“I did not know that such things were
possible,” said Mr. Middleton, when
Prince Achmed had concluded the
tale of the episode of the two Orientalists
and the faithless woman. “Do I
understand that the person in this condition is
asleep?”
“It is not consistent with strict scientific
accuracy to say the person is asleep,” said the
emir; “for the vital processes are entirely in
abeyance and the subject is devoid of any evidence
of life. The pulse is still, for the heart
no longer beats and all the blood having
retreated to that inmost citadel of the body,
the skin has the pallor of death. Only in a
little spot upon the crown is there any sign of
life. Here is a place warm to the touch and
the first and most important operation in restoring
the suspended animation, is to send this
vital warmth forth from where it still feebly
simmers, coursing once more through the
body’s shrunken channels. This is accomplished
by shaving the crown and applying
thereto a succession of piping hot pancakes.
The tongue has been curved back over the
entrance to the throat. You reach into the
mouth and with a finger pull the tongue back
into place. Plugs of wax in the nostrils and
ears are removed, and in a very short time the
subject is as well as ever.”
“It is very interesting,” murmured Mr.
Middleton.
“Since you find it so, let me present you
with a little treatise upon the subject written
by a Mohammedan hakim, or doctor of medicine,
after studying several cases of the kind
at Madras, which is in India,” and at his bidding,
Mesrour brought him a small portable
writing desk from which he took a manuscript
scroll inscribed in the Arabic language. “The
first page,” said Prince Achmed, “contains a
few thoughts upon the superiority of the Moslem
faith over all others and a discussion of the
follies, inconsistencies, not to say evils of them
all when compared with that perfect religious
system declared to men by the Prophet of
Mecca,” and having in an orotund voice given
Mr. Middleton some idea of the contents of
this page by quoting a number of sentences,
the prince handed him the sheet, which was
inscribed upon one side only. The emir continuing
to give a summary of what the hakim
set forth in the remaining pages, and handing
over each sheet as he finished it, Mr. Middleton
wrote in short-hand upon the blank side of
each preceding sheet what the emir culled from
the one following, omitting, of course, the contents
of the first sheet, both because he had
nothing to write upon while the emir was quoting
from that one, and because its theology
was entirely contrary to all Mr. Middleton held,
and, in his eyes, ridiculous and sacrilegious.
When the emir had done, Mr. Middleton had
in his possession a succinct account of the
process of inducing a condition of suspended
animation and of the means of restoring the
subject to his normal state. It was his intention
to write an article from his notes for some
Sunday paper, and putting the hakim’s treatise
in his pocket, and thanking his host for the
entertainment and instruction as well as the
gift, he sought his lodgings.
Mr. Middleton had now been admitted to
the bar for some time. But the firm of
Brockelsby and Brockman did not therefore
raise his salary. They made greater demands
upon his endeavors than before, for he was now
able to handle cases in court, but they did not
raise his salary, nor did they employ him upon
cases where he was able to distinguish himself,
or learn new points of law and gain forensic
ability. He was employed upon humdrum
and commonplace cases that were a vexation
to his spirit without any compensating advantage
of pecuniary reward or experience.
While he felt that his self-respect and on one
hand his self-interests impelled him to resign
his connection with Brockelsby and Brockman,
on the other hand, the very course his employers
pursued made such retirement temporarily
inexpedient. For the trivial cases he handled
could neither gain him reputation enough or
make him friends enough to warrant him in setting
up for himself, nor would they attract the
attention of other firms and result in offers at
an increased salary. He was in a measure
forced to remain with Brockelsby and Brockman,
hoping they would be moved to pay him
according to his worth and dreaming of some
contingency which might place in his hands the
management of an important case with the
resulting enhancing of his reputation.
On the morning after he had received the
dissertation of the hakim, Mr. Middleton arose
with the first streak of dawn, minded to seek
the office and write his projected article before
the time for his regular duties should arrive.
As he opened the door of the main office, his
ear was saluted by a low grunting sound, and
there in evening dress was Mr. Augustus
Alfonso Brockelsby, reclining in a big chair,
asleep, if one could with propriety call the
stupor in which he was sunk, sleep. The disorder
of his garments, the character of his
sternutations, the redness of his face, and
above all, the odor he distilled upon the chill
morning air, made patent to Mr. Middleton
the disgusting fact that the senior member of
the firm was drunk. On the table before the
unconscious man was a note from Mr. Brockman
informing him that he had been unexpectedly
called to Lansing, Michigan, and would
not be back for a week and that therefore he,
Brockelsby, would have to attend to the important
case of Ralston versus Hippenmeyer,
all by himself. Mr. Middleton at once set
about bringing his employer into a condition
where he could attend to his affairs, for the
case of Ralston versus Hippenmeyer was a very
important one indeed, and as Mr. Middleton
had briefed the case himself and had his sympathies
greatly excited for Johannes Hippenmeyer,
he was very anxious that their client
should not lose for default of any effort he
could make. But his heart was heavy as he
brought towels and a basin of cold water from
the wash-room, for after he had done his very
best, Brockelsby would still be far from the
proper form, his brain befogged, his speech
thick, and the counsel for the other side would
make short work of him.
