mrs. Barton, “I nope he won’t bother us long.” At that moment, Mrs. Barton preferred Paul Patoff’s society to that of any Count in Italy. Volpi made a graceful obeisance before the ladies. “Good evening,” returned Mrs. Barton, carefully keep¬ ing her thumb on the page she was reading. “It ees a lofely evening,” said the Count with a radiant smile. “A—vat de poets would nominate de paradise.” “It is very nice,” said Mrs. Barton, with a longing glance at “Paul Patoff”. “Haf I de happiness to find de amiable signora in de goot health dis evening?” asked the Count with genial solicitude. “I am pretty well, thank you,” returned Mrs. Barton, wondering why the young man should stand there smil¬ ing and bowing. But Count Volpi was in no hurry to go. After a few more polite inquiries as to Mrs. ( 283 ) 284 CONCLUSION Barton’s general welfare and as to whether she was en¬ joying the scenery, Count Volpi made another graceful reverence and said: “I haf come to say dat I haf de honaire and de happiness to ask for de hand of your lofely filia—vat you call girl, de signorina Gracia!” Mrs. Barton, whose mind was wholly engrossed by the troubles of the Patoff family, and who was impatient to get back to her novel, did not catch the drift of Volpi’s meaning. “Agnes,” she said with the hope of turning the Count over to her companion, “you can understand the Count better than I, you must talk to him.” “Madam,” replied Agnes, in a low voice, “the Count asks for your daughter Grace.” “Tell him Grace is not here. She has gone walking with Rhett.” “Madam, he does not ask to see Miss Grace; he wants you to give her to him.” “Give him Grace?” said Mrs Barton, opening wide her eyes. Just at moment the idea of marriage was so far from her thoughts it vaguely occurred to her that the foreigner had asked for her daughter as he might ask to be given a piece of bric-a-brac or a book out of her library. It was Mrs. Barton’s secret but fixed belief that all people who spoke a tongue she could not under¬ stand were insane, or, at any rate, were on the road to insanity. Volpi stood smiling, awaiting the outcome of the whispered conversation between Mrs. Barton and Agnes. “Madam,” said Agnes, “the Count wishes you to give him your daughter in marriage.” “He wants to marry Grace—my daughter?” said Mrs. Barton with as much surprise as if she had never heard of a marriage between an American girl and an Italian Count. “That’s what he wants.” “The poor little man,” murmured Mrs. Barton, gazing at the Count. “It must be in his blood; he is cousin to the little Countess’ husband and ‘he’ was all wrong in his mind. Poor little man!” CONCLUSION 285 Volpi nodded and smiled at this evidence of kindness on the part of his prospective mother-in-law; he did not catch the drift of her meaning and construed her look of compassion as a look of affection and interest. “Get rid of him, Agnes,” whispered Mrs. Barton. “Don’t stir him up; speak soothingly but get him to go away.” “Shall I say you decline the honor of his offer?” ! “Tell him anything, Agnes, only get him to go away.” And Mrs. Barton re-opened “Paul Patoff”. “Count,” said Agnes, in very fair Italian, “Mrs. Barton requests me to say that she declines the honor you propose.” “Decline? Dio mio! Vat ees de objection? I am of de family vaire old and noble. My wife will haf de title noble. De American lady lofe de title noble!” “What does he say, Agnes?” whispered Mrs. Barton. “I told you not to stir him up.” “He says that his family is noble, that his wife will bear a noble title.” “Nonsense!” said Mrs. Barton. “Do get the poor little man to go, Agnes.” The Count began speaking rapidly in Italian and Mrs. Barton asked again what he was saying. “Madam, he says your daughter must marry him, as she has compromised herself with him—that, here in Italy, high society will look down on Miss Grace unless she marries him!” “But why? How has Grace compromised herself?” “By staying that night in the Albergo San Quirico. The Count says Miss Grace is irretrievably compromised and can heal the compromise only by marriage.” “Poor, crazy little man!” murmured Mrs. Barton, gaz¬ ing at the Count pityingly. “Since you can’t get. him to go, Agnes, we had better go ourselves. There is no telling when he might grow worse.” Mrs. Barton closed “Paul Patoff” and walked through the garden back to the hotel. As she started off, Mr. 286 CONCLUSION Gassaway looked up from his note-book and gazed at her retreating figure. “Zounds!” he muttered, ‘Til pickle this pointer for the G. A. N.