The failure of the old-time firm of Edgerton, Tennant &
Co. was unusual only because it was an honest one—the bewildered
creditors receiving a hundred cents on a dollar from property not
legally involved.
Edgerton had been dead for several years; the failure of the
firm presently killed old Tennant, who was not only old in years,
but also old in fashion—so obsolete, in fact, were the fashions he
clung to that he had used his last cent in a matter which he
regarded as involving his personal honor.
The ethically laudable but materially ruinous integrity of
old Henry Tennant had made matters rather awkward for his orphaned
nieces. Similar traditions in the Edgerton family—of which there
now remained only a single representative, James Edgerton
3d—devastated that young man's inheritance so completely that he
came back to the United States, via Boston, on a cattle steamer and
arrived in New York the following day with two dollars in loose
silver and a confused determination to see the affair through
without borrowing.
He walked from the station to the nearest of his clubs. It
was very early, and the few club servants on duty gazed at him with
friendly and respectful sympathy.
In the visitors' room he sat down, wrote out his resignation,
drew up similar valedictories to seven other expensive and
fashionable clubs, and then picked up his two suit cases again,
declining with a smile the offered assistance from Read, the
doorman who had been in service there as long as the club had
existed.
"Mr. Edgerton," murmured the old man, "Mr. Inwood is in the
Long Room, sir."
Edgerton thought a moment, then walked to the doorway of the
Long Room and looked in. At the same time Inwood glanced up from
his newspaper.
"Hello!" he exclaimed; "is that you, Edgerton?"
"Who the devil do you think it is?" replied Edgerton
amiably.
They shook hands. Inwood said:
"What's the trouble—a grouch, a hangover, or a
lady?"
Edgerton laughed, placed his suit cases on the floor, and
seated himself in a corner of the club window for the first time in
six months—and for the last time in many, many months to
come.
"It's hot in town," he observed. "How are you,
Billy?"
"Blooming. Accept from me a long, cold one with a permanent
fizz to it. Yes? No? A Riding Club cocktail, then? What? Nix for
the rose-wreathed bowl?"
Edgerton shook his head. "Nix for the bowl,
thanks."
"Well, you won't mind if I ring for first-aid materials, will
you?"
The other politely waved his gloved hand.
A servant arrived and departed with the emergency order.
Inwood pushed an unpleasant and polychromatic mess of Sunday
newspapers aside and reseated himself in the leather
chair.
"I'm terribly sorry about what happened to you, Jim," he
said. "So is everybody. We all thought it was to be another gay
year of that dear Paris for you——"
"I thought so, too," nodded Edgerton; "but what a fellow
thinks hasn't anything to do with anything. I've found out
that."
Inwood emptied his glass and gazed at the frost on it,
sentimentally.
"The main thing," he said, "is for your friends to stand by
you——"
"No; the main thing is for them to stand aside—kindly,
Billy—while I pass down and out for a while."
"My dear fellow——"
"While I pass out ,"
repeated Edgerton. "I may return; but that will be up to me—and not
up to them."
"Well, what good is friendship?"
"Good to believe in—no good otherwise. Let it alone and it's
the finest thing in the world; use it, and you will have to find
another name for it."
He smiled at Inwood.
"Friendship must remain always the happiest and most
comforting of all—theories," he said. "Let it alone; it has a value
inestimable in its own place—no value otherwise."
Inwood began to laugh.
"Your notion concerning friends and friendship isn't the
popular one."
"But my friends will sleep the sounder for knowing what are
my views concerning friendship."
"That's cynical and unfair," began the other,
reddening.
"No, it's honest; and you notice that even my honesty puts a
certain strain on our friendship," retorted Edgerton, still
laughing.
"You're only partly in earnest, aren't you?"
"Oh, I'm never really in earnest about anything. That's why
Fate extended an unerring and iron hand, grasped me by the slack of
my pants, shook me until all my pockets turned inside out, and set
me down hard on the trolley tracks of Destiny. Just now I'm
crawling for the sidewalk and the skirts of Chance."
He laughed again without the slightest bitterness, and looked
out of the window.
The view from the club window was soothing: Fifth Avenue lay
silent and deserted in the sunshine of an early summer
morning.
Inwood said: "The papers—everybody—spoke most glowingly of
the way your firm settled with its creditors."
