<h2><SPAN name="the-guest-of-honour"></SPAN>The Guest of Honour</h2>
<p><br/></p>
<p class="center pfirst"><span class="bold medium">PART ONE</span></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><span>The doctor shut and locked his desk drawer
upon his memorandum book with his right
hand, and extended the left to his friend
Manning Verrill, with the remark:</span></p>
<p><span>"Well, Manning, how are you?"</span></p>
<p><span>"If I were well, Henry," answered Verrill
gravely, "I would not be here."</span></p>
<p><span>The doctor leaned back in his deep leather chair,
and having carefully adjusted his glasses, tilted
back his head, and looked at Verrill from beneath
them. He waited for him to continue.</span></p>
<p><span>"It's my nerves—I </span><em class="italics">suppose</em><span>," began Verrill.
"Henry," he declared suddenly leaning forward,
"Henry, I'm scared; that's what's the matter with
me—I'm scared."</span></p>
<p><span>"Scared," echoed the doctor, "What nonsense!
What of?"</span></p>
<p><span>"Scared of death, Henry," broke out Verrill,
"scared </span><em class="italics">blue</em><span>!"</span></p>
<p><span>"It is your nerves," murmured the doctor. "You
need travel and a bromide, my boy. There's
nothing the matter with you. Why, you're good for
another forty years,—yes, or even for another fifty
years. You're sound as a nut. You, to talk about
death!"</span></p>
<p><span>"I've seen thirty—twenty-nine I should say,
twenty-nine of my best friends go."</span></p>
<p><span>The doctor looked puzzled a moment; then—"Oh! you
mean that club of yours," said he.</span></p>
<p><span>"Yes," said Verrill, "Great heavens! to think
that I should be the last man after all—well, one
of us had to be the last. And that's where the
trouble is, Henry. It's been growing on me for
the last two years—ever since Curtice died. He
was the twenty-sixth. And he died only a month
before the Annual Dinner. Arnold, Brill, Steve—Steve
Sharrett, you know, and I—just the four,—were
left then; and we sat down to that big table
alone; and when we came to the toast of 'The
Absent Ones' ... Well, Henry, we were pretty
solemn before we got through. And we knew that
the choice of the last man,—who would face those
thirty-one empty covers and open the bottle of
wine that we all set aside at our first dinner, and
drink 'The Absent Ones,'—was narrowing down
pretty fine.</span></p>
<p><span>"Next year there were only Arnold and Steve,
and myself left. Brill—well you know all about his
death. The three of us got through dinner somehow.
The year after that we were still three, and
even the year after that. Then poor old Steve
went down with the </span><em class="italics">Dreibund</em><span> in the bay of Biscay,
and four months afterward Arnold and I sat down
to the table at the Annual, alone. I'm not going
to forget that evening in a hurry. Why,
Henry—oh! never mind. Then—"</span></p>
<p><span>"Well," prompted the doctor as his friend paused:</span></p>
<p><span>"Arnold died three months ago. And the day
of our Annual—I mean my—the club's," Verrill
changed his position. "The date of the dinner,
the Annual Dinner, is next month, and I'm the only
one left."</span></p>
<p><span>"And, of course, you'll not go," declared the
doctor.</span></p>
<p><span>"Oh, yes," said Verrill. "Yes, I will go, of
course. But—" He shook his head with a long
sigh. "When the Last Man Club was organised,"
he went on, "in '68, we were all more or less
young. It was a great idea, at least I felt that way
about it, but I didn't believe that thirty young men
would persist in anything—of that sort very long.
But no member of the club died for the first five
years, and the club met every year and had its
dinner without much thought of—of consequences,
and of the inevitable. We met just to be sociable."</span></p>
<p><span>"Hold on," interrupted the doctor, "you are
speaking now of thirty. A while ago you said
thirty-one."</span></p>
<p><span>"Yes, I know," assented Verrill, "There were
thirty in the club, but we always placed an extra
cover—for—for the Guest of Honour."</span></p>
<p><span>The doctor made a movement of impatience.
