Miss Clarissa Dawson was a young
lady who had charge of the cutlery
counter in one of the great emporiums
of State Street. She was reckoned of
a pretty wit and not more cutting were the
Sheffield razors that were piled before her than
the remarks she sometimes made to those who,
incited thereto by her reputation for readiness
of retort, sought to engage her in a contest of
repartee. It was seldom that she issued from
these encounters other than triumphant, leaving
her presumptuous opponents defeated and
chagrined. But in the month of November of
the last year, for once she owned to herself
that she had been overcome,—overcome, it is
true, because her adversary was plainly a person
of stupidity, mailed by his doltishness
against the keenest sarcasm she could launch
against him, yet nevertheless overcome. To
her choicest bit of irony, the individual replied,
“Somebody left you on the grindstone and
forgot to take you off,” to which the most
adroit in quips and quirks could find no fitting
replication, unless it were to indulge in facial
contortion or invective, and Miss Clarissa was
too much of a lady to do either. Forced into
silence, she had no resource but to seek to
transfix him with a protracted and contemptuous
stare, which, though failing to disconcert
the object, put her in possession of the facts
that he had mild blue eyes, that the remnants
of his hair were red, that he was slightly above
middle height and below middle age, and that
there was little about his face and still less his
figure to distinguish him from a multitude of
men of the average type. Indeed, one could
not even conjecture his nationality, for his
type was one to be seen in all branches of the
Indo-European race. If from a package in his
upper left-hand coat pocket, which, broken,
disclosed some wieners, you concluded he was
of the German nation, a short dudeen in an
upper vest pocket would seem to indicate that
he was an Irishman. His coat was of black
cheviot, new, and of the current cut. His vest
was of corduroy, of the kind in vogue in the
past decade, while his pantaloons, black, with
a faint green line in them, were a compromise,
being of a non-commital cut that would never
be badly out of style in any modern period.
Sustaining Miss Clarissa’s stare with great
composure, he purchased six German razors at
thirty-five cents each, six English at fifty,
twelve American at the same price, and a stray
French razor at sixty-two.
“Don’t you want some razorine?” asked Miss
Clarissa. “It makes razors—and other things—sharper.”
“Why don’t you use it, then, instead of lobsterine?”
replied the stranger, picking up his
package and the change. Miss Clarissa
deigning to give no reply but an angry frown,
the stranger expressed his gratitude for the
amusement he intimated she had afforded him
and he further said he hoped he would see her
at the Charity Ball and he made bold to ask
her to save the second two-step for him, and
thereafter departed, having declined Miss
Clarissa’s offer to have his purchases sent to
his address, an offer dictated not by a spirit of
accommodation and kindliness, but by a
desire to learn in what part of the city he had
his residence.
On the morrow again came a man to purchase
razors, of which there was a large number
on Miss Clarissa’s counter, traveling men’s
samples for sale at ridiculous prices. The man
had purchased two dozen razors before Miss
Clarissa, noting this similarity to the transactions
of the odious person and thereby led to
take a good look at him, observed with astonishment
that this new man had on exactly the
same suit that had been worn by the purchaser
of the day before. She recognized the fabric,
the color, everything down to a discoloration
on the left coat lapel. Here the resemblance
ended. The second individual was a young
man. He had a heavy shock of abundant hair.
He was not more than twenty-eight years old
and so far from being commonplace, he was of
a distinguished appearance. But as the eyes
of Miss Clarissa continued to dwell upon him
in some admiration, she told herself that the
resemblance did not end with the clothes,
after all. His eyes were of the same blue, his
hair of the same auburn as those of the man of
yesterday. Indeed, the man of yesterday
might have been this man with twenty years
added on him, with the light of hope and ambition
dimmed by contact with the world, and
his youthful alertness and dash succeeded by
the resigned vacuity of one who has seen none
of his early dreams realized. Again did Miss
Clarissa ask if he would have his purchases
sent to his address, but this time it was not
entirely curiosity and the perfunctory performance
of a duty, for she would gladly have been
of service to one of such a pleasing presence.
Communing with himself for a moment, the
young man said:
“On the whole, you may. But they must
be delivered to me in person, into my own
hands. I would take them, but I have a number
of other things to take. Remember, they
are to be delivered to me in person,” and he
handed her a card which announced that his
name was Asbury Fuller and on which was
written in lead pencil the address of a house
in a quarter of the city which, once the most
fashionable of all, had suffered from the encroachments
of trade and where a few mansions
yet occupied by the aristocracy were
surrounded by the deserted homes of families
which had fled to the newer haunts of fashion,
leaving their former abodes to be occupied by
boarding mistresses, dentists, doctors, clairvoyants,
and a whole host of folk whose names
would never be in the papers until their burial
permits were issued.
