From the head of our firm:
_My dear Miss Smith_:
I have your interesting letter and the delightful photographs, which have so completely charmed Mrs.
Westmacote and me that we have decided it wouldn"t be good business to miss Hynds House on our trip South this year.
Mrs. Westmacote asks if you could also accommodate a cousin of hers, Miss Emmeline Phelps-Parsons, a lady deeply interested in the colonial homes of America.
You must allow me heartily to congratulate you upon your great good fortune in falling heir to such a wonderful old place; and to wish you many happy and prosperous years in it.
I shall telegraph you when to expect us. With all good wishes,
Yours faithfully, GEORGE PEABODY WESTMACOTE.
Letter from Miss Emmeline Phelps-Parsons, of Boston:
_Dear Miss Smith_:
My cousin Mrs. Westmacote, whom I have been visiting, showed me your letter and the enchanting photographs of your house which you were kind enough to send Mr. Westmacote. Hynds House is just the one place I have long been looking for!--an unspoiled colonial house, with historic a.s.sociations!
It is perfect! I must see with my own eyes those Chelsea figures on your drawing-room mantel, the l.u.s.ter and Washington jugs in the dining-room, and the cabinets in the hall.
Sincerely yours, EMMELINE PHELPS-PARSONS.
P.S. I hope it is really true that there is an Influence in Hynds House? I do so greatly long to come in contact with the Occult and the Unknown!
"Somewhere on the firing-line of fifty," mused Alicia. "A lady with a soul. Don"t you hear dear old Boston calling you, Sophy? Here"s one to put Miss Martha Hopkins"s light under a bushel basket!"
We had several other inquirers; and chose from them Mr. Chetwynd Harrison-Gore and his daughter, English folk "doing" America and delighted to include a Carolina colonial house in their trip; a suffrage leader, whose throat needed a rest; and Morenas, the ill.u.s.trator. It seemed that Hynds House offered to each one something that had been craved for.
The Author pounced upon us two or three days before we expected him, to take stock after his own fashion. I have heard The Author commended for "the humor of his rare smile and the keen, kind intellectuality of his remarkable eyes." Well, the smile was rare enough; and of course there isn"t any doubt about the man"s intellectuality. For the rest, he proved to be a tall, lanky, stooping person, with a thin tanned face, outstanding ears, a high nose, and long, blue-gray eyes half-hidden under drooping lids and behind gla.s.ses. His hair was just hair. And he had the sort of mustache that bristled like a cat"s when he twisted his lip.
So far as monetary success, and efficacious press-agents, and the adulation, admiration, emulation, and envy of his contemporaries went, he had nothing to complain of. He was lionized, quoted, courted, flattered, reviewed, viewed through rose-colored spectacles; and disillusioned, discontented, cynical, selfish, and, of course, most horribly bored. He was gun-shy of women; he suspected them of wanting to marry him. He was wary of men; he suspected them of wanting to exploit him. He loathed children, who were generally obstreperous and unnecessary editions of parents he didn"t admire. He didn"t even trust the beautiful works of men"s hands. They, even they, were too often faked! If you had dug up the indubitable mummy of the first Pharaoh from under the oldest of the pyramids, The Author would have turned him over on his back and hunted for the trade-mark of The Modern Mummy-makers: London, Paris, and New York; Catalogue on Request.
He stalked through Hynds House with slitted eyes and bristling mustache--business of silent sleuth on the trail of the furniture-fakir! He"d pause at each door and with an eagle glance take a comprehensive survey; then, defensively, offensively, he examined things in detail. From our rambling attics to our vast and cavernous cellars did he go; and not a word crossed his lips until he had completed this conandoyley examination. Then:
"Telegraph form if you have one, please," he requested briefly. "I wish to wire for my car. Put Johnson in the room next mine.
Johnson"s my secretary." He looked at Alicia, reflectively. "Amiable a.s.s, Johnson," he volunteered. Then he went over to the tiled fireplace--we were in the library--and bent worshipfully before it.
"The finest bit of tile-work on this continent," he said, in a hushed voice. "Absolutely perfect. And it belongs to a woman named Smith!"
"We know just how you feel about it," Alicia told him sympathetically, while The Author turned red to his ears. "I have often felt like that myself, when something I particularly wanted was bought by somebody I was sure couldn"t properly appreciate it. I dare say I was mistaken," admitted Alicia, "just as mistaken as you are now in thinking that Sophy and I aren"t worthy of those tiles.
We are--all the more so because we never before had anything like them."
The spoiled darling of success looked at us intently; and a most curious change came over his clever, bad-tempered face. His eyes are as bright as ice, and have somewhat the same cold light in them. Now a thaw set in and melted them, and a mottled red spread over his sallow cheeks.
"Miss Gaines," he said, abruptly, "your doll-baby face does your intelligence an injustice--Miss Smith, I apologize." And before the astonished and indignant Alicia could summon a withering retort, he added heartily: "This whole place is quite the real thing, you know--almost too good to be true and too true to be good. Would you mind telling me how you happened to think of letting me in on it, eh?"
"Because we knew it _was_ the real thing," Alicia replied, truthfully.
"Do you know,"--The Author was plainly pleased--"that that is one of the very nicest things that"s ever been said to me? Because I really _do_ know above a bit about genuine stuff."
"It must be a great relief to you to hear something pleasant about yourself that is also something true," I said with sympathy. The Author grinned like a hyena, and Alicia giggled. "Because you must be bored to extinction, having to listen to all sorts of people ascribe to you all sorts of virtues that no one man could possibly possess and remain human." I was remembering some of the fulsome flubdub I"d read about him.
"Hark to her!" grinned The Author. "What! you don"t believe all the nice things you"ve read about me?"
"I do not."
"You don"t in the least look or write like a dehumanized saint, you know," supplemented Alicia, laughing.
"What _do_ I look like, then?" He sat on the edge of a table and cuddled a bony knee. Behind his gla.s.ses his eyes began to twinkle.
"You look more like yourself than you do like your photographs,"
decided Alicia.
The Author threw up his hands.
"And now, tell me this, please: How, when, where, and from whom, did you acquire the supreme art of aiding and abetting an old house to grow young again without losing its character?"
"We were born," Alicia explained, "with the inherent desire to do just what we have been able to do here. This house gave us our big chance. But it wouldn"t have been so--so in keeping with itself,"
she was feeling for the right words, "if it hadn"t been for Mr.
Nicholas Jelnik."
The Author p.r.i.c.ked up his intellectual ears. His eyes narrowed.
"Jelnik? I knew a Jelnik, an Austrian alienist; met him at dinner at the American Amba.s.sador"s in Vienna; quiet, una.s.suming, pleasant man, and one of the greatest doctors in Europe."
"Mr. Jelnik is Doctor Jelnik"s son."
"What!" shrieked The Author. And with unfeigned amazement: "In the name of high heaven, what is Jelnik"s son doing _here_?"
"Mr. Jelnik"s mother was a Miss Hynds. She met and married your doctor abroad."
That sixth sense possessed by him to an unusual degree, warned him that he was on the trail of Copy.
"May I ask questions?" he demanded.
"Of course."
"You inherited this property from an old aunt, I believe?"
"She wasn"t my aunt, really. She married my mother"s uncle, Johnny Scarlett."
"I see. And Jelnik"s mother was a Miss Hynds. How long has he been here?"
"For some time before we came."
"Near neighbor of yours?"