Mr. Middleton had never tried to sober a
drunken man, but he had an indistinct recollection
of hearing that a towel wet with cold
water, wrapped around the head was the best
remedial agent. As he soaked the towels, he
could not but compare the difference between
this chill restorative and the hot cakes in the
tale of the emir, and on a sudden there came
to him a thought that sent all the gloom from
his face. He dropped the towels, he dropped
the basin, and he opened the treatise of the
hakim and feverishly refreshed his memory of
the details of an operation sometimes practised
in India.
An hour and a half had passed when Mr.
Middleton finished. Mr. Augustus Brockelsby
still sat in the revolving chair, but he was no
longer disturbing the air with his unseemly
grunts. He was, in fact, absolutely silent,
absolutely still. The keenest touch could feel
no pulsation in his wrist, the keenest eye could
detect no agitation of his chest, the keenest ear
could hear no beating from the region of the
heart. For a moment as he gazed upon the
result of following the instructions set down by
the hakim, Mr. Middleton felt a little clutch
of fear. But he was reassured by the lifelike
appearance of the learned jurisconsult and by
the fact that the induction into his present
state had been attended by none of the manifestations
that accompany death.
“Now,” said Mr. Middleton, addressing the
unconscious form of Augustus Brockelsby,
“now there will be no chance of you appearing
in court in the case of Ralston versus Hippenmeyer.
I will not restore you until it is all
over. I will now have the long coveted opportunity
to plead an important case and as I have
studied it so carefully, I shall win. There will
now be no chance that poor little Hippenmeyer
will suffer from your disgraceful and bestial
habits, for in spite of the best that could be
done for you, you would be in no fit condition
to plead a case this afternoon. And when I
bring you to at fall of night, you will think you
have been drunk all day. But where will I
keep you in the meantime?”
This was a most perplexing problem. There
were no closets in the suite of offices. There
were no boxes, no desks big enough to conceal
a man and Mr. Middleton’s brow was beginning to
contract as he struggled with the problem,
when suddenly the stillness of the room
was disturbed by some one smiting the door.
Not a sound made he, for his heart had stopped
beating as completely as Brockelsby’s. What
should he do, what should he do? The
paralysis of fear answered for him and supplied
the best present plan and he did nothing.
Then came a voice, a voice calling him by
name, the voice of Chauncy Stackelberg.
“Open up, old man, open up. I know you
are there, for I heard you knocking around
before I rapped and you dropped your handkerchief
outside the door. Open up, or I’ll
shin right over the transom, for I must see
you,” and still preserving silence, Mr. Middleton
heard a sound as of a man essaying to
stand on the door knob and grasp the transom
above. He rushed to the door, unlocked it,
and opening it just enough to squeeze through,
shut it behind him and thrust the key in the lock.
“Keep still, keep still. You’ll wake the old
man. I can’t let you in.”
“Was that him, slumped down in the chair?
Must be tired to sleep in that position. Say,
old chap, you were my best man, and now I
want you again.”
“Want me to draw up papers for a divorce?”
said Mr. Middleton, gloomily. How was he
going to get rid of this inopportune fellow?
“Shut up,” said Chauncy Stackelberg. “It’s
a boy, and I want you to come up to the christening
next Sunday and be godfather. You
don’t know how happy I am. Say, come on
down and get a drink.”
Ten minutes before, Mr. Middleton had been
convinced that drink was a very great curse,
but he accepted this invitation with alacrity,
naming a saloon two blocks away as the one
he considered best in that vicinity. He
surmised that the happy father would hardly
offer to come back with him from such a distance,
and the surmise was correct. As he
reascended to the office, with him in the elevator
were two gentlemen, one of whom he
recognized as Dr. Angus McAllyn, a celebrated
surgeon who had two or three times come to
the office to see Mr. Brockelsby and the other
as Dr. Lucius Darst, a young eye and ear
specialist who within the space of but a few
days had established his office in the building.
To neither of these gentlemen, however, was
Mr. Middleton known.
“I want you to get off on this floor with
me,” said Dr. McAllyn to his medical confrere.
“I may want your assistance a bit.
