<h2>CHAPTER XXVI</h2></div>
<p>Howard Letchworth settled himself
comfortably by an open window in the 5.12
express and spread out the evening paper,
turning, like any true college man, first to the sporting
page. He was anxious to know how his team had
come out in the season’s greatest contest with another
larger college. He had hoped to be there to witness
the game himself, and in fact the Clouds had invited
him to go with them in their car, but unfortunately
at the last minute a telegram came from a firm with
whom he expected to be located during the summer,
saying that their representative would be in the city
that afternoon and would like to see him. Howard had
been obliged to give up the day’s pleasure and see his
friends start off without him. Now, his business over,
he was returning to college and having his first minute
of leisure to see how the game came out.</p>
<p>The train was crowded, for it was just at closing
time and every one was in a rush to get home. Engrossed
in his paper, he noticed none of them until
someone dropped, or rather sprawled, in the seat beside
him, taking far more room than was really
necessary, and making a lot of fuss pulling up his
trousers and getting his patent leather feet adjusted
to suit him around a very handsome sole-leather suitcase
which he crowded unceremoniously over to
Howard’s side of the floor.</p>
<p>The intruder next addressed himself to the arrangement
of a rich and striking necktie, and seemed to have
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_295' name='page_295'></SPAN>295</span>
no compunctions about annoying his neighbor during
the process. Howard glanced up in surprise as a more
strenuous knock than before jarred his paper out of
focus. He saw a young fellow of about his own age
with a face that would have been strikingly handsome
if it had not also been bold and conceited. He had
large dark eyes set off by long curling black lashes,
black hair that crinkled close to his head in satiny
sleek sheen, well-chiselled features, all save a loose-hung,
insolent lip that gave the impression of great
self-indulgence and selfishness. He was dressed with
a careful regard to the fashion and with evidently no
regard whatever for cost. He bore the mark at once
of wealth and snobbishness. Howard, in spite of his
newly-acquired desire to look upon all men as brothers,
found himself disliking him with a vehemence that
was out of all proportion to the occasion.</p>
<p>“Don’t they have any pahlah cars on this road?”</p>
<p>The question was addressed to him in a calm, insolent
tone as if he were a paid servitor of the road.
He looked up amusedly and eyed the stranger pitingly:</p>
<p>“Not so as you’d notice it,” he remarked crushingly
as he turned back to his paper. “People on this
road too busy to use ’em.”</p>
<p>But the stranger did not crush easily:</p>
<p>“Live far out?” he asked, turning his big, bold
eyes on his seatmate and calmly examining him from
the toe of a well-worn shoe to the crown of a dusty
old hat that Howard was trying to make last till the
end of the season. When he had finished the survey
his eyes travelled complacently back to his own immaculate
attire, and his well-polished shoes fresh from
the hands of the city station bootblack. With a well-manicured
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_296' name='page_296'></SPAN>296</span>
thumb and finger he flecked an imaginary bit
of dust from the knee of his trousers.</p>
<p>Howard named the college town brusquely.</p>
<p>“Ah, indeed!” Another survey brief and significant
this time. “I don’t suppose you know any people
at the college.” It was scarcely a question, more like
a statement of a deplorable fact. Howard was suddenly
amused.</p>
<p>“Oh, a few,” he said briefly. (He was just
finishing his senior year rather brilliantly and his professors
were more than proud of him.)</p>
<p>Another glance seemed to say: “In what capacity?”
but the elegant youth finally decided to voice
another question:</p>
<p>“Don’t happen to know a fellah by the name of
Cloud, I suppose? Al Cloud?”</p>
<p>“I’ve met him,” said Howard with his eyes still
on his paper.</p>
<p>“He’s from my State!” announced the youth with
a puff of importance. “We live next door in California.
He’s a regular guy, he is. Got all kinds of
money coming to him. He’ll be of age in a month or
two now, and then you’ll see him start something! He’s
some spender, <i>he</i> is.”</p>
<p>Howard made no comment, but something in him
revolted at the idea of talking over his friend in
such company.</p>
<p>“I’ve got to hunt him up,” went on the young
man, not noticing that his auditor appeared uninterested.
“I’m to stay with him to-night. I was to
send a telegram, but didn’t think of it till it was almost
train time. Guess it won’t make much difference.
The Clouds always used to keep open house. I suppose
they have a swell place out here?”</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_297' name='page_297'></SPAN>297</span></div>
<p>“Oh, it’s quite comfortable, I believe,” Howard
turned over a page of the paper and fell to reading an
article on the high price of sugar and the prospect
of a fall.</p>
<p>“You ought to see their dump out in Cally. It’s
some mansion, believe me! There wasn’t anything else
in that part of the State to compare with it for miles
around. And cahs! They had cahs to burn! The
old man was just lousy with gold, you know; struck a
rich mine years ago. His wife had a pile, too. Her
father was all kinds of a millionaire and left every
bit to her; and Al and his sister’ll get everything.