Then in a moment, "Well," he said, resignedly, "go on."</span></p>
<p><span>"That's about the essentials," answered Verrill.
"The first death was in '73. And from that year
on the vacant places at the table have steadily
increased. Little by little the original bravado of
the thing dropped out of it all for me; and of late
years—well I have told you how it is. I've seen
so many of them die, and die so fast, so regularly—one
a year you might say,—that I've kept saying
'who next, who next, who's to go this year?'
... And as they went, one by one, and still I was
left ... I tell you, Henry, the suspense was,
... the suspense is ... You see I'm the last now, and
ever since Curtice died, I've felt this thing weighing
on me. </span><em class="italics">By God, Henry, I'm afraid; I'm afraid
of Death! It's horrible!</em><span> It's as though I were
on the list of 'condemned' and were listening to
hear my name called every minute."</span></p>
<p><span>"Well, so are all of us, if you come to that,"
observed the doctor.</span></p>
<p><span>"Oh, I know, I know," cried Verrill, "it is
morbid and all that. But that don't help me any.
Can you imagine me one month from to-morrow
night. Think now. I'm alone, absolutely, and
there is the long empty table, with the thirty places
set, and the extra place, and those places are where
all my old friends used to sit. And at twelve
I get up and give first 'The Absent Ones,' and then
'The Guest of the Evening.' I gave those toasts
last year, but there were two of us, then, and
the year before there were three. But ever since
Curtice died and we were narrowed down to four,
this thing has been weighing on me—this idea of
death, and I've conceived a horror of it—a—a
dread. And now I am the last. I had no idea
this would ever happen to me; or if it did, that it
would be like this. I'm shaken, Henry, shaken.
I've not slept for three nights. So I've come to
you. You must help me."</span></p>
<p><span>"So I will, by advising you. You give up the
idiocy. Cut out the dinner this year; yes, and for always."</span></p>
<p><span>"You don't understand," replied Verrill, calmly.
"It is impossible. I could not keep away. I </span><em class="italics">must</em><span>
be there."</span></p>
<p><span>"But it's simple lunacy," expostulated the doctor.
"Man, you've worked upon your nerves over this
fool club and dinner, till I won't be responsible for
you if you carry out this notion. Come, promise
me you will take the train for, say Florida,
tomorrow, and </span><em class="italics">I'll</em><span> give you stuff that will make you
sleep. St. Augustine is heaven at this time of year,
and I hear the tarpon have come in. Shall—"</span></p>
<p><span>Verrill shook his head.</span></p>
<p><span>"You don't understand," he repeated. "You
simply don't understand. No, I shall go to the
dinner. But of course I'm—I'm nervous—a little.
Did I say I was scared? I didn't mean that. Oh,
I'm all right; I just want you to prescribe for me,
something for the nerves. Henry, death is a
terrible thing,—to see 'em all struck down,
twenty-nine of 'em—splendid boys. Henry, I'm not a
coward. There's a difference between cowardice
and fear. For hours last night I was trying to
work it out. Cowardice—that's just turning tail
and running; but I shall go through that Annual
Dinner, and that's ordeal enough, believe me. But
fear,—it's just death in the abstract that unmans
me. </span><em class="italics">That's</em><span> the thing to fear. To think that
we all go along living and working and fussing
from day to day, when we </span><em class="italics">know</em><span> that this great
Monster, this Horror, is walking up and down the
streets, and that sooner or later he'll catch us,—that
we can't escape. Isn't it the greatest curse in
the world! We're so used to it we don't realise
the Thing. But suppose one could eliminate the
Monster altogether. </span><em class="italics">Then</em><span> we'd realise how sweet
life was, and we'd look back at the old days with
horror—just as I do now."</span></p>
<p><span>"Oh, but this is rubbish," cried the doctor,
"simple drivel. Manning, I'm ashamed of you. I'll
prescribe for you, I suppose I've got to. But a
good rough fishing-and-hunting-trip would do more
for you than a gallon of drugs. If you won't go
to Florida, get out of town, if it's only over Sunday.