Miss Clarissa did a very peculiar thing. It
was already four o’clock of a Saturday afternoon.
Instead of immediately giving the
package into the hands of the delivery department,
she retained it and, at closing time, going
to the room where ready made uniforms for
messenger boys were kept, she purloined one.
Now it must be known that the principal reason
for doing a thing so unusual, not to say indiscreet,
was her desire to obey the young man’s
injunction to hand the razors into his own
hands and no others. She had become possessed
of the idea that some disaster would
befall if the razors came into the possession of
any one else. Moreover, the stranger had
humbled her in the contest of repartee, which,
as a true woman, had made her entertain an
admiration for him, and this and his strange
disguises and his unaccountable purchases had
surrounded him with a mist of romantic mystery
she fain would penetrate. Some little
time before, it had been Miss Clarissa’s misfortune,
through sickness, to lose much of her
hair. It had now begun to grow again and
resume its former luxuriant abundance, but by
removing several switches—of her own hair—and
the bolster commonly called a rat, and
sleeking her hair down hard with oil, she
appeared as a boy might who was badly in
need of a haircut. After a light supper, she
set out alone for the residence of Asbury Fuller
and at the end of her journey found herself
at the gateway of a somber edifice, which was
apparently the only one in the block that was
inhabited. On either side and across the way
were vacant houses, lonesome and forbidding.
Indeed, the residence of Asbury Fuller was
itself scarcely less lonesome and forbidding.
The grass of the plot before it was long and
unkempt and heavily covered with mats of
autumn leaves. The bricks of the front walk
were sunken and uneven and the steps leading
to the high piazza were deeply warped, as by
pools of water that had lain and dried on their
unswept surface through many seasons. The
blinds hung awry and the paint on the great
front doors was scaling, and altogether it was a
faded magnificence, this of Asbury Fuller.
She pulled the handle of the front-door bell
and in response to its jangling announcement
came a maid.
“Asbury Fuller?” said the maid, omitting
the “Mr.” Miss Clarissa had affixed. “Go to
the side door around to the right.”
Wondering if this were a lodging house and
Asbury Fuller had a private entrance, or if it
being his own house he had left word that
callers should be sent to the side door to prevent
the delivery of the razors being seen by
others, Clarissa followed the walk through an
avenue of dead syringa bushes and came to the
side door. The same maid who had met her
before, ushered her in and presently she found
herself in a small apartment, almost a closet,
standing at the back of Asbury Fuller. But
though small, she remarked that the apartment
was one of some magnificence, for on all sides
was a quantity of burnished copper, binding
the edges of a row of shelves and covering the
whole top of a broad counter-like projection
running along one side of the wall. Before
this, Asbury Fuller was standing, assorting a
number of cut-glass goblets of various sizes
and putting them upon silver salvers, bottles
of various colored wines being placed upon
each salver with the goblets. He turned at her
entrance and the look of sad and gloomy abstraction
sitting upon his countenance instantly
changed to one of relief and joy.
“At last, at last,” he exclaimed, in a deep
tone which even more than his countenance
betrayed his relief and joy. “It is almost too
late and I thought the young woman had not
attended to sending them, that she had failed
me.”
“She would not fail you, sir,” said Clarissa,
earnestly, allowing herself in the protection
her assumed character gave her the pleasure of
giving utterance to her feeling of regard for
the young man. “She would not fail, sir, she
could not fail you. Oh, you wrong her, if you
think she could ever break her word to you.”
Asbury Fuller bent an inscrutable look upon
Clarissa and then bidding her remain until his
return, hastily left the room. But though he
was gone, Clarissa sat gloating upon the mental
picture of his manly beauty. He seemed
taller than before, for the stoop he had worn in
the afternoon had now departed and he stood
erect and muscular in the suit of full evening
dress that set off his lithe, soldierly form to
such advantage. His garb was of an elegance
such as Clarissa had never before beheld, and
it was plain that the aristocracy affected certain
adornments in the privacy of their homes
which they did not caparison themselves with
in public. Clarissa had seen dress suits in restaurants
and in theaters, but never before had
she seen a bottle-green dress coat with gold
buttons and a velvet collar and a vest with
broad longitudinal stripes of white and brown.
