<h1>Chapter III.</h1>
<p>“Dear Ronald,–You can’t imagine what
a funny place Boston is. I wish you were here, it
would be so nice to talk about them together–I mean
the people, of course, for they are much funnier than
the place they live in. But I think they are very
nice, too, particularly some of the men. I don’t
understand the women in the least–they go in awfully
for sets, if you understand that kind of thing–and
art, too, and literature. The other day at a lunch
party–that is what they call it here–they sat and
talked about pictures for ever so long. I wonder what
you would have said if you had been there! but then
there were no men, and so you couldn’t have been,
could you? And the sets, too. The girls who come out
together, all in a batch, like a hive of bees swarming,
spend the rest of their lives together; and they have
what they call sewing circles, that go on all their
lives. There are sewing circles of old frumps sixty
years old who have never been parted since they all
went to their first ball together. They sew for the
poor; they don’t sew so very much, you know;
but then they have a tremendous lunch afterwards.
I sewed for the poor the other day, because one of
the sewing circles asked me to their meeting. I sewed
two buttons on to the end of something, and then I
ate six kinds of salad, and went to drive with Mr.
Vancouver. I dare say it does a lot of good in its
way, but I think the poor must be awfully good-natured.</p>
<p>“It is quite too funny about driving, too. You
may go out with a man in a sleigh, but you couldn’t
possibly go with him on wheels–on the same road,
at the same hour, same man, same everything, except
the wheels. You agree to go out next week in a sleigh
with Mr. Vancouver; but when the day comes, if it
has happened to thaw and there is no snow, and he comes
in a buggy, you couldn’t possibly go with him,
because it would be quite too improper. But I mean
to, some day, just to see what they will say. I wish
you would come! We would do a lot of driving together,
and by and by, in the spring, they say one can ride
here, but only along the roads, for everything else
is so thick with steam-engines and Irishmen that one
could not possibly go across country.</p>
<p>“But although they are so funny, they are really
very nice, and awfully clever. I don’t think
there are nearly so many clever men anywhere else in
society, when once you have got over their Americanisms.
Most of them would be in Parliament at home; but nobody
goes into Parliament here, except Mr. Harrington–that
is, into Congress, which is the same thing, you know.
They say politics in America are not at all fit for
gentlemen, and they spend an hour or two every day
in abusing all the politicians, instead of turning
them out and managing things themselves. But Mr. Harrington
is going to be a senator as soon as he can, and he
is so clever that I am sure he will make a great reform.</p>
<p>“I don’t think of anything else to say
just now, but if I do I will write again–only it’s
unfeminine to write two letters running, so you must
answer at once. And if you should want to travel this
winter you can come here; they will treat you ever
so much better than you deserve. So good-by. Yours
ever sincerely,</p>
<p>“<i>Joe</i> <i>Thorn</i>.”</p>
<p>The precise nature of the friendship that existed
between Josephine Thorn and Ronald Surbiton could
not be accurately inferred from the above specimen
of correspondence; and indeed the letter served rather
to confuse than to enlighten the recipient as to the
nature of his relations with the writer. He was, of
course, very much in love with Joe Thorn; he knew it,
because he had always been in love with her since they
were children together, so there could be no possible
doubt in the matter. But whether she cared a jot for
him and his feelings he could not clearly make out,
from the style of the hurried, ungrammatical sentences,
crammed with abbreviations and unpermissible elisions.
