Chapter Five: The Love Story of Mr. Peter Spillikins
Almost any day, on Plutoria Avenue or thereabouts, you
may see little Mr. Spillikins out walking with his four
tall sons, who are practically as old as himself.
To be exact, Mr. Spillikins is twenty-four, and Bob, the
oldest of the boys, must be at least twenty. Their exact
ages are no longer known, because, by a dreadful accident,
their mother forgot them. This was at a time when the
boys were all at Mr. Wackem's Academy for Exceptional
Youths in the foothills of Tennessee, and while their
mother, Mrs. Everleigh, was spending the winter on the
Riviera and felt that for their own sake she must not
allow herself to have the boys with her.
But now, of course, since Mrs. Everleigh has remarried
and become Mrs. Everleigh-Spillikins there is no need to
keep them at Mr. Wackem's any longer. Mr. Spillikins is
able to look after them.
Mr. Spillikins generally wears a little top hat and an
English morning coat. The boys are in Eton jackets and
black trousers, which, at their mother's wish, are kept
just a little too short for them. This is because Mrs.
Everleigh-Spillikins feels that the day will come some
day--say fifteen years hence--when the boys will no longer
be children, and meantime it is so nice to feel that they
are still mere boys. Bob is the eldest, but Sib the
youngest is the tallest, whereas Willie the third boy is
the dullest, although this has often been denied by those
who claim that Gib the second boy is just a trifle duller.
Thus at any rate there is a certain equality and good
fellowship all round.
Mrs. Everleigh-Spillikins is not to be seen walking with
them. She is probably at the race-meet, being taken there
by Captain Cormorant of the United States navy, which
Mr. Spillikins considers very handsome of him. Every now
and then the captain, being in the navy, is compelled to
be at sea for perhaps a whole afternoon or even several
days; in which case Mrs. Everleigh-Spillikins is very
generally taken to the Hunt Club or the Country Club by
Lieutenant Hawk, which Mr. Spillikins regards as awfully
thoughtful of him. Or if Lieutenant Hawk is also out of
town for the day, as he sometimes has to be, because he
is in the United States army, Mrs. Everleigh-Spillikins
is taken out by old Colonel Shake, who is in the State
militia and who is at leisure all the time.
During their walks on Plutoria Avenue one may hear the
four boys addressing Mr. Spillikins as "father" and "dad"
in deep bull-frog voices.
"Say, dad," drawls Bob, "couldn't we all go to the ball
game?"
"No. Say, dad," says Gib, "let's all go back to the house
and play five-cent pool in the billiard-room."
"All right, boys," says Mr. Spillikins. And a few minutes
later one may see them all hustling up the steps of the
Everleigh-Spillikins's mansion, quite eager at the prospect,
and all talking together.
Now the whole of this daily panorama, to the eye that
can read it, represents the outcome of the tangled love
story of Mr. Spillikins, which culminated during the
summer houseparty at Castel Casteggio, the woodland
retreat of Mr. and Mrs. Newberry.
But to understand the story one must turn back a year or
so to the time when Mr. Peter Spillikins used to walk on
Plutoria Avenue alone, or sit in the Mausoleum Club
listening to the advice of people who told him that he
really ought to get married.
In those days the first thing that one noticed about Mr.
Peter Spillikins was his exalted view of the other sex.
Every time he passed a beautiful woman in the street he
said to himself, "I say!" Even when he met a moderately
beautiful one he murmured, "By Jove!" When an Easter hat
went sailing past, or a group of summer parasols stood
talking on a leafy corner, Mr. Spillikins ejaculated,
"My word!" At the opera and at tango teas his projecting
blue eyes almost popped out of his head.
Similarly, if he happened to be with one of his friends,
he would murmur, "I say, do look at that beautiful girl,"
or would exclaim, "I say, don't look, but isn't that an
awfully pretty girl across the street?" or at the opera,
"Old man, don't let her see you looking, but do you see
that lovely girl in the box opposite?"
One must add to this that Mr. Spillikins, in spite of
his large and bulging blue eyes, enjoyed the heavenly
gift of short sight. As a consequence he lived in a world
of amazingly beautiful women. And as his mind was focused
in the same way as his eyes he endowed them with all the
virtues and graces which ought to adhere to fifty-dollar
flowered hats and cerise parasols with ivory handles.
Nor, to do him justice, did Mr. Spillikins confine his
attitude to his view of women alone. He brought it to
bear on everything. Every time he went to the opera he
would come away enthusiastic, saying, "By Jove, isn't it
simply splendid! Of course I haven't the ear to appreciate
it--I'm not musical, you know--but even with the little
that I know, it's great; it absolutely puts me to sleep."
And of each new novel that he bought he said, "It's a
perfectly wonderful book! Of course I haven't the head
to understand it, so I didn't finish it, but it's simply
thrilling." Similarly with painting, "It's one of the
most marvellous pictures I ever saw," he would say. "Of
course I've no eye for pictures, and I couldn't see
anything in it, but it's wonderful!"
The career of Mr. Spillikins up to the point of which we
are speaking had hitherto not been very satisfactory, or
at least not from the point of view of Mr. Boulder, who
was his uncle and trustee. Mr. Boulder's first idea had
been to have Mr. Spillikins attend the university. Dr.
Boomer, the president, had done his best to spread abroad
the idea that a university education was perfectly suitable
even for the rich; that it didn't follow that because a
man was a university graduate he need either work or
pursue his studies any further; that what the university
aimed to do was merely to put a certain stamp upon a man.
That was all. And this stamp, according to the tenor of
the president's convocation addresses, was perfectly
harmless. No one ought to be afraid of it. As a result,
a great many of the very best young men in the City, who
had no need for education at all, were beginning to attend
college. "It marked," said Dr. Boomer, "a revolution."
Mr. Spillikins himself was fascinated with his studies.
The professors seemed to him living wonders.