In a brief space, Asbury Fuller returned, and
glancing at his watch, he said:
“There is some time before the dinner party
begins and I would like to talk with you. I
am impressed by your apparent honesty and
particularly by the air of devotion to duty that
characterizes you. The latter I have more
often remarked in women than in the more
selfish sex to which we belong. We need a
boy here. Wages, twenty dollars a month and
keep.”
“Oh, sir, I should be pleased to come.”
“Your duties will commence at once. Owing
to the fact that this old house has been empty
for some time and the work of rehabilitating
and refurnishing it is far from completed, you
cannot at present have a room to yourself.
You will sleep with John Klussmann, the
hostler——”
“Oh, sir, I cannot do that,” exclaimed
Clarissa, starting up in alarm.
“John is a good boy and kicks very little in
his sleep. But doubtless you object to the
smell of horses.”
“Oh, sir, let me do what is needed this evening
and go home and I will come back and
work to-morrow and go home to-morrow night,
and if by that time you find I can have a
room by myself, perhaps I will come permanently.”
“I don’t smell of horses myself,” said
Asbury Fuller, musingly, to which Clarissa
making no response other than turning away
her head to hide her blushes, he continued.
“But two days will be enough. Indeed, to-night
is the crucial point. I will not beat about
the bush longer. I wish to attach you to my
interests. I wish you to serve me to-night in
the crisis of my career.”
“Oh, sir,” said Clarissa, in the protection
that her assumed character gave her, allowing
herself the privilege of speaking her real sentiments,
“I am attached to your interests. Let
me serve you. Command, and I will use my
utmost endeavor to obey.”
Asbury Fuller looked at her in surprise.
Carried away by her feelings and in the state
of mental exaltation which the romance and
mystery of the adventure had induced, she had
made a half movement to kneel as she thus
almost swore her fealty in solemn tones.
“Why are you attached to my interests?”
asked Asbury Fuller, somewhat dryly.
Alas, Clarissa could not take advantage of
the protection her assumed character gave her
to tell the real reason. Only as a woman
could she do that, only as a woman could she
say and be believed, “Because I love you.”
“Why, some people are naturally leaders,
naturally draw others to them——”
“You cannot be a spy upon me, since no one
knows who I am.”
“A spy!” cried Clarissa, in a voice whose
sorrowful reproach gave convincing evidence
of her ingenuousness.
“I wrong you, I wrong you,” said Asbury
Fuller. “I will trust you. I will tell you
what you are to do——”
“Butler,” said a maid, poking her head in at
the door, “it is time to come and give the finishing
touches to the table. It is almost time
for the dinner to be served,” and without ado,
Asbury Fuller sprang out of the room.
A butler! A butler! Clarissa sat stunned.
It was thus that her hero had turned out.
Could she tell the other girls in the store with
any degree of pride that she was keeping company
with a butler? She had received a good
literary education in the high school at Muncie,
Indiana, and was a young woman of taste and
refinement. Could she marry a butler? To
be near her hero, she herself had just now been
willing to undertake a menial position. But
she had then imagined him to be a person of
importance. This stage in her cogitations led
her to the reflection that her feelings were unworthy
of her. Had her regard for Asbury
Fuller been all due to the belief that he was a
person of importance, merely the worship of
position, the selfish desire and hope—however
faint—of rising to affluence and social dignity
through him? Butler or no butler, Asbury
Fuller was handsome, he was distinguished, his
manner of speech was superior to that of any
person she had ever known. Butler or no butler,
she loved him. Just now she had hoped
that he, rich and well placed, would overlook
her poverty, and take her, friendless and
obscure, for his bride. Could she give less
than she had hoped he would give? And then
as butler, her chances of winning him were so
greatly increased.
In a short time, he returned. He told her
she was to wait on the table and instructed her
how to serve the courses.
“The master will look surprised when he
sees you instead of me. If he asks who you
are, say the new page. But he will be too
much afraid of exciting the wonder of his
guests to ask you any questions. I feel certain
that he will accept your presence without
question, being desirous his guests shall not
think him a tyro in the management of an
establishment like this. I feel certain that
after dinner, his guests will ask to see his collection
of arms. Indeed, Miss Bording told
him in my hearing last Monday that she
accepted his invitation here on condition that
she be allowed to see the famous collection.
You are to follow them into the drawing-room
after dinner. The master will not know
whether that is usual or not. If they do start
to go to look at the arms, you are to say, ‘The
collection of your former weapons, sir, has
been placed in the first room to the left at the
head of the stairs. The paper-hangers and
decorators have been busy.’ Then you are to
lead the way into that room, which you will
find dimly lighted. After that, I will attend to
everything myself.”