—Illustrates Italian and American character —dancing Count doing the Romeo act—serene mamma smiles and walks away—dancing Count aghast—while Rhett Calhoun, American lover with no frills or non¬ sense about him, knocks the persimmon. At any rate I think he will knock it before this ancient burg sees another day.” Mr. Gassaway was not far wrong in his calculations. At that very moment, Rhett and Grace were strolling along the city wall overlooking the mountain slope and the fertile Tuscan valley. It was one of those miracu-i lously fine evenings such as one rarely sees outside of Italy. The sun had set, but its after-glow left a bright zone of light over the plain and upon the ancient walled city. The people of Siena thronged the plaza near the walls and occasionally the jingle of wagon bells and the laughter of peasants passing out of the gate down the mountain side disturbed the otherwise still summer air. But Rhett noticed neither the bells nor the people. His thoughts were of Lord Apohaqui and of the last glimpse he had obtained the day before, of that young nobleman. Rhett had returned to Grace in time to see Lord Apo¬ haqui walking rapidly toward Siena; and there was something in the very aspect of the Englishman’s back, something in his wild haste to flee, which did not indi¬ cate that triumph of triumphs—the winning of the girl he loved. Was it possible that Lord Apohaqui, young, handsome and titled, had failed? And even if he had failed, would that help Rhett? Where such a one as Lord Apohaqui had met with defeat, coiild success come to him, Rhett Calhoun, untitled, penniless, fame and fortune yet to be won? “At any rate,” thought Rhett, “I shall put my chances to the test and though I fail it will be some consolation to know that he is not to have her.” This is hardly a Christian sentiment, yet it is one CONCLUSION 287 frequently indulged in by lovers; that man is rare indeed who, rejected by his lady love, can find delight in seeing her happily mated to another. “Miss Grace,” said Rhett, as they sat down on the parapet looking out over the beautiful valley, “we are such old friends that I may venture U> ask a question, may I not?” “Assuredly, but I do not promise an answer until I know what it is.” “You ought to answer it.” “If I think it should be answered I will.” “Are you engaged to Lord Apohaqui?” “No.” “Thank God for that much! He asked you?” “You did not stipulate for two questions.” “But will you be generous and reply?”—appealingly. “It might be very ungenerous to reply. Put yourself in his place; suppose—I say merely suppose—he had asked me, would it be generous on my part to speak of it?” “Let me put the question differently. You say you are not already engaged to Lord Apohaqui—do you think you ever will be?” “I dp not.” Rhett jumped up from his seat and stood a moment as he gazed on the girl’s downcast face—downcast and burning beneath the ardor of his eyes. “Then may I speak for myself, Grace?” he said in a whisper. “May I tell you, that you are the one woman on earth that I love? Oh, my darling! My darling!” What did he see in her face, in the one shy glance she shot upward at him .to bring out that rapturous ex¬ clamation? He saw that which is given man never more than once in his life to see—the first look of a first love which tells him that she, the one woman in the world, is his own, his own in heart and soul! s{s jfs :Js jJj Mrs. Barton thoroughly approved of Grace’s choice. 288 CONCLUSION Rhett was a Southern gentleman who would know how to protect his wife from Italian Counts; moreover the engagement of her two daughters would necessitate their speedy return to Alabama and if there was one thing in the world Mrs. Barton fairly pined for, it was to get away from “crazy Europe” and return once more to a place where people had the good sense to speak a lan¬ guage she could understand. The idea of cultivating Miss Clara’s voice up to D was abandoned, and early in December after visiting Rome and Naples, the Bartons returned to America to prepare for the double wedding which was to take place in Birmingham in the Spring. When Count Volpi saw that there was not the slightest intention on the part of either Mrs. Barton or her daughter to accept his generous offer to “heal the com¬ promise”, he turned his attention to Miss Packer, and at last accounts that young lady was endeavoring to make up her mind whether she would flourish in Rome as an Italian Countess or whether she would shine among New York’s “400” as the wife of Mr. Montrose Morton. Both gentlemen, the titled Italian and the untitled Ameri¬ can, paid her persistent court, greatly to the edification of Mr. Green Gassaway, who spent the winter in Rome “pickling pointers” for his great novel. The eagle eye of such an author as Mr. Gassaway ranges from pole to pole; when the weddings in Birmingham take place, when the Packer comedy in Rome terminates, and when Lord Apohaqui recovers from his love sickness and returns from Montana (whither he went to kill bear and forget Grace Barton), Mr. Gassaway promises to survey those incidents and describe them to the world in the pages of the G. A. N. the end. o & • *S & 4 O • * * * % ./ : v 4 -' % %* £ . V % ** V ■% c> x>* - . - «. * -U* ; #C%' 'W* c ip * 1/y/K*\ \v % v ^ * *~ ^ °<%vMW* v ' • • * s «G^ ^ '«• » * , \ <■“ ' ^ ,>. ^ - * °o .** .^v'*. ■% ,0* ‘V .4 s '=>• r-v-r^: ■ f u-o < :£$&&* *6$' *9 *0 *7* - ^ » <0 * V’fe r- - . • r» ■ „ * ^s. ■ j/,' t- •*• j 0-7 *. ■•’ i° **• **. ',•' .* °o *.'.*“%»* 0° ■%• *>■ **&•*♦ JsJfe.X. V.----* y: < 5^* V. SO ' •*- .v cV" V. T ^ « ?> r^rlK. ^ 0 * *• -«. 4 c> ■0? «<• « V ^ --w * •*> • *■ A X % "V* -5^ . t*. -vnzmir; & ~ 0 ->®§^.* V ^ \^ny -V °*U ’*■' A" '*•'■ .< * . V s .^. 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