As the character of a woman may be accurately deduced from
her handkerchief, so a man’s mental status is evident from the way
he opens his mail.
Curtis Keefe, engaged in this daily performance, slit the
envelopes neatly and laid the letters down in three piles. These
divisions represented matters known to be of no great interest;
matters known to be important; and, third, letters with contents as
yet unknown and therefore of problematical value.
The first two piles were, as usual, dispatched quickly, and
the real attention of the secretary centred with pleasant
anticipation on the third lot.
“Gee whiz, Genevieve!”
As no further pearls of wisdom fell from the lips of the
engrossed reader of letters, the stenographer gave him a round-eyed
glance and then continued her work.
Curtis Keefe was, of course, called Curt by his intimates,
and while it may be the obvious nickname was brought about by his
short and concise manner of speech, it is more probable that the
abbreviation was largely responsible for his habit of
curtness.
Anyway, Keefe had long cultivated a crisp, abrupt style of
conversation. That is, until he fell in with Samuel Appleby. That
worthy ex-governor, while in the act of engaging Keefe to be his
confidential secretary, observed: “They call you Curt, do they?
Well, see to it that it is short for courtesy.”
This was only one of several equally sound bits of advice
from the same source, and as Keefe had an eye single to the glory
of self-advancement, he kept all these things and pondered them in
his heart.
The result was that ten years of association with Lawyer
Appleby had greatly improved the young man’s manner, and though
still brief of speech, his curtness had lost its unpleasantly sharp
edge and his courtesy had developed into a dignified urbanity, so
that though still Curt Keefe, it was in name only.
“What’s the pretty letter all about, Curtie?” asked the
observant stenographer, who had noticed his third reading of the
short missive.
“You’ll probably answer it soon, and then you’ll know,” was
the reply, as Keefe restored the sheet to its envelope and took up
the next letter.
Genevieve Lane produced her vanity-case, and became absorbed
in its possibilities.
“I wish I didn’t have to work,” she sighed; “I wish I was an
opera singer.”
“‘Cromwell, I charge thee, fling away ambition,’ murmured
Keefe, his eyes still scanning letters; ‘by that sin fell the
angels,’ and it’s true you are angelic, Viva, so down you’ll go, if
you fall for ambition.”
“How you talk! Ambition is a good thing.”
“Only when tempered by common sense and perspicacity—neither
of which you possess to a marked degree.”
“Pooh! You’re ambitious yourself, Curt.”
“With the before-mentioned qualifications. Look here, Viva,
here’s a line for you to remember. I ran across it in a book. ‘If
you do only what is absolutely correct and say only what is
absolutely correct—you can do anything you like.’ How’s
that?”
“I don’t see any sense in it at all.”
“No? I told you you lacked common sense. Most women
do.”
“Huh!” and Genevieve tossed her pretty head, patted her curly
ear-muffs, and proceeded with her work.
Samuel Appleby’s beautiful home graced the town of
Stockfield, in the western end of the Commonwealth of
Massachusetts. Former Governor Appleby was still a political power
and a man of unquestioned force and importance.
It was fifteen years or more since he had held office, and
now, a great desire possessed him that his son should follow in his
ways, and that his beloved state should know another governor of
the Appleby name.
And young Sam was worthy of the people’s choice. Himself a
man of forty, motherless from childhood, and brought up sensibly
and well by his father, he listened gravely to the paternal plans
for the campaign.
But there were other candidates, and not without some strong
and definite influences could the end be attained.
Wherefore, Mr. Appleby was quite as much interested as his
secretary in the letter which was in the morning’s
mail.
“Any word from Sycamore Ridge?” he asked, as he came into the
big, cheerful office and nodded a kindly good-morning to his two
assistants.
“Yes, and a good word,” returned Keefe, smiling. “It says:
‘Come.’” The secretary’s attitude toward his employer, though
deferential and respectful, was marked by a touch of
good-fellowship—a not unnatural outgrowth of a long term of
confidential relations between them. Keefe had made himself
invaluable to Samuel Appleby and both men knew it. So, as one had
no desire to presume on the fact and the other no wish to ignore
it, serenity reigned in the well-ordered and well-appointed offices
of the ex-governor.
Even the light-haired, light-hearted and light-headed
Genevieve couldn’t disturb the even tenor of the routine. If she
could have, she would have been fired.
Though not a handsome man, not even to be called
distinguished looking, Samuel Appleby gave an impression of power.
His strong, lean face betokened obdurate determination and
implacable will.
Its deep-graven lines were the result of meeting many
obstacles and surmounting most of them. And at sixty-two, the hale
and hearty frame and the alert, efficient manner made the man seem
years younger.