You see,” he went on, as they got out of the
elevator and started down the corridor with
Mr. Middleton just behind, “we had a banquet
last night of the Society of Andrew Jackson’s
Wars, and my friend Brockelsby got too much
aboard. He was turned over to me to take to
his home, but just as we were leaving, I
received an urgent call. So the best I could
do was to drive by here and start him toward
his office and go on. He could navigate after
a fashion and doubtless spent the night all
right in his office, and I would take no farther
trouble with him but for the fact that he has an
important case to-day. So I want to fix him
up, and as I haven’t much time, you can be of
service to me.”
“Ah, ha,” said Mr. Middleton to himself,
“I’ll just lie low until they have given up trying
to get in and have gone.”
But they did not go away. To his consternation,
they opened the door and walked in,
for though he had put the key in the lock when
he had closed the door behind him to parley
with Chauncy Stackelberg, he had walked away
without turning it! They would find Mr. Brockelsby!
Great though Dr. McAllyn was, he
would hardly be likely to recognize a condition
of suspended animation. Unless Mr. Middleton
confessed, there was danger that the famous
forensic orator would be buried alive. And
if he confessed, what would the consequences
be to himself? The fact that in whatever event
he would lose his place and be a marked and
disgraced man, was the very least thing to consider.
He was threatened with far more serious
dangers than that. First, there would be
the vengeance the law would take upon him
for meddling with and tampering with medical
matters. But even if he had been a physician,
would the medical faculty look otherwise than
with horror upon this rash and wanton experimenting
with the strange and unholy practices
of India? Even a medical man would be
arrested for malpractice and for depriving a
fellow being of the use of his faculties. The
penitentiary stared him in the face.
He could not endure not to know what was
taking place within. He must have knowledge
of everything in order to know what moves to
make and when to make them. He let himself
through the outer door of Mr. Brockman’s
private office, and by taking a position by the
door communicating between this office and
the main office, he could hear everything in
safety.
“Shall I send for an undertaker?” asked Dr.
Darst.
At these chilling words, Mr. Middleton was
about to open the private office door and rush
in and confess all. He had begun to place the
key in the lock, when a joyful thought stayed
his hand. Let them bury Mr. Brockelsby.
He would dig him up. He laughed noiselessly
in his intense relief. But hark, what does he
hear?
“Darst, this is an unusual case.”
“Yes?” said Dr. Darst mildly.
“A strange, a remarkable case. Darst, if we
do not examine this case, we are traitors to
science. Darst, we must take him to the
medical school. When we are through, we’ll
sew him all again and bring him back here, or
leave him almost any place where he can be
found easily. He will be just as good to bury
then as now, nobody hurt, and the cause of
science advanced. Observe, Darst, dead,
absolutely dead, yet with no rigor mortis.
Dead, and yet as if he slept. If need be, we
will pursue to the inmost recesses of his being
the secret of his demise.”
Mr. Middleton was nigh to falling to the
floor. The succession of hope and fear had
taken from him all resolution. Of what use
would it be to exhume Mr. Brockelsby after
the doctors had cut him up? The impulse to
rush in and confess had spent itself and he was
now cravenly drifting with the tide. All judgment,
all power of reflection had departed from
him. He was now only a pitiable wretch with
scarcely strength to stand by the door and
listen, unable to originate any thought, any
action.
“How are you going to get him out of here?”
asked Dr. Darst.
“In a box. You don’t suppose I’d carry
him down and put him in a hack?”
“But suppose they get to looking for him?
It is known that he came here. A box goes
out of here to be taken to the medical school,
a long box that might hold a man. You and I
are the ones who hire the men who carry the
box.”
“Who said a long box that might hold a
man? It will be a short, rather tall box, packing-case
shape. Remember, he is as limber
as you are and can be accommodated to any
position. He will be put in it sitting bolt
upright. It will be only half the length of a
man, with nothing in its shape to suggest that
it might hold a man. Who said take it to the
medical school from here? I hire a drayman
to take a box to the Union Depot. He dumps
it there on the sidewalk near the places for
in-going and out-going baggage. Ostensibly
going to carry it as excess baggage. We fiddle
around until he goes, then call up some
other drayman in the crowd hanging about and
take a box just arrived from Milwaukee, St.
Paul, any place the drayman wants to think,
out to the college. As for the inquiry that
will be made concerning the whereabouts of
Brockelsby, rest easy on that point. He frequently
goes off on sprees of several days’
duration and his absence from home is of such
common occurrence that his wife won’t begin
to hunt him up until we are through with him
and have got him back here, or have dumped
him in front of some building with his neck
broken, showing that he fell out of some story
above.”
