"Shrouds!" announced Miss Riordon complacently.

"Shrouds!" shrieked Mrs. McChesney, and her elbow gave way. She fell back on the pillow.

"Beautiful, ain"t they?" Miss Riordon twirled the white garment in her hand. "They"re the very newest thing. You"ll notice they"re made up slightly hobble, with a French back, and high waist-line in the front.

Last season kimono sleeves was all the go, but they"re not used this season. This one--"

"Take them away!" screamed Emma McChesney hysterically. "Take them away! Take them away!" And buried her face in her trembling white hands.

Miss Riordon stared. Then she slammed the cover of the case, rose, and started toward the door. But before she reached it, and while the sick woman"s sobs were still sounding hysterically the door flew open to admit a tall, slim, miraculously well-dressed young man. The next instant Emma McChesney"s lace nightgown was crushed against the top of a correctly high-cut vest, and her tears coursed, unmolested, down the folds of an exquisitely shaded lavender silk necktie.

"Jock!" cried Emma McChesney; and then, "Oh, my son, my son, my beautiful boy!" like a woman in a play.

Jock was holding her tight, and patting her shoulder, and pressing his healthy, glowing cheek close to hers that was so gaunt and pale.

"I got seven wires, all at the same time. They"d been chasing me for days, up there in the woods. I thought I"d never get here."

And at that a wonderful thing happened to Emma McChesney. She lifted her face, and showed dimples where lines had been, smiles where tears had coursed, a glow where there had been a grayish pallor. She leaned back a bit to survey this son of hers.

"Ugh! how black you are!" It was the old Emma McChesney that spoke.

"You young devil, you"re actually growing a mustache! There"s something hard in your left-hand vest pocket. If it"s your fountain pen you"d better rescue it, because I"m going to hug you again."

But Jock McChesney was not smiling. He glanced around the stuffy little hotel room. It looked stuffier and drearier than ever in contrast with his radiant youth, his glowing freshness, his outdoor tan, his immaculate attire. He looked at the astonished Miss Riordon.

At his gaze that lady muttered something, and fled, sample-case banging at her knees. At the look in his eyes his mother hastened, woman-wise, to rea.s.sure him.

[Ill.u.s.tration: "At his gaze that lady fled, sample-case banging at her knees"]

"It wasn"t so bad, Jock. Now that you"re here, it"s all right. Jock, I didn"t realize just what you meant to me until you didn"t come. I didn"t realize--"

Jock sat down at the edge of the bed, and slid one arm under his mother"s head. There was a grim line about his mouth.

"And I"ve been fishing," he said. "I"ve been sprawling under a tree in front of a darned fool stream and wondering whether to fry "em for lunch now, or to put my hat over my eyes and fall asleep."

His mother reached up and patted his shoulder. But the line around Jock"s jaw did not soften. He turned his head to gaze down at his mother.

"Two of those telegrams, and one letter, were from T. A. Buck, Junior," he said. "He met me at Detroit. I never thought I"d stand from a total stranger what I stood from that man."

"Why, what do you mean?" Alarm, dismay, astonishment were in her eyes.

"He said things. And he meant "em. He showed me, in a perfectly well- bred, cleancut, and most convincing way just what a miserable, selfish, low-down, worthless young hound I am."

"He--dared!--"

"You bet he dared. And then some. And I hadn"t an argument to come back with. I don"t know just where he got all his information from, but it was straight."

He got up, strode to the window, and came back to the bed. Both hands thrust deep in his pockets, he announced his life plans, thus:

"I"m eighteen years old. And I look twenty-three, and act twenty-five --when I"m with twenty-five-year-olds. I"ve been as much help and comfort to you as a pet alligator. You"ve always said that I was to go to college, and I"ve sort of trained myself to believe I was. Well, I"m not. I want to get into business, with a capital B. And I want to jump in now. This minute. I"ve started out to be a first-cla.s.s slob, with you keeping me in pocket money, and clothes, and the Lord knows what all. Why, I--"

"Jock McChesney," said that young man"s bewildered mother, "just what did T. A. Buck, Junior, say to you anyway?"

"Plenty. Enough to make me see things. I used to think that I wanted to get into one of the professions. Professions! You talk about the romance of a civil engineer"s life! Why, to be a successful business man these days you"ve got to be a buccaneer, and a diplomat, and a detective, and a clairvoyant, and an expert mathematician, and a wizard. Business--just plain everyday business--is the gamiest, chanciest, most thrilling line there is to-day, and I"m for it. Let the other guy hang out his shingle and wait for "em. I"m going out and get mine."

"Any particular line, or just planning to corner the business market generally?" came a cool, not too amused voice from the bed.

"Advertising," replied Jock crisply. "Magazine advertising, to start with. I met a fellow up in the woods--named O"Rourke. He was a star football man at Yale. He"s bucking the advertising line now for the _Mastodon Magazine_. He"s crazy about it, and says it"s the greatest game ever. I want to get into it now--not four years from now."

He stopped abruptly. Emma McChesney regarded him, eyes glowing. Then she gave a happy little laugh, reached for her kimono at the foot of the bed, and prepared to kick off the bedclothes.