"By Jove!" he said, "the professor of mathematics is a
marvel. You ought to see him explaining trigonometry on
the blackboard. You can't understand a word of it." He
hardly knew which of his studies he liked best. "Physics,"
he said, "is a wonderful study. I got five per cent in
it. But, by Jove! I had to work for it. I'd go in for it
altogether if they'd let me."
But that was just the trouble--they wouldn't. And so in
course of time Mr. Spillikins was compelled, for academic
reasons, to abandon his life work. His last words about
it were, "Gad! I nearly passed in trigonometry!" and he
always said afterwards that he had got a tremendous lot
out of the university.
After that, as he had to leave the university, his trustee,
Mr. Boulder, put Mr. Spillikins into business. It was,
of course, his own business, one of the many enterprises
for which Mr. Spillikins, ever since he was twenty-one,
had already been signing documents and countersigning
cheques. So Mr. Spillikins found himself in a mahogany
office selling wholesale oil. And he liked it. He said
that business sharpened one up tremendously.
"I'm afraid, Mr. Spillikins," a caller in the mahogany
office would say, "that we can't meet you at five dollars.
Four seventy is the best we can do on the present market."
"My dear chap," said Mr. Spillikins, "that's all right.
After all, thirty cents isn't much, eh what? Dash it,
old man, we won't fight about thirty cents. How much do
you want?"
"Well, at four seventy we'll take twenty thousand barrels."
"By Jove!" said Mr. Spillikins; "twenty thousand barrels.
Gad! you want a lot, don't you? Pretty big sale, eh, for
a beginner like me? I guess uncle'll be tickled to death."
So tickled was he that after a few weeks of oil-selling
Mr. Boulder urged Mr. Spillikins to retire, and wrote
off many thousand dollars from the capital value of his
estate.
So after this there was only one thing for Mr. Spillikins
to do, and everybody told him so--namely to get married.
"Spillikins," said his friends at the club after they
had taken all his loose money over the card table, "you
ought to get married."
Goodness knows he was willing enough. In fact, up to this
point Mr. Spillikins's whole existence had been one long
aspiring sigh directed towards the joys of matrimony.
In his brief college days his timid glances had wandered
by an irresistible attraction towards the seats on the
right-hand side of the class room, where the girls of
the first year sat, with golden pigtails down their backs,
doing trigonometry.
He would have married any of them. But when a girl can
work out trigonometry at sight, what use can she possibly
have for marriage? None. Mr. Spillikins knew this and it
kept him silent. And even when the most beautiful girl
in the class married the demonstrator and thus terminated
her studies in her second year, Spillikins realized that
it was only because the man was, undeniably, a demonstrator
and knew things.
Later on, when Spillikins went into business and into
society, the same fate pursued him. He loved, for at
least six months, Georgiana McTeague, the niece of the
presbyterian minister of St. Osoph's. He loved her so
well that for her sake he temporarily abandoned his pew
at St. Asaph's, which was episcopalian, and listened to
fourteen consecutive sermons on hell. But the affair got
no further than that. Once or twice, indeed, Spillikins
walked home with Georgiana from church and talked about
hell with her; and once her uncle asked him into the
manse for cold supper after evening service, and they
had a long talk about hell all through the meal and
upstairs in the sitting-room afterwards. But somehow
Spillikins could get no further with it. He read up all
he could about hell so as to be able to talk with Georgiana,
but in the end it failed: a young minister fresh from
college came and preached at St. Osoph's six special
sermons on the absolute certainty of eternal punishment,
and he married Miss McTeague as a result of it.
And, meantime, Mr. Spillikins had got engaged, or
practically so, to Adelina Lightleigh; not that he had
spoken to her, but he considered himself bound to her.
For her sake he had given up hell altogether, and was
dancing till two in the morning and studying action bridge
out of a book. For a time he felt so sure that she meant
to have him that he began bringing his greatest friend,
Edward Ruff of the college football team, of whom Spillikins
was very proud, up to the Lightleighs' residence. He
specially wanted Adelina and Edward to be great friends,
so that Adelina and he might ask Edward up to the house
after he was married. And they got to be such great
friends, and so quickly, that they were married in New
York that autumn. After which Spillikins used to be
invited up to the house by Edward and Adelina. They both
used to tell him how much they owed him; and they, too,
used to join in the chorus and say, "You know, Peter,
you're awfully silly not to get married."
Now all this had happened and finished at about the time
when the Yahi-Bahi Society ran its course. At its first
meeting Mr. Spillikins had met Dulphemia Rasselyer-Brown.
At the very sight of her he began reading up the life of
Buddha and a translation of the Upanishads so as to fit
himself to aspire to live with her. Even when the society
ended in disaster Mr. Spillikins's love only burned the
stronger. Consequently, as soon as he knew that Mr. and
Mrs. Rasselyer-Brown were going away for the summer, and
that Dulphemia was to go to stay with the Newberrys at
Castel Casteggio, this latter place, the summer retreat
of the Newberrys, became the one spot on earth for Mr.
Peter Spillikins.
Naturally, therefore, Mr. Spillikins was presently
transported to the seventh heaven when in due course of
time he received a note which said, "We shall be so
pleased if you can come out and spend a week or two with
us here. We will send the car down to the Thursday train
to meet you. We live here in the simplest fashion possible;
in fact, as Mr. Newberry says, we are just roughing it,
but I am sure you don't mind for a change. Dulphemia is
with us, but we are quite a small party."
The note was signed "Margaret Newberry" and was written
on heavy cream paper with a silver monogram such as people
use when roughing it.
The Newberrys, like everybody else, went away from town
in the summertime. Mr. Newberry being still in business,
after a fashion, it would not have looked well for him
to remain in town throughout the year. It would have
created a bad impression on the market as to how much he
was making.
In fact, in the early summer everybody went out of town.
The few who ever revisited the place in August reported
that they hadn't seen a soul on the street.
It was a sort of longing for the simple life, for nature,
that came over everybody. Some people sought it at the
seaside, where nature had thrown out her broad plank
walks and her long piers and her vaudeville shows. Others
sought it in the heart of the country, where nature had
spread her oiled motor roads and her wayside inns. Others,
like the Newberrys, preferred to "rough it" in country
residences of their own.
