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<h2> II </h2>
<h3> THE UNKNOWN </h3>
<p>He was roused by the bluff greeting of an acquaintance not dissimilar to
himself in age, manner, and apparel.</p>
<p>"H'lo, Silly Bill!" said this person, William Sylvanus Baxter. "What's the
news?"</p>
<p>William showed no enthusiasm; on the contrary, a frown of annoyance
appeared upon his brow. The nickname "Silly Bill"—long ago
compounded by merry child-comrades from "William" and "Sylvanus"—was
not to his taste, especially in public, where he preferred to be addressed
simply and manfully as "Baxter." Any direct expression of resentment,
however, was difficult, since it was plain that Johnnie Watson intended no
offense whatever and but spoke out of custom.</p>
<p>"Don't know any," William replied, coldly.</p>
<p>"Dull times, ain't it?" said Mr. Watson, a little depressed by his
friend's manner. "I heard May Parcher was comin' back to town yesterday,
though."</p>
<p>"Well, let her!" returned William, still severe.</p>
<p>"They said she was goin' to bring a girl to visit her," Johnnie began in a
confidential tone. "They said she was a reg'lar ringdinger and—"</p>
<p>"Well, what if she is?" the discouraging Mr. Baxter interrupted. "Makes
little difference to ME, I guess!"</p>
<p>"Oh no, it don't. YOU don't take any interest in girls! OH no!"</p>
<p>"No, I do not!" was the emphatic and heartless retort. "I never saw one in
my life I'd care whether she lived or died!"</p>
<p>"Honest?" asked Johnnie, struck by the conviction with which this speech
was uttered. "Honest, is that so?"</p>
<p>"Yes, 'honest'!" William replied, sharply. "They could ALL die, <i>I</i>
wouldn't notice!"</p>
<p>Johnnie Watson was profoundly impressed. "Why, <i>I</i> didn't know you
felt that way about 'em, Silly Bill. I always thought you were kind of—"</p>
<p>"Well, I do feel that way about 'em!" said William Sylvanus Baxter, and,
outraged by the repetition of the offensive nickname, he began to move
away. "You can tell 'em so for me, if you want to!" he added over his
shoulder. And he walked haughtily up the street, leaving Mr. Watson to
ponder upon this case of misogyny, never until that moment suspected.</p>
<p>It was beyond the power of his mind to grasp the fact that William
Sylvanus Baxter's cruel words about "girls" had been uttered because
William was annoyed at being called "Silly Bill" in a public place, and
had not known how to object otherwise than by showing contempt for any
topic of conversation proposed by the offender. This latter, being of a
disposition to accept statements as facts, was warmly interested, instead
of being hurt, and decided that here was something worth talking about,
especially with representatives of the class so sweepingly excluded from
the sympathies of Silly Bill.</p>
<p>William, meanwhile, made his way toward the "residence section" of the
town, and presently—with the passage of time found himself eased of
his annoyance. He walked in his own manner, using his shoulders to
emphasize an effect of carelessness which he wished to produce upon
observers. For his consciousness of observers was abnormal, since he had
it whether any one was looking at him or not, and it reached a crucial
stage whenever he perceived persons of his own age, but of opposite sex,
approaching.</p>
<p>A person of this description was encountered upon the sidewalk within a
hundred yards of his own home, and William Sylvanus Baxter saw her while
yet she was afar off. The quiet and shady thoroughfare was empty of all
human life, at the time, save for those two; and she was upon the same
side of the street that he was; thus it became inevitable that they should
meet, face to face, for the first time in their lives. He had perceived,
even in the distance, that she was unknown to him, a stranger, because he
knew all the girls in this part of the town who dressed as famously in the
mode as that! And then, as the distance between them lessened, he saw that
she was ravishingly pretty; far, far prettier, indeed, than any girl he
knew. At least it seemed so, for it is, unfortunately, much easier for
strangers to be beautiful. Aside from this advantage of mystery, the
approaching vision was piquant and graceful enough to have reminded a much
older boy of a spotless white kitten, for, in spite of a charmingly
managed demureness, there was precisely that kind of playfulness somewhere
expressed about her. Just now it was most definite in the look she bent
upon the light and fluffy burden which she carried nestled in the inner
curve of her right arm: a tiny dog with hair like cotton and a pink ribbon
round his neck—an animal sated with indulgence and idiotically
unaware of his privilege. He was half asleep!</p>
<p>William did not see the dog, or it is the plain, anatomical truth that
when he saw how pretty the girl was, his heart—his physical heart—began
to do things the like of which, experienced by an elderly person, would
have brought the doctor in haste. In addition, his complexion altered—he
broke out in fiery patches. He suffered from breathlessness and from
