<SPAN name="chap15"></SPAN>
<h3> CHAPTER XV </h3>
<h3> ECHOES FROM THE CITY </h3>
<p>Sallie Kingsbury, unused to psychological analysis, could not have
explained why Mr. Hand was so objectionable to her. He was no relative
of the family, she had discovered that; and, accustomed as she was to
the old-fashioned gentility of a thrifty New England town, instinct
told her that he could not possibly be one of its varied products. He
might have come from anywhere; he talked so little that he was
suspicious on that ground alone; and when he did speak, there was no
accent at all that Sallie could lay hold of. Useful as he was just now
in taking care of that poor young man up-stairs, he nevertheless
inspired in her breast a most unholy irritation. Her attitude was that
of a housemaid pursuing the cat with the broom.</p>
<p>Mr. Hand was not greatly troubled by Sallie's tendency to sweep him out
of the way, but whenever he took any notice of her he was more than a
match for her. On the afternoon following Agatha's visit to Mrs.
Stoddard, he appeared to show some slight objection to being treated
like the cat. He ate his luncheon in the kitchen—a large, delightful
room—while Aleck Van Camp stayed with James. Hand was stirring broth
over the stove, now and then giving a sharp eye to Sallie's preparation
of her new mistress' luncheon.</p>
<p>"You haven't put any salt or pepper on mademoiselle's tray, Sallie,"
said he, as the maid was about to start up-stairs.</p>
<p>"<i>Miss</i> Sallie, I should prefer, Mr. Hand," she requested in a mournful
tone of resignation. "And Miss Redmond don't take any pepper on her
aigs; I watched her yesterday."</p>
<p>"Well, she may want some to-day, just the same," insisted Mr. Hand in a
lordly manner, putting a thin silver boat, filled with salt, and a
cheap pink glass pepper-shaker side by side on the tray. Sallie
brushed Hand away in disgust.</p>
<p>"That doesn't go with the best silver salt-cellar; that's the kitchen
pepper. And, you can say <i>Miss</i> Sallie, if you please."</p>
<p>"No, just Sallie, if <i>you</i> please! I've taken a great fancy to you,
Sallie, and I don't like to be so formal," argued Hand. "Besides, I
like your name; and I'll carry the tray to the top of the stairs for
you, if you'll be good."</p>
<p>"I wouldn't trouble you for the world, Mr. Hand," she tossed back.
"You'd stumble and break Parson Thayer's best china that I've washed
for seventeen years and only broke the handle of one cup. She wouldn't
drink her coffee this morning outer the second-best cups; went to the
buttery before breakfast and picked out wunner the best set, and poured
herself a cup. She said it was inspiring, but I call it wasteful—and
me with extra work all day!"</p>
<p>Sallie disappeared, leaving a dribbling trail of good-natured complaint
behind her. Mr. Hand continued making broth—at which he was as expert
as he was at the lever or the launch engine. He strained and seasoned,
and regarded two floating islands of oily substance with disapproval.
While he was working Sallie joined him again at the stove, her
important and injured manner all to the front.</p>
<p>"Says she'll take another aig," she explained. "Only took one
yesterday, and then I had two all cooked."</p>
<p>"What did I tell you?" jeered Hand.</p>
<p>"You didn't tell me anything about aigs, not that I recollect," Sallie
replied tartly.</p>
<p>"Well, the principle's the same," asserted Hand. After a moment his
countenance assumed a crafty and jocose expression, which would have
put even Sallie on her guard if she had looked up in time to see it.
"You won't have so much extra work when mademoiselle's maid arrives,"
he said slyly. "<i>She'll</i> wait on mademoiselle and attend to her tray
when she wants one, and you won't have to do anything for mademoiselle
at all."</p>
<p>Sallie became slowly transfixed in a spread-eagle attitude, with the
half of a thin white egg-shell held up in each hand.</p>
<p>"A maid! When's she coming?"</p>
<p>"Ought to be here now, she's had time enough. But women never can get
round without wasting a lot of time." Sallie's glance must have
brought him to his senses, for he added hastily, "City women, I mean."</p>
<p>"Hm! She won't touch Parson Thayer's china—not if I know myself!"
Sallie disappeared with Miss Redmond's second egg. When she returned,
she delivered a message to the effect that Miss Redmond wished to see
Mr. Hand when he had finished his luncheon. He was off instantly,
calling, "Watch that broth, Sallie!"</p>
<p>It was a different Hand, however, who entered Miss Redmond's room a
moment later. His half impudent manner changed to distant respect,
tinged with a sort of personal adoration. Agatha felt it, though it
was too intangible to be taken notice of, either for rebuke or reward.