Although Clarissa could not but wonder at
the strangeness of her instructions and to be
somewhat alarmed at the evidences of a plot
in which she was to be an agent, she agreed,
for though her regard for Asbury Fuller would
have been sufficient to cause such acquiescence,
so great was her curiosity to have solved the
mysteries which surrounded that individual,
that this alone would have gained her consent.
There were but two guests at the table of
Mr. William Leadbury—Judge Volney Bording,
and his daughter, Eulalia Bording. Mr. Leadbury
cast a look of surprise and displeasure as
he saw Clarissa serving the first course, but he
quickly concealed these emotions and proceeded
to plunge into an animated conversation
with his guests. Indeed, it assumed the
character of a monologue in which he frequently
adverted to the weather, to be off on a
tangent the next moment on a discussion of
finance, politics, sociology, on which subjects,
however, he was far from showing the
positiveness and fixed opinion that he did while
descanting upon the weather. In all the subjects
he touched upon, he exhibited a certain
skill in so framing his remarks that they would
not run counter to any prejudices or opposite
opinions of his auditors, but the feelings of the
auditors having been elicited, served as a preamble
from which he could go on, warmly
agreeing with their views in the further and
more complete unfolding of his own. He was
between twenty-seven and thirty years of age,
of a somewhat spare figure, and in the well-proportioned
features of his face there was no one
that would attract attention beyond the others
and easily remain fixed in memory. He was
not without an appearance of intelligence and
his chest was thrown out and the small of his
back drawn in after the manner of the Prussian
ex-sergeants who give instruction in athletics
and the cultivation of a proper carriage to the
elite of this city, and withal he had the appearance
of a person of substance and of consequence
in his community. In the midst of
a pause where he was occupied in putting
his soup-spoon into his mouth, Miss Bording
remarked:
“Please do not talk about commonplace
American subjects, Mr. Leadbury. Tell us of
your foreign life. Tell us of Algeria. What
sort of a country is Algeria?”
Turning his eyes toward the chandelier about
him and with an elegance of enunciation that
did much to relieve the undeniably monotonous
evenness of his discourse, he began:
“Algeria, the largest and most important of
the French colonial possessions, is a country
of northern Africa, bounded on the north by
the Mediterranean, west by Morocco, south by
the desert of Sahara, and east by Tunis. It
extends for about five hundred and fifty miles
along the coast and inland from three hundred
to four hundred miles. Physiographically it
may be roughly divided into three zones,” and
so on for a considerable length until by an
accident which Clarissa could attribute to
nothing but inconceivable awkwardness, Judge
Bording dropped a glass of water, crash!
Having ceased his disquisition at this accident,
so disconcerting to the judge, Miss
Bording very prettily and promptly thanked
him for his information and saying that she
now had a clear understanding of the principal
facts pertaining to Algeria, abruptly changed
the subject by asking him if he had heard anything
more concerning his second cousin, the
barber.
“There is nothing more to be heard. He is
dead. You know he came here about a week
before I did. By the terms of my uncle’s will,
the five years to be allowed to elapse before I
was to be considered dead or disappeared
would have come to an end in a week after the
time of my arrival, and the property have
passed to him, my uncle’s cousin. By the
greatest luck in the world, I had become
homesick and throwing up my commission in
the Foreign Legion, or Battalion D’Etranger,
as we have it in French, which is, as you may
know, a corps of foreigners serving under the
French flag, mainly in Algeria, but occasionally
in other French possessions—throwing up
my commission, I came home, bringing with
me my famous collection of weapons and the
fauteuil of Ab del Kader, the armchair, you
understand, of the great Arab prince who led
the last revolt against France. It was not all
homesickness, either. Among the men of all
nationalities serving in the Foreign Legion,
are many adventurous Americans, and a young
Chicagoan, remarking my name, apprised me
of the fact that perhaps I was heir to a fortune
in Chicago. I came,” continued Leadbury,
looking down toward his lap, where Clarissa
saw he held a clipping from a newspaper, “and
took apartments at the Bennington Hotel,
where, when seen by the representatives of the
‘Commercial Advertiser,’ the following interesting
facts were brought out in the interview:
‘William Leadbury’—your humble servant—” he
interjected, “‘is the only son of the late
Charles Leadbury, only brother of the late
millionaire iron merchant, James Leadbury.
Upon his death, James Leadbury left his entire
property’—but,” said Leadbury, looking up,
“I have previously covered that point.”
“But tell us of your weapons,” interposed
Miss Bording.
