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Glancing at the card, he saw that the rooming-house was quite near, and he turned toward it.
CHAPTER VIII
The house was a red-brick building like all the others in the block. The steps were of the conventional brownstone with rusty iron railings. The front door over the bas.e.m.e.nt entrance was open, and he rang a jangling bell, the handle of which was so loose in its socket that it was drawn almost out of place. While he waited he looked into the hall. It was clean, though the carpets on the floor and visible stairs were worn and the ma.s.sive hat-rack of walnut leaned forward from the wall as if about to fall. The bas.e.m.e.nt door was opened and a portly woman with a red face and tousled yellow hair climbed the stair to the sidewalk and approached him.
"I understand you have rooms to rent," Charles said.
The woman eyed him curiously, evidently surprised at the elegance of his clothing and the politeness of his att.i.tude, for he had taken off his hat in greeting her.
"Top floor back, three a week; hallroom back, next to it, two," she answered, wiping her fat hands on a white ap.r.o.n. "Want to see 'em?"
"If you please," Charles said.
"No trouble. That's what I'm here for," she smiled pleasantly. She came up the steps and led him into the hall. "Three flights up," she explained. "Will you leave your bag? If you do I'll have to lock the door. Roomers can't leave overcoats or hats on the rack now. Thieves are as plentiful as mosquitoes in Jersey--some in the house, as for that. My folks keep their rooms locked."
"I'll take the bag up with me," he said, feeling that, no matter what the rooms were like, he would take one.
The stairs were dark. A wire hanging down the shaft was attached to a bell at the top in order that it might be rung from the bas.e.m.e.nt by the landlady as a signal to her few servants who might be working above when needed below. Immediately over the stairs in the roof was an oblong skylight of variegated gla.s.s through which the tinted rays of sunlight came. The woman pushed open the door of the larger room.
"The girl hasn't had a chance to get at it yet," she apologized. "The bed hasn't been made up, and the man that is in it has left his things lying around. He is going away this afternoon. If you like the room I'll put his things out. He is unable to pay and I can't run my house on nothing."
Charles saw an open unpacked trunk of very cheap quality in the center of the room. The sight of the chamber in its disorder was decidedly unpleasant, and Charles did not enter it. "What is the other like?" he asked.
"I'll show you," said the woman, and she opened the door of the adjoining room. It was very small, and it had only a single chair and one window with a torn shade and cheap cotton-lace curtains. The only place to hang clothing was the back of the door, into which hooks had been screwed. There was a tiny wash-stand with a bowl in which a pitcher stood, and a rack holding two thin cotton towels.
"This will do very well," he said. "It is large enough for me. I want to cut down expenses. I am out of work at present."
"Oh, I see!" the landlady said, sympathetically. "A good many young men are out of work. That is what is the matter with the fellow next door!"
Charles paid for a week in advance, and when she was about to leave she said:
"Is your trunk coming? If it is, I'll send it up."
"No, I don't happen to have one," he said, trying to summon a casual smile.
"Oh," she exclaimed, avoiding his eyes, "I make a rule to insist on that. I've had trouble with some roomers, and it was always them that just had hand-baggage."
"I can pay you more in advance, if you wish," he proposed, anxiously. "I don't want you to break any rules on my account."
"Oh, never mind!" she said. "I know you are all right. I'm a pretty good judge. The Lord knows I see all sorts of folks in my business, and most of them will do me whenever they can. I've had thugs and counterfeiters in my house. One man that said he was studying to be a minister had six wives scattered over the country. They arrested him one afternoon while I was giving him a cup of tea down-stairs--the smoothest talker that ever lived, by all odds. I missed some trinkets, but, being a widow, I never mentioned it to the officers. You see, it was all in the papers and any little thing like that might have put my name on the list of his victims; as it was, the number of my house was all that got into print."
When she had left him Charles closed the door and softly locked it. He sat down in the chair and leaned back. The little walled s.p.a.ce gave him an odd sense of security. It was his own, for the time being, at least.
The window was open and a cooling breeze came in, fanning back the white curtains. He took out his cigarettes and began to smoke, and as he smoked his mind became very active in dealing with recent events. Two marvelous things had taken place. He was free from future contact with his Boston friends and acquaintances, who knew of his recent escapades and their humiliating consequences, and he had released his brother from conditions that were even worse. The memory of William's open-mouthed stare of hope as he clutched at life anew drenched his soul with joy inexpressible. What did it matter that he was never again to see William, or his wife or child, or that he was never again to walk the historic streets of his native city? What was to become of him he knew not. Somehow it did not seem to matter. For the first time in his existence life had taken on a meaning that was worth consideration. It meant that by his persistent self-obliteration another man might reach readjustment, and a woman and a child would escape pain and disgrace.