Agatha was sitting in a rocking-chair by the window, sipping her tea
out of the best tea-cup, her tray on a stand in front of her. She
looked excited and flushed, but her eyes were tired.</p>
<p>"Can I do anything for you, Mademoiselle?" Hand inquired courteously.</p>
<p>"Yes, please," answered Agatha, and paused a moment, as if to recall
her thoughts in order. Hand was very presentable, in negligée shirt
which Sallie must have washed while he was asleep. He was one of those
people who look best in their working or sporting clothes, ruddy, clean
and strong. He would have dwindled absolutely into the commonplace in
Sunday clothes, if he was ever so rash as to have any.</p>
<p>"I wish to talk with you a little," said Agatha. "We haven't had much
opportunity of talking, so far; and perhaps it is time that we
understand each other a little better."</p>
<p>"As mademoiselle wishes," conceded Hand.</p>
<p>"In the first place," Agatha went on, "I must tell you that Mrs.
Stoddard is coming to help nurse Mr. Hambleton. You have been very
good to stay with us so long; and if you will stay on, I shall be glad.
But Doctor Thayer thinks you should have help, and so do I. Especially
for the next few days."</p>
<p>"That is entirely agreeable to me, Mademoiselle."</p>
<p>"Will you tell me what—what remuneration you were receiving as
chauffeur?"</p>
<p>"Pardon me, but that is unnecessary, Mademoiselle. If you will allow
me to stay here, either taking care of Mr. Hambleton or in any outdoor
work, for a week or as long as you may need me, I shall consider myself
repaid."</p>
<p>Agatha was silent while she buttered a last bit of toast. Hand's
reticence and evident secretiveness were baffling. She had no
intention of letting the point of wages go by in the way Hand
indicated, but after deliberation she dropped it for the moment, in
order to take up another matter.</p>
<p>"I was wondering," she began again, "how you happened to escape from
the <i>Jeanne D'Arc</i> alone in a rowboat, and what your connection with
Monsieur Chatelard was. Will you tell me?"</p>
<p>A perfectly vacant look came into Hand's face. He might have been deaf
and dumb.</p>
<p>At last Agatha began again. "I am grateful, exceedingly grateful, Mr.
Hand, for all that you have done for us since this catastrophe, but I
can't have any mystery about people. That is absurd. Did you leave
the <i>Jeanne D'Arc</i> when the others did—when I fell into the water?"</p>
<p>This time Hand consented to answer. "No, Mademoiselle; I did not know
you had fallen into the water until I brought you ashore in the
morning."</p>
<p>"Then how did you get off?"</p>
<p>"Well, it was rather queer. The men were all tired out working at the
pumps, and Monsieur Chatelard ordered a seaman named Bazinet and me to
relieve two of them. He said he would call us when the boats were
lowered, as the yacht was then getting pretty shaky. Bazinet and I
worked a long time; and when finally we got on deck, thinking the
<i>Jeanne D'Arc</i> was nearly done for, the boats had put off. We heard
some one shouting, and Bazinet got frightened and jumped for the boat.
He thought they'd wait for him. It was too dark for me to see whether
he made it or not. I stayed on the yacht for some time, not knowing
anything better to do—" Hand allowed himself a faint smile—"and at
last, after a hunt, I found that extra boat, stowed away aft. It was
very small, and it leaked; probably that was why they did not think of
using it. But it was better than nothing. I found some putty and a
tin bucket, and got food and a lot of other things, though the boat
filled so fast that I had to throw most everything out. But I got
ashore, as you know. I didn't even wait to see the last of the <i>Jeanne
D'Arc</i>."</p>
<p>Agatha's eyes shone. Hand's story was perfectly simple and plausible.