All this Mr. Middleton heard as he leaned
against the door jamb, swallowing, swallowing,
with never a thing in his mouth since the
night before, yet swallowing. He heard Dr.
Darst go after a box. He heard men deposit
it in the corridor outside. He heard the two
doctors take it in when the men had gone.
He heard it go heavily out into the corridor
again after a long interval. He heard more
men come, come to carry it away, and he
pulled himself together with a supreme effort
and followed. He saw the box loaded on a
dray. With his eye constantly on it, he
threaded his way through the crowd on the
sidewalk, followed it on its way across the
river to the Union Depot. With never a hope
in his heart that anything could possibly occur
to save him from a final confession and its
consequences, humanlike postponing the evil
hour as long as he could.
The box was dumped upon the sidewalk
before the depot. The two medical men stood
leaning upon it, waiting for the drayman to
depart. The evil moment had arrived. Once
away from the depot, in the less congested
streets in the direction of the medical college,
the dray would go too fast for him to follow.
He approached. He must speak now. No,
no. He need not follow the dray. That was
not necessary. He could get to the medical
school before they could have time to do
injury to Mr. Brockelsby. It would be safe to
let the box get out of his sight for that little
time. He would tell at the medical college.
“Yes, as soon as we get him there,” said
Dr. McAllyn, “we’ll put him in the pickle.”
Mr. Middleton sprang forward and put an
appealing hand upon the shoulder of either
doctor. With a sudden start that caused him
to start in turn, each wheeled about. For a
moment, he could say nothing and stood with
palsied lips while they gave back his stare.
Gave back his stare? All at once his mouth
came open and these were the words he heard
issue forth:
“Sirs, I arrest you for stealing the body of
Mr. Augustus Alfonso Brockelsby, attorney-at-law.”
He who had just now been an abject, grovelling
wretch, was of a sudden come to be a lord
among men. The practitioners making no
reply, he continued:
“Are you going to be sensible enough to
make no trouble, or shall I have to call yonder
officer?”
Mr. Middleton considered this quite a master
stroke. By the assumption of a pretended
authority over the neighboring policeman he
would forestall any possibility of resistance
and question as to what authority he represented.
But he need have had no fears on this
score. The doctors were too alarmed to do
otherwise than submit to his pleasure, too
thoroughly convinced that none but a detective
could have had knowledge of the contents
of the box. But Dr. McAllyn did attach a significance
to what Mr. Middleton had said, a significance
natural to one so well acquainted with
the devious ways of the great city as he was.
“Well,” he said, with a sardonic smile, “you
needn’t call in help. We stand pat. How
much is it going to cost us?”
Then did Mr. Middleton perceive he was
delivered from a dilemma, a dilemma unforeseen,
but which even if foreseen, he could not
have forearmed against. After he had arrested
the doctors, how would he have disposed of
them and the box containing Mr. Brockelsby?
How could he have released the doctors and
carried off the box in a manner that would not
excite their suspicions? If he had, in pretended
leniency and soft-heartedness told them
they were free, the absence of any apparent
motive for this action would have instantly
caused them to suspect that for some unknown
and probably unrighteous reason, he desired
possession of the body of Mr. Brockelsby and
thus would ensue a series of complications
that would make the ruse of the arrest but a
leap from the frying pan into the fire. But
now Dr. McAllyn had supplied the motive.
“Sirs,” said Mr. Middleton, with an air of
virtue that was well suited to the character of
the sentiments he now began to enunciate,
“you deserve punishment. You have been
taken in the act of committing a crime that is
particularly revolting,—stealing a corpse. Dr.
McAllyn, you have been apprehended in foul
treason against friendship. You have stolen
the body of a comrade. You have meditated
cruel and shocking mutilation of this body,
giving to the horror-stricken eyes of the frantic
widow the mangled and defaced flesh that was
once the goodly person of her husband, leaving
her to waste her life in vain and terrible
speculations as to where and how he encountered
this awful death with its so dreadful
wounds.”
“It was for the sake of science,” interpolated
Dr. McAllyn, in no little indignation.
“If from the insensible clay of the dead we
may learn that which will save suffering and
prolong existence for the living, well may we
disregard the ancient and ridiculous sentiment
regarding corpses, a relic of the ancient heathen
days when it was believed that this selfsame
body of this life was worn again in another
world.”
“I will not engage in an antiquarian discussion
with you, sir, as to the origin of this sentiment.
Suffice to say it exists and is one of
the most powerful sentiments that rules mankind.
You have attempted to violate it, to
outrage it. However you may look upon your
action, the penitentiary awaits you. Yet one
can well hesitate to pronounce the word that
condemns a fellow man to that living death.