True, she said three times that she hoped he would
come to America; but America was a long way off, and
she very likely reckoned on his laziness and dislike
to foreign traveling. It is so easy for a young woman
writing from Boston to say to a young man residing
in Scotland, “Do come over for a few days”–Surbiton
thought it would be a good joke to take her at her
word and go. The idea of seeing her again so much
sooner than he had expected was certainly uppermost
in his mind as he began to make his resolution; but
it was sustained and strengthened by a couple of allusions
Joe had made to men of her acquaintance in Boston,
not to say by the sweeping remark that there were
more clever men in Boston society than anywhere else,
which made his vanity smart rather unpleasantly. When
Josephine used to tell him, half in earnest, half
in jest, that he was “so dreadfully stupid,”
he did not feel much hurt; but it was different when
she took the trouble to write all the way from America
to tell him that the men there were much cleverer than
at home. He had a great mind to go and see for himself
whether it were true. Nevertheless, the hunting was
particularly good just at the time when he got the
letter, and being rather prudent of counsel, Ronald
determined to wait until a hard frost should spoil
his temper and give the necessary stimulus to his
activity, before he packed his boxes for a western
voyage.</p>
<p>As for Josephine, it was very natural that she should
feel a little homesick, and wish to have some one
of her own people with her. In spite of the favorable
views she expressed about America, Boston, and her
new acquaintances, her position was not without some
drawbacks in her own eyes. She felt herself out of
her natural element, and the very great admiration
she received in society, though pleasant enough in
itself, was not to her so entirely satisfactory as
it would have been to a woman older or younger than
she, or to a more thorough flirt. An older woman would
have enjoyed more keenly the flattery of it; a younger
girl would have found it more novel and fresh, and
the accomplished professional society flirt–there
is no other word to express her–would have rejoiced
exceedingly over a great holocaust of victims.</p>
<p>In writing to Surbiton and suggesting to him to come
to Boston, Joe had no intention of fanning his hopes
into flame. She never thought much about Ronald. She
had long been used to him, and regarded him in the
light of a marriage fixture, though she had never
exactly promised to marry him; she had been brought
up to suppose she would, and that was all. When or
where the marriage would actually take place was a
question she did not care to raise, and if ever Surbiton
raised it she repressed him ruthlessly. For the present
she would look about the world, seeing she had been
transported into a new part of it, and she found it
amusing. Only she would like to have a companion to
whom she could talk. Ronald would be so convenient,
and after all it was a great advantage to be able to
make use of the man to whom she was engaged. She never
had known any other girl who could do that, and she
rather prided herself on the fact that she was not
ridiculous, although she was in the most traditionally
absurd position, that of betrothal. She would like
to compare Ronald with the men she had met lately.</p>
<p>The desire for comparison had increased of late. A
fortnight had passed since she had first met John
Harrington, and she had made up her mind. He was handsome,
though his hair was red and he had no beard, and she
liked him; she liked him very much; it was quite different
from her liking for Ronald. She liked Ronald, she
said to herself that she loved him dearly, partly
because she expected to marry him, and partly because
he was so good and so much in love with herself. He
would take any amount of trouble for anything she
wanted. But John was different. She knew very well
that she was thinking much more of him than he of
her, if indeed he thought of her at all. But she was
a little ashamed of it, and in order to justify herself
in her own eyes she was cold and sarcastic in her manner
to him, so that people noticed it, and even John Harrington
himself, who never thought twice whether his acquaintances
liked him or disliked him, remarked one day to Mrs.
Wyndham that he feared he had offended Miss Thorn,
as she took such particular pains to treat him differently
from others. On the other hand Joe was always extremely
candid to Pocock Vancouver.</p>
<p>It was on a Monday that John made the aforesaid remark.
All Boston was at Mrs. Wyndham’s, excepting
all the other ladies who lived in Beacon Street, and
that is a very considerable portion of Boston, as every
schoolboy knows. John was standing near the tea-table
talking to Mrs. Sam, when Joe entered the room and
came up to the hostess, who welcomed her warmly. She
nodded coldly to John without shaking hands, and joined
a group of young girls near by.</p>
<p>“It is very strange,” said John to Mrs.