Seen anything of <i>her</i>? She ought to be a winner pretty
soon. She was a peach when she was little. She’s
some speedy kid! We used to play together, you know,
and our folks sorta fixed it up we were just made for
each other and all that sorta thing, you know––but
I don’t know––I’m not going to be bound by any such
nonsense, of course, unless I like. One doesn’t want
one’s wife to be such an awfully good shot, fer instance,
you know–––!”</p>
<p>A great anger surged up in Howard’s soul, and his
jaw set with a fierce line that those who knew him
well had learned to understand meant self-control
under deep provocation. He would have liked nothing
better than to surprise the insolent young snob
with a well-directed blow in his pretty face that would
have sent him sprawling in the aisle. His hands fairly
twitched to give him the lesson that he needed, but he
only replied with a slight inscrutable smile in one
corner of his mouth:</p>
<p>“It <i>might</i> be inconvenient for <i>some people</i>.” There
an aloofness in his tone that did not encourage
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_298' name='page_298'></SPAN>298</span>
further remarks, but the young stranger was evidently
not thin-skinned, or else he loved to hear himself
babbling.</p>
<p>“I’m coming on heah, you know, to look this college
ovah–––!” he drawled. “If it suits me, I may come
heah next yeah. Got fired from three institutions out
West for larking, and father thought I better go East
awhile. Any fun doing out this way?”</p>
<p>“I suppose those that go to college looking for it
can find it,” answered Howard noncommittally.</p>
<p>“Well––that’s what I’m looking for. That’s about
all anybody goes to college for anyway, that and making
a lot of friends. Believe me, it would be a beastly
bore if it wasn’t for that. Al Cloud used to be a lively
one. I’ll wager he’s into everything. See much of the
college people down in town––do you?” He eyed his
companion patronizingly. “S’pose you get in on some
of the spoahts now and then?”</p>
<p>“Oh, occasionally,” said Howard with a twinkle
in his eye. He was captain of the football team and
forward in basket-ball, but it didn’t seem to be necessary
to mention it.</p>
<p>“Any fellows with any pep in them out here? I
suppose there must be or Al wouldn’t stay unless he’s
changed. He used to keep things pretty lively. That’s
one reason why I told dad I’d come out here. I like
a place with plenty of ginger. It gets my goat to be
among a lot of grinds and sissies! This is a co-ed
college, isn’t it? That suits me all right if the girls
have any pep and aren’t too straitlaced. Any place
around here where you can go off and take a girl for a
good dinner and a dash of life? I couldn’t stand for
any good-little-boy stuff. Know any place around
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_299' name='page_299'></SPAN>299</span>
here where you can get a drink of the real thing now
and then, some place near enough to go joy-riding to,
you know? I shall bring my cah of course–––! One
can get away with a lot more stuff if they have their
own cah, you know––especially where there’s girls.
You can’t pull off any devilment if you have to depend
on hired cahs. You might get caught. I suppose
they have some pretty spicy times down at the frat
rooms, don’t they? I understood the frats were mostly
located down in the town.”</p>
<p>Howard suddenly folded his paper, looking squarely
in the limpid eyes of his seatmate for the first time,
with a cold, searching, subduing gaze.</p>
<p>“I really couldn’t say,” he answered coldly.</p>
<p>“Oh, I s’pose you’re not interested in that sort of
thing, not being in college,” said the other insolently.
“But Al Cloud’ll put me wise. He’s no grind, I’ll
wager. He’s always in for a good time, and he’s such a
good bluff he never gets found out. Now I, somehow,
always get caught, even when I’m not the guilty one.”</p>
<p>The boy laughed unroariously as if it were a good
joke, and his weak chin seemed to grow weaker in
the process.</p>
<p>Howard was growing angry and haughty, but it
was his way to be calm when excited. He did not laugh
with the stranger. Instead, he waited until the joke
had lost its amusement and then he turned soberly to
the youth with as patronizing an air as ever the other
had worn:</p>
<p>“Son, you’ve got another guess coming to you
about Allison Cloud. You’ll have the surprise of your
young life when you see him, I imagine. Why, he’s
been an A student ever since he came to this college,
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_300' name='page_300'></SPAN>300</span>
and he has the highest average this last semester of any
man in his class. As for bluff, he’s as clear as crystal,
and a prince of a fellow; and if you’re looking for a
spot where you can bluff your way through college you
better seek elsewhere. Bluff doesn’t go down in <i>our</i>
college. We have student government, and I happen
to be chairman of the student exec. just now. You
better change your tactics if you expect to remain here.