"Oh, hell! Why should ordinary honesty make such a stir in
New York? Don't let's talk about it; I'm going home,
anyway."
"Where?"
"To my place."
"It's been locked up for over a year, hasn't
it?"
"Yes, but there's a janitor——"
"Come down to Oyster Bay with me," urged Inwood; "come on,
Jim, and forget your troubles over Sunday."
"As for my troubles," returned the other, rising with a shrug
and pulling on his gloves, "I've had leisure on the ocean to
classify and pigeonhole the lot of them. I know exactly what I'm
going to do, and I'm going home to begin it."
"Begin what?" inquired Inwood with a curiosity entirely
friendly.
"I'm going to find out," said Edgerton, "whether any of what
my friends have called my 'talents' are real enough to get me a job
worth three meals a day, or whether they'll merely procure for me
the hook."
"What are you thinking of trying?"
"I don't know exactly. I thought of turning some one of my
parlor tricks into a future profession—if people will let
me."
"Writing stories?"
"Well, that, or painting, or illustrating—music, perhaps.
Perhaps I could write a play, or act in some other fellow's; or do
some damn thing or other—" he ended vaguely. And for the first time
Inwood saw that his friend's eyes were weary, and that his face
seemed unusually worn. It was plain enough that James Edgerton 3d
had already journeyed many a league with Black Care, and that he
had not yet outridden that shadowy horseman.
"Jim," said Inwood seriously, "why won't you let me help
you—" But Edgerton checked him in a perfectly friendly
manner.
"You are helping me," he
said; "that's why I'm going about my business. Success to yours,
Billy. Good-by! I'll be back"—glancing around the familiar
room—"sometime or other; back here and around town, everywhere, as
usual," he added confidently; and the haunted look faded. He smiled
and nodded with a slight gesture of adieu, picked up his suit
cases, and, with another friendly shake of his head for the offers
of servants' assistance, walked out into the sunshine of Fifth
Avenue, and west toward his own abode in Fifty-sixth
Street.
When he arrived there, he was hot and dusty, and he decided
to let Kenna carry up his luggage. So he descended to the
area.
Every time he pulled the basement bell he could hear it
jingle inside the house somewhere, but nobody responded, and after
a while he remounted the area steps to the street and glanced up at
the brown-stone façade. Every window was shut, every curtain drawn.
That block on Fifty-sixth Street on a Sunday morning in early
summer is an unusually silent and deserted region. Edgerton looked
up and down the sunny street. After Paris the city of his birth
seemed very mean and treeless and shabby in the merciless American
sunshine.
Fumbling for his keys he wondered to what meaner and shabbier
street he might soon be destined, now that fortune had tripped him
up; and how soon he would begin to regret the luxury of this dusty
block and the comforts of the house which he was now about to
enter. And he fitted his latch-key to the front door and let
himself in.
It was a very clumsy and old-fashioned apartment house,
stupidly built, five stories high; there was only one apartment to
a floor, and no elevator. The dark and stuffy austerity of this
out-of-date building depressed him anew as he entered. Its tenants,
of course, were away from town for the summer—respectable,
middle-aged people—stodgy, wealthy, dull as the carved banisters
that guarded the dark, gas-lit well of the staircase. Each family
owned its own apartment—had been owners for years. Edgerton
inherited his floor from an uncle—widely known among earlier
generations as a courtly and delightful old gentleman—an amateur of
antiquities and the possessor of many very extraordinary things,
including his own private character and disposition.
Carrying his suit cases, which were pasted all over with
tricolored labels, the young man climbed the first two flights of
stairs, and then, placing his luggage on the landing, halted to
recover his breath and spirits.
The outlook for his future loomed as dark as the stair well.
He sat down on the top step, lighted a cigarette, and gazed up at
the sham stained glass in the skylight above. And now for the first
time he began to realize something of the hideousness of his
present position, his helplessness, unfitted as he was to cope with
financial adversity or make an honest living at
anything.
If people had only let him alone when he first emerged from
college as mentally naked as anything newly fledged, his more
sensible instincts probably would have led him to remain in the
ancient firm of his forefathers, Edgerton, Tennant & Co.,
dealers in iron.