Here's your prescription, and </span><em class="italics">do</em><span> take a
Friday-to-Monday trip. Tramp in the woods, get tired, and
</span><em class="italics">don't go to that dinner</em><span>!"</span></p>
<p><span>"You don't understand," repeated Verrill, as the
two stood up. He put the prescription into his
pocket-book. "You don't understand. I couldn't
keep away. It's a duty, and besides—well I
couldn't make you see. Good-by. This stuff will
make me sleep, eh? And do my nerves good, too,
you say? I see. I'll come back to you if it don't
work. Good-by again. </span><em class="italics">This</em><span> door, is it? Not
through the waiting-room, eh? Yes, I remember....
Henry, did you ever—did you ever face
death yourself—I mean—"</span></p>
<p><span>"Nonsense, nonsense, nonsense," cried the doctor.
But Verrill persisted. His back to the closed
door, he continued:</span></p>
<p><span>"</span><em class="italics">I</em><span> did. </span><em class="italics">I</em><span> faced death once,—so you see I should
know. It was when I was a lad of twenty. My
father had a line of New Orleans packets and I
often used to make the trip as super-cargo. One
October day we were caught in the equinox off
Hatteras, and before we knew it we were wondering if
she would last another half-hour. Along in the
afternoon there came a sea aboard, and caught me
unawares. I lost my hold and felt myself going,
going.... I was sure for ten seconds that it was
the end,—</span><em class="italics">and I saw death then, face to face</em><span>!</span></p>
<p><span>"And I've never forgotten it. I've only to shut
my eyes to see it all, hear it all—the naked spars
rocking against the grey-blue of the sky, the wrench
and creak of the ship, the threshing of rope ends,
the wilderness of pale-green water, the sound of
rain and scud.... No, no, I'll not forget it.
And death was a horrid specter in that glimpse I
got of him. I—I don't care to see him again.
Well, good-by once more."</span></p>
<p><span>"Good-by, Manning, and believe me, this is all
hypochondria. Go and catch fish. Go shoot
something, and in twenty-four hours you'll believe
there's no such thing as death."</span></p>
<p><span>The door closed. Verrill was gone.</span></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p class="center pfirst"><span class="bold medium">PART TWO</span></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><span>The banquet hall was in the top story of one of
the loftiest sky-scrapers of the city. Along the
eastern wall was a row of windows reaching from
ceiling to floor, and as the extreme height of the
building made it unnecessary to draw the curtains
whoever was at the table could look out and over
the entire city in that direction. Thus it was that
Manning Verrill, on a certain night some four
weeks after his interview with the doctor, sat there
at his walnuts and black coffee and, absorbed,
abstracted, looked out over the panorama beneath
him, where the Life of a great nation centered and
throbbed.</span></p>
<p><span>To the unenlightened the hall would have
presented a strange spectacle. Down its center
extended the long table. The chairs were drawn up,
the covers laid. But the chairs were empty, the
covers untouched; and but for the presence of the
one man the hall was empty, deserted.</span></p>
<p><span>At the head of the table Verrill, in evening dress,
a gardenia in his lapel, his napkin across his lap,
an unlighted cigar in his fingers, sat motionless,
looking out over the city with unseeing eyes. Of
thirty places around the table, none was distinctive,
none varied. But at Verrill's right hand the
thirty-first place, the place of honour, differed from all
the rest. The chair was large, massive. The oak
of which it was made was black, while instead of
the usual array of silver and porcelain, one saw
but two vessels,—an unopened bottle of wine and a
large silver cup heavily chased.</span></p>
<p><span>From far below in the city's streets eleven o'clock
struck. The sounds broke in upon Verrill's reverie
and he stirred, glanced about the room and then,
rising, went to the window and stood there for
some time looking out.</span></p>
<p><span>At his feet, far beneath lay the city, twinkling
with lights. In the business quarter all was dark,
but from the district of theatres and restaurants
there arose a glare into the night, ruddy, vibrating,
with here and there a ganglion of electric bulbs