"Good! good!" Charles exclaimed, and slapped his knee. "I haven't lived in vain, after all--that is," was his afterthought, "if I am not caught; but I shall escape. The infinite powers could not will it otherwise.
William shall be a new man, and--why, I am already one! It is strange, but I am. This room"--he swept the walls with exultant eyes--"seems as natural to me as one in a fas.h.i.+onable club or hotel. It is all owing to one's point of view. I now live on this plane, and it is good. How amusing that woman was just now! How remarkable that I should feel inclined to laugh at her drollery! Another week and she would have been the seventh wife. The tea in the bas.e.m.e.nt proves it. She is funny. I like her."
Then his facile mood changed. What was happening at the bank at that very moment? He looked at his watch. It was ten o'clock. The bank examiners were at work. The discovery was made. Poor, crushed William at his desk had only to say that the brother he had trusted had fled, and, understanding all, they would leave him alone.
CHAPTER IX
At nine o'clock that morning William Browne came down to breakfast.
Celeste was already in her place, and smiled as he bent down and kissed her. As he drew out his chair he noticed on his plate the envelope in his brother's handwriting. He was not expecting any communication from Charles, and the sight of the letter startled him. What could it mean, his morbid fears suggested, unless it was that Charles had changed his mind, after all, and had not left the city? Perhaps he was now in his room, sleeping late, as usual. The thought was unbearable, for it brought back all the terrors which had beset him during the weeks just past. He sat down, and for a moment let the envelope lie on the plate untouched. Celeste was busy pouring his coffee.
Michael came in bringing toast. He indicated the note with a wave of his pudgy hand. "Mr. Charles asked me to hand it to you," he said, in a grave tone which caught the attention of Celeste and caused her eyes to linger on his face inquiringly.
"Is he coming down?" she asked.
For the first time in his experience as a family servant Michael deliberately decided not to answer. He pretended not to have heard and turned from the room.
William took grim notice of the failure on the man's part. He tore off the end of the envelope, drew out the note, and read it. A thrill of joyous relief went over him. With tingling fingers he folded it and put it back into the envelope, and then placed it in his pocket. The rays of the sun falling in at the window on the plants and flowers held a beauty he had never seen before. Life--life! After all, he was to live! Charles was gone and all would yet be well. His wife was looking straight at him now.
"Good news of some sort," she smiled, as she spoke.
"Why, why do you think that?" he inquired, his beaming eyes steadying into an uneasy stare.
"Because I saw it in your face just then," she answered. "But why is he writing you when he could have come down and seen you? Is--is he all right?"
William wondered what he could now say. Why had it not occurred to him that he must be as adroit in his explanations to his wife as to the bank examiners, the directors, the public in general?
His brain seemed too heavy to deal adequately with a situation so delicate and fraught with pitfalls, for Celeste had a subtle intuition.
"Yes, he is all right," William said. "That is, he is not--was not drinking yesterday or last evening when I saw him at the bank. In this note he tells me that he has left town. I don't think he slept here last night. Did he, Michael?" The butler was entering with the eggs and bacon. "Did my brother sleep in his room last night?"
"I think not, sir," Michael answered, stiffly, avoiding the straight gaze of his mistress as he put the platter down by his master. "At least he was not there half an hour ago."
"But he gave you the note," Celeste put in, insistently.
"That was last night," Michael said. "He gave it to me when he came in.
I was to hand it to you, sir, at breakfast."
"It is all right," William said, evasively. He took up a spoon to help himself to the eggs, but awkwardly dropped it. Michael served him with steady hands and unruffled mien. "Yes, he is all right. He says he wants to leave Boston for a while. You know he has had some troubles of late."
"Gone without saying anything to me or Ruth?" Celeste said, her thin lips twitching. "Why, I can't understand it! Is there anything in the note about the length of time he will be away?"
"I can't explain now," William returned, frowning over his coffee-cup.
"Perhaps later to-day I may tell you more. I--I don't want to talk about it now. I have hard work before me to-day at the bank--a meeting of the directors, and other things of importance."
Celeste stared stolidly. She sat a moment erect in her chair, then said, crisply, "If you will excuse me, I'll go attend to Ruth."