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The former office is a grill room, and made one with the back parlor, now the club restaurant. On this Sat.u.r.day night in March, the white-capped chef--Augustus prided himself in keeping abreast the times--was busy in the grill room, and Augustus himself was superintending the laying of a round table for ten. The Colonel was to celebrate his sixty-fifth birthday by giving a little supper.
"Nothing elaborate, Buzzby," he said a week before the event, "a fine saddle of mutton--Southdown--some salmon trout, a stiff bouillon for Quimber, you know his masticatory apparatus is no longer equal to this whole occasion, and a chive salad. _The_ cake Mrs. Caukins elects to provide herself, and I need not a.s.sure you, who know her culinary powers, that it will be a _ne plus ultra_ of a cake, both in material and execution; fruits, coffee and cheese--Roquefort. Your accomplished chef can fill in the interstices. Here are the cards--Quimber at my right, if you please."
Augustus looked at the cards and smiled.
"All the old ones included, I see, Colonel," he ran over the names, "Quimber, Tave, Elmer Wiggins, Emlie, Poggi and Caukins"--he laughed outright; "that's a good firm, Colonel," he said slyly, and the Colonel smiled his appreciation of the gentle insinuation--"the manager at the sheds, and the new boss of the Upper Quarry?" He looked inquiringly at the Colonel on reading the last name.
"That's all right, Buzzby; he's due here next Sat.u.r.day, the festal day; and I want to give some substantial expression to him, as a stranger and neighbor, of Flamsted's hospitality."
Augustus nodded approval, and continued: "And me! Thank you kindly, Colonel, but you'll have to excuse me this time. I want everything to go right on this special occasion. I'll join you with a pipe afterwards."
"As you please, Buzzby, only make it a cigar; and consider yourself included in the spirit if not in the flesh. Nine sharp."
At a quarter of nine, just as Augustus finished putting the last touch to an already perfect table, the Colonel made his appearance at The Greenbush, a pasteboard box containing a dozen boutonnieres under his arm. He laid one on the table cloth by each plate, and stood back to enjoy the effect. He rubbed his hands softly in appreciation of the "color scheme" as he termed it--a phrase that puzzled Augustus. He saw no "scheme" and very little "color" in the dark-wainscoted room, except the cheerful fire on the hearth and some heavy red half-curtains at the windows to shut out the cold and dark of this March night. The walls were white; the grill of dark wood, and the floor painted dark brown.
But the red carnations on the snow-white damask did somehow "touch the whole thing up," as he confided later to his brother.
The Colonel's welcome to his companions was none the less cordial because he repressed his usual flow of eloquence till "the cloth should be removed." He purposed then to spring a surprise, oratorical and otherwise, on those a.s.sembled.
After the various toasts,--all given and drunk in sweet cider made for the occasion from Northern Spies, the Colonel being prohibitive for example's sake,--the good wishes for many prospective birthdays and prosperous years, the Colonel filled his gla.s.s to the brim and, holding it in his left hand, literally rose to the occasion.
"Gentlemen," he began in full chest tones, "some fourteen years ago, five of us now present were wont to discuss in the old office of this hospitable hostelry, now the famous grill room of the Club, the Invasion of the New--the opening of the great Flamsted Quarries--the migrations of the nations. .h.i.therwards and the consequent prospective industrial development of our native village."
He paused and looked about him impressively; finally his eye settled sternly on Elmer Wiggins who, satisfied inwardly with the choice and bounteous supper provided by the Colonel, had made up his mind to "stand fire", as he said afterwards to Augustus.
The Colonel resumed his speech, his voice acquiring as he proceeded a volume and depth that carried it far beyond the grill room's walls to the ears of edified pa.s.sers on the street:
"There were those among us who maintained--in the face of extreme opposition, I am sorry to say--that this town of Flamsted would soon make itself a factor in the vast industrial life of our marvellous country. In retrospect, I reflect that those who had this faith, this trust in the resources of their native town, were looked upon with scorn; were subjected to personal derision; were termed, to put it mildly, 'mere dreamers'--if I am not mistaken, the original expression was 'darned boomers.' Mr. Wiggins, here, our esteemed wholesale and retail pharmacist, will correct me if I am wrong on this point--"
He paused again as if expecting an answer; nothing was forthcoming but a decidedly embarra.s.sed "Hem," from the afore-named pharmacist. The Colonel was satisfied.
"Now, gentlemen, in refutation of that term--I will not repeat myself--and what it implied, after fourteen years, comparable to those seven fat kine of Pharaoh's dream, our town can point throughout the length and breadth of our land to its monumental works of art and utility that may well put to blush the renowned record of the Greeks and Romans."
Prolonged applause and a ringing cheer.
"All over our fair land the granite monoliths of _Flamsted_, beacon or battle, point heavenwards. The transcontinental roads, that track and nerve our country, cross and re-cross the raging torrents of western rivers on granite abutments from the _Flamsted_ quarries! The laws, alike for the just and unjust,"--the Colonel did not perceive his slip, but Elmer Wiggins smiled to himself,--"are promulgated within the stately granite halls of the capitals of our statehood--_Flamsted_ again! The gospel of praise and prayer will shortly resound beneath the arches of the choir and nave of the great granite cathedral--the product of the quarries in The Gore!"