“Oh, yes, that seems to interest you,” and
deftly sliding the clipping along in his fingers,
he resumed: “‘The collection of weapons is one
of the most interesting and remarkable collections
in the United States, for, though not
large, its owner can say, with pardonable pride,
“every bit of steel in that collection has been
used by me in my trade.”’”
“Ah, how proud you must be,” mused Miss
Bording. “I read something like that in the
papers, myself. Just to think of it! Every bit
of steel in that collection has been used by you
in your trade. What a strange affectation you
military men have in calling your profession a
trade! But, Captain Leadbury, tell me of your
cousin, who disappeared two days after your
arrival, and why you shaved your moustache
which the papers described you as having.”
“A moustache is a bother,” said Leadbury.
“As to my cousin, why, overcome by disappointment,
he took to drink. He disappeared
from his lodgings on Rush Street two days
after my arrival, at the close of a twenty-four
hours’ debauch. It was found he had shipped
as a sailor on the Ingar Gulbrandson, lumber
hooker for Marinette, and the Gulbrandson was
found sunk up by Death’s Door, at the
entrance to Green Bay, her masts sticking
above water. Her crew had utterly disappeared.
That was three months ago and
neither hide nor hair of any of them has been
seen since. Poor Anderson Walkley is dead!
Were he alive, I would be glad to assist him.
But he was a rover, never long in one place—a
few months here, a few months there—and now
he is at rest and I believe he is glad, I believe
he is glad.”
The second course consisted of turkey, and
Clarissa was astounded, as she deposited the
dishes of the course, to see Asbury Fuller
swiftly enter the door upon all-fours and with
extreme celerity and cat-like lightness, flit
across the room and esconce himself behind a
huge armchair upholstered in velvet, and her
astonishment increased and was tinged with no
small degree of terror, as she observed the
chair, noiselessly and almost imperceptibly,
progress across the floor, propelled by some
hidden force, until it reached a station behind
the master of the house. Captain Leadbury
began to carve the turkey and Clarissa was
astonished more than ever to hear, in the Captain’s
voice, though she was sure his lips were
shut,
“Would you like a close shave, Miss Bording?”
The sound of the carving-knife dropping
upon the platter as Leadbury started in some
sudden spasm of pain, was drowned by the silvery
laughter of Miss Bording, saying,
“Oh, don’t make fun of the profession of
your poor cousin, Captain,” and the look of
disquiet upon Leadbury’s face was quickly
relieved and he joined heartily and almost
boisterously in the merriment. A moment
later, Clarissa was alarmed to find him bending
upon herself a look in which suspicion,
distrust, fear, and hatred all were blended.
Judge Volney Bording, ornament to the legal
profession, was a hearty eater, and it was not
long before he sent his plate for a second helping,
and again Clarissa heard from the closed
lips of Leadbury, in a voice that seemed to
float up from his very feet:
“Next. Next. You’re next, Miss Bording.
What’ll it be?”
Leadbury half rose, looking toward Clarissa
with a glance of most violent anger, but whatever
he would have said, was again interrupted
by the silvery laugh of Miss Bording, and again
Leadbury joined heartily, almost boisterously.
But though he regained his self-possession and
his brow became serene, Clarissa saw in his eye
that which told he had a reckoning in store
for her when once the guests were out of the
house, but that in the meantime he would dissemble
the various unpleasant emotions with
which his mind was filled. The rest of the dinner
passed without untoward event. The huge
armchair by imperceptible degrees retired to its
former position, and as Clarissa set down the
dessert, she saw Asbury Fuller, with a grace
unusual and not to be expected of one in such
a posture, proceeding quickly and silently out
of the room upon all-fours.
Mindful of her instructions, Clarissa accompanied
the party when, rising from the table,
they withdrew to the drawing-room. It was
manifest that her presence caused Leadbury
some uneasiness and he looked now at her and
now at his guests with an inquiring and perturbed
countenance, but in the calm faces of
the judge and his daughter he could detect
nothing to indicate that they thought the presence
of the page at all strange, and little by
little he recovered his good spirits and related
some interesting anecdotes of a bulldog he
once owned and of a colored person who stole
a guitar from him. But though Miss Bording
gave a courteous and interested attention and
laughed at the anecdotes of the dog, she irked
at the necessity of silence, which the garrulity
of her host placed her under and was desirous
of having the conversation become general
and of a more entertaining, elevated and instructive
character. As the narration of the
episode of the colored person came to an end,
she hastily exclaimed:
“Captain, you promised to show us your collection.
It is nearing the time when we must
go home, for father has had to-day to listen to
an unparalleled amount of gabble and is very
tired.”