It is not the mere punishment itself. The
dragging years will pass, but what will you be
when they have passed? We no longer brand
the persons of convicts, but none the less does
the iron sear their souls and none the less does
the world see with its mind’s eye the scorched
word ‘convict’ on their brows, so long as they
live. In the capacity of judge, were I one, I
might use such limit of discretion as the law
allows in making your punishment lighter or
heavier, but the disgrace of it, no one can
mitigate. Therefore, that you may receive
some measure of the punishment you deserve,
and yet not be blasted for life, I will accept a
monetary consideration and set you free.”
“Oh, you will, will you?” said Dr. McAllyn.
“How much lighter or heavier will you in your
capacity as judge make this impost?”
“I will not take my time in replying to your
slurs in kind. You, Dr. McAllyn, as the one
primarily responsible, as the leader who induced
Dr. Darst to enter this conspiracy, as
the one most to be reproached, in that Mr.
Brockelsby was your friend, as the one by far
the most able to pay, you shall pay $1,200.
Dr. Darst shall pay $200. This is a punishment
by no means commensurate with your
crime. By this forfeit, shall you escape prison
and disgrace.”
“Of course you know that I have no such
sum as that about me,” said Dr. McAllyn. “I
will write you a check.”
“I am not so green as I look,” said Mr.
Middleton, assuming an easy sitting posture
upon the box containing the mortal envelope
of Mr. Brockelsby. “You may dispatch Dr.
Darst with a check to get the money for you
and himself. You will remain here as a hostage
until his return.”
Accordingly, Dr. Darst departed and Mr.
Middleton sat engrossed in reflection upon the
chain of unpleasant circumstances that had
forced upon him the unavoidable and distasteful
rôle of a bribe-taker. Yet how else could
he have carried off the part he had assumed?
How else could he have obtained custody of
Mr. Brockelsby? And surely the doctors
richly deserved punishment. It was not meet
that they should go scot free and in no other
way could he bring it about that retribution
should be visited upon them.
“It is all here,” said Mr. Middleton,
when he had counted the bills brought by Dr.
Darst. “I shall now see that Mr. Brockelsby
is taken back to the office whence you took
him.”
“Pardon me,” said Dr. Darst, “how in the
world did you know we took him from his
office? How did you ferret it all out?”
“I cannot tell you that,” said Mr. Middleton.
“I shall take him back to the office.
He will be found there later in the day, just as
you found him. You are wise enough to make
no inquiries concerning him, to watch for no
news of developments. Indeed, to make in
some measure an alibi, should it be needed,
you had better leave town by next train for the
rest of the day. If it were known you were
with Mr. Brockelsby at any time, might it not
be thought that you were responsible for the
condition he was found in?”
The doctors boarded the very next train, and
Mr. Middleton, serene in the knowledge that
no one would disturb him now, had the box
taken back and set up in the main office. A
slight thump in the box as it was ended up
against the wall, caused Mr. Middleton to
believe that Mr. Brockelsby was now resting
on his head, but he resolved to allow this unavoidable
circumstance to occasion him no disquiet.
Going to a large department store
where a sale of portières was in progress, he
purchased some portières and a number of
other things. The portières he draped over
the box, concealing its bare pine with shimmering
cardinal velvet and turning it into the
semblance of a cabinet. Lest any inquisitive
hand tear it away, he placed six volumes of
Chitty and a bust of Daniel Webster upon the
top and tacked two photographs of Mr.
Brockelsby upon the front. Confident that no
one would disturb the receptacle containing
his employer, he went into court and after a
short but exceedingly spirited legal battle in
which he displayed a forensic ability, a legal
lore, and a polished eloquence which few of
the older members of the Chicago bar could
have equalled, he won a signal victory.
Although it was not his intention to set
about restoring Mr. Brockelsby until an hour
that would ensure him against likelihood of
interruption, he returned to the office to see if
by any untoward mischance anybody could
have interfered with the box. To his surprise,
he found Mrs. Brockelsby seated before that
object of vertu with her eye straying abstractedly
over the cardinal portières, the photographs
of Mr. Brockelsby, the bust of Daniel
Webster, and the volumes of Chitty.
“Oh, Mr. Middleton,” exclaimed the lady.
“Mr. Brockelsby did not come home to-day
and they tell me he wasn’t in court.”
“No, he was not in court,” said Mr. Middleton.
“Oh, where, oh, where can he be!” moaned
Mrs. Brockelsby.
Mr. Middleton being of the opinion that this
question was merely exclamatory, ejaculatory
in its nature, of the kind orators employ to
garnish and embellish their discourse and
which all books of rhetoric state do not expect
or require an answer, accordingly made no
answer. He was, nevertheless, somewhat disturbed
by the poor lady’s grief and wished that
it were possible to restore her husband to her
instantly.