upon a "fire sign" emphasising itself in a whiter
radiance. Cable-cars and cabs threaded the streets
with little starring eyes of coloured lights, while
underneath all this blur of illumination, the people,
debouching from the theatres, filled the sidewalks
with tiny ant-like swarms, minute, bustling.</span></p>
<p><span>Farther on in the residence district, occasional
lighted windows watched with the street-lamps
gazing blankly into the darkness. In particular one
house was all ablaze. Every window glowed. No
doubt a great festivity was in progress and Verrill
could almost fancy that he heard the strains of the
music, the rustle of the silks.</span></p>
<p><span>Then nearer at hand, but more to the eastward,
where the office buildings rose in tower-like clusters
and somber groups, Verrill could see a vista of open
water—the harbour. Lights were moving here,
green and red, as the great hoarse-voiced freighters
stood out with the tide.</span></p>
<p><span>And beyond this was the sea itself, and more
lights, very, very faint where the ships rolled
leisurely in the ground swells; ships bound to and
from all ports of the earth,—ships that united the
nations, that brought the whole world of living
men under the view of the lonely watcher in the
empty Banquet Hall.</span></p>
<p><span>Verrill raised the window. At once a subdued
murmur, prolonged, monotonous,—the same murmur
as that which disengages itself from forests,
from the sea, and from sleeping armies,—rose to
meet him. It was the mingling of all the night
noises into one great note that came simultaneously
from all quarters of the horizon, infinitely vast,
infinitely deep,—a steady diapason strain like the
undermost bourdon of a great organ as the wind
begins to thrill the pipes.</span></p>
<p><span>It was the stir of life, the breathing of the
Colossus, the push of the nethermost basic force,
old as the world, wide as the world, the murmur
of the primeval energy, coeval with the centuries,
blood-brother to that spirit which in the brooding
darkness before creation, moved upon the face of
the waters.</span></p>
<p><span>And besides this, as Verrill stood there looking
out, the night wind brought to him, along with the
taint of the sea, the odour of the heaped-up fruit
in the city's markets and even the suggestion of the
vegetable gardens in the suburbs.</span></p>
<p><span>Across his face, like the passing of a long breath,
he felt the abrupt sensation of life, indestructible,
persistent.</span></p>
<p><span>But absorbed in other things, Verrill, unmoved,
and only dimly comprehending, closed the window
and turned back into the room. At his place stood
an unopened bottle and a glass as yet dry. He
removed the foil from the neck of the bottle, but
after looking at his watch, set it down again
without drawing the cork. It lacked some fifteen
minutes to midnight.</span></p>
<p><span>Once again, as he had already done so many
times that evening, Verrill wiped the moisture from
his forehead. He shut his teeth against the slow
thick labouring of his heart. He was alone. The
sense of isolation, of abandonment, weighed down
upon him intolerably as he looked up and down the
the empty table. Alone, alone; all the rest were
gone, and he stood there, in the solitude of that
midnight; he, last of all that company whom he
had known and loved. Over and over again he muttered:</span></p>
<p><span>"All, all are gone, the old familiar faces." Then
slowly Verrill began to make the circuit of the
table, reading, as if from a roll call, the names
written on the cards which lay upon the
place-plates. "Anderson, ... Evans, ... Copeland,—dear
old 'crooked-face' Copeland, his camp companion
in those Maine fishing-trips of the old days,
dead now these ten years.... Stryker,—'Buff'
Stryker they had called him, dead,—he had
forgotten how long,—drowned in his yacht off the
Massachusetts coast; Harris, died of typhoid
somewhere in Italy; Dick Herndon, killed in a mine
accident in Mexico; Rice, old 'Whitey Rice' a suicide
in a California cattle town; Curtice, carried off by
fever in Durban, South Africa." Thus around the
whole table he moved, telling the bead-roll of
death, following in the footsteps of the Monster
who never relented, who never tired, who never,
never,—never forgot.</span></p>
<p><span>His own turn would come some day. Verrill,
sunken into his chair, put his hands over his eyes.