“I will show the collection to you with great
pleasure,” said Leadbury, and at this juncture,
Clarissa, remembering her instructions, said:
“The collection of your former weapons, sir,
has been placed in the first room at the left at
the head of the stairs. The paperhangers
and decorators have been busy.” And then she
proceeded to lead the way into the hall and up
the broad funereal staircase that led above.
Dimly burned the lights in the hall. Dimly
burned a gas jet in the room whose door stood
open at the left.
“Oh, yes,” said Leadbury, gaily, responding
to a remark of Miss Bording, as they entered
the room and saw the uncertain shape of a
large chair vaguely looming in the gloom; “I
secured the fauteuil of Ab del Kader after we
had stormed the last stronghold of that unfortunate
prince. But interesting as this relic is,
I put no value upon it in comparison with the
weapons, for every bit of steel in the collection
has been used by me in my trade.”
As he said these words, he turned on the gas
at full head and the light blazed forth to be
shot back from an array of polished steel festooned
upon the wall, a glittering rosette, but
not of sabres and scimetars, yataghans, rapiers,
broadswords, dirks and poniards, pistols, fusils
and rifles. No! Razors and scissors! Before
this array sat a great red velvet barber’s chair,
and near them on the wall was a board, bearing
little brass hooks, upon each of which hung a
green ticket.
In the unexpected revelation that had followed
the flare of light, all eyes were turned
upon William Leadbury, swaying back and
forward with one hand clinging to the big
chair, as if ready to swoon. A sickly, cringing
grin played over his face, suddenly come all
a-yellow, and his long tongue was flickering
over his pale lips. But all at once his muscles
sprang tense and a malignant anger tightened
his quivering features and turning upon Clarissa,
he hissed:
“You did this. You exposed me, you exposed
me,” and he was about to leap at the
terrified girl, when a ringing voice cried,
“Stop!” and there was Asbury Fuller standing
in the doorway with the broad red cordon
of a Commander of the Legion of Honor across
his breast and a glittering rapier in his hand.
Clarissa could have fallen at his feet, he
looked so handsome and grand, and she could
have scratched out the eyes of Eulalia Bording,
whose gaze betrayed an admiration equal
to her own. Asbury Fuller, yet not wearing
quite his wonted appearance, for the luxuriant
locks of auburn had gone and his head was
covered with a short, though thick crop of
chestnut.
“You exposed yourself. Harmless would all
this have been, powerless to hurt you, if you
had kept your self-possession and turned it off
as a joke—your own. But your abashed mien,
your complete confusion, your utter disconcertment,
betrayed you, even if you had no longer
left any question by crying out that you have
been exposed. Yes, exposed, Anderson Walkley,
by the sudden confronting of you with the
implements of your craft, the weapons you had
used in your trade, and the belief thus aroused
in your guilty mind that your secret was
known, that your identity had been detected.”
“Asbury Fuller, what business is it of
yours?” and Leadbury snatched up a large
pair of hair clippers and waved them with a
menacing gesture.
“Everyman to the weapons of his trade,”
exclaimed Asbury Fuller, and the hair clippers
seemed suddenly enveloped in a mass of white
flame, as the rapier played about them.
Cling, clang, across the room flew the clippers,
twisted from Leadbury’s hand as neatly as
you please.
“Asbury Fuller?” cried the Commander of
the Legion of Honor. “Asbury Fuller?” and
he deftly fastened beneath his nose an elegant
false moustache with waxed ends.
With his hands before his eyes as if to forefend
his view from some dreadful apparition,
the man in the corner sank upon his knees,
gibbering, “William Leadbury, come back
from the dead!”
“William Leadbury, alive and well, here to
claim his own from you, Anderson Walkley,
outlaw and felon. Your plans were well-laid,
but I am not dead. You signed the papers of
the Ingar Gulbrandson in your proper person.
Then as she was about to sail, I was brought
aboard ostensibly drunk, but really drugged,
under the name of Anderson Walkley. The
Gulbrandson was found sunk. Her crew of
four had utterly disappeared. Dead, of course.
The records gave their names. I had become
Anderson Walkley and was dead. You had
seized my property and my identity. I had
been in Chicago but two days and no one had
become familiar enough with my appearance to
make any question when you with your clean-shaven
face came down on the morning after
my kidnaping and told the people at the
hotel that you were William Leadbury and had
shaved your moustache off over night. Whatever
difference they might have thought they
saw, was easily explained by the change occasioned
by the removal of your moustache.
Had your minions been as intelligent as they
were villainous, your scheme would have succeeded.
