<h3><SPAN name="chap21"></SPAN>Chapter XXI</h3>
<p>The papers the next morning announced that Mr. Stuyvesant Carter while taking a
short cut through the lower quarter of the city, had been cruelly attacked,
beaten and robbed, and had barely escaped with his life.</p>
<p>He was lying in his rooms under the care of a trained nurse, and was recovering
as rapidly as could be expected from the shock.</p>
<p>Michael reading it next morning after seeing Sam off to Kansas, lifted his head
with that quiet show of indignation. He knew that the message must have been
telephoned to the paper by Carter himself shortly after he had escaped from the
police. He saw just how easy it was for him to give out any report he chose.
Money and influence would buy even the public press. It would be little use to
try to refute anything he chose to tell about himself.</p>
<p>The days that followed were to Michael one long blur of trouble. He haunted Mr.
Endicott’s office in hopes of getting some news of his return but they
told him the last letters had been very uncertain. He might come quickly, and
he might be delayed a month yet, or even longer; and a cablegram might not
reach him much sooner than a letter, as he was travelling from place to place.</p>
<p>After three days of this agony, knowing that the enemy would soon be recovering
from his bruises and be about again, he reluctantly wrote a note to Starr:</p>
<p class="letter">
My dear Miss Endicott:<br/>
At the risk of offending you I feel that I must make one more attempt to
save you from what I feel cannot but be great misery. The young man of whom we
were speaking has twice to my knowledge visited a young woman of the slums
within the last month, and has even since your engagement been maintaining an
intimacy with her which can be nothing but an insult to you. Though you may not
believe me, it gives me greater pain to tell you this than anything I ever had
to do before, I have tried in every way I know to communicate with your father,
but have thus far failed. I am writing you thus plainly and painfully, hoping
that though you will not take my word for it, you will at least be willing to
find some trustworthy intimate friend of your family in whom you can confide,
who will investigate this matter for you, and give you his candid opinion of
the young man. I can furnish such a man with information as to where to go to
get the facts. I know that what I have said is true. I beg for the sake of your
future happiness that you will take means to discover for yourself.</p>
<p class="right">
Faithfully yours,<br/>
Michael</p>
<p>To this note, within two days, he received a condescending, patronizing reply:</p>
<p class="letter">
Michael:<br/>
I am exceedingly sorry that you have lent yourself to means so low to
accomplish your end, whatever that may be. It is beyond me to imagine what
possible motive you can have for all this ridiculous calumny that you are
trying to cast on one who has shown a most noble spirit toward you.<br/>
Mr. Carter has fully explained to me his presence at the home of that girl,
and because you seem to really believe what you have written me, and because I
do not like to have <i>anyone</i> think evil of the man whom I am soon to
marry, I am taking the trouble to explain to you. The young woman is a former
maid of Mr. Carter’s mother, and she is deeply attached to her. She does
up Mrs. Carter’s fine laces exquisitely, and Mr. Carter has twice been
the bearer of laces to be laundered, because his mother was afraid to trust
such valuable pieces to a servant. I hope you will now understand that the
terrible things you have tried to say against Mr. Carter are utterly false.
Such things are called blackmail and bring terrible consequences in court I am
told if they become known, so I must warn you never to do anything of this sort
again. It is dangerous. If my father were at home he would explain it to you.
Of course, having been in that out-of-the-way Florida place for so long you
don’t understand these things, but for papa’s sake I would not like
you to get into trouble in any way.<br/>
There is one more thing I must say. Mr. Carter tells me that he saw you
down in that questionable neighborhood, and that you are yourself interested in
this girl. It seems strange when this is the case, that you should have thought
so ill of him.<br/>
Trusting that you will cause me no further annoyance in this matter,</p>
<p class="right">
S.D. Endicott.</p>
<p>When Michael had read this he bowed himself upon his desk as one who had been
stricken unto death. To read such words from her whom he loved better than his
own soul was terrible! And he might never let her know that these things that
had been said of him were false. She would probably go always with the idea
that his presence in that alley was a matter of shame to him. So far as his
personal part in the danger to herself was concerned, he was from this time
forth powerless to help her. If she thought such things of him,—if she
had really been made to believe them,—then of course she could credit
nothing he told her. Some higher power than his would have to save her if she
was to be saved.</p>
<p>To do Starr justice she had been very much stirred by Michael’s note, and
after a night of wakefulness and meditation had taken the letter to her mother.
Not that Starr turned naturally to her most unnatural mother for help in
personal matters usually; but there seemed to be no one else to whom she could
go. If only her father had been home! She thought of cabling him, but what
could she say in a brief message? How could she make him understand? And then
there was always the world standing by to peer curiously over one’s
shoulder when one sent a message. She could not hope to escape the public eye.</p>
<p>She considered showing Michael’s note to Morton, her faithful nurse, but
Morton, wise in many things, would not understand this matter, and would be
powerless to help her. So Starr had gone to her mother.</p>
<p>Mrs. Endicott, shrewd to perfection, masked her indignation under a very proper
show of horror, told Starr that of course it was not true, but equally of
course it must be investigated; gave her word that she would do so immediately
and her daughter need have no further thought of the matter; sent at once for
young Carter with whom she held a brief consultation at the end of which Starr
was called and cheerfully given the version of the story which she had written
to Michael.</p>
<p>Stuyvesant Carter could be very alluring when he tried, and he chose to try.