Yes his own turn would come. There was no
escape. That dreadful face would rise again
before his eyes. He would bow his back to the
scourge of nations, he would roll helpless beneath
the wheels of the great car. How to face that
prospect with fortitude! How to look into those
terrible grey eyes with calm! Oh, the terror of
that gorgon face, oh, the horror of those sightless,
lightless grey eyes!</span></p>
<p><span>But suddenly midnight struck. He heard the
strokes come booming upward from the city streets.
His vigil was all but over.</span></p>
<p><span>Verrill opened the bottle of wine, breaking the
seal that had been affixed to the cork on the night
of the first meeting of the club. Filling his glass,
he rose in his place. His eyes swept the table, and
while for the last time the memories came thronging
back, his lips formed the words:</span></p>
<p><span>"To the Absent Ones: to you, Curtice, Anderson,
Brill, to you, Copeland, to you, Stryker, to
you, Arnold, to you all, my old comrades, all you
old familiar faces who are absent to-night."</span></p>
<p><span>He emptied the glass, but immediately filled it
again. The last toast was to be drunk, the last of
all. Verrill, the glass raised, straightened himself.</span></p>
<p><span>But even as he stood there, glass in hand, he
shivered slightly. He made note of it for the
moment, yet his emotions had so shaken him during
all that evening that he could well understand the
little shudder that passed over him for a moment.</span></p>
<p><span>But he caught himself glancing at the windows.
All were shut. The doors of the hall were closed,
the flames of the chandeliers were steady. Whence
came then this certain sense of coolness that so
suddenly had invaded the air? The coolness was
not disagreeable, but none the less the temperature
of the room had been lowered, at least so he
could fancy. Yet already he was dismissing the
matter from his mind. No doubt the weather had
changed suddenly.</span></p>
<p><span>In the next second, however, another peculiar
circumstance forced itself upon his attention. The
stillness of the Banquet Hall, placed as it was, at
the top of one of the highest buildings in the city
was no matter of comment to Verrill. He was
long since familiar with it. But for all that, even
through the closed windows, and through the
medium of steel and brick and marble that composed
the building the indefinite murmur of the city's
streets had always made itself felt in the hall. It
was faint, yet it was distinct. That bourdon of
life to which he had listened that very evening was
not wholly to be shut out, yet now, even in this
supreme moment of the occasion it was impossible
for Verrill to ignore the fancy that an unusual
stillness had all at once widened about him, like the
widening of unseen ripples. There was not a
sound, and he told himself that stillness such as this
was only the portion of the deaf. No faintest
tremor of noise rose from the streets. The vast
building itself had suddenly grown as soundless as
the unplumbed depth of the sea. But Verrill shook
himself; all evening fancies such as these had
besieged him, even now they were prolonging the
ordeal. Once this last toast drunk and he was
released from his duty: He raised his glass again,
and then in a loud clear voice he said:</span></p>
<p><span>"</span><em class="italics">Gentlemen, I give you the toast of the evening.</em><span>" And
as he emptied the glass, a quick, light footstep
sounded in the corridor outside the door.</span></p>
<p><span>Verrill looked up in great annoyance. The
corridor led to but one place, the door of the
Banquet Hall, and any one coming down the corridor
at so brisk a pace could have but one intention—that
of entering the hall. Verrill frowned at the
idea of an intruder. His orders had been of the
strictest. That a stranger should thrust himself
upon his company at this of all moments was exasperating.</span></p>
<p><span>But the footsteps drew nearer, and as Verrill
stood frowning at the door at the far end of the
hall, it opened.</span></p>
<p><span>A gentleman came in, closed the door, behind
him, and faced about. Verrill scrutinised him with
an intent eye.</span></p>
<p><span>He was faultlessly dressed, and just by his
manner of carrying himself in his evening clothes
Verrill knew that here was breeding, distinction.