Deafening applause, clinking of gla.s.ses, and cries of "Good!
True--Hear--Hear!"
The Colonel beamed and gathered himself together with a visible effort for his peroration. He laid his hand on his heart.
"A man of feeling, gentlemen, has a heart. He is not oblivious either of the needs of his neighbor, his community, or the world in general.
Although he is vulnerable to wounds in the house of his friends,"--a severe look falls upon Wiggins,--"he is not impervious to appeal for sympathy from without. I trust I have defined a man of feeling, gentlemen, a man of heart, as regards the world in general. And now, to make an abrupt descent from the abstract to the concrete, from the general to the particular, I will permit myself to say that those aspersions cast upon me fourteen years ago as a mere promoter, irrespective of my manhood, hurt me as a man of feeling--a man of heart.
"Sir--" he turned again to Elmer Wiggins who was apparently the lightning conductor for the Colonel's fourteen years of pent-up injury--"a father has his feelings. You are _not_ a father--I draw no conclusions; but _if_ you had been a father fourteen years ago in this very room, I would have trusted to your magnanimity not to give expression to your decided views on the subject of the native Americans'
intermarriage with those of a race foreign to us. I a.s.sure you, sir, such a view not only narrows the mind, but constricts humanity, and ossifies the heart--that special organ by which the world, despite present-day detractors, lives and moves and has its being." (Murmuring a.s.sent.)
"But, sir, I believe you have come to see otherwise, else as my guest on this happy occasion, I should not permit myself to apply to you so personal a remark. And, gentlemen," the Colonel swelled visibly, but those nearest him caught the s.h.i.+mmer of a suspicious moisture in his eyes, "I am in a position to-night--this night whereon you have added to my happiness by your presence at this board--to repeat now what I said fourteen years ago in this very room: I consider myself honored in that a member of my immediate family, one very, very dear to me," his voice shook in spite of his effort to strengthen it, "is contemplating entering into the solemn estate of matrimony at no distant date with--a foreigner, gentlemen, but a naturalized citizen of our great and glorious United States. Gentlemen," he filled his gla.s.s again and held it high above his head,--"I give you with all my heart Mr. Luigi Poggi, an honored and prosperous citizen of Flamsted--my future son-in-law--the prospective husband of my youngest daughter, Dulcibella Caukins."
The company rose to a man, young Caukins a.s.sisting Quimber to his feet.
With loud and hearty acclaim they welcomed the new member of the Caukins family; they crowded about the Colonel, and no hand that grasped his and Luigi's in congratulation was firmer and more cordial than Elmer Wiggins'. The Colonel's smile expanded; he was satisfied--the old score was wiped out.
Afterwards with cigars and pipes they discussed for an hour the affairs of Flamsted. The influx of foreigners with their families was causing a shortage of houses and housing. Emlie proposed the establishment of a Loan and Mortgage Company to help out the newcomers. Poggi laid before them his plan for an Italian House to receive the unmarried men on their arrival.
"By the way," he said, turning to the new head of the Upper Quarry, "you brought up a crowd with you this afternoon, didn't you?--mostly my countrymen?"
"No, a mixed lot--about thirty. A few Scotch and English came up on the same train. Have they applied to you?" He addressed the manager of the Company's sheds.
"No. I think they'll be along Monday. I've noticed that those two nationalities generally have relations who house and look out for them when they come. But I had an application from an American just after the train came in; I don't often have that now."
"Did you take him on?" the Colonel asked between two puffs of his Havana.
"Yes; and he went to work in Shed Number Two. I confess he puzzles me."
"What was he like?" asked the head of the Upper Quarry.
"Tall, blue eyes, gray hair, but only thirty-four as the register showed--misfit clothes--"
"That's the one--he came up in the train with me. I noticed him in the car. I don't believe he moved a muscle all the way up. I couldn't make him out, could you?"
"Well, no, I couldn't. By the way, Colonel, I noticed the name he entered was a familiar one in this part of Maine--Googe--"
"Googe!" The Colonel looked at the speaker in amazement; "did he give his first name?"
"Yes, Louis--Louis C. Googe--"
"My G.o.d!"
Whether the e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.i.o.n proceeded from one mouth or five, the manager and foreman could not distinguish; but the effect on the Flamsted men was varied and remarkable. The Colonel's cigar dropped from his shaking hand; his face was ashen. Emlie and Wiggins stared at each other as if they had taken leave of their senses. Joel Quimber leaned forward, his hands folded on the head of his cane, and spoke to Octavius who sat rigid on his chair:
"What'd he say, Tave?--Champ to home?"
But Octavius Buzzby was beyond the power of speech. Augustus spoke for him:
"He said a man applied for work in the sheds this afternoon, Uncle Jo, who wrote his name Louis C. Googe."
"Thet's him--thet's Champ--Champ's to home. You help me inter my coat, Tave, I 'm goin' to see ef's true--" He rose with difficulty. Then Octavius spoke; his voice shook:
"No, Uncle Jo, you sit still a while; if it's Champney, we can't none of us see him to-night." He pushed him gently into his chair.
The Colonel was rousing himself. He stepped to the telephone and called up Father Honore.
"Father Honore--
"This is Colonel Caukins. Can you tell me if there is any truth in the report that Champney Googe has returned to-day?
"Thank G.o.d."