The Girl in his House by Harold MacGrath (story books for 5 year olds .TXT) đ
- Author: Harold MacGrath
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âI didnât,â said Mrs. Burlingham, who, like all happily wedded women, believed in clairvoyance. âWhat brought you back?â âconfident that she knew.
âHowâs the baby?â countered Armitage.
âBaby? Why, the baby is twelve, and doing his bit at a military school. Some boy, Jim. If you turn out to be half as fine a man as he isââ Burlingham slapped his boyhood friend on the shoulder. âBut what brought you back?â
âFate,â said Armitage, soberly. âBut I thought it was this.â He took out the clipping and handed it to Betty.
Now that he was safely at anchor in a most congenial harbor, he became aware of a strange, indescribable exhilaration. A superficial analysis convinced him that it was not due to the propinquity of these old friends of his; rather the cause lay over there in the dark, beyond the shadows. Over and above this, he was in a quandary. How much should he tell of this tomfool exploit of his? Just enough to whet their curiosity, or just nothing at all? Sooner or later, though. Bob, who was a persistent chap, would be asking about Durstonâs grille.
Would she notify the police? He wasnât sure. She seemed rather a resolute young woman. Heavens! she had been after him like a hawk after a hare! Pearl and pomegranate and Persian peach! Was he fickle? Was that it? No. A fickle man could not have remained loyal for six years to the memory of a jilt. He determined to ask some questions laterâcautious, roundabout questions. He was far off his course, with a paper compass and nothing to take the sun with. And still that tingle of exhilaration!
âAnd so that brought you back?â said Betty, returning the clipping.
âNo; I only thought it brought me back. I honestly believe that I never really loved Clare at all. Else, why should I be glad to be back, assured that I can meet her without wobbling at the knees?â Armitage rolled the clipping into a ball and tossed it into the fire.
âShe was here to tea this afternoon, Jim,â said Betty, softly.
âSheâs back in town, then, with her millions?â
âYes. Sheâs different, though. I really think she cared for you. From a lovely girl she has become a beautiful woman,â
âNothing doing, Betty. I shall never marry!â Armitage pulled out his pipe and filled it.
âOh, piffle!â exploded Burlingham. âYouâre only thirty-four. Mark me, old scout, after six yearsâ roaming around jungles and hobnobbing with âduskies,â youâll fall for the first âskirtâ that makes googoo eyes at you. On the other hand, much as I like Clare, Iâm glad you didnât hook up. Sheâs beautiful, but hard. And donât you fool yourself that you werenât in love with her. You were; but you got over it.â
âPiffle! A bit of slang sounds good.â
âIf human beings couldnât fall out of love as quickly and easily as they fall in, the murder editions of the evening papers would be on the streets before breakfastâ; and Burlingham got out his pipe also.
For a quarter of an hour the two men sat in silence, puffing and blowing rings and sleepily eying the fire. Betty watched them amusedly. Werenât they funny! They hadnât seen each other in six long years, and hadnât ever expected to see each other again; and here they were, smoking their dreadful pipes and saying never a word! Two women, nowâ
âSay, Jim, that pipe of yours is a bird.â
âCalabash I made myself.â
âWell, when you bury it invite me to the funeral.â
âIs it strong?â
âStrong? Wow! It would kill a bull elephant quicker than an express bullet. But finish her up and give us the dope about Durstonâs grille.â
Armitage leaned forward and knocked the âdottleâ from his pipe. âWhen I found that clipping I became full of flame. On the way down from Maingkwan to Mahdalay there was a torch in my heart. But, somehow, when I reached Naples I could feel the fire dying down. I hated myself, but I could not escape the feeling. When I stepped off the ship to-day I knew that I had done a sensible thing in surrendering to a mad, shameless impulse. I came very near throwing away my life for something that had ceased to exist or had never existed. Folks, Iâm absolutely cured.â
âGoing to quit wandering?â
âPerhaps. Great world over there; fascinating.â
âBut where will you put up here? Youâve sold the old house. Jim, you could have knocked me over with a feather when I heard the news last April. To sell the house wasnât so much, considering you never intended to return; but to sell it furnished, with all those treasures your mother and father had so much fun in collecting! I couldnât quite understand that.â Burlingham shook his head.
âNor I,â added his wife.
Armitage, despite the fact that the room was warm, sensed something like a cold finger running up and down his spine. âI suppose it did seem callous to you two. But, honestly, I never expected to come back again. How much does rumor say I got for it?â He dared not look at them.