Excuse me, I see a friend up at the front of the car!”</p>
<p>With which remarks Howard Letchworth strode
across the sprawling legs of his fellow-traveller and
departed up the aisle, leaving the elegant stranger to
enjoy the whole seat and his own company.</p>
<p>Thus did Clive Terrence introduce himself to
Howard Letchworth and bring dismay into the little
clique of four young people who had been enjoying
a most unusually perfect friendship. Howard
Letchworth, as he stood the rest of the ride on the
front platform of the car conversing with apparent interest
with a fraternity brother, was nevertheless filled
with a growing dismay. Now and then he glanced
back and glared down the aisle at the elegant sprawling
youth and wondered how it was that a being as insignificant
as that could so upset his equilibrium. But the
assured drawl of the stranger as he spoke of Leslie and
called her a “speedy kid” had made him boil with
rage. He carried the mood back to college with him,
and sat gloomily at the table thinking the whole incident
over, while the banter and chaffing went on about
him unnoticed. Underneath it all there was a deep
uneasiness that would not be set aside. The young
man had said that the Clouds were very wealthy. That
Leslie was especially so. That when she was of age
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_301' name='page_301'></SPAN>301</span>
she would have a vast inheritance. There had been
no sign of great wealth or ostentation in their living
but if that were so then there was an insuperable wall
between him and her.</p>
<p>It was strange that the question of wealth had never
come up between them. Howard had known that they
were comfortably off, of course. They had a beautiful
car and wore good clothes, and were always free with
their entertaining, but they lived in a modest
house, and never made any pretences. It had
not occurred to him that they were any better off
than he might be some day if he worked hard. They
never talked about their circumstances. Of course, now
he came to think about it, there were fine mahogany
pieces of furniture in the little house and wonderful
rugs and things, but they all fitted in so harmoniously
with their surroundings that it never occurred to him
that they might have cost a mint of money. They
never cried out their price to those who saw them,
they were simply the fitting thing in the fitting place,
doing their service as all right-minded things both
animate and inanimate in this world should do. It was
the first serpent in the Eden of this wonderful friendship
at Cloudy Villa and it stung the proud-spirited
young man to the soul.</p>
<p>Alone in his room that night he finally gave up all
pretence at study and faced the truth. He had been
drifting in a delightful dream during the last two
years, with only a vague and alluring idea of the future
before him, a future in which there was no question
but that Allison Cloud AND his sister Leslie should
figure intimately. Now he was suddenly and roughly
awakened to ask himself whether he had any right to
count on all this. If these young people belonged
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_302' name='page_302'></SPAN>302</span>
to the favored few of the world who were rolling in
wealth, wasn’t it altogether likely that when they finished
college they would pass out of this comradely
atmosphere into a world of their own, with a new set
of laws whereby to judge and choose their friends
and life companions? He could not quite imagine
Allison and Leslie as anything but the frank, friendly,
enthusiastic comrades they had been since he had known
them––and yet––he knew the world, knew what the
love of money could do to a human soul, for he had
seen it many times before in people he had come to
love and trust who had grown selfish and forgetful as
soon as money and power were put into their hands.
He had to confess that it was possible. Also, his own
pride forbade him to wish to force himself into a crowd
where he could not hold his own and pay his part.
They would simply not be in his class, at least not
for many years to come, and his heart sank with desolation.
It was then, and not till then, that the heart
of the trouble came out and looked him in the face.