But the other question was even more important. She hesitated before
repeating it, however, and rewarded Hand's unusual frankness with a
grateful look.</p>
<p>"That was a night of experience for us all," she said, with a little
sigh at the memory of it.</p>
<p>"But tell me—" Agatha looked up squarely at Hand, only to encounter
his deaf and dumb expression.</p>
<p>"If you will excuse me, Mademoiselle," said Hand deferentially, "I
think Mr. Hambleton's broth is burning."</p>
<p>"Ah, well, very well!" said Agatha. And in spite of herself she smiled.</p>
<p>Hand found Mrs. Stoddard installed in James Hambleton's room. Doctor
Thayer and Aleck had gone, both leaving word that they would return
before night. Mrs. Stoddard had smoothed James's bed, folded down the
sheet with exactness, noted her brother's directions for treatment, and
sat reading her Bible by the window. Mr. Hand stood for a moment,
silently regarding first the patient, then his nurse.</p>
<p>"By the grace of God, he will pull through, I firmly believe!"
ejaculated Mrs. Stoddard.</p>
<p>As the first words came in that resonant deep voice, Hand thought that
the new nurse was swearing, though presently he changed his mind.</p>
<p>"Yes, ma'am," he replied with unwonted meekness. Then, "I'll sleep an
hour or two, if that is agreeable to you, ma'am."</p>
<p>"Perfectly!" heartily responded Mrs. Stoddard, and Mr. Hand disappeared
like the mist before the sun.</p>
<p>It was to be an afternoon of excitement, after all, though Agatha
thought that she would apply herself to the straightening out of much
necessary business. But after an hour's work over letters at Parson
Thayer's desk, there occurred an ebullition below which could be
nothing less than the arrival of Lizzie, Agatha's maid, with sundry
articles of luggage. She was a small-minded but efficient city girl,
clever enough to keep her job by making herself useful, and
sophisticated to the point of indecency. No woman ought ever to have
known so much as Lizzie knew. Agatha was to hear how she had been
relieved by the telegram several days before, how she had nearly killed
herself packing in such haste, how she thought she was traveling to the
ends of the earth, coming thus to a region she had never heard of
before.</p>
<p>Big Simon, who had been instructed to watch for Lizzie and bring her
and her baggage out, presently arrived with the trunks, having sent the
maid on ahead in the buggy with his son. Big Simon positively declined
to carry the two trunks to the second floor, saying he thought they'd
like it just as well, or better, if he left them in the hall
down-stairs. Lizzie was angrily hesitating whether to argue with him
or use the persuasion of one of her mistress' silver coins, when Agatha
interfered, and saved her from making the mistake of her life. It is
doubtful if she could have lived in Ilion after having been guilty of
tipping one of its foremost citizens. And even if she had, she would
not have got the trunks taken up-stairs.</p>
<p>The prospect of discarding Sallie Kingsbury's makeshifts and wearing a
dress which belonged to her had more comfort in it than Agatha had ever
believed possible; and the reality was even better. She made a toilet,
for the first time in many days, with her accustomed accessories,
dressed herself in a white wool gown, and felt better.</p>
<p>"Are these the relatives you were visiting, Miss Redmond?" inquired
Lizzie, eaten up with curiosity, which was her mortal weakness.</p>
<p>Agatha paused, struck with the form of the maid's question; but,
knowing her liking for items of news, she answered cautiously:</p>
<p>"Not relatives exactly. The Thayers were old friends of my mother."</p>
<p>Lizzie shook out a skirt and hung it in the wardrobe in the far corner
of the room. She was bursting to know everything about Miss Redmond's
sudden journey, but knew better than to appear anxious.</p>
<p>"The message at the hotel was so indefinite that I didn't know at all
what I should do. After the excitement quieted down a little, I went
out to visit my cousin Hattie, in the Bronx."</p>
<p>"What sort of excitement?"</p>
<p>"Oh, newspaper men, and the manager, and Herr Weimar, of the orchestra,
and a lot of other people who came, wanting to see you immediately.
They seemed to think I was hiding you somewhere."</p>
<p>Agatha smiled. She could imagine Lizzie in her new-fledged importance,
talking to all those people.</p>
<p>"You spoke of a message—" ventured Agatha.</p>
<p>"Yes; the one you sent the day you left, Miss Redmond. The hotel clerk
said you had suddenly left town on a visit to a sick relative."</p>
<p>"Oh, yes."</p>
<p>Lizzie's quick scent was already on the trail of a mystery, but Agatha
was in no mood just then to give her any version of the events of that
Monday afternoon.</p>
<p>"Was there any other message, Miss Redmond? Some word for me, which
the clerk forgot to deliver?"</p>
<p>"No, nothing else."</p>
<p>"Mr. Straker came Tuesday morning with some contracts for you to sign.