Some of the people, as already said, went for business
reasons, to avoid the suspicion of having to work all
the year round. Others went to Europe to avoid the reproach
of living always in America. Others, perhaps most people,
went for medical reasons, being sent away by their doctors.
Not that they were ill; but the doctors of Plutoria
Avenue, such as Doctor Slyder, always preferred to send
all their patients out of town during the summer months.
No well-to-do doctor cares to be bothered with them. And
of course patients, even when they are anxious to go
anywhere on their own account, much prefer to be sent
there by their doctor.
"My dear madam," Dr. Slyder would say to a lady who, as
he knew, was most anxious to go to Virginia, "there's
really nothing I can do for you." Here he spoke the truth.
"It's not a case of treatment. It's simply a matter of
dropping everything and going away. Now why don't you go
for a month or two to some quiet place, where you will
simply do nothing?" (She never, as he knew, did anything,
anyway.) "What do you say to Hot Springs,
Virginia?--absolute quiet, good golf, not a soul there,
plenty of tennis." Or else he would say, "My dear madam,
you're simply worn out. Why don't you just drop everything
and go to Canada?--perfectly quiet, not a soul there,
and, I believe, nowadays quite fashionable."
Thus, after all the patients had been sent away, Dr.
Slyder and his colleagues of Plutoria Avenue managed to
slip away themselves for a month or two, heading straight
for Paris and Vienna. There they were able, so they said,
to keep in touch with what continental doctors were doing.
They probably were.
Now it so happened that both the parents of Miss Dulphemia
Rasselyer-Brown had been sent out of town in this fashion.
Mrs. Rasselyer-Brown's distressing experience with
Yahi-Bahi had left her in a condition in which she was
utterly fit for nothing, except to go on a Mediterranean
cruise, with about eighty other people also fit for
nothing.
Mr. Rasselyer-Brown himself, though never exactly an
invalid, had confessed that after all the fuss of the
Yahi-Bahi business he needed bracing up, needed putting
into shape, and had put himself into Dr. Slyder's hands.
The doctor had examined him, questioned him searchingly
as to what he drank, and ended by prescribing port wine
to be taken firmly and unflinchingly during the evening,
and for the daytime, at any moment of exhaustion, a light
cordial such as rye whiskey, or rum and Vichy water. In
addition to which Dr. Slyder had recommended Mr.
Rasselyer-Brown to leave town.
"Why don't you go down to Nagahakett on the Atlantic?"
he said.
"Is that in Maine?" said Mr. Rasselyer-Brown in horror.
"Oh, dear me, no!" answered the doctor reassuringly.
"It's in New Brunswick, Canada; excellent place, most
liberal licence laws; first class cuisine and a bar in
the hotel. No tourists, no golf, too cold to swim--just
the place to enjoy oneself."
So Mr. Rasselyer-Brown had gone away also, and as a result
Dulphemia Rasselyer-Brown, at the particular moment of
which we speak, was declared by the Boudoir and Society
column of the Plutorian Daily Dollar to be staying with
Mr. and Mrs. Newberry at their charming retreat, Castel
Casteggio.
The Newberrys belonged to the class of people whose one
aim in the summer is to lead the simple life. Mr. Newberry
himself said that his one idea of a vacation was to get
right out into the bush, and put on old clothes, and just
eat when he felt like it.
This was why he had built Castel Casteggio. It stood
about forty miles from the city, out among the wooded
hills on the shore of a little lake. Except for the
fifteen or twenty residences like it that dotted the
sides of the lake it was entirely isolated. The only way
to reach it was by the motor road that wound its way
among leafy hills from the railway station fifteen miles
away. Every foot of the road was private property, as
all nature ought to be. The whole country about Castel
Casteggio was absolutely primeval, or at any rate as
primeval as Scotch gardeners and French landscape artists
could make it. The lake itself lay like a sparkling gem
from nature's workshop-except that they had raised the
level of it ten feet. stone-banked the sides, cleared
out the brush, and put a motor road round it. Beyond that
it was pure nature.
Castel Casteggio itself, a beautiful house of white brick
with sweeping piazzas and glittering conservatories,
standing among great trees with rolling lawns broken with
flower-beds as the ground sloped to the lake, was perhaps
the most beautiful house of all; at any rate, it was an
ideal spot to wear old clothes in, to dine early (at
7.30) and, except for tennis parties, motor-boat parties,
lawn teas, and golf, to live absolutely to oneself.
It should be explained that the house was not called
Castel Casteggio because the Newberrys were Italian: they
were not; nor because they owned estates in Italy: they
didn't nor had travelled there: they hadn't. Indeed, for
a time they had thought of giving it a Welsh name, or a
Scotch. But the beautiful country residence of the
Asterisk-Thomsons had stood close by in the same primeval
country was already called Penny-gw-rydd, and the woodland
retreat of the Hyphen-Joneses just across the little lake
was called Strathythan-na-Clee, and the charming chalet
of the Wilson-Smiths was called Yodel-Dudel; so it seemed
fairer to select an Italian name.
"By Jove! Miss Furlong, how awfully good of you to come
down!"
The little suburban train--two cars only, both first
class, for the train went nowhere except out into the
primeval wilderness--had drawn up at the diminutive
roadside station. Mr. Spillikins had alighted, and there
was Miss Philippa Furlong sitting behind the chauffeur
in the Newberrys' motor. She was looking as beautiful as
only the younger sister of a High Church episcopalian
rector can look, dressed in white, the colour of
saintliness, on a beautiful morning in July.
There was no doubt about Philippa Furlong. Her beauty
was of that peculiar and almost sacred kind found only
in the immediate neighbourhood of the High Church clergy.
It was admitted by all who envied or admired her that
she could enter a church more gracefully, move more
swimmingly up the aisle, and pray better than any girl
on Plutoria Avenue.