Wyndham. “I wonder whether I can have done anything
Miss Thorn resents. I am not sensitive, but it is
impossible to mistake people when they look at one
like that. She always does it just in that way.”</p>
<p>Mrs. Wyndham looked inquiringly at John for a moment,
and the quick smile of ready comprehension played
on her sensitive mouth.</p>
<p>“Are you really quite sure you have not offended
her?” she asked.</p>
<p>“Quite sure,” John answered, in a tone
of conviction. “Besides, I never offend any
one, certainly not ladies. I never did such a thing
in my whole life.”</p>
<p>“Not singly,” said Mrs. Wyndham, laughing.
“You offend people in large numbers when you
do it at all, especially newspaper people. Sam read
that ridiculous article in the paper to me last night.”</p>
<p>“Which paper?” asked John, smiling. “They
have most of them been at me this week.”</p>
<p>“<i>The</i> paper,” answered Mrs.
Sam, “the <i>horrid</i> paper. You do not
suppose I would mention such a publication in my house?”</p>
<p>“Oh, my old enemy,” laughed John. “I
do not mind that in the least. One might almost think
those articles were written by Miss Thorn.”</p>
<p>“Perhaps they are,” answered Mrs. Wyndham.
“Really,” she added, glancing at Josephine,
whom Pocock Vancouver had just detached from her group
of girls, “really you may not be so very, very
far wrong.” John’s glance followed the
direction of her eyes, and he saw Vancouver. He looked
steadily at the man’s delicate pale features
and intellectual head, and at the end of half a minute
he and Mrs. Wyndham looked at each other again. She
probably regretted the hint she had carelessly dropped,
but she met Harrington’s gaze frankly.</p>
<p>“I did not mean to say it,” she said,
for John looked so grave that she was frightened.
“It was only a guess.”</p>
<p>“But have you any reason to think it might be
the truth?” asked John.</p>
<p>“None whatever–really none, except that he
differs so much from you in every way, politically
speaking.”</p>
<p>She knew very well that Vancouver hated John, and
she had often thought it possible that the offensive
articles in question came from the pen of the former.
There was a tone of superior wit and a ring of truer
English in them than are generally met with in the
average office work of a daily newspaper.</p>
<p>“I do not believe Vancouver writes them,”
said John, slowly. “He is not exactly a friend,
but he is not an enemy either.”</p>
<p>Mrs. Wyndham, who knew better than that, held her
peace. She was not a mischief-maker, and moreover
she liked both the men too well to wish a quarrel
between them. She busied herself at the tea-table for
a moment, and John stood near her, watching the moving
crowd. Now and then his eyes rested on Josephine Thorn’s
graceful figure, and he noticed how her expressive
features lighted up in the conversation. John could
hear something of their conversation, which was somewhat
noisy. They were talking in that strain of objectless
question and answer which may be stupid to idiocy
or clever to the verge of wit, according to the talkers.
Joe called it “chaff.”</p>
<p>“I have learned America,” said Joe.</p>
<p>“Indeed!” said Vancouver. “You have
not been long about it; but then, you will say there
is not much to learn.”</p>
<p>“I never believe in places till I have lived
in them,” said Joe.</p>
<p>“Nor in people till you have seen them, I suppose,”
returned Vancouver. “But now that you have learned
America, of course you believe in us all without exception.
We are the greatest nation on earth–I suppose you
have heard that?”</p>
<p>“Yes; you told me so the other day; but it needs
all the faith I have in your judgment to believe it.
If any one else had said it, you know, I should have
thought there was some mistake.”</p>
<p>“Oh no; it is pretty true, taking it all round,”
returned Vancouver, with a smile. “But I am
tremendously flattered at the faith you put in my
sayings.”</p>
<p>“Oh, are you? That is odd, you know, because
if you are so much flattered at my believing you,
you would not be much disappointed if I doubted you.”</p>
<p>“I beg to differ. Excuse me”–</p>
<p>“Not at all,” answered Joe, laughing.
“Only we have old-fashioned prejudices at home.
