<h2><SPAN name="chap07"></SPAN>VII<br/> THE ROBE OF PEACE</h2>
<p>Mysteries follow one another so closely in a great city that the reading public
and the friends of Johnny Bellchambers have ceased to marvel at his sudden and
unexplained disappearance nearly a year ago. This particular mystery has now
been cleared up, but the solution is so strange and incredible to the mind of
the average man that only a select few who were in close touch with
Bellchambers will give it full credence.</p>
<p>Johnny Bellchambers, as is well known, belonged to the intrinsically inner
circle of the <i>élite</i>. Without any of the ostentation of the
fashionable ones who endeavor to attract notice by eccentric display of wealth
and show he still was <i>au fait</i> in everything that gave deserved lustre to
his high position in the ranks of society.</p>
<p>Especially did he shine in the matter of dress. In this he was the despair of
imitators. Always correct, exquisitely groomed, and possessed of an unlimited
wardrobe, he was conceded to be the best-dressed man in New York, and,
therefore, in America. There was not a tailor in Gotham who would not have
deemed it a precious boon to have been granted the privilege of making
Bellchambers’ clothes without a cent of pay. As he wore them, they would
have been a priceless advertisement. Trousers were his especial passion. Here
nothing but perfection would he notice. He would have worn a patch as quickly
as he would have overlooked a wrinkle. He kept a man in his apartments always
busy pressing his ample supply. His friends said that three hours was the limit
of time that he would wear these garments without exchanging.</p>
<p>Bellchambers disappeared very suddenly. For three days his absence brought no
alarm to his friends, and then they began to operate the usual methods of
inquiry. All of them failed. He had left absolutely no trace behind. Then the
search for a motive was instituted, but none was found. He had no enemies, he
had no debts, there was no woman. There were several thousand dollars in his
bank to his credit. He had never showed any tendency toward mental
eccentricity; in fact, he was of a particularly calm and well-balanced
temperament. Every means of tracing the vanished man was made use of, but
without avail. It was one of those cases—more numerous in late
years—where men seem to have gone out like the flame of a candle, leaving
not even a trail of smoke as a witness.</p>
<p>In May, Tom Eyres and Lancelot Gilliam, two of Bellchambers’ old friends,
went for a little run on the other side. While pottering around in Italy and
Switzerland, they happened, one day, to hear of a monastery in the Swiss Alps
that promised something outside of the ordinary tourist-beguiling attractions.
The monastery was almost inaccessible to the average sightseer, being on an
extremely rugged and precipitous spur of the mountains. The attractions it
possessed but did not advertise were, first, an exclusive and divine cordial
made by the monks that was said to far surpass benedictine and chartreuse. Next
a huge brass bell so purely and accurately cast that it had not ceased sounding
since it was first rung three hundred years ago. Finally, it was asserted that
no Englishman had ever set foot within its walls. Eyres and Gilliam decided
that these three reports called for investigation.</p>
<p>It took them two days with the aid of two guides to reach the monastery of St.
Gondrau. It stood upon a frozen, wind-swept crag with the snow piled about it
in treacherous, drifting masses. They were hospitably received by the brothers
whose duty it was to entertain the infrequent guest. They drank of the precious
cordial, finding it rarely potent and reviving. They listened to the great,
ever-echoing bell, and learned that they were pioneer travelers, in those gray
stone walls, over the Englishman whose restless feet have trodden nearly every
corner of the earth.</p>
<p>At three o’clock on the afternoon they arrived, the two young Gothamites
stood with good Brother Cristofer in the great, cold hallway of the monastery
to watch the monks march past on their way to the refectory. They came slowly,
pacing by twos, with their heads bowed, treading noiselessly with sandaled feet
upon the rough stone flags. As the procession slowly filed past, Eyres suddenly
gripped Gilliam by the arm. “Look,” he whispered, eagerly,
“at the one just opposite you now—the one on this side, with his
hand at his waist—if that isn’t Johnny Bellchambers then I never
saw him!”</p>
<p>Gilliam saw and recognized the lost glass of fashion.</p>
<p>“What the deuce,” said he, wonderingly, “is old Bell doing
here? Tommy, it surely can’t be he! Never heard of Bell having a turn for
the religious. Fact is, I’ve heard him say things when a four-in-hand
didn’t seem to tie up just right that would bring him up for
court-martial before any church.”</p>
<p>“It’s Bell, without a doubt,” said Eyres, firmly, “or
I’m pretty badly in need of an oculist. But think of Johnny Bellchambers,
the Royal High Chancellor of swell togs and the Mahatma of pink teas, up here
in cold storage doing penance in a snuff-colored bathrobe! I can’t get it
straight in my mind. Let’s ask the jolly old boy that’s doing the
honors.”</p>
<p>Brother Cristofer was appealed to for information. By that time the monks had
passed into the refectory. He could not tell to which one they referred.