Mr. Spillikins, as he gazed at her in her white summer
dress and wide picture hat, with her parasol nodding
above her head, realized that after all, religion, as
embodied in the younger sisters of the High Church clergy,
fills a great place in the world.
"By Jove!" he repeated, "how awfully good of you!"
"Not a bit," said Philippa. "Hop in. Dulphemia was coming,
but she couldn't. Is that all you have with you?"
The last remark was ironical. It referred to the two
quite large steamer trunks of Mr. Spillikins that were
being loaded, together with his suit-case, tennis racket,
and golf kit, on to the fore part of the motor. Mr.
Spillikins, as a young man of social experience, had
roughed it before. He knew what a lot of clothes one
needs for it.
So the motor sped away, and went bowling noiselessly over
the oiled road, and turning corners where the green boughs
of the great trees almost swished in their faces, and
rounding and twisting among curves of the hills as it
carried Spillikins and Philippa away from the lower domain
or ordinary fields and farms up into the enchanted country
of private property and the magic castles of Casteggio
and Penny-gw-rydd.
Mr. Spillikins must have assured Philippa at least a
dozen times in starting off how awfully good it was of
her to come down in the motor; and he was so pleased at
her coming to meet him that Philippa never even hinted
that the truth was that she had expected somebody else
on the same train. For to a girl brought up in the
principles of the High Church the truth is a very sacred
thing. She keeps it to herself.
And naturally, with such a sympathetic listener, it was
not long before Mr. Spillikins had begun to talk of
Dulphemia and his hopes.
"I don't know whether she really cares for me or not,"
said Mr. Spillikins, "but I have pretty good hope. The
other day, or at least about two months ago, at one of
the Yahi-Bahi meetings--you were not in that, were you?"
he said breaking off.
"Only just at the beginning," said Philippa; "we went to
Bermuda."
"Oh yes, I remember. Do you know, I thought it pretty
rough at the end, especially on Ram Spudd. I liked him.
I sent him two pounds of tobacco to the penitentiary last
week; you can get it in to them, you know, if you know
how."
"Oh yes," said Mr. Spillikins. And he realized that he
had actually drifted off the topic of Dulphemia, a thing
that had never happened to him before. "I was going to
say that at one of the meetings, you know, I asked her
if I might call her Dulphemia."
"And a little after that I took her slippers home from
the Charity Ball at the Grand Palaver. Archie Jones took
her home herself in his car, but I took her slippers.
She'd forgotten them. I thought that a pretty good sign,
wasn't it? You wouldn't let a chap carry round your
slippers unless you knew him pretty well, would you, Miss
Philippa?"
"Oh no, nobody would," said Philippa. This of course,
was a standing principle of the Anglican Church.
"And a little after that Dulphemia and Charlie Mostyn
and I were walking to Mrs. Buncomhearst's musical, and
we'd only just started along the street, when she stopped
and sent me back for her music--me, mind you, not Charlie.
That seems to me awfully significant."
"Doesn't it?" said Mr. Spillikins. "You don't mind my
telling you all about this Miss Philippa?" he added.
Incidentally Mr. Spillikins felt that it was all right
to call her Miss Philippa, because she had a sister who
was really Miss Furlong, so it would have been quite
wrong, as Mr. Spillikins realized, to have called Miss
Philippa by her surname. In any case, the beauty of the
morning was against it.
"I don't mind a bit," said Philippa. "I think it's awfully
nice of you to tell me about it."
She didn't add that she knew all about it already.
"You see," said Mr. Spillikins, "you're so awfully
sympathetic. It makes it so easy to talk to you. With
other girls, especially with clever ones, even with
Dulphemia. I often feel a perfect jackass beside them.
But I don t feel that way with you at all."
"Don't you really?" said Philippa, but the honest admiration
in Mr. Spillikin's protruding blue eyes forbade a sarcastic
answer.
"By Jove!" said Mr. Spillikins presently, with complete
irrelevance, "I hope you don't mind my saying it, but
you look awfully well in white--stunning." He felt that
a man who was affianced, or practically so, was allowed
the smaller liberty of paying honest compliments.
"Oh, this old thing," laughed Philippa, with a contemptuous
shake of her dress. "But up here, you know, we just wear
anything." She didn't say that this old thing was only
two weeks old and had cost eighty dollars, or the equivalent
of one person's pew rent at St. Asaph's for six months.
And after that they had only time, so it seemed to Mr.
Spillikins, for two or three remarks, and he had scarcely
had leisure to reflect what a charming girl Philippa had
grown to be since she went to Bermuda--the effect, no
doubt, of the climate of those fortunate islands--when
quite suddenly they rounded a curve into an avenue of
nodding trees, and there were the great lawn and wide
piazzas and the conservatories of Castel Casteggio right
in front of them.
"Here we are," said Philippa, "and there's Mr. Newberry
out on the lawn."
"Now, here," Mr. Newberry was saying a little later,
waving his hand, "is where you get what I think the finest
view of the place."
He was standing at the corner of the lawn where it sloped,
dotted with great trees, to the banks of the little lake,
and was showing Mr. Spillikins the beauties of Castel
Casteggio.
Mr. Newberry wore on his short circular person the summer
costume of a man taking his ease and careless of dress:
plain white flannel trousers, not worth more than six
dollars a leg, an ordinary white silk shirt with a rolled
collar, that couldn't have cost more than fifteen dollars,
and on his head an ordinary Panama hat, say forty dollars.
"By Jove!" said Mr. Spillikins, as he looked about him
at the house and the beautiful lawn with its great trees,
"it's a lovely place."
"Isn't it?" said Mr. Newberry. "But you ought to have
seen it when I took hold of it. To make the motor road
alone I had to dynamite out about a hundred yards of
rock, and then I fetched up cement, tons and tons of it,
and boulders to buttress the embankment."
"Did you really!" said Mr. Spillikins, looking at Mr.
Newberry with great respect.