The newcomer was tall, slim. Also he was young;
Verrill, though he could not have placed his age
with any degree of accuracy, would none the less
have disposed of the question by setting him down
as a young man. But Verrill further observed that
the gentleman was very pale, even his lips lacked
colour. However, as he looked closer, he discovered
that this pallor was hardly the result of any present
emotion, but was rather constitutional.</span></p>
<p><span>There was a moment's silence as the two looked
at each other the length of the Hall; then with a
peculiarly pleasant smile the stranger came forward
drawing off his white glove and extending his hand.
He seemed so at home, so perfectly at his ease, and
at the same time so much of what Verrill was wont
to call a "thoroughbred fellow" that the latter
found it impossible to cherish any resentment. He
preferred to believe that the stranger had made
some readily explained mistake which would be
rectified in their first spoken words. Thus it was
that he was all the more non-plussed when the
stranger took him by the hand with words: "This
is Mr. Manning Verrill, of course. I am very glad
to meet you again, sir. Two such as you and I
who have once been so intimate, should never
forget each other."</span></p>
<p><span>Verrill had it upon his lips to inform the other
that he had something the advantage of him; but at
the last moment he was unable to utter the words.
The newcomer's pleasure in the meeting was so
hearty, so spontaneous, that he could not quite
bring himself to jeopardise it—at the outset at
least—by a confession of implied unfriendliness; so
instead he clumsily assumed the other's manner,
and, though deeply perplexed, managed to attain
a certain heartiness as he exclaimed: "But you have
come very late. I have already dined, and by the
way, let me explain why you find me here alone,
in a deserted Banquet Hall with covers laid for so
many."</span></p>
<p><span>"Indeed, you need not explain," replied the
stranger. "I am a member of your club, you know."</span></p>
<p><span>A member of the club, this total stranger! Verrill
could not hide a frown of renewed perplexity;
surely this face was not one of any friend he ever
had. "A charter member, you might say," the
other continued; "but singularly enough, I have
never been able to attend one of the meetings until
now. Of us all I think I have been the busiest—and
the one most widely traveled. Such must be
my excuses."</span></p>
<p><span>At the moment an explanation occurred to Verrill.
It was within the range of the possible that
the newcomer was an old member of the club, some
sojourner in a foreign country, whose death had
been falsely reported. Possibly Verrill had lost
track of him. It was not always easy to "place"
at once every one of the thirty. The two sat down,
but almost immediately Verrill exclaimed:</span></p>
<p><span>"Pardon me, but—that chair. The omen would
be so portentous! You have taken the wrong
place. You who are a member of the club! You
must remember that we reserved that chair—the
one you are occupying."</span></p>
<p><span>But the stranger smiled calmly.</span></p>
<p><span>"I defy augury, and I snap my fingers at the
portent. Here is my place and here I choose to
remain."</span></p>
<p><span>"As you will," answered Verrill, "but it is a
singular choice. It is not conducive to appetite."</span></p>
<p><span>"My dear Verrill," answered the other, "I shall
not dine, if you will permit me to say so. It is very
late and my time is limited. I can stay but a
short while at best. I have much to do to-night
after I leave you,—much good I hope, much good.
For which," he added rather sadly, "I shall
receive no thanks, only abuse, only abuse, my dear
Verrill." Verrill was only half listening. He was
looking at the other's face, and as he looked, he
wondered; for the brow was of the kind fitted for
crowns, and from beneath glowed the glance of a
King. The mouth seemed to have been shaped
by the utterance of the commands of Empire.
The whole face was astonishing, full of power
tempered by a great kindliness. Verrill could not
keep his gaze from those wonderful, calm grey
eyes. Who was this extraordinary man met under
such strange circumstances, alone and in the night,
in the midst of so many dead memories, and
surrounded by that inexplicable stillness, that sudden,
profound peace? And what was the subtle
magnetism that upon sight, drew him so powerfully to
the stranger? Kingly he was, but Verrill seemed
to feel that he was more than that. He was—could
be—a friend, such a friend as in all their
circle of dead companions he had never known.