“Oh, I have wanted to see him so, I have
wanted him so! Oh, where can he be, Mr.
Middleton! I must find him. I cannot
endure it longer. I will offer a reward to anyone
who will bring him home within twenty-four
hours, to anyone who will find him. Oh,
oh, oh, oh! I will give $200. I will give it to
you, yourself, if you will find him. Write a
notice to that effect and take it to the newspaper
offices.”
This great distress on the part of the lady
was all contrary to what Dr. McAllyn had said
concerning her indifference to the absence of
her spouse and caused Mr. Middleton to feel
very much like a guilty wretch. As he wrote
out the notices for the papers, he reiterated
assurances that Mr. Brockelsby would turn up
before morning, while the partner of the missing
barrister continued her heartbroken wailing
and the cause of it all was driven well-nigh wild.
“Oh, if you only knew!” she said, as Mr.
Middleton was about to depart for the newspaper
offices. “Day after to-morrow, I am
going to Washington to attend a meeting of
the Federation of Woman’s Clubs. That
odious Mrs. LeBaron is going to spring a
diamond necklace worth two thousand dollars
more than mine. Augustus must come home
in time to sign a check so I can put three thousand
dollars more into mine.”
A great load soared from Mr. Middleton’s
mind and blithe joy reigned there instead.
“Mrs. Brockelsby, I’ll leave no stone unturned.
I’ll bring you your husband before
breakfast,” and escorting the lady to her carriage
and handing her in with the greatest
deference and most courtly gallantry, he set
forth for one of the more famous of the large
restaurants which are household words among
the elite of Chicago. Mr. Middleton had
never passed its portals, but with fourteen
hundred dollars in his pocket and two hundred
more in sight, he felt he could afford to give
himself a good meal and break the fast he had
kept since the evening before, for in the
crowded events of the day, he had found time
to refresh himself with nothing more substantial
than an apple and a bag of peanuts, or
fruit of the Arachis hypogea.
As he sat down at a table in the glittering
salle-à-manger, what was his great surprise and
even greater delight, to see seated opposite,
just slowly finishing his dessert—a small bowl
of sherbet—habited in a perfectly-fitting frock
coat with a red carnation in the lapel, the
urbane and accomplished prince of the tribe of
Al-Yam. Having exchanged mutual expressions
of pleasure at this unexpected encounter,
Mr. Middleton, overjoyed and elated at the
successes of the day, began to pour into the
ears of the prince a relation of the events that
had resulted from the gift of the treatise of the
learned hakim of Madras, which is in India.
He told everything from the beginning to
the end.
“In the morning,” he said in conclusion, “I
take Mr. Brockelsby home in a cab and get
the two hundred dollars.”
“Alas, alas!” said Achmed mournfully, his
great liquid brown eyes resting sorrowfully
upon Mr. Middleton. “What a corrupting
effect the haste to get rich has upon American
youth. My friend, it cannot be that you intend
to take the two hundred dollars?”
“But I find old Brock, don’t I?’
“That is precisely what you do not do. You
know where he is. You put him there. How
can you say you found him?”
“All right, I won’t do it,” said Mr. Middleton,
abashed at Achmed’s reproof, a reproof
his conscience told him was eminently deserved.
“I thank Allah,” said the prince, “that I
am an Arab and not an American. The fortunes
of my line, its glories, were not won in
the vulgar pursuits of trade, in the chicanery
of business, in the shady paths of speculation,
in the questionable manipulation of stocks and
bonds. It was not thus that the ancient houses
of the nobility of Europe and the Orient built
up their honorable fortunes. Never did the
men of my house parley with their consciences,
never did they strike a truce with their knightly
instincts in order to gain gold. Ah, no, no,”
mused the prince, looking pensively up at the
gaily decorated ceiling as he reflected upon the
glories of his line; “it was in the noble profession
of arms, the illustrious practice of warfare
that we won our honorable possessions. At
the sacking of Medina, the third prince of our
house gained a goodly treasure of gold and
precious stones, and founded our fortune. In
warfare with the Wahabees, we acquired countless
herds and the territories for them to roam
upon. By descents across the Red Sea into
the realms of the Abyssinians, we took hundreds
of slaves. From the Dey of Aden we
acquired one hundred thousand sequins as the
price of peace. In the sacking of the cities of
Hedjaz and Yemen and even the dominions of
Oman, did we gallantly gain in the perilous
and honorable pursuit of war further store of
treasure. Ah, those were brave days, those
days of old, those knightly days of old!