The stakes were a fortune, a noble name, and a very pretty girl with whom he
was as much in love at present as he ever had been in his checkered career,
with any girl. Moreover he had a nature that held revenge long. He delighted to
turn the story upon the man who pretended to be so righteous and who had dared
to give him orders about a poor worthless girl of the slums. He set his cunning
intellect to devise a scheme whereby his adversary should be caught in his own
net and brought low. He found a powerful ally in the mother of the girl he was
to marry.</p>
<p>For reasons of ambition Mrs. Endicott desired supremely an alliance with the
house of Carter, and she was most determined that nothing should upset her
plans for her only daughter’s marriage.</p>
<p>She knew that if her husband should return and hear any hint of the story about
Carter he would at once put an end to any relations between him and Starr. He
had always been “queer” about such things, and
“particular,” as she phrased it. It would be mortifying beyond
anything to have any balk in the arrangements after things had gone thus far;
and there was that hateful Mrs. Waterman, setting her cap for him so odiously
everywhere even since the engagement had been announced. Mrs. Endicott intended
to risk nothing. Therefore she planned with the young people for an early
marriage. She was anxious to have everything so thoroughly cut and dried, and
matters gone so far that her husband could not possibly upset them when he
returned. Finally she cabled him, asking him to set a positive date for his
home-coming as the young people wished to arrange for an early wedding. He
cabled back a date not so very far off, for in truth, though he had received
none of Michael’s warnings he was uneasy about this matter of his
daughter’s engagement. Young Carter had of course seemed all right, and
he saw no reason to demur when his wife wrote that the two young people had
come to an understanding, but somehow it had not occurred to him that the
marriage would be soon. He was troubled at thought of losing the one bright
treasure of his home, when he had but just got her back again from her European
education. He felt that it was unfortunate that imperative business had called
him abroad almost as soon as she returned. He was in haste to be back.</p>
<p>But when his wife followed her cable message with, a letter speaking of an
immediate marriage and setting a date but four days after the time set for his
arrival, he cabled to her to set no date until his return, which would be as
soon as he could possibly come.</p>
<p>However, Mrs. Endicott had planned well. The invitations had been sent out that
morning. She thought it unnecessary to cable again but wrote, “I’m
sorry, but your message came too late. The invitations are all out now, and
arrangements going forward. I knew you would not want to stop Starr’s
plans and she seems to have her heart set on being married at once. Dear
Stuyvesant finds it imperative to take an ocean trip and he cannot bear the
thought of going without his wife. I really do not see how things could
possibly be held off now. We should be the laughing stock of society and I am
sure you would not want me to endure that. And Starr, dear child, is quite
childishly happy over her arrangements. She is only anxious to have you
properly home in time, so do hurry and get an earlier boat if possible.”</p>
<p>Over this letter Mr. Endicott frowned and looked troubled. His wife had ever
taken things in her own hands where she would; but concerning Starr they had
never quite agreed, though he had let her have her own way about everything
else. It was like her to get this marriage all fixed up while he was away. Of
course it must be all right, but it was so sudden! And his little Starr! His
one little girl!</p>
<p>Then, with his usual abrupt action he put the letter in his inner pocket and
proceeded to hurry his business as much as possible that he might take an
earlier boat than the one he had set. And he finally succeeded by dint of
working night as well as day, and leaving several important matters to go as
they would.</p>
<p>The papers at last announced that Mr. Delevan Endicott who had been abroad for
three months on business had sailed for home and would reach New York nearly a
week before the date set for the wedding. The papers also were filled with
elaborate foreshadowings of what that event was likely to mean to the world of
society.</p>
<p>And Michael, knowing that he must drink every drop of his bitter cup, knowing
that he must suffer and endure to the end of it, if perchance he might yet save
her in some miraculous way, read every word, and knew the day and the hour of
the boat’s probable arrival. He had it all planned to meet that boat
himself. If possible he would go out on the pilot and meet his man before he
landed.</p>
<p>Then the silence of the great deep fell about the traveller; and the days went
by with the waiting one in the city; the preparations hurried forward by
trained and skilful workers. The Endicott home was filled with comers and
goers. Silks and satins and costly fabrics, laces and jewels and rare trimmings
from all over the world were brought together by hands experienced in costuming
the great of the earth.</p>
<p>Over the busy machinery which she had set going, Mrs. Endicott presided with
the calmness and positive determination of one who had a great purpose in view
and meant to carry it out. Not a detail escaped, her vigilant eye, not an item
was forgotten of all the millions of little necessities that the world expected
and she must have forthcoming. Nothing that could make the wedding unique,
artistic, perfect, was too hard or too costly to be carried out. This was her
pinnacle of opportunity to shine, and Mrs. Endicott intended to make the most
of it. Not that she had not shone throughout her worldly career, but she knew
that with the marriage of her daughter her life would reach its zenith point
and must henceforth begin to decline. This event must be one to be remembered
in the annals of the future so long as New York should continue to marry and be
given in marriage. Starr’s wedding must surpass all others in wonder and
beauty and elegance.</p>
<p>So she planned, wrought, carried out; and day by day the gleam in her eyes told
that she was nearing her triumph.</p>
<p>It did not disturb her when the steamer was overdue one whole day, and then
two. Starr, even amid the round of gaieties in her young set, all given in her
honor, found time to worry about her father; but the wife only found in this
fact a cause for congratulation. She felt instinctively that her crucial time
was coming when her husband reached home. If Michael had dared to carry out his
threats, or if a breath of the stories concerning young Carter’s life
should reach him there would be trouble against which she had no power.</p>
<p>It was not until the third morning with still no news of the vessel that Mrs.