"Just run into the hall a second, son," she announced. "I"m going to get up."

"Up! No, you"re not!" shouted Jock, making a rush at her. Then, in the exuberance of his splendid young strength, he picked her up, swathed snugly in a roll of sheeting and light blanket, carried her to the big chair by the window, and seated himself, with his surprised and laughing mother in his arms.

But Mrs. McChesney was serious again in a moment. She lay with her head against her boy"s breast for a while. Then she spoke what was in her sane, far-seeing mind.

[Ill.u.s.tration: "In the exuberance of his young strength, be picked her up"]

"Jock, if I"ve ever wished you were a girl, I take it all back now.

I"d rather have heard what you just said than any piece of unbelievable good fortune in the world. G.o.d bless you for it, dear.

But, Jock, you"re going to college. No--wait a minute. You"ll have a chance to prove the things you just said by getting through in three years instead of the usual four. If you"re in earnest you can do it. I want my boy to start into this business war equipped with every means of defense. You called it a game. It"s more than that--it"s a battle.

Compared to the successful business man of to-day the Revolutionary Minute Men were as keen and alert as the Seven Sleepers. I know that there are more non-college men driving street-cars than there are college men. But that doesn"t influence me. You could get a job now.

Not much of a position, perhaps, but something self-respecting and fairly well-paying. It would teach you many things. You might get a knowledge of human nature that no college could give you. But there"s something--poise--self-confidence--a.s.surance--that nothing but college can give you. You will find yourself in those three years. After you finish college you"ll have difficulty in fitting into your proper niche, perhaps, and you"ll want to curse the day on which you heeded my advice. It"ll look as though you had simply wasted those three precious years. But in five or six years after, when your character has jelled, and you"ve hit your pace, you"ll bless me for it. As for a knowledge of humanity, and of business tricks--well, your mother is fairly familiar with the busy marts of trade. If you want to learn folks you can spend your summers selling Featherlooms with me."

"But, mother, you don"t understand just why--"

"Yes, dear "un, I do. After all, remember you"re only eighteen. You"ll probably spend part of your time rushing around at cla.s.s proms with a red ribbon in your coat lapel to show you"re on the floor committee.

And you"ll be girl-fussing, too. But you"d be attracted to girls, in or out of college, and I"d rather, just now, that it would be some pretty, nice-thinking college girl in a white sweater and a blue serge skirt, whose worst thought was wondering if you could be cajoled into taking her to the Freshman-Soph.o.m.ore basketball game, than some red- lipped, black-jet-earringed siren gazing at you across the table in some bas.e.m.e.nt cafe. And, goodness knows, Jock, you wear your clothes so beautifully that even the haberdashers" salesmen eye you with respect. I"ve seen "em. That"s one course you needn"t take at college."

Jock sat silent, his face grave with thought. "But when I"m earning money--real money--it"s off the road for you," he said, at last. "I don"t want this to sound like a scene from East Lynne, but, mother--"

"Um-m-m-m--ye-ee-es," a.s.sented Emma McChesney, with no alarming enthusiasm. "Jock dear, carry me back to bed again, will you? And then open the closet door and pull out that big sample-case to the side of my bed. The newest Fall Featherlooms are in it, and somehow, I"ve just a whimsy notion that I"d like to look "em over."

VIII

CATCHING UP WITH CHRISTMAS

Temptation himself is not much of a spieler. Raucous-voiced, red- faced, greasy, he stands outside his gaudy tent, dilating on the wonders within. One or two, perhaps, straggle in. But the crowd, made wary by bitter experience of the sham and cheap fraud behind the tawdry canvas flap, stops a moment, laughs, and pa.s.ses on. Then Temptation, in a panic, seeing his audience drifting away, summons from inside the tent his bespangled and bewitching partner, Mlle.

Psychological Moment, the Hypnotic Charmer. She leaps to the platform, bows, pirouettes. The crowd surges toward the ticket-window, nickel in hand.

Six months of bad luck had dogged the footsteps of Mrs. Emma McChesney, traveling saleswoman for the T. A. Buck Featherloom Petticoat Company, New York. It had started with a six-weeks" illness endured in the discomfort of a stuffy little hotel bedroom at Glen Rock, Minnesota. By August she was back in New York, attending to out- of-town buyers.

Those friendly Middle-Western persona showed dismay at her pale, hollow-eyed appearance. They spoke to her of teaspoonfuls of olive-oil taken thrice a day, of mountain air, of cold baths, and, above all, of the advisability of leaving the road and taking an inside position. At that Emma McChesney always showed signs of unmistakable irritation.

In September her son, Jock McChesney, just turned eighteen, went blithely off to college, disguised as a millionaire"s son in a blue Norfolk, silk hose, flat-heeled shoes, correctly mounted walrus bag, and next-week"s style in fall hats. As the train glided out of the great shed Emma McChesney had waved her handkerchief, smiling like fury and seeing nothing but an indistinct blur as the observation platform slipped around the curve. She had not felt that same clutching, desolate sense of loss since the time, thirteen years before, when she had cut off his curls and watched him march st.u.r.dily off to kindergarten.

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