"Why! John, you ain"t married or you wouldn"t ask that. I"m a peaceable body and I like peace in the house. More"n that, I hate to go "round feelin" like a sneak thief. That one d.a.m.n made me miserable for two days. I never swore to Serena afore and I never will again. She was all cut up over it and in a way she was right. No, swearin" aboard ship is one thing--I"ve had mates that couldn"t navigate without it--but ash.o.r.e in your own house, to the women folks you care for, it don"t go. I can"t talk to Serena about that Chapter--not even if I"m left alone ALL the time, same as I"m left to-night."
John nodded. He thought that, at last, he had reached the milk in the cocoanut. Captain Dan, with his love for home and his hatred of lodges and societies, had refused to be interested in his wife"s pet hobby, and felt himself neglected and forsaken. He had brooded upon it, and this outburst and the letter he had written were the consequences.
"Oh, well," he said. "I shouldn"t worry. The Chapter here is a large one and Mrs. Dott is interested in it. The interest will wear off when it gets to be an old story."
"Wear off! With Gertie goin" it harder than her mother ever thought of?"
"Oh, Gertie doesn"t mean it."
"She DON"T! She don"t! Perhaps you don"t think she means it when she goes to every "tea" and "recital" and "at home" and crazy dido from here to Beersheba and back. Is THAT goin" to wear off? Chasin" around with Cousin Percy and that Holway and land knows who?"
"What? Captain Dott, you"re making mountains out of mole hills. Gertie isn"t that kind."
"That"s what I said. That"s what I used to think. It"s this Scarford that"s doin" it. It"s this Scarford and the society crowd we"ve got in with. Annette Black--Barney Phelps"s wife--is in society, and so"s the Lake woman and that Canby piano pounder and that Dusante--my G.o.dfreys!
you ought to have seen her, John! She was the brazen thing. Dancin"
around! And all hands sittin" lookin" at her as if she was a Sunday School. Everybody! Serena and Gertie and that Holway man and all. And Gertie up and says she might like to dance that way. She! And Cousin Percy laughin" because she said it."
"Hold on! Wait a minute, Captain. I never saw you so excited. What about this Cousin Percy of yours? He"s living here with you, I know that; but what sort of a chap is he? And Holway--who is Holway?"
Daniel went on to explain who Holway was. Also he spoke of Mr.
Hungerford and his ways and his intimacy with the family, particularly Gertrude. For weeks the captain had been wanting to talk to someone about these things and, now that he had that opportunity, he made the most of it. He spoke of his own loneliness, and of Serena"s infatuation for society, of Gertrude"s coming and the great change in her, of the gay life in Scarford, and of his daughter"s apparent love for it. He gave his opinion of Hungerford and of Holway, the latter"s friend. When John asked questions which implied a belief that the situation was not really as bad as the narrator thought it, Captain Dan, growing warmer and more anxious to justify himself, proceeded to make his statements stronger. He quoted instances to prove their truth. Serena was crazy on the subjects of Chapter and Chapter politics and fashion and money and society, and Gertrude was getting to be even worse. It wasn"t any use to talk to her. He had tried. He had told her she was engaged and ought to be more careful. He wasn"t the only one who thought so. Barney Black had said the same thing. He quoted from Mr. Black"s conversation.
John Doane listened, at first with the smile of the disbeliever, then with more and more uneasiness. He trusted Gertrude, he believed in her, she was not a flirt, but if these stories were true--if they were true--he could not understand. He asked more questions and the answers were as non-understandable. Altogether, Captain Dan, with the best intentions in the world, and with the happiness of his daughter and John uppermost in his mind, succeeded in laying a mine which might wreck that happiness altogether.
At last something--perhaps the expression on his visitor"s face--caused him to feel that he might have said too much. He hastened to rectify the mistake.
"Of course you mustn"t think Gertie ain"t all right, far"s you"re concerned, John," he said. "She is--I--I"m dead sure she is. But, you see--you see--You do see, don"t you, John?"
Mr. Doane did not answer. He seemed to be thinking hard.
"You see, John, don"t you?" repeated Captain Dan.
"Yes, I suppose I do."
"And you know Gertie"s all right--at heart, I mean? You mustn"t be jealous, nor anything of that kind."
John laughed. "Don"t talk nonsense," he said curtly.
"No, I won"t. But--er--what are you thinkin" about?"
"Nothing. Humph! I can"t understand--"
"Neither could I. That"s why I wrote you. You see why I wrote you, don"t you, John?"
"Yes--yes, I see why you wrote me; but--but I can"t see why she didn"t.
She hasn"t written me a word of all this."
And then the captain, in his anxiety to explain, made another indiscreet remark.
"Well," he observed, "I suppose likely she was afraid you might think that, now she had money--more money than she ever had before, I mean--and was in a different, a higher-toned crowd than she had ever been, that--that--well, that she was likin" that crowd better than the old one. She might have thought that, you know, mightn"t she?"
Mr. Doane did not answer. Daniel had made a pretty thorough mess of it.
"Of course," went on the captain, "as far as Cousin Percy is concerned--"
John stirred uneasily. "Cousin Percy be hanged!" he snapped. "That"s enough of this foolishness. Let"s change the subject. How is Nate Bangs getting on with the store at home?"
The Metropolitan Store at Trumet was the one thoroughly satisfactory spot on the checkered map of Daniel Dott"s existence at the present time. Nathaniel Bangs was making a success of that store. He reported each week and the reports showed increasing business and a profit, small as yet, but a profit nevertheless.
So the captain was only too glad to speak of the store and did so. John appeared to listen, but his answers and comments were absent-minded. He accepted a fresh cigar, at his host"s invitation, but he permitted it to go out.
At half-past ten the doorbell rang. Daniel sprang to his feet.
"Here they are!" he declared. "Gertie come home early, just as she said she would. That"s "cause she wanted to see you, John. Hi!" shouting at Mr. Hapgood, who had long since given up the search for the missing pocketbook and had been dozing upstairs, "Hi! you needn"t mind. Go aloft again! Go below! Go somewhere! We don"t need you. I"ll let "em in, myself."
The butler, looking surprised, obeyed orders and went--somewhere. The captain flung open the door.
"Well!" he hailed. "Here you are! And pretty early for Chapter night, too. We"re waitin" for you, John and I. Shall I pay the cab man?"
Serena, the first to enter, answered.
"No," she said, "he is already paid."
"That so? Did you pay him, Serena? Thought that was my job usually.
I--" Then, in a tone go entirely different that John Doane, in the drawing-room, noticed the change, he added, "Oh! oh! I, see."
"Come in," went on Serena. "Come right in, Cousin Percy."
She entered the drawing-room, followed by Gertrude and--Mr. Percy Hungerford. Captain Dan, remaining to close the door, came last.
"John," said Serena proudly, "we want you to meet our cousin, Mr.
Hungerford. Percy, this is John."
John and Hungerford exchanged looks. The latter gentleman extended a gloved hand. "Charmed," he observed.
John expressed pleasure at the meeting. The pair shook hands.
"So--so Cousin Percy came home with you, did he?" inquired Daniel. "That was kind of unexpected, wasn"t it?"
Mr. Hungerford himself answered.
"Why," he declared, "not altogether, on my part I hoped for the pleasure. It seemed rather rough for Miss Dott and her mother to come alone, and so I hung about until the affair was over."
"He had a carriage all ready for us," declared Serena. "It was so thoughtful of him."
"Not at all. Great pleasure, really."
Gertrude made the next remark.