Faugh, I am out of tune with this vile commercial
country and this vile commercial
age.”
The prince arose as he uttered these last
words and in his rhapsody forgetting the presence
of Mr. Middleton, without a farewell he
stalked through the great apartment, absentmindedly,
though gracefully twirling a pair of
pearl gray gloves in the long sensitive fingers
of his left hand. A little hush fell upon the
brilliant assemblage and many a bright eye
dwelt admiringly upon the elegant person, so
elegantly attired, of the urbane and accomplished
prince of the tribe of Al-Yam.
For some time Mr. Middleton sat plunged
in abstraction, toying with the three kinds of
dessert he had ordered, as he meditated upon
the words of the emir. At last rousing himself,
he had finished the marrons glacées and
was about to begin upon a Nesselrode pudding,
when he heard himself addressed, and looking
up saw before him a young woman of an exceedingly
prepossessing appearance. She was
richly dressed with a quiet elegance that bespoke
her a person of good taste. Laughing,
roguish eyes illuminated a piquant face in
which were to be seen good sense, ingenuousness
and kindness, mingled with self-reliance
and determination. Mr. Middleton knew not
whether to admire her most for the beautiful
proportions of her figure, the loveliness of her
face, or the fine mental qualities of which her
countenance gave evidence. With a delightful
frankness in which there was no hint of real
or pretended embarrassment, she said:
“Pray pardon this intrusion on the part of a
total stranger. I have particular reasons for
desiring to know the name and station of the
gentleman who left you a short time ago, and
knowing no one else to ask, have resolved to
throw myself upon your good nature. I will
ask of you not to require the reasons of me,
assuring you that they are perhaps not entirely
unconnected with the welfare of this gentleman.
I observed from your manner toward
one another that you were acquaintances and
that it was no chance conversation between
strangers. He is, I take it, an Italian.”
Without pausing to reflect that the emir
might not be at all pleased to have this young
woman know of his identity, Mr. Middleton
exclaimed hastily and with a gesture of expostulation:
“Oh, no! He is not a Dago,” and then after
a pause he remarked impressively, “He is an
Arab,” and then after a still longer pause, he
said still more impressively, “He is the Emir
Achmed Ben Daoud, hereditary prince of the
tribe of Al-Yam, which ranges on the borders
of that fertile and smiling region of Arabia
known as Yemen, or Arabia the Happy.”
“He is not a Dago!” said the young woman,
clasping her hands with delighted fervor.
“He is not a Dago!” said another voice, and
Mr. Middleton became aware that at his back
stood a second young woman scarcely less
charming than the first. “He is not a Dago!”
she repeated, scarcely less delighted than the
first.
Mr. Middleton arose and assumed an attitude
which was at once indicative of proper
deference toward his fair questioners and
enabled him the better to feast his entranced
eyes upon them. Moreover, on all sides he
observed that people were looking at them and
he needed no one to tell him that his conversation
with these two daughters of the aristocracy
was causing the assemblage to regard him as
an individual of social importance. He gave
the emir’s address upon Clark Street and after
dwelling some time upon his graces of person
and mind, related how it was that this Eastern
potentate was resident in the city of Chicago
in a comparatively humble capacity.
“His brother is shut up in a vermillion
tower.”
“Vermillion, did you say?” breathlessly
asked the first young lady.
“Oh, how romantic!” exclaimed the second
young lady. “A tower of vermillion! Is he
good looking, like this one? Do you suppose
he will come here? Oh, Mildred, I must meet
him. And the imam of Oman is going to give
the vermillion tower to the brother, when he
is released. We could send one of papa’s
whalebacks after it. What a lovely house on
Prairie Avenue it would make. ‘The Towers,’
we would call it. No, ‘Vermillion Towers.’
How lovely it would sound on a card, ‘Wednesdays,
Vermillion Towers.’ We must get him
out. Can’t we do it?”
“If it were in this country,” said Mr. Middleton,
“I would engage to get him out. I
would secure a writ of habeas corpus, or devise
other means to speedily release him. But
unfortunately, I am not admitted to practice
in the dominions of Oman. But I do not pity
the young man. One could well be willing to
suffer incarceration in a tower of vermillion, if
he knew he were an object of solicitude to one
so fair as yourself. One could wear the gyves
and shackles of the most terrible tyranny
almost in happiness, if he knew that such
lovely eyes grew moist over his fate and such
beauteous lips trembled when they told the
tale of his imprisonment.”
Now such gallant speeches were all very well
in the days of knee-breeches and periwigs, but
in this age and in Chicago, they are an
anachronism and the two young ladies started
as if they had suddenly observed that Mr.