"Yes, and even that was nothing to the house itself. Do
you know, I had to go at least forty feet for the
foundations. First I went through about twenty feet of
loose clay, after that I struck sand, and I'd no sooner
got through that than, by George! I landed in eight feet
of water. I had to pump it out; I think I took out a
thousand gallons before I got clear down to the rock.
Then I took my solid steel beams in fifty-foot lengths,"
here Mr. Newberry imitated with his arms the action of
a man setting up a steel beam, "and set them upright and
bolted them on the rock. After that I threw my steel
girders across, clapped on my roof rafters, all steel,
in sixty-foot pieces, and then just held it easily, just
supported it a bit, and let it sink gradually to its
place."
Mr. Newberry illustrated with his two arms the action of
a huge house being allowed to sink slowly to a firm rest.
"You don't say so!" said Mr. Spillikins, lost in amazement
at the wonderful physical strength that Mr. Newberry must
have.
"Excuse me just a minute," broke off Mr. Newberry, "while
I smooth out the gravel where you're standing. You've
rather disturbed it, I'm afraid."
"My gardener. He doesn't care to have us walk on the
gravel paths. It scuffs up the gravel so. But sometimes
one forgets."
It should be said here, for the sake of clearness, that
one of the chief glories of Castel Casteggio lay in its
servants. All of them, it goes without saying, had been
brought from Great Britain. The comfort they gave to Mr.
and Mrs. Newberry was unspeakable. In fact, as they
themselves admitted, servants of the kind are simply not
to be found in America.
"Our Scotch gardener," Mrs. Newberry always explained
"is a perfect character. I don't know how we could get
another like him. Do you know, my dear, he simply won't
allow us to pick the roses; and if any of us walk across
the grass he is furious. And he positively refuses to
let us use the vegetables. He told me quite plainly that
if we took any of his young peas or his early cucumbers
he would leave. We are to have them later on when he's
finished growing them."
"How delightful it is to have servants of that sort,"
the lady addressed would murmur; "so devoted and so
different from servants on this side of the water. Just
imagine, my dear, my chauffeur, when I was in Colorado,
actually threatened to leave me merely because I wanted
to reduce his wages. I think it's these wretched labour
unions."
"I'm sure it is. Of course we have trouble with McAlister
at times, but he's always very reasonable when we put
things in the right light. Last week, for example, I was
afraid that we had gone too far with him. He is always
accustomed to have a quart of beer every morning at
half-past ten--the maids are told to bring it out to him,
and after that he goes to sleep in the little arbour
beside the tulip bed. And the other day when he went
there he found that one of our guests who hadn't been
told, was actually sitting in there reading. Of course
he was furious. I was afraid for the moment that he would
give notice on the spot."
"Positively, my dear, I don't know. But we explained to
him at once that it was only an accident and that the
person hadn't known and that of course it wouldn't occur
again. After that he was softened a little, but he went
off muttering to himself, and that evening he dug up all
the new tulips and threw them over the fence. We saw him
do it, but we didn't dare say anything."
"Oh no," echoed the other lady; "if you had you might
have lost him."
"Exactly. And I don't think we could possibly get another
man like him; at least, not on this side of the water."
"But come," said Mr. Newberry, after he had finished
adjusting the gravel with his foot, "there are Mrs.
Newberry and the girls on the verandah. Let's go and join
them."
A few minutes later Mr. Spillikins was talking with Mrs.
Newberry and Dulphemia Rasselyer-Brown, and telling Mrs.
Newberry what a beautiful house she had. Beside them
stood Philippa Furlong, and she had her arm around
Dulphemia's waist; and the picture that they thus made,
with their heads close together, Dulphemia's hair being
golden and Philippa's chestnut-brown, was such that Mr.
Spillikins had no eyes for Mrs. Newberry nor for Castel
Casteggio nor for anything. So much so that he practically
didn't see at all the little girl in green that stood
unobtrusively on the further side of Mrs. Newberry.
Indeed, though somebody had murmured her name in
introduction, he couldn't have repeated it if asked two
minutes afterwards. His eyes and his mind were elsewhere.
For the Little Girl in Green looked at Mr. Spillikins
with wide eyes, and when she looked at him she saw all
at once such wonderful things about him as nobody had
ever seen before.
For she could see from the poise of his head how awfully
clever he was; and from the way he stood with his hands
in his side pockets she could see how manly and brave he
must be; and of course there was firmness and strength
written all over him. In short, she saw as she looked
such a Peter Spillikins as truly never existed, or could
exist--or at least such a Peter Spillikins as no one else
in the world had ever suspected before.
All in a moment she was ever so glad that she accepted
Mrs. Newberry's invitation to Castel Casteggio and hadn't
been afraid to come. For the Little Girl in Green, whose
Christian name was Norah, was only what is called a poor
relation of Mrs. Newberry, and her father was a person
of no account whatever, who didn't belong to the Mausoleum
Club or to any other club, and who lived, with Norah, on
a street that nobody who was anybody lived upon. Norah
had been asked up a few days before out of the City to
give her air--which is the only thing that can be safely
and freely given to poor relations. Thus she had arrived
at Castel Casteggio with one diminutive trunk, so small
and shabby that even the servants who carried it upstairs
were ashamed of it. In it were a pair of brand new tennis
shoes (at ninety cents reduced to seventy-five) and a
white dress of the kind that is called "almost evening,"
and such few other things as poor relations might bring
with fear and trembling to join in the simple rusticity
of the rich.
As for him, such is the contrariety of human things, he
had no eyes for her at all.
"What a perfectly charming house this is," Mr. Spillikins
was saying. He always said this on such occasions, but
it seemed to the Little Girl in Green that he spoke with
wonderful social ease.
"I am so glad you think so," said Mrs. Newberry (this
was what she always answered); "you've no idea what work
it has been. This year we put in all this new glass in
the east conservatory, over a thousand panes. Such a
tremendous business!"