It was not that he could not be in their class, that he
could not keep pace with Allison Cloud and come and
go in his company as freely as he had done; it was
that he loved the bright-haired Leslie, the sweet-faced,
eager, earnest, wonderful girl. She held his future happiness
in her little rosy hand, and if she really were a rich
girl he couldn’t of course tell her now that he loved her,
because he was a poor man. He didn’t expect to stay
poor always, of course, but it would be a great many
years before he could ever hope to compete with anything
like wealth, and during those years who might
not take her from him? Was it conceivable that such
a cad as that youth who had boasted himself a playmate
of her childhood could possibly win her?</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_303' name='page_303'></SPAN>303</span></div>
<p>Howard went out and sat on the campus under a
great shadowing tree. He watched a silver thread of
a moon slip down between the branches and dip behind
the hill, and while he sat there he went through all the
desolation of a lonely life; the bitterness of having
Leslie taken from him by one who was unworthy!––He
persuaded himself that he loved her enough to be
willing to step aside and give her up to a man who
was better than himself––but this little whiffet––ugh!</p>
<p>The chimes on the library pealed out nine o’clock,
reminding him of his work half done, yet the shadow
of engulfing sorrow and loss hung over him. With a
jerk he drew himself up and tried to grasp at common
sense. How ridiculous of him to get up all this nightmare
out of a few minutes’ talk with a fellow who used
to be the Clouds’ old neighbor. He might not have
been telling the truth. And anyhow it was a libel on
friendship to distrust them all this way, as though
riches were some kind of a disease like leprosy that set
people apart. It wasn’t his night to go down to the
village, but just to dispel this nonsense and bring back
his normal state of mind he would go and drop in on the
Clouds for a few minutes. A sight of them all would
reassure him and clear his brain for the work he must
do before midnight. Leslie Cloud was very young yet,
and much can happen in a year or two. He might
even be in a fair way to make a fortune himself somewhere,
who knew? And as for that little cad, it was
nonsense to suppose he was anything to fear. Besides,
it wasn’t time yet to think about being married
when he wasn’t even out of college. He would forget
it and work the harder. Of course he could never
quite go back and forget that he had admitted to himself
that he was in love with Leslie, but he would keep
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_304' name='page_304'></SPAN>304</span>
it like a precious jewel hid far in his heart, so carefully
locked that not even for his own delight would he
take it out to look at now at this time.</p>
<p>Having thus resolved, a weight seemed to have
rolled from his shoulders and he sprang up and walked
with a quick tread down to the village. There was
a cheerful clang of victrolas, player-pianos and twanging
guitars as he passed the fraternity rooms, and he
went whistling on his way toward Cloudy Villa.</p>
<p>But as he neared the tall arched hedge, and looked
eagerly for the welcome light, he saw that the big
living-room windows were only lit by a soft play of
firelight. Did that mean they were all sitting in the
firelight around the hearth? A fearful thought of the
stranger intruded just here upon his fine resolves,
and to dispel it he knocked noisily on the little
brass knocker.</p>
<p>It was very still inside, but a quick electric light
responded to his knock and in a moment he could
hear someone coming down-stairs to the door. His
heart leaped. Could it be Leslie? Ah! He must not––yet
how wonderful it was going to be to look at her
this first time after really knowing his own heart in
plain language. Could he keep the joy of her out of
his eyes, and the wonder of her from his voice? Then
the door opened and there stood Cherry in negligée of
flaring rosy cotton crêpe embroidered with gorgeous
peacocks, and her pigtails in eclipse behind an arrangement
of cheap lace and pink ribbons.</p>
<p>“No, sir, Mister Howard, dey ain’t none ob ’em
heah! Dey got cumpney––some young fellah fum
back to Californy way. Dey done tuk him out to see
de town.”</p>
<p>Howard’s heart sank and he turned his heavy footsteps
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_305' name='page_305'></SPAN>305</span>
back to college. The worst fear had come to pass.
Of course reason asserted itself, and he told himself
that he was a fool, a perfect fool. Of course they
had to be polite to an old neighbor whether they liked
him or not. And what was he to presume to judge a
stranger from a five-minute conversation, and turn
him down so completely that he wasn’t willing to have
his old friends even like him? Well, he was worse
than he had thought himself and something would have
to be done about it.</p>
<p>What he did about it was to stay away from Cloudy
Villa for almost a week, and when Leslie at last, after
repeated efforts to get hold of him by telephone, called
him up to say there was an important committee meeting
at the church which he ought to attend, he excused
his long absence by telling how busy he had been.
Of course he had been busy, but Leslie knew that he
had always been busy, and yet had found time to come
in often. She was inclined to be hurt and just the
least bit stand-offish. Of course if he didn’t <i>want</i> to
come he needn’t! And she took Clive Terrence driving
in the car and showed him all the wonders of the surrounding
neighborhood with much more cordiality than
she really felt. It was her way of bearing her hurt.
At last she got Allison by himself and asked him quite
casually why Howard hadn’t been down. But Allison,
in haste to keep an appointment with Jane, and knowing
that Howard enjoyed being down as much as they
wanted him, hadn’t even noticed the absence yet.</p>
<p>“Oh, he’s up to his eyes in work,” responded
Allison. “He’s likely busy as a one-armed paper-hanger
with fleas! He’s a senior, you know. Wait
till next year and you’ll see me in the same boat!” and
he hurried away whistling.</p>
<hr class='toprule' />
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<SPAN name='CHAPTER_XXVII' id='CHAPTER_XXVII'></SPAN>
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