"But for you I should have starved to death,--as long ago as last week.
G.o.d bless you!"
His frail body swayed a little as he made his way down the length of the shop. Commanding all his strength of will, he squared his shoulders and stiffened his trembling knees, but not soon enough to delude the observing Mr. Bramble, who hurried after him, peering anxiously through his horn-rimmed spectacles.
"It is just like you foreigners," he said, overtaking the violinist near the door, and speaking with some energy. "Just like you, I say, to forget to eat breakfast when you are excited. You did not have a bite of breakfast, now did you? Up and out, all excited and eager, forgetting everything but--I say, Mirabeau, lend a hand! He is ready to drop. G.o.d bless my soul! Brace up, your highness,--I should say old chap--brace up! Damme, sir, what possessed you to refuse our invitation to dine with us last night? And it was the third time within the week. Answer me that, sir!"
De Bosky sat weakly, limply, pathetically, before the two old men. They had led him to a chair at the back of the shop. Both were regarding him with justifiable severity. He smiled wanly as he pa.s.sed his hand over his moist, pallid brow.
"You are poor men. Why,--why should I become a charge upon you?"
"Mon dieu!" sputtered M. Mirabeau, lifting his arms on high and shaking his head in absolute despair,--despair, you may be sure, over a most unaccountable and never-to-be-forgotten moment in which he found himself utterly and hopelessly without words.
Mr. Bramble suddenly rammed a hand down into the pocket of his ancient smoking-coat, and fished out a huge, red, glistening apple.
"Here! Eat this!"
De Bosky shook his head. His smile broadened.
"No, thank you. I--I do not like apples."
The bookseller was aghast. Moreover, pity and alarm rendered him singularly inept in the choice of a reply to this definite statement.
"Take it home to the children," he pleaded, with the best intention in the world.
By this time, M. Mirabeau had found his tongue. He took the situation in hand. With tact and an infinite understanding, he astonished the matter-of-fact Mr. Bramble by appearing to find something amusing in the plight of their friend. He made light of the whole affair. Mr. Bramble, who could see no farther than the fact that the poor fellow was starving, was shocked. It certainly wasn"t a thing one should treat as a joke,--and here was the old simpleton chuckling and grinning like a lunatic when he should be--
Lunatic! Mr. Bramble suddenly went cold to the soles of his feet. A horrified look came into his eyes. Could it be possible that something had snapped in the old Frenchman"s--but M. Mirabeau was now addressing him instead of the smiling de Bosky.
"Come, come!" he was shouting merrily. "We"re not following de Bosky to the grave. He is not even having a funeral. Cheer up! Mon dieu, such a face!"
Mr. Bramble grew rosy. "Blooming rubbish," he snorted, still a trifle apprehensive.
The clock-maker turned again to de Bosky. "Come upstairs at once. I shall myself fry eggs for you, and bacon,--nice and crisp,--and my coffee is not the worst in the world, my friend. _His_ is abominable.
And toast, hot and b.u.t.tery,--ah, I am not surprised that your mouth waters!"
"It isn"t my mouth that is watering," said de Bosky, wiping his eyes.
"Any fool could see that," said Mr. Bramble, scowling at the maladroit Mirabeau.
It was two o"clock when Prince Waldemar de Bosky took his departure from the hospitable home of the two old men, and, well-fortified in body as well as in spirit, moved upon the stronghold of Mrs. Moses Jacobs.
The chatelaine of "The Royal Exchange. M. Jacobs, Proprietor," received him with surprising cordiality.
"Well, well!" she called out cheerily as he approached the "desk." "I thought you"d never get here. I been waitin" since nine o"clock."
Her dark, heavy face bore signs of a struggle to overcome the set, implacable expression that avarice and suspicion had stamped upon it in the course of a long and resolute abstinence from what we are p.r.o.ne to call the milk of human kindness. She was actually trying to beam as she leaned across the gem-laden showcase and extended her coa.r.s.e, unlovely hand to the visitor.
