"I see," said Mary, as he paused and flushed. "Go on."
She was not exactly helpful, sitting there and staring at Anthony with her great, deep-blue eyes. They were very beautiful eyes, doubtless, but they caused Anthony"s mind to stagger as he labored on.
"There are the back stairs, of course, but to pa.s.s them it would be necessary to meet servants and employees of the house in half a dozen places; I believe there is even a gate-keeper of some sort below and--oh, the back stairs would not be at all possible!" said Anthony as he pushed the b.u.t.ton for Wilkins. "I deplore the necessity of sending you out as you came, Miss Mary, but--er--Wilkins! Mr. Prentiss"s clothes, if you please."
"What of them, sir?" Wilkins asked blankly.
"Bring them here."
"But I can"t do that, Mr. Fry."
"Why not?" Anthony asked crisply.
"You told me to dispose of them last night, sir. I"ve thrown them out!"
Anthony caught his breath.
"Where have you thrown them?"
"Out with the other refuse of the day, sir--on the dumbwaiter."
"Then--well, never mind. That is all, Wilkins," said Anthony Fry, his voice thickening somewhat.
The invaluable one retired, with a last disapproving glance at the frowsy David, and Anthony"s forehead wrinkled. David, the while, sat hunched on the bed and seemed altogether unaffected by the disaster.
"Well, you"ll have to make the best of some of my wardrobe, I fear," the master of the apartment smiled.
"_Yours?_" Mary cried.
"They will be a trifle large, but you"ll have to hitch them up in spots and in in other spots and make the best of it," Anthony pursued firmly.
"It"s too bad, of course, but it is unavoidable. Those togs of yours were decidedly shabby and I had meant, while supposing you to be a boy, that to-day we"d have some shopping done for you. Just a moment, please."
He left the room with a nervous stride altogether unlike his usual dignified glide. He turned, wildly almost, into the nearest closet in the corridor and switched on the light. There was the dark gray suit, which was too loose even for Anthony, and the dark brown suit, which happened to be too long for him; but the old blue suit--ah, that was the one!
Very earnestly, Anthony tried to a.s.sure himself that it had been both far too tight and far too short in every detail, at its last wearing; almost pathetically he sought to tell himself that David in the old blue suit would look quite like a young man wearing his own clothes--and with the old blue suit over his arm and a pair of shoes in the other hand, he tip-toed back to David.
"This is the next best thing to the clothes you wore, and I"m sure you"ll find them quite all right," said he.
"Me get into those?" Mary murmured with the same strange apathy.
"Most certainly, and I"ve thought out the rest of it--there while I was locating this suit," Anthony pursued, with what was meant for a rea.s.suring smile and making his jerky way to the little desk in the corner of the guest chamber. "I shall give you a note, David, addressed to a mythical person and unsealed."
"What for?"
"So that, on the remote chance of any one in this house questioning your presence, you can show that you"re merely delivering a grip--your own--for me!" smiled Fry, as he scribbled. "Rather clever, that, eh?"
"Horribly clever!" Mary said enigmatically.
Two long minutes the pen scratched on, while Mary watched his back with the same inscrutable, almost unwinking stare. Then Anthony turned with a smile.
"This is to Mr. J. Thurston Phillips at the Astor Hotel," said he. "If I were you, I"d carry it rather conspicuously; it"s quite possible that the clerk downstairs may want to know who you are. And, also if I were you, I"d explain that you"re the son of an old friend of mine and a stranger in the city and that I put you up overnight--something like that. You understand?"
"I hear you say it," said Mary.
Anthony"s countenance darkened a little as he rose.
"Then please pay strict attention to what I say!" he said. "I am doing my best to undo an absurd piece of business. I"m quite ready to admit that it is just that, but the blame isn"t quite all my own. You should have told me the truth. Now, when you"re dressed and ready--simply leave! Just walk down the corridor to the door, please, open it and go.
There"s no need of risking another inspection by Mr. Boller; you look decidedly less like a boy in daylight, believe me. Is everything clear?"
"I suppose it is," sighed Mary, with a significant glance at the door.
Anthony allowed himself a single sigh of relief.
"This, then, is our parting," he said, with a faint, Kindly smile. "I ask your pardon and the best thing I can wish you is a safe return home.
Good-by."
"Au revoir," Mary said, with another glance at the door.
She seemed to have accepted the situation, blue suit and all; she was a sensible little thing, Anthony reflected almost comfortably, as he hurried back to his own room and his bath.
And now he would rush through the dressing process himself, as he had never rushed before, and by some means he would manage to keep Johnson Boller in his own room and out of sight of the corridor, until the telltale closing of the door a.s.sured him that one of his life"s most painful episodes was over.
It had not been entirely without humor. Later on--much later on--Anthony a.s.sured himself that he would have many a good laugh in private over the youth upon whom he had tried to thrust opportunity--laughs that would be the richer and more enjoyable because he alone possessed the key to the joke. That would be after the shock had pa.s.sed, of course; enough for the present to sigh again and again and think gloriously that each second brought David that much nearer to leaving.
Yet David had not departed, even when Anthony had given the last twitch to his morning coat and the last dab to his thin, rather prim hair. He listened, as he entered the living-room, and then risked a quiet trip across and looked down the corridor; David"s door was closed tightly and--yes, even though it caused Anthony"s hair to rise and his cheek to flush angrily, David was singing a faint little s.n.a.t.c.h of song in a perfectly indubitable soprano!
The little fool should have had more sense; Anthony listened, started down to halt the song and turned back as quickly, to head for Johnson Boller"s room and engage that citizen in conversation, for that was the important thing just now. He turned the k.n.o.b and would have entered rather breezily, but that Johnson Boller, fully groomed and ready for the day, walked out suddenly and resistlessly and looked around with:
"Where"s the kid?"
"Er--dressing," said Anthony.
"Where"s breakfast?" Mr. Boller pursued.
Inspiration came swiftly to Anthony.
"I breakfast in here as a rule," said he, "but--just this morning, you know--I thought we might go below. It"s not so quiet down there and there"s more to see, Johnson, and----"
Johnson Boller sprawled comfortably in a chair near the corridor and grinned.
"Nix!" said he, with a shake of the head. "We"ll eat right here; I"m all done with that noisy stuff, Anthony, and this is more homelike. And then, another thing," he added more seriously, "I want to cross-examine that little shaver in private, as it were. This idea of settling him in the house without knowing anything about him is downright crazy. I want to ask him about that French doll and----."
He stopped. The window at the end of the corridor was open and the fresh morning breeze was blowing lightly past him. Also, he sniffed.
"Who"s using perfume around here?" asked Johnson Boller.
"What?"