It was necessary to drug me anew on
the voyage, as the effects were wearing off.
They did not drug me enough, and when they
scuttled the old hulk and rowed ashore to flee
with their blood money, the cold water rising
in the sinking vessel awoke me, brought me
to full consciousness, and I easily got ashore
on some planking. I saw at once what the
plot had been. I realized I had a desperate
man to deal with. I had no money and it
would take me some time to get from northern
Wisconsin to Chicago. In the meantime,
every one would have come to believe you
William Leadbury, and who would believe me,
the ragged tramp, suddenly appearing from
nowhere and claiming to be the heir? You
would be coached by your lawyers, have time
to concoct lies, to manufacture conditions that
would color your claim, and in court you
would be self-possessed and on your guard.
Therefore I felt that I must await the psychological
moment when you could be taken off
your guard, when, surprised and in confusion,
you would betray yourself. I secured employment
as your butler, the psychological moment
came, and you stand, self-convicted, thief and
would-be murderer.”
“Send for the police at once,” said Judge
Bording.
“No,” said the late captain in the Foreign
Legion. “He may reform. I wish him to
have another chance. That he may have the
wherewithal to earn a livelihood, I present him
with the contents of this room, the means of
his undoing. In my uncle’s library are many
excellent theological works of a controversial
nature, and these, too, I present to him, as a
means of turning his thoughts toward better
things. I will not send for the police. I will
send for a dray. Judge Bording, by the recent
concatenation of events, I am become the host.
Let us leave Walkley here to pack his effects,
and return to the drawing-room.”
Clarissa preceded the others as they slowly
descended, with all her ears open to hear whatsoever
William Leadbury might say to Eulalia
Bording, and it was so that she noted a strange
little creaking above them, and looking up,
saw poised upon the edge of the balustrade in
the upper hall, impending over the head of
William Leadbury and ready to fall, the great
barber chair! With a swift leap, she pushed
him to the wall, causing him to just escape the
chair as it fell with a dreadful crash. But she
herself was not so fortunate, for with a wicked
tunk the cushioned back of the chair struck
her a glancing blow that felled her senseless
upon the stairs.
Judge Bording flew after the dastardly barber,
who swifter still, was down the backstairs and
out of the house into the darkness before the
Judge could lay hands upon him.
The judge, his daughter, and William Leadbury,
bent over the unconscious form of the
page.
“He saved your life,” said the judge. “The
wood and iron part would have hit your
head.”
“His breath is knocked out of him,” said
Miss Bording.
“He saved my life. I cannot understand
his strange devotion. I cannot understand it,”
said William Leadbury, the while opening the
page’s vest, tearing away his collar, and straining
at his shirt, that the stunned lungs might
have play and get to work again. The stiffly
starched shirt resisted his efforts and he
reached in under it to detach the fastenings of
the studs that held the bosom together. Back
came his hand as if it had encountered a serpent
beneath that shirt front.
“I begin to understand,” he exclaimed, and
bending an enigmatical look upon the startled
judge and his daughter, he picked the page up
in his arms with the utmost tenderness, and
bore him away.
The pains in Clarissa’s body had left her.
Indeed, they had all but gone when on Sunday
morning, after a night which had been one of
formless dreams where she had not known
whether she slept or waked or where she was,
a frowsy maid had called her from the bed
where she lay beneath a blanket, fully dressed,
and told her it was time she was getting back
to the city. Not a sign of William Leadbury as
she passed out of the great silent house. Not
a word from him, no inquiry for the welfare of
the little page who had come so nigh dying for
him. Clarissa was too proud to do or say anything
to let the frowsy maid guess that she
wondered at this or cared aught for the ungrateful
captain. She steeled her heart against
him, but though as the days went by she succeeded
in ceasing to care for one who was so
unworthy of her regard, she could not stifle the
poignant regret that he was thus unworthy.
It had come Friday evening, almost closing
time in the great store. Slowly and heavily,
Clarissa was setting her counter in order, preparing
to go to her lodgings and nurse her sick
heart until slumber should give respite from
her pain, when there came a messenger from
the dress-making department asking her presence
there.
“We’ve just got an order for a ready-made
ball-dress for a lady that is unexpectedly going
to the Charity Ball to-night,” said Mrs. McGuffin,
head of the department. “The message
says the lady is just your height and build
and color—she noticed you sometime, it
seems—and that we are to fit one of the
dresses to you, making such alterations as
would make it fit you, choosing one suitable to
your complexion. When it’s done, to save
time, you are to go right to the person who
ordered it, without stopping to change your
clothes. You can do that there. It will make
her late to the ball, at best. A carriage and a
person to conduct you will be waiting.”