We begin by expecting to be believed, and are sometimes
a good deal annoyed if any one says we are telling
fibs.”</p>
<p>“Of course, if you put it in that way,”
said Vancouver. “But I suppose it is not a very
bad fib to say one’s country is the greatest
on earth. I am sure you English say it quite as often
and as loudly as we do, and, you see, we cannot both
be right, possibly.”</p>
<p>“No, not exactly. But suppose two men, any two,
like you and Mr. Harrington for instance, each made
a point of telling every one you met that you were
the greatest man on earth.”</p>
<p>“It is conceivable that we might both be wrong,”
said Vancouver, laughing at the idea.</p>
<p>“But one of you might be right,” objected
Joe.</p>
<p>“No–that is not conceivable,” retorted
Vancouver.</p>
<p>“No? Let us ask Mr. Harrington. Mr. Harrington!”</p>
<p>Joe turned towards John and called him. He was only
a step from her, and joined the two instantly. He
looked from one to the other inquiringly.</p>
<p>“Here is a great question to be decided, Mr.
Harrington,” said Joe. “I was saying to
Mr. Vancouver that, supposing each of you asserted
that he was the greatest man on earth, it would–I
mean, how could the point be settled?” John
stared for a moment.</p>
<p>“If you insist upon raising such a very remarkable
point of precedence, Miss Thorn,” he answered
calmly, “I am sure Vancouver will agree with
me to leave the decision to you also.”</p>
<p>Joe looked slightly annoyed. She had brought the retort
on herself.</p>
<p>“Pardon me,” said Vancouver, quickly,
“I object to the contest. The match is not a
fair one. Mr. Harrington means to be the greatest man
on earth, or in the water under the earth, whereas
I have no such aspiration.”</p>
<p>Instead of being grateful to Vancouver for coming
to her rescue in the rather foolish position in which
she was placed, Joe felt unaccountably annoyed. She
was willing to make sure of John herself, if she could,
but she was not prepared to allow that privilege to
any one else. Accordingly she turned upon Vancouver
before John could answer. “The question began
in a foolish comparison, Mr. Vancouver,” she
said coldly. “I think you are inclined to make
it personal?”</p>
<p>“I believe it became personal from the moment
you hit upon Mr. Harrington and me as illustrations
of what you were saying, Miss Thorn,” retorted
Vancouver, very blandly, but with a disagreeable look
in his eyes. He was angry at Joe’s rebuke.</p>
<p>John stood calmly by without exhibiting the least
shade of annoyance. The chaff of a mere girl, and
the little satirical thrusts of a lady’s man
like Vancouver, did not seem to him of much importance.
Joe, however, did not vouchsafe any answer to Vancouver’s
last remark, and it devolved on John to say something
to relieve the awkwardness of the situation.</p>
<p>“Have you become reconciled to our methods of
amusement, Miss Thorn?” he asked, “or
shall we devise something different from the everlasting
sleighing and five o’clock tea, and dinner parties
and ’dancing classes’?”</p>
<p>“Oh, do not remind me of all that,” said
Joe. “I did not mean half of it, you know.”
She turned to John, and Vancouver moved away in pursuit
of Sybil Brandon, who had just entered the room.</p>
<p>“Tell me,” said Joe, when Pocock was gone,
“do you like Mr. Vancouver? You are great friends,
are you not?” John looked at her inquiringly.</p>
<p>“I should not say we were very great friends,”
he answered, “because we are not intimate; but
we have always been on excellent terms, as far as I
know. Vancouver is a very clever fellow.”</p>
<p>“Yes,” said Joe, thoughtfully, “I
fancy he is. You do not mind my having asked, do you?”</p>
<p>“Not in the least,” said John, quietly.