"I was just telling Mr. Spillikins," said Mr. Newberry,
"about the work we had blasting out the motor road. You
can see the gap where it lies better from here, I think,
Spillikins. I must have exploded a ton and a half of
dynamite on it."
"By Jove!" said Mr. Spillikins; "it must be dangerous
work eh? I wonder you aren't afraid of it."
"One simply gets used to it, that's all," said Newberry,
shrugging his shoulders; "but of course it is dangerous.
I blew up two Italians on the last job." He paused a
minute and added musingly, "Hardy fellows, the Italians.
I prefer them to any other people for blasting."
"Did you blow them up yourself?" asked Mr. Spillikins.
"I wasn't here," answered Mr. Newberry. "In fact, I never
care to be here when I'm blasting. We go to town. But I
had to foot the bill for them all the same. Quite right,
too. The risk, of course, was mine, not theirs; that's
the law, you know. They cost me two thousand each."
"But come," said Mrs. Newberry, "I think we must go and
dress for dinner. Franklin will be frightfully put out
if we're late. Franklin is our butler," she went on,
seeing that Mr. Spillikins didn't understand the reference,
"and as we brought him out from England we have to be
rather careful. With a good man like Franklin one is
always so afraid of losing him--and after last night we
have to be doubly careful."
"Oh, it wasn't much," said Mrs. Newberry. "In fact, it
was merely an accident. Only it just chanced that at
dinner, quite late in the meal, when we had had nearly
everything (we dine very simply here, Mr. Spillikins),
Mr. Newberry, who was thirsty and who wasn't really
thinking what he was saying, asked Franklin to give him
a glass of hock. Franklin said at once, 'I'm very sorry,
sir, I don't care to serve hock after the entree!'"
"And of course he was right," said Dulphemia with emphasis.
"Exactly; he was perfectly right. They know, you know.
We were afraid that there might be trouble, but Mr.
Newberry went and saw Franklin afterwards and he behaved
very well over it. But suppose we go and dress? It's
half-past six already and we've only an hour."
In this congenial company Mr. Spillikins spent the next
three days.
Life at Castel Casteggio, as the Newberrys loved to
explain, was conducted on the very simplest plan. Early
breakfast, country fashion, at nine o'clock; after that
nothing to eat till lunch, unless one cared to have
lemonade or bottled ale sent out with a biscuit or a
macaroon to the tennis court. Lunch itself was a perfectly
plain midday meal, lasting till about 1.30, and consisting
simply of cold meats (say four kinds) and salads, with
perhaps a made dish or two, and, for anybody who cared
for it, a hot steak or a chop, or both. After that one
had coffee and cigarettes in the shade of the piazza and
waited for afternoon tea. This latter was served at a
wicker table in any part of the grounds that the gardener
was not at that moment clipping, trimming, or otherwise
using. Afternoon tea being over, one rested or walked on
the lawn till it was time to dress for dinner.
This simple routine was broken only by irruptions of
people in motors or motor boats from Penny-gw-rydd or
Yodel-Dudel Chalet.
The whole thing, from the point of view of Mr. Spillikins
or Dulphemia or Philippa, represented rusticity itself.
To the Little Girl in Green it seemed as brilliant as
the Court of Versailles; especially evening dinner--a
plain home meal as the others thought it--when she had
four glasses to drink out of and used to wonder over such
problems as whether you were supposed, when Franklin
poured out wine, to tell him to stop or to wait till he
stopped without being told to stop; and other similar
mysteries, such as many people before and after have
meditated upon.
During all this time Mr. Spillikins was nerving himself
to propose to Dulphemia Rasselyer-Brown. In fact, he
spent part of his time walking up and down under the
trees with Philippa Furlong and discussing with her the
proposal that he meant to make, together with such topics
as marriage in general and his own unworthiness.
He might have waited indefinitely had he not learned,
on the third day of his visit, that Dulphemia was to go
away in the morning to join her father at Nagahakett.
That evening he found the necessary nerve to speak, and
the proposal in almost every aspect of it was most
successful.
"By Jove!" Spillikins said to Philippa Furlong next
morning, in explaining what had happened, "she was awfully
nice about it. I think she must have guessed, in a way,
don't you, what I was going to say? But at any rate she
was awfully nice--let me say everything I wanted, and
when I explained what a fool I was, she said she didn't
think I was half such a fool as people thought me. But
it's all right. It turns out that she isn't thinking of
getting married. I asked her if I might always go on
thinking of her, and she said I might."
And that morning when Dulphemia was carried off in the
motor to the station, Mr. Spillikins, without exactly
being aware how he had done it, had somehow transferred
himself to Philippa.
"Isn't she a splendid girl!" he said at least ten times
a day to Norah, the Little Girl in Green. And Norah always
agreed, because she really thought Philippa a perfectly
wonderful creature. There is no doubt that, but for a
slight shift of circumstances, Mr. Spillikins would have
proposed to Miss Furlong. Indeed, he spent a good part
of his time rehearsing little speeches that began, "Of
course I know I'm an awful ass in a way," or, "Of course
I know that I'm not at all the sort of fellow," and so
on.
For it so happened that on the Thursday, one week after
Mr. Spillikins's arrival, Philippa went again to the
station in the motor. And when she came back there was
another passenger with her, a tall young man in tweed,
and they both began calling out to the Newberrys from a
distance of at least a hundred yards.
And both the Newberrys suddenly exclaimed, "Why, it's
Tom!" and rushed off to meet the motor. And there was
such a laughing and jubilation as the two descended and
carried Tom's valises to the verandah, that Mr. Spillikins
felt as suddenly and completely out of it as the Little
Girl in Green herself--especially as his ear had caught,
among the first things said, the words, "Congratulate
us, Mrs. Newberry, we're engaged."
After which Mr. Spillikins had the pleasure of sitting
and listening while it was explained in wicker chairs on
the verandah, that Philippa and Tom had been engaged
already for ever so long--in fact, nearly two weeks, only
they had agreed not to say a word to anybody till Tom
had gone to North Carolina and back, to see his people.