“You know the conditions on which Wheeler lives in that
house?” Appleby asked, as he looked over the top of the letter at
Keefe.
“No, sir.”
“Well, it’s this way. But, no—I’ll not give you the story
now. We’re going down there—to-day.”
“The whole tribe?” asked Keefe, briefly.
“Yes; all three of us. Be ready, Miss Lane, please, at
three-thirty.”
“Yes, sir,” said Genevieve, reaching for her
vanity-box.
“And now, Keefe, as to young Sam,” Appleby went on, running
his fingers through his thick, iron-gray mane. “If he can put it
over, or if I can put it over for him, it will be only with the
help of Dan Wheeler.”
“Is Wheeler willing to help?”
“Probably not. He must be made willing. I can do it—I
think—unless he turns stubborn. I know Wheeler—if he turns
stubborn—well, Balaam’s historic quadruped had nothing on
him!”
“Does Mr. Wheeler know Sam?”
“No; and it wouldn’t matter either way if he did. It’s the
platform Wheeler stands on. If I can keep him in ignorance of that
one plank——”
“You can’t.”
“I know it—confound it! He opposed my election on that one
point—he’ll oppose Sam’s for the same reason, I know.”
“Where do I come in?”
“In a general way, I want your help. Wheeler’s wife and
daughter are attractive, and you might manage to interest them and
maybe sway their sympathies toward Sam——”
“But they’ll stand by Mr. Wheeler?”
“Probably—yes. However, use your head, and do all you can
with it.”
“And where do I come in?” asked Genevieve, who had been an
interested listener.
“You don’t come in at all, Miss. You mostly stay out. You’re
to keep in the background. I have to take you, for we’re only
staying one night at Sycamore Ridge, and then going on to Boston,
and I’ll need you there.”
“Yes, sir,” and the blue eyes turned from him and looked
absorbedly into a tiny mirror, as Genevieve contemplated her
pleasant pink-and-whiteness.
Her vanity and its accompanying box were matters of
indifference to Mr. Appleby and to Keefe, for the girl’s efficiency
and skill outweighed them and her diligence and loyalty scored one
hundred per cent.
Appleby’s fetish was efficiency. He had found it and
recognized it in his secretary and stenographer and he was willing
to recompense it duly, even generously. Wherefore the law business
of Samuel Appleby, though carried on for the benefit of a small
number of clients, was of vast importance and productive of
lucrative returns.
At present, the importance was overshadowed by the immediate
interest of a campaign, which, if successful would land the second
Appleby in the gubernatorial chair. This plan, as yet not a boom,
was taking shape with the neatness and dispatch that characterized
the Appleby work.
Young Sam was content to have the matter principally in his
father’s hands, and things had reached a pitch where, to the senior
mind, the coöperation of Daniel Wheeler was imperatively
necessary.
And, therefore, to Wheeler’s house they must betake
themselves.
“What do you know about the Wheeler business, kid?” Keefe
inquired, after Mr. Appleby had left them.
Genevieve leaned back in her chair, her dimpled chin moving
up and down with a pretty rhythm as she enjoyed her chewing-gum,
and gazed at the ceiling beams.
Appleby’s offices were in his own house, and the one given
over to these two was an attractive room, fine with mahogany and
plate glass, but also provided with all the paraphernalia of the
most up-to-date of office furniture. There were good pictures and
draperies, and a wood fire added to the cheer and mitigated the
chill of the early fall weather.
Sidling from her seat, Miss Lane moved over to a chair near
the fire.
“I’ll take those letters when you’re ready,” she said. “Why,
I don’t know a single thing about any Wheeler. Do
you?”
“Not definitely. He’s a man who had an awful fight with Mr.
Appleby, long ago. I’ve heard allusions to him now and then, but I
know no details.”
“I, either. But, it seems we’re to go there. Only for a
night, and then, on to Boston! Won’t I be glad to go!”
“We’ll only be there a few days. I’m more interested in this
Wheeler performance. I don’t understand it. Who’s Wheeler,
anyhow?”
“Dunno. If Sammy turns up this morning, he may enlighten
us.”
Sammy did turn up, and not long after the conversation young
Appleby strolled into the office.
Though still looked upon as a boy by his father, the man was
of huge proportions and of an important, slightly overbearing
attitude.
Somewhat like his parent in appearance, young Sam, as he was
always called, had more grace and ease, if less effect of power. He
smiled genially and impartially; he seemed cordial and friendly to
all the world, and he was a general favorite. Yet so far he had
achieved no great thing, had no claim to any especial record in
public or private life.