In his company he knew he need never be ashamed
of weakness, human, natural, ordained weakness,
need not be ashamed because of the certainty of
being perfectly and thoroughly understood. Thus
it was that when the stranger had spoken the
words"—only abuse, only abuse, my dear
Verrill." Verrill, starting from his muse, answered
quickly: "What, abuse, you! in return for good!
You astonish me."</span></p>
<p><span>"'Abuse' is the mildest treatment I dare expect;
it will no doubt be curses. Of all personages,
I am the one most cruelly misunderstood. My
friends are few, few,—oh, so pitiably few." "Of
whom may I be one?" exclaimed Verrill. "I
hope," said the stranger gravely, "we shall be the
best of friends. When we met before I am afraid,
my appearance was too abrupt and—what shall I
say—unpleasant to win your good will." Verrill
in some embarrassment, framed a lame reply; but
the other continued:</span></p>
<p><span>"You do not remember, as I can easily understand.
My manner at that time was against me.
It was a whim, but I chose to be most forbidding
on that occasion. I am a very Harlequin in my
moods; Harlequin did I say, my dear fellow I am
the Prince of Masqueraders."</span></p>
<p><span>"But a Prince in all events," murmured Verrill,
half to himself.</span></p>
<p><span>"Prince and Slave," returned the other, "slave
to circumstance."</span></p>
<p><span>"Are we not all—," began Verrill, but the
stranger continued:</span></p>
<p><span>"Slave to circumstance, slave to time, slave to
natural laws, none so abject as I, in my servility.
When the meanest, the lowest, the very weakest
calls, I must obey. On the other hand, none so
despotic as I, none so absolute. When I summon,
the strongest must respond; when I command, the
most powerful must obey. My profession, my
dear Verrill, is an arduous one."</span></p>
<p><span>"Your profession is, I take it," observed Verrill,
"that of a physician."</span></p>
<p><span>"You may say so," replied the other, "and you
may also say an efficient one. But I am always
the last to be summoned. I am a last resource;
my remedy is a heroic one. But it prevails—inevitably.
No pain, my dear Verrill, so sharp that
I cannot allay, no anguish so great that I cannot
soothe."</span></p>
<p><span>"Then perhaps you may prescribe for me," said
Verrill. "Of late I have been perturbed. I have
lived under a certain strain, certain contingencies
threaten, which, no doubt unreasonably, I have
come to dread. I am shaken, nervous, fearful.
My own doctor has been unable to help me. Perhaps
you—"</span></p>
<p><span>The stranger had already opened the bottle of
wine which stood by his plate, and filled the silver
cup. He handed it to Verrill.</span></p>
<p><span>"Drink," he said.</span></p>
<p><span>Verrill hesitated:</span></p>
<p><span>"But this wine," he protested: "This cup—pardon
me, it was reserved—"</span></p>
<p><span>"Drink," repeated the stranger. "Trust me."</span></p>
<p><span>He took Verrill's glass in which he had drunk
the toasts and which yet contained a little wine.