His face had grown very grave again, and he seemed
suddenly absorbed by some thought. “Let us sit
down,” he said presently, and the two installed
themselves on a divan in a corner.</p>
<p>“You are not in the least inquisitive,”
remarked Joe, as soon as they were settled.</p>
<p>“What makes you say that?” asked John.</p>
<p>“It was such a silly thing, you know, and you
never asked what it was all about.”</p>
<p>“When you called me? No–I did not hear what
led up to it, and I supposed from what you said afterwards
that I understood.”</p>
<p>“Did you? What did you think?” asked Joe.</p>
<p>“I thought from the question about Vancouver
that you wanted to put us into an awkward position
in order to find out whether we were friends.”</p>
<p>“No,” said Joe, with a little laugh, “I
am not so clever as that. It was pure silliness–chaff,
you know–that sort of thing.”</p>
<p>“Oh,” ejaculated John, still quite unmoved,
“then it was not of any importance.”</p>
<p>“Very silly things sometimes turn out to be
very important. Saul, you know–was not it he?–was
looking for asses and he found a kingdom.”</p>
<p>John laughed suddenly. “And so it is clear which
part Vancouver and I played in the business,”
he said. “But where is the kingdom?”</p>
<p>“I did not mean that,” said Joe, seriously.
“I am not making fun any more. I have not been
successful in my chaff to-day. I should think that
in your career it would be very important for you
to know who are your friends. Is it not?”</p>
<p>“Certainly,” said John, looking at her
curiously. “It is very important; but I think
political life is generally much simpler than people
suppose. It is rather like fighting. The man who hits
you is your enemy. The man who does not is practically
your friend. Do you mean in regard to Vancouver?”</p>
<p>“Yes.”</p>
<p>“Vancouver never hit me, that I can swear,”
said John, “and I am very sure I never hit him.”</p>
<p>“I dare say I am mistaken,” said Joe.
“You ought to know best. Let us leave him alone.”</p>
<p>“With all my heart,” answered John.</p>
<p>“Tell me what you have been doing, Mr. Harrington,”
said Joe, after a moment’s pause; “all
the papers are full of you.”</p>
<p>“Yes, I have been rather in the passive mood
during the last week. I have been standing up to be
shot at.”</p>
<p>“Without shooting back? What are they so angry
about?”</p>
<p>“The truth,” said John, calmly. “They
do not like to hear it.”</p>
<p>“What is truth–in this instance?”</p>
<p>“Apparently something so unpleasant that the
mere mention of it has roused the bile of every penny-a-liner
in the Republican press. I undertook to demonstrate
that one of the fifteen millions of the ’ablest
men in the country,’ whom you are always hearing
about, is a swindler. He is, but he does not like
to be told so.”</p>
<p>“I suppose not,” said Joe. “I wonder
if any one likes unpleasant truths. But what do you
mean to do now? Are you going to fight it out? I hope
so!”</p>
<p>“Of course, in good time. One can hardly retire
from such a position as mine; they would make an end
of me in a week and quarrel over my bones. But the
real fight will be fought by and by, when the elections
come on.”</p>
<p>“How exciting it must all be,” said Joe.
“I wish I were a man!”</p>
<p>“And an American?” asked John, smiling.
“How are the mighty fallen! You were laughing
at us and our politics the day before yesterday, and
now you are wishing you were one of us yourself. I
think you must be naturally fond of fighting”–</p>
<p>“Fond of a row?” suggested Miss Thorn,
with a laugh. “Yes, I fancy I am. I am fond
of all active things. Are not you?”</p>
<p>“I do not know,” said John. “I never
thought much about it. But I suppose I should be called
rather an active person.”</p>
<p>“Is not she beautiful?” ejaculated Miss
Thorn, looking across the room at Sybil Brandon, whose
fair head was just visible between two groups of people.</p>
<p>“Who?” asked John, who was looking at
his companion.</p>
<p>“Miss Brandon,” said Joe. “Look
at her, over there. I think she is the most beautiful
thing I ever saw.”</p>
<p>“Yes,” said John, “she is very beautiful.”</p>
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