But fate and his friends had done the business for him,
finally persuading him to go abroad. He happened, unfortunately, to
possess a light, graceful, but not at all unusual, talent for
several of the arts; he could tinkle catchy improvisations on a
piano, sketch in oil and water colors, model in clay, and write the
sort of amateur verse popular in college periodicals. Women often
evinced an inclination to paw him and tell him their troubles; fool
friends spoke vaguely of genius and "achieving something distinctly
worth while"—which finally spoiled a perfectly good business man,
especially after a third-rate periodical had printed one of his
drawings, and a fourth-rate one had published a short story by him;
and the orchestra at the Colonnade had played one of his waltzes,
and Bernstein of the Frivolity Theater had offered to read any
libretto he might send.
So he had been ass enough to take a vacation and offer
himself two years' study abroad; and he had been away almost a year
when the firm went to the wall, carrying with it everything he
owned on earth except this apartment and its entailed contents,
which he could neither cast into the melting pot for his creditors
nor even sell for his own benefit. However, the creditors were paid
dollar for dollar, and those finer and entirely obsolete points of
the Edgerton honor remained silver bright; and the last of the
Edgertons was back once more in New York with his apartment, his
carvings, tapestries and pictures, which the will forbade him to
sell, and two dollars change in his pockets.
Presently he cast his cigarette from him, picked up his suit
cases, and started upward, jaw set. It was a good thing for him
that he had a jaw like that. It was his only asset now. So far in
life, however, he had never used it.
Except the echo of his tread on the uncarpeted staircase, not
another sound stirred in the house. Every landing was deserted,
every apartment appeared to be empty and locked up for the summer.
Dust lay gray on banister and landing; the heated atmosphere reeked
with the odor of moth balls and tar paper seeping from locked
doors.
On the top floor a gas jet flickered as usual in the corridor
which led to his apartment. By its uncertain flame he selected a
key from the bunch he carried, and let himself into his own rooms;
and the instant he set foot across the threshold he knew that
something was wrong.
Whether it had been a slight sound which he fancied he heard
in the private passage-way, or whether he imagined some stealthy
movement in the golden dusk beyond, he could not determine; but a
swift instinct halted and challenged him, and left him
listening.
As he stood there, checked, slowly the idea began to possess
him that there was somebody else in the apartment. When the slight
but sudden chill had left him, and his hair no longer tingled on
the verge of rising, he moved forward a step, then again halted.
For a moment, still grasping both suit cases, he stood as though at
bay, listening, glancing from alcove to corridor, from one dim spot
of light to another where a door ajar here and there revealed
corners of empty rooms.
Whether or not there was at that moment another living being
except himself in the place he did not know, but he did know that
otherwise matters were not as he had left them a year ago in his
apartment.
For one thing, here, under his feet, was spread his
beautiful, antique Daghestan runner, soft as deep velvet, which he
had left carefully rolled up, sewed securely in burlap, and stuffed
full of camphor balls. For another thing, his ear had caught a low,
rhythmical sound from the mantel in his bedroom. It was his
frivolous Sèvres clock ticking as indiscreetly as it had ever
ticked in the boudoir of its gayly patched and powdered mistress a
hundred and fifty years ago—which was disturbing to Edgerton, as he
had been away for a year, and had left his apartment locked up with
orders to Kenna, the janitor, to keep out until otherwise
instructed by letter or cable.
Listening, eyes searching the dusk, he heard somewhere the
rustle of a curtain blowing at an open window; and, stepping softly
to his dining-room door, he turned the knob cautiously and peered
in.
No window seemed to be open there; the place was dark, the
furniture still in its linen coverings.
As he moved silently to the butler's pantry, where through
loosely closed blinds the sunshine glimmered, making an
amber-tinted mystery of the silence, it seemed for a moment to him
as though he could still hear somewhere the stir of the curtain;
and he turned and retraced his steps through the
library.
In the twilight of the place, half revealed as he passed, he
began now to catch glimpses of a state of things that puzzled
him.
Coming presently to his dressing room, he opened the door,
and, sure enough, there was a window open, and beside it a curtain
fluttered gayly. But what completely monopolized his attention was
a number of fashionable trunks—wardrobe trunks, steamer trunks, hat
trunks, shoe trunks—some open, and the expensive-looking contents
partly visible; some closed and covered. And on every piece of this
undoubtedly feminine luggage were the letters D.T. or
S.T.
And on top of the largest trunk sat a live cat.