He pressed the silver cup into Verrill's hands.</span></p>
<p><span>"Drink," he urged for the third time.</span></p>
<p><span>Verrill took the cup, and the stranger raised his
glass.</span></p>
<p><span>"To our better acquaintance," he said.</span></p>
<p><span>But Verrill, at length at the end of all
conjecture, cried out, the cup still in his hand:</span></p>
<p><span>"Your toast is most appropriate, sir. A better
acquaintance with you, I assure you, would be most
pleasing to me. But I must ask your pardon for
my stupidity. Where have we met before? Who
are you, and what is your name?"</span></p>
<p><span>The stranger did not immediately reply, but
fixed his grave grey eyes upon Verrill's. For a
moment he held his gaze in his own. Then as the
seconds slipped by, the first indefinite sense of
suspicion flashed across Verrill's mind, flashed and
faded, returned once more, faded again, and left
him wondering. Then as the stranger said:</span></p>
<p><span>"Do you remember,—it was long ago. Do you
remember the sight of naked spars rocking against
a grey torn sky, a ship wrenching and creaking,
wrestling with the wind, a world of pale green
surges, the gale singing through the cordage, and
then as the sea swept the decks—ah, you do remember."</span></p>
<p><span>For Verrill had started suddenly, and with the
movement, full recognition, complete, unequivocal,
gleamed suddenly in his eyes. There was a long
silence while he returned the gaze of the other,
now no longer a stranger. At length Verrill spoke,
drawing a long breath.</span></p>
<p><span>"Ah ... it is you ... at last."</span></p>
<p><span>"Well!"</span></p>
<p><span>Verrill smiled:</span></p>
<p><span>"It </span><em class="italics">is</em><span> well, I had imagined it would be so
different,—when you did come. But as it is—," he
extended his hand, "I am very glad to meet you."</span></p>
<p><span>"Did I not tell you," said the other, "that of
all the world, I am the most cruelly misunderstood?"</span></p>
<p><span>"But you confessed to the masquerade."</span></p>
<p><span>"Oh, blind, blind, not to see behind the foolish
masque. Come, we have not yet drunk."</span></p>
<p><span>He placed the cup in Verrill's hands, and once
again raised the glass.</span></p>
<p><span>"To our better acquaintance," he said.</span></p>
<p><span>"To our better acquaintance," echoed Verrill.
He drained the cup.</span></p>
<p><span>"The lees were bitter," he observed.</span></p>
<p><span>"But the effect?"</span></p>
<p><span>"Yes, it is calming—already, exquisitely so. It
is not—as I have imagined for so long, deadening,
on the contrary, it is invigorating, revivifying. I
feel born again."</span></p>
<p><span>The other rose: "Then there is no need," he
said, "to stay here any longer. Come, shall we be
going?"</span></p>
<p><span>"Yes, yes, I am ready," answered Verrill.
"Look," he exclaimed, pointing to the windows.
"Look—it is morning."</span></p>
<p><span>Low in the east, the dawn was rising over the
city. A new day was coming; the stars were
paling, the night was over.</span></p>
<p><span>"That is true," said Verrill's new friend.
"Another day is coming. It is time we went out to
meet it."</span></p>
<p><span>They rose and passed down the length of the
Banquet Hall. He who had called himself the
great Physician, the Servant of the Humble, the
Master of Kings, the Prince of Masqueraders,
held open the door for Verrill to pass. But when
the man had gone out, the Prince paused a
moment, and looked back upon the deserted Banquet
Hall, lit partly by the steady electrics, partly by
the pale light of morning, that now began with
ever-increasing radiance to stream through the
eastern windows. Then he stretched forth his
hand and laid his touch upon a button in the wall.
Instantly the lights sank, vanished; for a moment
the hall seemed dark.</span></p>
<p><span>He went out quietly, shutting the door behind him.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst"><span>* * * * *</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em"></div>
<p><span>And the Banquet Hall remained deserted,
lonely, empty, yet it was neither dark nor lifeless.
Stronger and stronger grew the flood of light that
burned roseate toward the zenith as the sun came
up. It penetrated to every corner of the room, and
the drops of wine left in the bottom of the glasses
flashed like jewels in the radiance. From without,
from the city's streets, came the murmur of
increasing activity. Through the night it had
droned on, like the low-pitched diapason of some
vast organ, but now as the sun rose, it swelled in
volume. Louder it grew and ever louder. Its
sound-waves beat upon the windows of the hall.
They invaded the hall itself.</span></p>
<p><span>It was the symphony of energy, the vast
orchestration of force, the pæan of an indestructible
life, coeval with the centuries, renascent, ordained,
eternal.</span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />