"Mr. Glave, I used to know your father, I believe. We were at college together." I think I must have shown some feeling in my face, for he added, "We were very good friends," and held out his hand. I came away drenched with perspiration; but I felt that I had made a step in the direction of winning Eleanor Leigh, and almost as if I had gained a friend. At least, I liked him, as self-contained as he was, for he looked at times like his daughter.
That evening Miss Leigh observed something unusual in her father"s expression, and finally, after waiting a little while for him to disclose what he had on his mind, she could stand it no longer.
"Dad, what is it?" she demanded.
Mr. Leigh gazed at her quizzically.
"Well, I have had a rather strenuous day. In the first place, I got a letter from Henry Glave." Miss Eleanor"s eyes opened.
"From Henry Glave! What in the world is he writing to you about?"
"He has offered me a.s.sistance," said Mr. Leigh. He took from his pocket a letter, and tossed it across the table to her, observing her with amus.e.m.e.nt as her expression changed. It, possibly, was not the Henry Glave she had had in mind.
As she read, her face brightened. "Isn"t that fine! I thought he would--" She stopped suddenly.
"You wrote to him?" said Mr. Leigh.
"Yes, but I didn"t know he would. I only asked his advice--I thought maybe, he possibly might--knowing how he liked you. This will help us out? You will accept his offer, of course?"
Mr. Leigh nodded. "I am considering it. It was certainly very good in him. Not every man is as grateful these times. My only question is whether I ought to accept his offer."
"Why not?"
Mr. Leigh did not answer for a moment, he was deep in reflection, reviewing a past in which two older men who bore my name had borne a part, and was trying to look forward into the future. Presently he replied:
"Well, the fact is, I am very hard pressed."
For answer Eleanor sprang up and ran around to him, and throwing her arm about his neck, kissed him. "You poor, dear old dad. I knew you were in trouble; but I did not like to urge you till you got ready. Tell me about it."
Mr. Leigh smiled. It was a patronizing way she had with him which he liked while he was amused by it.
"Yes. I"m--the fact is, I"m pretty near--" He paused and reflected; then began again, "What would you say if I were to tell you that I am almost at the end of my resources?"
The girl"s countenance fell for a second, then brightened again almost immediately.
"I shouldn"t mind it a bit, except for you."
Mr. Leigh heaved a sigh which might have been a sigh of relief.
"You don"t know what it means, my dear."
"Oh! Yes, I do."
"No-o. It means giving up--everything. Not only all luxuries; but--" He gazed about him at the sumptuous surroundings in his dining-room, "but all this--everything. Horses, carriages, servants, pictures--everything.
Do you understand?"
"Everything?" Eleanor"s voice and look betrayed that she was a little startled.
"Yes," said her father with a nod and a sigh. "If I a.s.sign, it would all have to go, and we should have to begin afresh."
"Very well. I am ready. Of course, I don"t want to be broke; but I am ready. Whatever you think is right. And I would rather give up everything--everything, than have you worried as you have been for ever so long. I have seen it."
"Nelly, you are a brick," said her father fondly, looking at her in admiration. "How did you ever happen to be your Aunt Sophy"s niece?"
"Her half-niece," corrected the girl, smiling.
"It was the other half," mused Mr. Leigh.
"Tell me about it, father. How did it come? When did it happen?" she urged, smoothing tenderly the hair on his brow.
"It didn"t happen. It came. It has been coming for a long time. It is the conditions----"
"I know, those dreadful conditions. How I hate to hear the word! We used to get them when we were at Miss de Pense"s school,--we had to work them off--and now people are always talking about them."
"Well, these conditions," said Mr. Leigh smiling, "seem a little more difficult to work off. I am rated as belonging to the capitalists and as opposed to the working cla.s.s. The fact is I am not a capitalist; for my properties are good only while in active use, all my available surplus has gone into their betterment for the public use, and I am a harder-worked man than any laborer or workman in one of my shops or on one of my lines."
"That you are!" exclaimed his daughter.
"I belong to the cla.s.s that produces, and we are ground between the upper and the nether millstones. Do you see?"
Eleanor expressed her a.s.sent.
"The fire, of course, cost us a lot."
"It was set on fire," interrupted his daughter. "I know it."
"Well, I don"t know--possibly. It looks so. Anyhow, it caught us at the top notch, and while the insurance amounts to something, the actual loss was incalculable. Then came the trouble with the bank. So long as I was there they knew they could not go beyond the law. So Canter and the others got together, and I got out, and, of course----"
"I know," said his daughter.
"They asked me to remain, but--I preferred to be free."
"So do I."
"I had an overture to-day from the Canters," said Mr. Leigh, after a moment of reflection. "I do not quite know what it means, but I think I do."
"What was it?" Eleanor looked down with her face slightly averted.
"Jim Canter came from his father to propose--to suggest a _modus vivendi_, as it were. It means that they have started a blaze they cannot extinguish--that they are having trouble with their people, and fear that our people are coming around, but it means something further, too, I think." Mr. Leigh ceased talking, and appeared to be reflecting.
"What?" said the girl, after waiting a moment.
"You know--your aunt--however--" He paused.
She rose and faced him.
"Father, I wouldn"t marry him to save his life--and I have told both him and Aunt Sophia so." Mr. Leigh gave a sigh of relief.
"You, of course, declined the proposal they made?" said Eleanor.