And as to who Tom was, or what was the relation between
Tom and the Newberrys, Mr. Spillikins neither knew or
cared; nor did it interest him in the least that Philippa
had met Tom in Bermuda, and that she hadn't known that
he even knew the Newberry's nor any other of the exuberant
disclosures of the moment. In fact, if there was any one
period rather than another when Mr. Spillikins felt
corroborated in his private view of himself, it was at
this moment.
So the next day Tom and Philippa vanished together.
"We shall be quite a small party now," said Mrs. Newberry;
"in fact, quite by ourselves till Mrs. Everleigh comes,
and she won't be here for a fortnight."
At which the heart of the Little Girl in Green was glad,
because she had been afraid that other girls might be
coming, whereas she knew that Mrs. Everleigh was a widow
with four sons and must be ever so old, past forty.
The next few days were spent by Mr. Spillikins almost
entirely in the society of Norah. He thought them on the
whole rather pleasant days, but slow. To her they were
an uninterrupted dream of happiness never to be forgotten.
The Newberrys left them to themselves; not with any
intent; it was merely that they were perpetually busy
walking about the grounds of Castel Casteggio, blowing
up things with dynamite, throwing steel bridges over
gullies, and hoisting heavy timber with derricks. Nor
were they to blame for it. For it had not always been
theirs to command dynamite and control the forces of
nature. There had been a time, now long ago, when the
two Newberrys had lived, both of them, on twenty dollars
a week, and Mrs. Newberry had made her own dresses, and
Mr. Newberry had spent vigorous evenings in making
hand-made shelves for their sitting-room. That was long
ago, and since then Mr. Newberry, like many other people
of those earlier days, had risen to wealth and Castel
Casteggio, while others, like Norah's father, had stayed
just where they were.
So the Newberrys left Peter and Norah to themselves all
day. Even after dinner, in the evening, Mr. Newberry was
very apt to call to his wife in the dusk from some distant
corner of the lawn:
"Margaret, come over here and tell me if you don't think
we might cut down this elm, tear the stump out by the
roots, and throw it into the ravine."
And the answer was, "One minute, Edward; just wait till
I get a wrap."
Before they came back, the dusk had grown to darkness,
and they had redynamited half the estate.
During all of which time Mr. Spillikins sat with Norah
on the piazza. He talked and she listened. He told her,
for instance, all about his terrific experiences in the
oil business, and about his exciting career at college;
or presently they went indoors and Norah played the piano
and Mr. Spillikins sat and smoked and listened. In such
a house as the Newberry's, where dynamite and the greater
explosives were everyday matters, a little thing like
the use of tobacco in the drawing-room didn't count. As
for the music, "Go right ahead," said Mr. Spillikins;
"I'm not musical, but I don't mind music a bit."
In the daytime they played tennis. There was a court at
one end of the lawn beneath the trees, all chequered with
sunlight and mingled shadow; very beautiful, Norah thought,
though Mr. Spillikins explained that the spotted light
put him off his game. In fact, it was owing entirely to
this bad light that Mr. Spillikins's fast drives, wonderful
though they were, somehow never got inside the service
court.
Norah, of course, thought Mr. Spillikins a wonderful
player. She was glad--in fact, it suited them both--when
he beat her six to nothing. She didn't know and didn't
care that there was no one else in the world that Mr.
Spillikins could beat like that. Once he even said to
her.
"By Gad! you don't play half a bad game, you know. I
think you know, with practice you'd come on quite a lot."
After that the games were understood to be more or less
in the form of lessons, which put Mr. Spillikins on a
pedestal of superiority, and allowed any bad strokes on
his part to be viewed as a form of indulgence.
Also, as the tennis was viewed in this light, it was
Norah's part to pick up the balls at the net and throw
them back to Mr. Spillikins. He let her do this, not from
rudeness, for it wasn't in him, but because in such a
primeval place as Castel Casteggio the natural primitive
relation of the sexes is bound to reassert itself.
But of love Mr. Spillikins never thought. He had viewed
it so eagerly and so often from a distance that when it
stood here modestly at his very elbow he did not recognize
its presence. His mind had been fashioned, as it were,
to connect love with something stunning and sensational,
with Easter hats and harem skirts and the luxurious
consciousness of the unattainable.
Even at that, there is no knowing what might have happened.
Tennis, in the chequered light of sun and shadow cast by
summer leaves, is a dangerous game. There came a day when
they were standing one each side of the net and Mr.
Spillikins was explaining to Norah the proper way to hold
a racquet so as to be able to give those magnificent
backhand sweeps of his, by which he generally drove the
ball halfway to the lake; and explaining this involved
putting his hand right over Norah's on the handle of the
racquet, so that for just half a second her hand was
clasped tight in his; and if that half-second had been
lengthened out into a whole second it is quite possible
that what was already subconscious in his mind would have
broken its way triumphantly to the surface, and Norah's
hand would have stayed in his--how willingly--! for the
rest of their two lives.
But just at that moment Mr. Spillikins looked up, and he
said in quite an altered tone.
"By Jove! who's that awfully good-looking woman getting
out of the motor?"
And their hands unclasped. Norah looked over towards the
house and said:
"Why, it's Mrs. Everleigh. I thought she wasn't coming
for another week."
"I say," said Mr. Spillikins, straining his short sight
to the uttermost, "what perfectly wonderful golden hair,
eh?" "Why, it's--" Norah began, and then she stopped. It
didn't seem right to explain that Mrs. Everleigh's hair
was dyed. "And who's that tall chap standing beside
her?" said Mr. Spillikins.
"I think it's Captain Cormorant, but I don't think he's
going to stay. He's only brought her up in the motor from
town." "By Jove, how good of him!" said Spillikins; and
this sentiment in regard to Captain Cormorant, though
he didn't know it, was to become a keynote of his existence.
"I didn't know she was coming so soon," said Norah, and
there was weariness already in her heart. Certainly she
didn't know it; still less did she know, or anyone else,
that the reason of Mrs. Everleigh's coming was because
Mr. Spillikins was there. She came with a set purpose,
and she sent Captain Cormorant directly back in the motor
because she didn't want him on the premises.