pressure on the diaphragm.</p>
<p>Afterward, he could not have named the color of the little parasol she
carried in her left hand, and yet, as it drew nearer and nearer, a rosy
haze suffused the neighborhood, and the whole world began to turn an
exquisite pink. Beneath this gentle glow, with eyes downcast in thought,
she apparently took no note of William, even when she and William had come
within a few yards of each other. Yet he knew that she would look up and
that their eyes must meet—a thing for which he endeavored to prepare
himself by a strange weaving motion of his neck against the friction of
his collar—for thus, instinctively, he strove to obtain greater ease
and some decent appearance of manly indifference. He felt that his efforts
were a failure; that his agitation was ruinous and must be perceptible at
a distance of miles, not feet. And then, in the instant of panic that
befell, when her dark-lashed eyelids slowly lifted, he had a flash of
inspiration.</p>
<p>He opened his mouth somewhat, and as her eyes met his, full and
startlingly, he placed three fingers across the orifice, and also offered
a slight vocal proof that she had surprised him in the midst of a yawn.</p>
<p>"Oh, hum!" he said.</p>
<p>For the fraction of a second, the deep blue spark in her eyes glowed
brighter—gentle arrows of turquoise shot him through and through—and
then her glance withdrew from the ineffable collision. Her small,
white-shod feet continued to bear her onward, away from him, while his own
dimmed shoes peregrinated in the opposite direction—William
necessarily, yet with excruciating reluctance, accompanying them. But just
at the moment when he and the lovely creature were side by side, and her
head turned from him, she spoke that is, she murmured, but he caught the
words.</p>
<p>"You Flopit, wake up!" she said, in the tone of a mother talking
baby-talk. "SO indifferink!"</p>
<p>William's feet and his breath halted spasmodically. For an instant he
thought she had spoken to him, and then for the first time he perceived
the fluffy head of the dog bobbing languidly over her arm, with the motion
of her walking, and he comprehended that Flopit, and not William Sylvanus
Baxter, was the gentleman addressed. But—but had she MEANT him?</p>
<p>His breath returning, though not yet operating in its usual manner, he
stood gazing after her, while the glamorous parasol passed down the shady
street, catching splashes of sunshine through the branches of the
maple-trees; and the cottony head of the tiny dog continued to be visible,
bobbing rhythmically over a filmy sleeve. Had she meant that William was
indifferent? Was it William that she really addressed?</p>
<p>He took two steps to follow her, but a suffocating shyness stopped him
abruptly and, in a horror lest she should glance round and detect him in
the act, he turned and strode fiercely to the gate of his own home before
he dared to look again. And when he did look, affecting great casualness
in the action, she was gone, evidently having turned the corner. Yet the
street did not seem quite empty; there was still something warm and
fragrant about it, and a rosy glamor lingered in the air. William rested
an elbow upon the gate-post, and with his chin reposing in his hand gazed
long in the direction in which the unknown had vanished. And his soul was
tremulous, for she had done her work but too well.</p>
<p>"'Indifferink'!" he murmured, thrilling at his own exceedingly indifferent
imitation of her voice. "Indifferink!" that was just what he would have
her think—that he was a cold, indifferent man. It was what he wished
all girls to think. And "sarcastic"! He had been envious one day when May
Parcher said that Joe Bullitt was "awfully sarcastic." William had spent
the ensuing hour in an object-lesson intended to make Miss Parcher see
that William Sylvanus Baxter was twice as sarcastic as Joe Bullitt ever
thought of being, but this great effort had been unsuccessful, because
William, failed to understand that Miss Parcher had only been sending a
sort of message to Mr. Bullitt. It was a device not unique among her sex;
her hope was that William would repeat her remark in such a manner that
Joe Bullitt would hear it and call to inquire what she meant.</p>
<p>"'SO indifferink'!" murmured William, leaning dreamily upon the gate-post.
"Indifferink!" He tried to get the exact cooing quality of the unknown's
voice. "Indifferink!" And, repeating the honeyed word, so entrancingly
distorted, he fell into a kind of stupor; vague, beautiful pictures rising
before him, the one least blurred being of himself, on horseback, sweeping
between Flopit and a racing automobile. And then, having restored the
little animal to its mistress, William sat carelessly in the saddle (he
had the Guardsman's seat) while the perfectly trained steed wheeled about,
forelegs in the air, preparing to go. "But shall I not see you again, to
thank you more properly?" she cried, pleading. "Some other day—perhaps,"
he answered.</p>
<p>And left her in a cloud of dust.</p>
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