Bellchambers? Ah, the brothers of St. Gondrau abandoned their worldly names
when they took the vows. Did the gentlemen wish to speak with one of the
brothers? If they would come to the refectory and indicate the one they wished
to see, the reverend abbot in authority would, doubtless, permit it.</p>
<p>Eyres and Gilliam went into the dining hall and pointed out to Brother
Cristofer the man they had seen. Yes, it was Johnny Bellchambers. They saw his
face plainly now, as he sat among the dingy brothers, never looking up, eating
broth from a coarse, brown bowl.</p>
<p>Permission to speak to one of the brothers was granted to the two travelers by
the abbot, and they waited in a reception room for him to come. When he did
come, treading softly in his sandals, both Eyres and Gilliam looked at him in
perplexity and astonishment. It was Johnny Bellchambers, but he had a different
look. Upon his smooth-shaven face was an expression of ineffable peace, of
rapturous attainment, of perfect and complete happiness. His form was proudly
erect, his eyes shone with a serene and gracious light. He was as neat and
well-groomed as in the old New York days, but how differently was he clad! Now
he seemed clothed in but a single garment—a long robe of rough brown
cloth, gathered by a cord at the waist, and falling in straight, loose folds
nearly to his feet. He shook hands with his visitors with his old ease and
grace of manner. If there was any embarrassment in that meeting it was not
manifested by Johnny Bellchambers. The room had no seats; they stood to
converse.</p>
<p>“Glad to see you, old man,” said Eyres, somewhat awkwardly.
“Wasn’t expecting to find you up here. Not a bad idea though, after
all. Society’s an awful sham. Must be a relief to shake the giddy whirl
and retire to—er—contemplation and—er—prayer and hymns,
and those things.</p>
<p>“Oh, cut that, Tommy,” said Bellchambers, cheerfully.
“Don’t be afraid that I’ll pass around the plate. I go
through these thing-um-bobs with the rest of these old boys because they are
the rules. I’m Brother Ambrose here, you know. I’m given just ten
minutes to talk to you fellows. That’s rather a new design in waistcoats
you have on, isn’t it, Gilliam? Are they wearing those things on Broadway
now?”</p>
<p>“It’s the same old Johnny,” said Gilliam, joyfully.
“What the devil—I mean why— Oh, confound it! what did you do
it for, old man?”</p>
<p>“Peel the bathrobe,” pleaded Eyres, almost tearfully, “and go
back with us. The old crowd’ll go wild to see you. This isn’t in
your line, Bell. I know half a dozen girls that wore the willow on the quiet
when you shook us in that unaccountable way. Hand in your resignation, or get a
dispensation, or whatever you have to do to get a release from this ice
factory. You’ll get catarrh here, Johnny—and— My God! you
haven’t any socks on!”</p>
<p>Bellchambers looked down at his sandaled feet and smiled.</p>
<p>“You fellows don’t understand,” he said, soothingly.
“It’s nice of you to want me to go back, but the old life will
never know me again. I have reached here the goal of all my ambitions. I am
entirely happy and contented. Here I shall remain for the remainder of my days.
You see this robe that I wear?” Bellchambers caressingly touched the
straight-hanging garment: “At last I have found something that will not
bag at the knees. I have attained—”</p>
<p>At that moment the deep boom of the great brass bell reverberated through the
monastery. It must have been a summons to immediate devotions, for Brother
Ambrose bowed his head, turned and left the chamber without another word. A
slight wave of his hand as he passed through the stone doorway seemed to say a
farewell to his old friends. They left the monastery without seeing him again.</p>
<p>And this is the story that Tommy Eyres and Lancelot Gilliam brought back with
them from their latest European tour.</p>
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