It was a magnificent dress that was gradually
built upon the figure of Clarissa, and when at
last it was completed and she stood before the
great pier glass flushed with the radiance of a
pleasure she could not but feel despite her
late sorrow and the fact she was but the lay
figure for a more fortunate woman, one would
have to search far to find a more beautiful
creature.
“Whyee!” exclaimed Mrs. McGuffin. “Why,
I had no idea you had such a figure. Why, I
must have you in my department to show off
dresses on. You will work at the cutlery counter
not a day after to-morrow. But there, I am
keeping you. The ball must almost have
begun. Here’s a bag with your things in it.
I was going to say, ‘your other things.’” And
throwing a splendid cloak about the lovely
shoulders of Miss Clarissa, Mrs. McGuffin
turned her over to the messenger.
There was already somebody in the carriage
into which Clarissa stepped, but as the curtain
was drawn across the opposite window, she
was unable to even conjecture the sex of the
individual who was to be her conductor to her
destination, and steeped in dreams which from
pleasant ones quickly passed to bitter, she
speedily forgot all about the person at her
side. But presently she perceived their carriage
had come into the midst of a squadron of
other carriages charging down upon a brilliantly
lighted entrance where men and women,
brave in evening dress, were moving in.
“Why, we are going to the ball-room itself,”
and as she said this and realized that here on
the very threshold of the entrancing gayeties
she was to put off her fine plumage and see the
other woman pass out of the dressing-room
into the delights beyond, while she crept away
in her own simple garb amid the questioning,
amused, and contemptuous stares of the
haughty dames who had witnessed the exchange,
she broke into a piteous sob.
“Why, of course to the ball-room, my
darling,” breathed a voice, which low though
it was, thrilled her more than the voice of an
archangel, and she felt herself strained to a
man’s heart and her bare shoulders, which
peeped from the cloak at the thrust of a pair
of strong arms beneath it, came in contact with
the cool, smooth surface of the bosom of a
dress shirt. “Don’t you remember that I engaged
the second two-step at the Charity
Ball?”
Clarissa, almost swooning with joy as she
reclined palpitating upon the manly breast of
Captain William Leadbury, said never a word,
for the power of speech was not in her; the
power of song, of uttering peans of joy, perhaps,
but not the power of speech.
“Have I assumed too much,” said Leadbury,
gravely, relaxing somewhat the tightness of his
embrace. “Have I, arguing from the fact that
you both served me in the crisis of my career
and saved my life, assumed too much in
believing you love me? If so, I beg your pardon
for arranging this surprise. I will release
you. I——”
“Oh, no,” crooned Clarissa, nestling against
him with all the quivering protest of a child
about to be taken from its mother. “You read
my actions rightly. Oh, how I have suffered
this week. No word from you. I could not
understand it. Of course you could not know
I was a girl. But I thought you ought to be
grateful, even to a boy.”
“But I did know you were a girl. When
you fell, I began to open the clothes about
your chest. When I discovered your sex, I
carried you upstairs, placed you on a bed,
threw a blanket over you and was about to call
Miss Bording to take charge of you——”
“I’m glad you didn’t. I don’t like Miss
Bording,” said Clarissa.
“I had left to call her, when that poltroon of
an Anderson Walkley, who had stolen back
into the house after running from it, crept
behind me and struck me back of the ear with
a shaving mug. I dropped unconscious. In
the resulting confusion, your very existence
was as forgotten as your whereabouts was unknown.
You lay there as I had left you until
a maid found you in the morning and packed
you off. It was not until Wednesday that I
was able to be out. I knew you came from
this store, and mousing about in there, I had
no trouble in identifying the nice young page
with the beautiful young woman at the cutlery
counter. I could scarce wait two days, but as
three had already passed, I planned this surprise,
remembering our banter when I talked
with you, disguised as a man of fifty, and now
you are to go in with me as my affianced bride.
We’d better hurry, for the driver must be wondering
what we are thinking about.”
It was worthy of remark that even the ladies
passed many compliments upon the beauty
and grace of Miss Clarissa Dawson, the young
woman who came to the ball with William
Leadbury, former captain in the army of the
Republique Française, heir to the millions of
the late James Leadbury, and a number of
persons esteemed judges of all that pertains to
the Terpsichorean art, declared that when she
appeared upon the floor for the first time,
which was to dance the second two-step with
the gallant soldier, that such was the surpassing
grace with which she revolved over the
floor that one might well say she seemed to be
dancing upon air.