He said that you had an appointment with him, and he was nearly crazy
when he found you had gone away without leaving your address."</p>
<p>Agatha smiled more and more broadly, to Lizzie's disgust, but she could
not help it. "I don't doubt he was disturbed. Did he come again?"</p>
<p>"Come again, Miss Redmond!" Lizzie hung a blue silk coat over its
hanger, held it carefully up to the light, and turned toward her
mistress with the mien of a person who isn't to be bamboozled. "He
came twice every day to see if I had any word from you; and when I went
to Cousin Hattie's he called me up on the 'phone every morning and
evening. Most unreasonable, Mr. Straker was. He said there wasn't a
singer in town he could get to fill your engagements, and he was losing
a hundred dollars a day. He's very much put out, Miss Redmond."</p>
<p>"Well, I was, too," said Agatha, but somehow her tone failed to satisfy
the maid. To Agatha the thought of the dictatorial manager fluttering
about New York in quest of a vanished singer—well, the picture had its
humorous side. It had its serious side, too, for Agatha, of course,
but for the moment she put off thinking about that. Lizzie, however,
had borne the brunt of Mr. Straker's vexation, and, in that lumber-box
she called her mind, she regarded the matter solely as her personal cue
to come more prominently upon the stage.</p>
<p>"Then your accompanist came every morning, as you had directed, Miss
Redmond; and Madame Florio sent word a dozen times about those new
gowns." Lizzie, with the memory of her sudden importance, almost took
up the role of baffled innocence. "I declare, Miss Redmond, I didn't
know what to do or say to those people. The whole thing seemed so
irregular, with you not leaving any word of explanation with me."</p>
<p>"That is true, Lizzie; it was irregular, and certainly very
inconvenient. And it is serious enough, so far as breaking my
engagements is concerned. But the circumstances were very unusual
and—pressing. Some one else gave the message at the hotel, and, as
you know, I had no time even to get a satchel."</p>
<p>"That's what I said when the reporters came—that you were so worried
over your sick relative that you did not wait for anything."</p>
<p>Agatha groaned. "Did—did the papers have much to say about my leaving
town?"</p>
<p>"They had columns, Miss Redmond, and some of them had your picture on
the front page with an announcement of your elopement. But Mr. Straker
contradicted that; he told them he had heard from you, and that you
were at the bedside of a dying relative. Besides that, Miss Redmond,
the difficulty in getting up an elopement story was the lack of a
probable man. Your manager and your accompanist were both found and
interviewed, and there wasn't anybody else in New York except me who
knew you. Your discretion, Miss Redmond, has always been remarkable."</p>
<p>Agatha was suddenly tired of Lizzie.</p>
<p>"Very well, Lizzie, that will do. You may go and get your own things
unpacked. We shan't return to New York for several days yet."</p>
<p>"You've heard from Mr. Straker, of course, Miss Redmond?"</p>
<p>"No, but I have written to him, explaining everything. Why?"</p>
<p>"Oh, nothing; only when I sent him word that I had heard from you, he
said at first that he was coming here with me. Some business prevented
him, but he must have telegraphed."</p>
<p>"Maybe he has; but it takes some time, evidently, for a hidden person
to be discovered in Ilion."</p>
<p>As soon as the words were off her lips, Agatha realized that she had
made a slip. One has to look sharp when talking to a sophisticated
maid.</p>
<p>"But were you hiding, Miss Redmond?" Lizzie artlessly inquired.</p>
<p>"Oh, no, Lizzie; don't be silly. The telegram probably went wrong;
telegrams often do."</p>
<p>"Not when Mr. Straker sends them," proffered Lizzie. "But if his
telegrams have gone wrong, you may count on his coming down here
himself. He is much worried over the rehearsals, which begin early in
the month, he said. And he got the full directions you sent me for
coming here; he would have them."</p>
<p>Agatha knew her manager's pertinacity when once on the track of an
object. Moreover, the humor of the situation passed from her mind,
leaving only a vivid impression of the trouble and worry which were
sure to follow such a serious breaking up of well established plans.
She was rarely capricious, even under vexation, but she yielded to a
caprice at this moment, and one, moreover, that was very unjust toward
her much-tried manager. The thought of that man bursting in upon her
in the home that had been the fastidious Hercules Thayer's, in the
midst of her anxiety and sorrow over James Hambleton, was intolerable.</p>
<p>"If Mr. Straker should by any chance follow me here, you must tell him
that I can not see him," she said, and departed, leaving Lizzie wrapped
in righteous indignation.</p>
<p>"Well, I never!" she exclaimed, after her mistress had disappeared.
"Can't see him, after coming all this way! And into a country like
this, too, where there's only one bath-tub, and you fill that from a
pump in the yard!"</p>
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