âEighty thousand.â
âThatâs a tidy sum. I say, what sort of people are they?â
âWeâve met only the daughter,â said Betty, âAnd, Jimmie Armitage, sheâs the loveliest creature I ever saw. Odd, unusual; in all my life Iâve never met any woman quite like her. She has the queerest ideas. The whole world is nothing except a fairy-story to her. I loved her the moment I saw her. Have you ever run across or heard of Hubert Athelstone, explorer and archeologist?â
âAthelstone? No. But that doesnât signify anything. Those chaps are a queer breed. They are known only among themselves. Iâve run into a few of them. They eat hieroglyphics, walk in a maze of them, sleep on them, and die under them. Almost always they are unattached, homeless beggars, or, if they have families, they forget all about them. No; I donât recollect the name. Odd one, though.â
âWe havenât met him yet. I believe heâs somewhere in Yucatan. She hasnât seen him in ages. I never heard of a daughter worshiping a father the way this girl does. It makes me feel little and small when she begins to talk about him. My general impression regarding archeologists hasnât been complimentary. Iâve always pictured them as withered, dried-up things with huge glasses. But Mr. Athelstone is one of the handsomest men Iâve ever seen! She has shown me his photograph. It must have been taken before she was born, when he was somewhere in the late twenties. Anyhow, no novelist ever conjured a hero to match up with her father, from her point of view.â
âBetty and I are crazy over her,â said Burlingham.
âIndeed we are. About twice a year she hears from her father, and the letters are beautiful. The man must be a poet. We are eager to meet him. She was educated in a convent out of Florence in Italy, and she is more Italian in temperament than English. At eighteen she was ordered by her father to leave. An accomplished woman companion was given her, and together they spent about four years wandering over the ends of the earth. She came back to America in April, after her father had made the purchase of your house. Think of it! Sheâs seen the Himalayas from Darjeeling! Motherless from childhood. Isnât it romantic? We see each other nearly every day. I canât keep away from her. Suppose I have her over to tea to-morrow? Sheâs been asking lots of questions about you.â
âIâll be delighted to see her.â
âAnd remember what I said about goo-goo eyes.â Burlingham laughed.
Armitage got up. He knew enough for his present needs; the picture puzzle was fairly complete, and such blocks as were missing were easily to be supplied by imagination. He leaned against the mantel and idly kicked an andironâa Florentine winemuller. âYucatan. And nobody knows when heâll be back?â
âShe hints of the possibility of his return during the holidays.â
Have they changed the interior any?â Only enough to show that a woman instead of a bachelor lives there now. Sheâs very much in love with everything. She had very little to bring into it. Do you know, Jim, youâve changed?â concluded Betty, appraisingly.
âOlder?â quizzically.
âNo. There are lines in your face I never saw before. You are positively handsome.â
âPiffle! Fatâs been burnt out, thatâs all.â
âNo, that isnât it. You lookâwell, I canât just explain it.â
âI can,â said her husband, owlishly. âJimâs been living on hard ground instead of sofa pillows. And now, old scout, suppose we take up the original subject, Durstonâs grille.â
âFirst, Iâm going to bind you two to absolute secrecy. Iâm not joking, folks; something mighty serious has happened to me, and Iâm in dead earnest. Promise?â
âWe promise,â said Burlingham, mystified.
âThe pipes of Fortune!â Armitage rumpled his hair. âDid you ever hear them? When she blows, we dance. And goodness knows, Iâve just begun the queerest dance a man ever shook a leg to. Iâve been actually dumped into the middle of one of those Arabian Nights things. I did not sell the old home, furnished or unfurnished, to anybody in this world!â
ONCE, when Armitage was a little boy, he had gone into the country with his father for trout. They had been overtaken by a violent thunderstorm, and a green vivid bolt had riven the sod within a few feet of them. For hours afterward that green streak had intervened whichever way he lookedâinterfered with his sense of time and place, thrown him into a land of livid unreality, and partially convinced his childâs mind that he had been transformed into a mechanical toy whose mechanism he could hear clicking inside.
On the morning following his amazing discovery that the house he was born in had been sold without his knowledgeâa morning crisp and full of dazzling sunshine âthe memory of that bolt came back to him, bringing with it suggestive comparisons. Minus the green streak, his sensations were almost identical. He could walk, think, act, but all with a consciousness that what he did was not real. Indeed, the actual thunderbolt was preferable to this figurative one. To go to bed fairly rich, and to wake up facing the possibilities of utter financial ruin!âhelpless to avert it, totally incompetent to build anew! But Armitage was a brave young man, a philosopher who had long since recognized the uselessness of whining. He had at least learned in his wanderings that opportunities were not resuscitable. Dazedly, but pluckily, he started forth to find out how this ruin had been accomplished, vaguely hoping that his good luck would pull him through, that the ruin was not utter.
At nine oâclock he entered the Concord apartments, an old-fashioned building situated in an old-fashioned part of the town, and asked to see the janitor, aware that janitors were easily approachable and generally inclined toward verbosity, which was an interesting sidelight on his knowledge of human beings.
âI wish to make some inquiries regarding Mr. BordmanâSamuel Bordmanâwho lived here for many years.â
âAinât living here now,â replied the janitor, briefly. âWhen he went away in April he didnât come back. His lease lapsed in August; so I had to rent his apartment.â
âHave you any idea of his whereabouts?â
âNope. Packed up and cleared out, âs all I know. Sayââwith sudden interestââbe you a detective?â
âNo. Iâm merely one of his clients. I wanted to find him if possible. Did he seem all right when he left?â
âWell, he kind oâ spruced up a bit toward the last and wore a pink in his buttonhole. But he wasnât any more luny than usual.â
âA trifle queer,
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