Middleton had on a low-cut vest, or his trousers
were two years behind the times, and somewhat
curtly and coolly making their adieus,
they sailed rapidly away, leaving Mr. Middleton—who
was not the most obtuse mortal in
the world—to savagely fill with large pieces of
banana pie the orifice whence had lately issued
the words which had cut short his colloquy
with the two beauties. He deeply regretted
that in his association with Prince Achmed he
had fallen into a flowery and Oriental manner
of speech and resolved henceforth to eschew
such fashion of discourse.
The clocks were solemnly tolling the hour of
midnight when Mr. Augustus Alfonso Brockelsby
rubbed his eyes and sat up in the revolving
chair in the main office of his suite. Mr. Middleton
was standing near, hastily putting away a razor.
A warm odor lay on the still air of the room.
“Hello, isn’t it daylight yet?” asked Mr.
Brockelsby. The hot cakes that had but lately
been applied to his shaven crown, seemed to
have dispelled the fogs of intoxication and he
was master of himself.
“It is twelve o’clock,” said Mr. Middleton.
“Twelve! Why, it was three when I left the
banquet table. Twelve!”
“Twelve,” said Mr. Middleton, pointing
gravely to the clock on the desk.
“It—is—twelve. Don’t tell me it is the day
after.”
“I am compelled to do so. You were at the
banquet of the Sons of Andrew Jackson’s
Wars, twenty-four hours ago.”
“Great Scott!” exclaimed Mr. Brockelsby,
thrusting his hands through his hair, or rather
making the motion of doing so. “Great
Scott!” he repeated, “I am bald-headed.
What the devil have I been into? Where the
devil have I been?”
“I found you here this morning. Your wife
has been here.”
“Oh, lord! Oh, lord! What did she say
when she saw me dead to the world—and bald-headed?”
“She did not see you. I had concealed you.”
“Good boy, good boy.”
“She offered me two hundred dollars reward
to bring you home,” and Mr. Middleton related
all that Mrs. Brockelsby had said.
“It would be all off when she saw me bald-headed.
What the devil wouldn’t she suspect?
I don’t know. I would say I didn’t know where
I had been. That would certainly sound
fishy. It would sound like a preposterous
excuse to cover up something pretty questionable.
People don’t go out in good society
and get their heads shaved. She’s pretty independent
and uppish now. She said the next
time she knew of me cutting up any didoes,
she would get a divorce. She comes into two
hundred thousand from her grandfather’s estate
in six months and she’s pretty independent.
Say, my boy, can’t you take a check for the
money she wants? She’s going to Washington
to-morrow. Tell her I went out of town and
sent the money. I will go out of town. But
the boys will see my bald head. Where do
you suppose I was? What sort of crowd was I
with? I must have a wig. You must get it
for me. The boys would josh me to death,
and if the story got to my wife it would be all
off. I’ll go to Battle Creek and get a new lot
of hair started.”
Mr. Middleton sat down and wrote busily for
a moment. He handed a sheet of paper to
Mr. Brockelsby.
“What’s this? You resign? You’re not
going to help me out?”
“I am no longer in your employ. I will
undertake to do all you ask of me for a proper
compensation, say one hundred and fifty a day
for two days.”
“What?” screamed Mr. Brockelsby. “This
is robbery, extortion, blackmail.”
“It is what you often charge yourself. Very
well. Get your own wig and be seen on the
streets going after it. Leave your wife to
wonder why I do not come to report what
progress is made in the search for you and to
start a rigorous investigation herself. I am
under no obligations not to ease her worry, to
calm her disturbed mind by telling her I have
found you. She’ll be hot foot after you then.”
“She’d spot the wig at once. It would fool
others, but not her. She’d see I had been
jagged. You’ve got me foul. I’ll have to
accede to your terms. You’ll not give me
away?”
“Sir, I would not, in this, my first employment
as an independent attorney, be so derelict
to professional honor, as to betray the secrets
of my client. We have chosen to call this
three hundred dollars—a check for which you
will give me in advance—payment for the services
I am about to perform. In reality, I consider
it only part of what you owe for the
miserably underpaid services of the past three
years.”
As Mr. Middleton wended his way homeward,
it was with some melancholy that he
recalled how, on previous occasions when good
fortune had added to his stock of wealth, he
had rejoiced in it because he saw his dreams of
marriage with the young lady of Englewood
approaching realization more and more. But
now they had drifted apart. Not once had he
seen her since that fatal night. On several
evenings he had made the journey to Englewood
and walked up and down before her
house, but not so much as her shadow on the
curtain had he seen. Let her make the first
move toward a reconciliation. If she expected
him to do so after her treatment of him, she
was sadly mistaken.