At forty, unmarried and unattached, his was a case of an able
mentality and a firm, reliable character, with no opportunity
offered to prove its worth. A little more initiative and he would
have made opportunities for himself; but a nature that took the
line of least resistance, a philosophy that believed in a calm
acceptance of things as they came, left Samuel Appleby, junior,
pretty much where he was when he began. If no man could say aught
against him, equally surely no man could say anything very definite
for him. Yet many agreed that he was a man whose powers would
develop with acquired responsibilities, and already he had a
following.
“Hello, little one,” he greeted Genevieve, carelessly, as he
sat down near Keefe. “I say, old chap, you’re going down to the
Wheelers’ to-day, I hear.”
“Yes; this afternoon,” and the secretary looked up
inquiringly.
“Well, I’ll tell you what. You know the governor’s going
there to get Wheeler’s aid in my election boom, and I can tell you
a way to help things along, if you agree. See?”
“Not yet, but go ahead.”
“Well, it’s this way. Dan Wheeler’s daughter is devoted to
her father. Not only filial respect and all that, but she just
fairly idolizes the old man. Now, he recips, of course, and what
she says goes. So—I’m asking you squarely—won’t you put in a good
word to Maida, that’s the girl—and if you do it with your
inimitable dexterity and grace, she’ll fall for it.”
“You mean for me to praise you up to Miss Wheeler and ask her
father to give you the benefit of his influence?”
“How clearly you do put things! That’s exactly what I mean.
It’s no harm, you know—merely the most innocent sort of
electioneering——”
“Rather!” laughed Keefe. “If all electioneering were as
innocent as that, the word would carry no unpleasant
meaning.”
“Then you’ll do it?”
“Of course I will—if I get opportunity.”
“Oh, you’ll have that. It’s a big, rambling country house—a
delightful one, too—and there’s tea in the hall, and tennis on the
lawn, and moonlight on the verandas——”
“Hold up, Sam,” Keefe warned him, “is the girl
pretty?”
“Haven’t seen her for years, but probably, yes. But that’s
nothing to you. You’re working for me, you see.” Appleby’s glance
was direct, and Keefe understood.
“Of course; I was only joking. I’ll carry out your
commission, if, as I said, I get the chance. Tell me something of
Mr. Wheeler.”
“Oh, he’s a good old chap. Pathetic, rather. You see, he
bumped up against dad once, and got the worst of it.”
“How?”
Sam Appleby hesitated a moment and then said: “I see you
don’t know the story. But it’s no secret, and you may as well be
told. You listen, too, Miss Lane, but there’s no call to
tattle.”
“I’ll go home if you say so,” Genevieve piped up, a little
crisply.
“No, sit still. Why, it was while dad was governor—about
fifteen years ago, I suppose. And Daniel Wheeler forged a
paper—that is, he said he didn’t, but twelve other good and true
peers of his said he did. Anyway, he was convicted and sentenced,
but father was a good friend of his, and being governor, he
pardoned Wheeler. But the pardon was on condition—oh, I say—hasn’t
dad ever told you, Keefe?”
“Never.”
“Then, maybe I’d better leave it for him to tell. If he wants
you to know he’ll tell you, and if not, I mustn’t.”
“Oh, goodness!” cried Genevieve. “What a way to do! Get us
all excited over a thrilling tale, and then chop it off
short!”
“Go on with it,” said Keefe; but Appleby said, “No; I won’t
tell you the condition of the pardon. But the two men haven’t been
friends since, and won’t be, unless the condition is removed. Of
course, dad can’t do it, but the present governor can make the
pardon complete, and would do so in a minute, if dad asked him to.
So, though he hasn’t said so, the assumption is, that father
expects to trade a full pardon of Friend Wheeler for his help in my
campaign.”
“And a good plan,” Keefe nodded his
satisfaction.
“But,” Sam went on, “the trouble is that the very same points
and principles that made Wheeler oppose my father’s election will
make him oppose mine. The party is the same, the platform is the
same, and I can’t hope that the man Wheeler is not the same
stubborn, adamant, unbreakable old hickory knot he was the other
time.”
“And so, you want me to soften him by persuading his daughter
to line up on our side?”
“Just that, Keefe. And you can do it, I am
sure.”
“I’ll try, of course; but I doubt if even a favorite daughter
could influence the man you describe.”
“Let me help,” broke in the irrepressible Genevieve. “I can
do lots with a girl. I can do more than Curt could. I’ll chum up
with her and——”
“Now, Miss Lane, you keep out of this. I don’t believe in
mixing women and politics.”
“But Miss Wheeler’s a woman.”