Endicott began to feel uneasy. It would be most awkward to have to put off the
ceremony, and of course it would not do to have it without the bride’s
father when he was hurrying to be present. If he would arrive just in time so
much the better; but late—ah—that would be dreadful! She tightened
her determined lips, and looked like a Napoleon saying to herself, “There
shall be no Alps!” In like manner she would have said if she could:
“There shall be no sea if I wish it.”</p>
<p>But the anxiety she felt was only manifested by her closer vigilance over her
helpers as swiftly and hourly the perfected preparations glided to their
finish.</p>
<p>Starr grew nervous and restless and could not sleep, but hovered from room to
room in the daytime looking out of the windows, or fitfully telephoning the
steamship company for news. Her fiancé found her most unsatisfactory and none
of the plans he proposed for her diversion pleased her. Dark rings appeared
under her eyes, and she looked at him with a troubled expression sometimes when
she should have been laughing in the midst of a round of pleasures.</p>
<p>Starr deeply loved her father, and some vague presentiment of coming trouble
seemed to shadow all the brightness of life. Now and then Michael’s face
with its great, true eyes, and pleading expression came between her and
Carter’s face, and seemed to blur its handsome lines; and then indefinite
questions haunted her. What if those terrible things Michael had said were
true? Was she sure, <i>sure</i>? And at times like that she fancied she saw a
weakness in the lines about Carter’s eyes and mouth.</p>
<p>But she was most unused to studying character, poor child, and had no guide to
help her in her lonely problem of choosing; for already she had learned that
her mother’s ways and hers were not the same; and—her
father—did not come. When he came it would be all right. It had to be,
for there was no turning back, of course, now. The wedding was but two days
off.</p>
<p>Michael, in his new office, frankly acknowledged to himself these days that he
could not work. He had done all that he could and now was waiting for a report
of that vessel. When it landed he hoped to be the first man on board; in fact,
he had made arrangement to go out to meet it before it landed. But it did not
come! Was it going to be prevented until the day was put off? Would that make
matters any better? Would he then have more time? And could he accomplish
anything with Mr. Endicott, even, supposing he had time? Was he not worse than
foolish to try? Mr. Endicott was already angry with him for another reason. His
wife and Starr, and that scoundrel of a Carter, would tell all sorts of
stories. Of course he would believe them in preference to his! He groaned aloud
sometimes, when, he was alone in the office: and wished that there were but a
way he could fling himself between Starr and all evil once for all; give his
life for hers. Gladly, gladly would he do it if it would do any good. Yet there
was no way.</p>
<p>And then there came news. The vessel had been heard from still many miles out
to sea, with one of her propellers broken, and laboring along at great
disadvantage. But if all went well she would reach her dock at noon of the
following day—eight hours before the time set for the wedding!</p>
<p>Starr heard and her face blossomed, into smiles. All would go well after all.
She telephoned again to the steamship company a little while later and her
utmost fears were allayed by their assurances.</p>
<p>Mrs. Endicott heard the news with intense relief. Her husband would scarcely
have time to find out anything. She must take pains that he had no opportunity
to see Michael before the ceremony.</p>
<p>The young man heard and his heart beat wildly. Would the time be long enough to
save her?</p>
<p>Noon of the next day came, but the steamer had not yet landed, though the news
from her was good. She would be in before night, there was no doubt of it now.
Mr. Endicott would be in time for the wedding, but just that and no more. He
had sent reassurances to his family, and they were going forward happily in the
whirl of the last things.</p>
<p>But Michael in his lonely office hung up the telephone receiver with a heavy
heart. There would be no time now to save Starr. Everything was against him.
Even if he could get speech of Mr. Endicott which was doubtful now, was it
likely the man would listen at this the last minute? Of course his wife and
daughter and her fiancé could easily persuade him all was well, and Michael a
jealous fool!</p>
<p>As he sat thus with bowed head before his desk, he heard footsteps along the
stone floor of the corridor outside. They halted at his door, and hesitating
fingers fumbled with the knob. He looked up frowning and was about to send any
chance client away, with the explanation that he was entirely too much occupied
at present to be interrupted, when the face of the woman who opened the door
caught his attention.</p>
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