"All right," said Mr. Spillikins with great alacrity,
"let's go."
Now as this story began with the information that Mrs.
Everleigh is at present Mrs. Everleigh-Spillikins, there
is no need to pursue in detail the stages of Mr.
Spillikins's wooing. Its course was swift and happy. Mr.
Spillikins, having seen the back of Mrs. Everleigh's
head, had decided instantly that she was the most beautiful
woman in the world; and that impression is not easily
corrected in the half-light of a shaded drawing-room;
nor across a dinner-table lighted only with candles with
deep red shades; nor even in the daytime through a veil.
In any case, it is only fair to state that if Mrs.
Everleigh was not and is not a singularly beautiful woman,
Mr. Spillikins still doesn't know it. And in point of
attraction the homage of such experts as Captain Cormorant
and Lieutenant Hawk speaks for itself.
So the course of Mr. Spillikins's love, for love it must
have been, ran swiftly to its goal. Each stage of it was
duly marked by his comments to Norah.
"She is a splendid woman," he said, "so sympathetic. She
always seems to know just what one's going to say."
"By Jove!" he said a day later, "Mrs. Everleigh's an
awfully fine woman, isn't she? I was telling her about
my having been in the oil business for a little while,
and she thinks that I'd really be awfully good in money
things. She said she wished she had me to manage her
money for her."
This also was quite true, except that Mrs. Everleigh had
not made it quite clear that the management of her money
was of the form generally known as deficit financing. In
fact, her money was, very crudely stated, nonexistent,
and it needed a lot of management.
A day or two later Mr. Spillikins was saying, "I think
Mrs. Everleigh must have had great sorrow, don't you?
Yesterday she was showing me a photograph of her little
boy--she has a little boy you know--"
"Yes, I know," said Norah. She didn't add that she knew
that Mrs. Everleigh had four.
"--and she was saying how awfully rough it is having him
always away from her at Dr. Something's academy where he
is."
And very soon after that Mr. Spillikins was saying, with
quite a quaver in his voice,
"By Jove! yes, I'm awfully lucky; I never thought for a
moment that she'd have me, you know--a woman like her,
with so much attention and everything. I can't imagine
what she sees in me."
And then Mr. Spillikins checked himself, for he
noticed--this was on the verandah in the morning--that
Norah had a hat and jacket on and that the motor was
rolling towards the door.
"Yes, didn't you know?" Norah said. "I thought you heard
them speaking of it at dinner last night. I have to go
home; father's alone, you know."
"Oh, I'm awfully sorry," said Mr. Spillikins; "we shan't
have any more tennis."
"Goodbye," said Norah, and as she said it and put out
her hand there were tears brimming up into her eyes. But
Mr. Spillikins, being short of sight, didn't see them.
Then as the motor carried her away he stood for a moment
in a sort of reverie. Perhaps certain things that might
have been rose unformed and inarticulate before his mind.
And then, a voice called from the drawing-room within,
in a measured and assured tone,
Mr. Spillikins started to say, "I didn't know--" and then
checked himself and said, "By Gad! what a fine-looking
little chap, eh? I'm awfully fond of boys."
"Dear little fellow, isn't he?" said Mrs. Everleigh.
"He's really rather taller than that now, because this
picture was taken a little while ago."
And the next day she said, "This is Willie, my third
boy," and on the day after that she said, "This is Sib,
my youngest boy; I'm sure you'll love him."
"I'm sure I shall," said Mr. Spillikins. He loved him
already for being the youngest.
And so in the fulness of time--nor was it so very full
either, in fact, only about five weeks--Peter Spillikins
and Mrs. Everleigh were married in St. Asaph's Church on
Plutoria Avenue. And the wedding was one of the most
beautiful and sumptuous of the weddings of the September
season. There were flowers, and bridesmaids in long veils,
and tall ushers in frock-coats, and awnings at the church
door, and strings of motors with wedding-favours on
imported chauffeurs, and all that goes to invest marriage
on Plutoria Avenue with its peculiar sacredness. The face
of the young rector, Mr. Fareforth Furlong, wore the
added saintliness that springs from a five-hundred dollar
fee. The whole town was there, or at least everybody that
was anybody; and if there was one person absent, one who
sat by herself in the darkened drawing-room of a dull
little house on a shabby street, who knew or cared?
So after the ceremony the happy couple--for were they
not so?--left for New York. There they spent their
honeymoon. They had thought of going--it was Mr.
Spillikins's idea--to the coast of Maine. But Mrs.
Everleigh-Spillikins said that New York was much nicer,
so restful, whereas, as everyone knows, the coast of
Maine is frightfully noisy.
Moreover, it so happened that before the
Everleigh-Spillikinses had been more than four or five
days in New York the ship of Captain Cormorant dropped
anchor in the Hudson; and when the anchor of that ship
was once down it generally stayed there. So the captain
was able to take the Everleigh-Spillikinses about in New
York, and to give a tea for Mrs. Everleigh--Spillikins
on the deck of his vessel so that she might meet the
officers, and another tea in a private room of a restaurant
on Fifth Avenue so that she might meet no one but himself.
And at this tea Captain Cormorant said, among other
things, "Did he kick up rough at all when you told him
about the money?"
And Mrs. Everleigh, now Mrs. Everleigh-Spillikins, said,
"Not he! I think he is actually pleased to know that I
haven't any. Do you know, Arthur, he's really an awfully
good fellow," and as she said it she moved her hand away
from under Captain Cormorant's on the tea-table.
"I say," said the Captain, "don't get sentimental over
him."
So that is how it is that the Everleigh-Spillikinses came
to reside on Plutoria Avenue in a beautiful stone house,
with a billiard-room in an extension on the second floor.
Through the windows of it one can almost hear the click
of the billiard balls, and a voice saying, "Hold on,
father, you had your shot."