“And I don’t want her troubled with politics. Keefe here can
persuade her to coax her father just through her affections—I don’t
want her enlightened as to any of the political details. And I
can’t think your influence would work half as well as that of a
man. Moreover, Keefe has discernment, and if it isn’t a good plan,
after all, he’ll know enough to discard it—while you’d blunder
ahead blindly, and queer the whole game!”
“Oh, well,” and bridling with offended pride, Genevieve
sought refuge in her little mirror.
“Now, don’t get huffy,” and Sam smiled at her; “you’ll
probably find that Miss Wheeler’s complexion is finer than yours,
anyway, and then you’ll hate her and won’t want to speak to her at
all.”
Miss Lane flashed an indignant glance and then proceeded to
go on with her work.
“Hasn’t Wheeler tried for a pardon all this time?” Keefe
asked.
“Indeed he has,” Sam returned, “many times. But you see,
though successive governors were willing to grant it, father always
managed to prevent it. Dad can pull lots of wires, as you know, and
since he doesn’t want Wheeler fully pardoned, why, he doesn’t get
fully pardoned.”
“And he lives under the stigma.”
“Lots of people don’t know about the thing at all. He
lives—well—he lives in Connecticut—and—oh, of course, there is a
certain stigma.”
“And your father will bring about his full pardon if he
promises——”
“Let up, Keefe; I’ve said I can’t tell you that part—you’ll
get your instructions in good time. And, look here, I don’t mean
for you to make love to the girl. In fact, I’m told she has a
suitor. But you’re just to give her a little song and dance about
my suitability for the election, and then adroitly persuade her to
use her powers of persuasion with her stubborn father. For he will
be stubborn—I know it! And there’s the mother of the girl . . .
tackle Mrs. Wheeler. Make her see that my father was justified in
the course he took—and besides, he was more or less accountable to
others—and use as an argument that years have dulled the old feud
and that bygones ought to be bygones and all that.
“Try to make her see that a full pardon now will be as much,
and in a way more, to Wheeler’s credit, than if it had been given
him at first——”
“I can’t see that,” and Keefe looked quizzical
“Neither can I,” Sam confessed, frankly, “but you can make a
woman swallow anything.”
“Depends on what sort of woman Mrs. Wheeler is,” Keefe
mused.
“I know it. I haven’t seen her for years, and as I remember,
she’s pretty keen, but I’m banking on you to put over some of your
clever work. Not three men in Boston have your ingenuity, Keefe,
when it comes to sizing up a situation and knowing just how to
handle it. Now, don’t tell father all I’ve said, for he doesn’t
especially hold with such small measures. He’s all for the one big
slam game, and he may be right. But I’m right, too, and you just go
ahead.”
“All right,” Keefe agreed. “I see what you mean, and I’ll do
all I can that doesn’t in any way interfere with your father’s
directions to me. There’s a possibility of turning the trick
through the women folks, and if I can do it, you may count on
me.”
“Good! And as for you, Miss Lane, you keep in the background,
and make as little mischief as you can.”
“I’m not a mischief-maker,” said the girl, pouting playfully,
for she was not at all afraid of Sam Appleby.
“Your blue eyes and pink cheeks make mischief wherever you
go,” he returned; “but don’t try them on old Dan Wheeler. He’s a
morose old chap——”
“I should think he would be!” defended Genevieve; “living all
these years under a ban which may, after all, be undeserved! I’ve
heard that he was entirely innocent of the forgery!”
“Have you, indeed?” Appleby’s tone was unpleasantly
sarcastic. “Other people have also heard that—from the Wheeler
family! Those better informed believe the man guilty, and believe,
too, that my father was too lenient when he granted even a
conditional pardon.”
“But just think—if he was innocent—how awful his life has
been all these years! You bet he’ll accept the full pardon and give
all his effort and influence and any possible help in
return.”
“Hear the child orate!” exclaimed Sam, gazing at the
enthusiastic little face, as Genevieve voiced her
views.
“I think he’ll be ready to make the bargain, too,” declared
Keefe. “Your father has a strong argument. I fancy Wheeler’s jump
at the chance.”
“Maybe—maybe so. But you don’t know how opposed he is to our
principles. And he’s a man of immovable convictions. In fact, he
and dad are two mighty strong forces. One or the other must win
out—but I’ve no idea which it will be.”
“How exciting!” Genevieve’s eyes danced. “I’m so glad I’m to
go. It’s a pretty place, you say?”
“Wonderful. A great sweep of rolling country, a big, long,
rambling sort of house, and a splendid hospitality. You’ll enjoy
the experience, but remember, I told you to be good.”
“I will remember,” and Genevieve pretended to took
cherubic.