"I am sorry," said he, shaking hands with her. "I have been extremely busy. Besides, on a hot day like this, I could get along very nicely without a fur coat, Mrs. Jacobs."
"Sure!" said she. "It sure is hot today. You ought to thank G.o.d you ain"t as fat as I am. It"s awful on fat people. Well, wasn"t you surprised?"
"It was most gracious of you, Mrs. Jacobs," he said with dignity. "I should have come in at once to express my appreciation of your--"
"Oh, that"s all right. Don"t mention it. You"re a decent little feller, de Bosky, and I"ve got a heart,--although most of these mutts around here don"t think so. Yes, sir, I meant it when I said you could tear up the p.a.w.n ticket and take the coat--with the best wishes of yours truly."
"Spoken like a lady," said he promptly. He was fanning himself with his hat.
"Mind you, I don"t ask you for a penny. The slate is clean. There"s the coat, layin" over there on that counter. Take it along. No one can ever say that I"d let a fellow-creature freeze to death for the sake of a five-dollar bill. No, sir! With the compliments of "The Royal Exchange,"--if you care to put it that way."
"But I cannot permit you to cancel my obligation, Mrs. Jacobs. I shall hand you the money inside of a fortnight. I thank you, however, for the generous impulse--"
"Cut it out," she interrupted genially. "Nix on the sentiment stuff. I"m in a good humour. Don"t spoil it by tryin" to be polite. And don"t talk about handin" me anything. I won"t take it."
"In that case, Mrs. Jacobs, I shall be obliged to leave the coat with you," he said stiffly.
She stared. "You mean,--you won"t accept it from me?"
"I borrowed money on it. I can say no more, madam."
"Well, I"ll be--" She extended her hand again, a look of genuine pleasure in her black eyes. "Shake hands again, Prince de Bosky. I--I understand."
"And I--I think I understand, Princess," said he, grasping the woman"s hand.
"I hope you do," said she huskily. "I--I just didn"t know how to go about it, that"s all. Ever since that day you were in here to see me,--that bitterly cold day,--I"ve been trying to think of a way to--And so I waited till it turned so hot that you"d know I wasn"t trying to do it out of charity--You _do_ understand, don"t you, Prince?"
"Perfectly," said he, very soberly.
"I feel better than I"ve felt in a good long time," she said, drawing a long breath.
"That"s the way we all feel sometimes," said he, smiling. "No doubt it"s the sun," he added. "We haven"t seen much of it lately."
"Quit your kiddin"," she cried, donning her mask again and relapsing into the vernacular of the district.
He bore the coat in triumph to the work-shop of M. Mirabeau, and loudly called for moth-b.a.l.l.s as he mounted the steps.
"I jest, good friend," he explained, as the old Frenchman laid aside his tools and started for the shelves containing a vast a.s.sortment of boxes and packages. "Time enough for all that. At four o"clock I am due at Spangler"s for a rehearsal of the celebrated Royal Hungarian Orchestra, imported at great expense from Budapesth. I leave the treasure in your custody. Au revoir!" He had thrown the coat on the end of the work bench.
"You will return for dinner," was M. Mirabeau"s stern reminder. "A pot roast tonight, Bramble has announced. We will dine at six, since you must report at seven."
"In my little red coat," sang out de Bosky blithely.
"Mon dieu!" exclaimed the Frenchman, in dismay, running his fingers over the lining of the coat. "They are already at work. The moths! See! Ah, _le diable!_ They have devoured--"
"What!" cried de Bosky, s.n.a.t.c.hing up the coat.
"The arm pits and--ah, the seams fall apart! One could thrust his hand into the hole they have made. Too late!" he groaned. "They have ruined it, my friend."
De Bosky leaned against the bench, the picture of distress. "What will my friend, the safe-blower, say to this? What will he think of me for--"