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<h2> XIII </h2>
<h3> AT HOME TO HIS FRIENDS </h3>
<p>After ablutions, he found his wet hair plastic, and easily obtained the
long, even sweep backward from the brow, lacking which no male person,
unless bald, fulfilled his definition of a man of the world. But there
ensued a period of vehemence and activity caused by a bent collar-button,
which went on strike with a desperation that was downright savage. The day
was warm and William was warmer; moisture bedewed him afresh. Belated
victory no sooner arrived than he perceived a fatal dimpling of the new
collar, and was forced to begin the operation of exchanging it for a
successor. Another exchange, however, he unfortunately forgot to make: the
handkerchief with which he had wiped the wall remained in his pocket.</p>
<p>Voices from below, making polite laughter, warned him that already some of
the bidden party had arrived, and, as he completed the fastening of his
third consecutive collar, an ecstasy of sound reached him through the open
window—and then, Oh then! his breath behaved in an abnormal manner
and he began to tremble. It was the voice of Miss Pratt, no less!</p>
<p>He stopped for one heart-struck look from his casement. All in fluffy
white and heliotrope she was—a blonde rapture floating over the
sidewalk toward William's front gate. Her little white cottony dog, with a
heliotrope ribbon round his neck, bobbed his head over her cuddling arm; a
heliotrope parasol shielded her infinitesimally from the amorous sun. Poor
William!</p>
<p>Two youths entirely in William's condition of heart accompanied the
glamorous girl and hung upon her rose-leaf lips, while Miss Parcher
appeared dimly upon the outskirts of the group, the well-known penalty for
hostesses who entertain such radiance. Probably it serves them right.</p>
<p>To William's reddening ear Miss Pratt's voice came clearly as the chiming
of tiny bells, for she spoke whimsically to her little dog in that
tinkling childlike fashion which was part of the spell she cast.</p>
<p>"Darlin' Flopit," she said, "wake up! Oo tummin' to tea-potty wiz all de
drowed-ups. P'eshus Flopit, wake up!"</p>
<p>Dizzy with enchantment, half suffocated, his heart melting within him,
William turned from the angelic sounds and fairy vision of the window. He
ran out of the room, and plunged down the front stairs. And the next
moment the crash of breaking glass and the loud thump-bump of a heavily
falling human body resounded through the house.</p>
<p>Mrs. Baxter, alarmed, quickly excused herself from the tea-table, round
which were gathered four or five young people, and hastened to the front
hall, followed by Jane. Through the open door were seen Miss Pratt, Miss
Parcher, Mr. Johnnie Watson and Mr. Joe Bullitt coming leisurely up the
sunny front walk, laughing and unaware of the catastrophe which had just
occurred within the shadows of the portal. And at a little distance from
the foot of the stairs William was seated upon the prostrate "Battle of
Gettysburg."</p>
<p>"It slid," he said, hoarsely. "I carried it upstairs with me"—he
believed this—"and somebody brought it down and left it lying flat
on the floor by the bottom step on purpose to trip me! I stepped on it and
it slid." He was in a state of shock: it seemed important to impress upon
his mother the fact that the picture had not remained firmly in place when
he stepped upon it. "It SLID, I tell you!"</p>
<p>"Get up, Willie!" she urged, under her breath, and as he summoned enough
presence of mind to obey, she beheld ruins other than the wrecked
engraving. She stifled a cry. "WILLIE! Did the glass cut you?"</p>
<p>He felt himself. "No'm."</p>
<p>"It did your trousers! You'll have to change them. Hurry!"</p>
<p>Some of William's normal faculties were restored to him by one hasty
glance at the back of his left leg, which had a dismantled appearance. A
long blue strip of cloth hung there, with white showing underneath.</p>
<p>"HURRY!" said Mrs. Baxter. And hastily gathering some fragments of glass,
she dropped them upon the engraving, pushed it out of the way, and went
forward to greet Miss Pratt and her attendants.</p>
<p>As for William, he did not even pause to close his mouth, but fled with it
open. Upward he sped, unseen, and came to a breathless halt upon the
landing at the top of the stairs.</p>
<p>As it were in a dream he heard his mother's hospitable greetings at the
door, and then the little party lingered in the hall, detained by Miss
Pratt's discovery of Jane.</p>
<p>"Oh, tweetums tootums ickle dirl!" he heard the ravishing voice exclaim.
"Oh, tootums ickle blue sash!"</p>
<p>"It cost a dollar and eighty-nine cents," said Jane. "Willie sat on the
cakes."</p>
<p>"Oh no, he didn't," Mrs. Baxter laughed. "He didn't QUITE!"</p>
<p>"He had to go up-stairs," said Jane. And as the stricken listener above
smote his forehead, she added placidly, "He tore a hole in his clo'es."</p>
<p>She seemed about to furnish details, her mood being communicative, but
Mrs. Baxter led the way into the "living-room"; the hall was vacated, and
only the murmur of voices and laughter reached William. What descriptive
information Jane may have added was spared his hearing, which was a mercy.</p>
<p>And yet it may be that he could not have felt worse than he did; for there
IS nothing worse than to be seventeen and to hear one of the Noblest girls
in the world told by a little child that you sat on the cakes and tore a
hole in your clo'es.</p>
<p>William leaned upon the banister railing and thought thoughts about Jane.
For several long, seething moments he thought of her exclusively. Then,
spurred by the loud laughter of rivals and the agony of knowing that even
in his own house they were monopolizing the attention of one of the
Noblest, he hastened into his own, room and took account of his reverses.</p>
<p>Standing with his back to the mirror, he obtained over his shoulder a view
of his trousers which caused him to break out in a fresh perspiration.
Again he wiped his forehead with the handkerchief, and the result was
instantly visible in the mirror.</p>
<p>The air thickened with sounds of frenzy, followed by a torrential roar and
great sputterings in a bath-room, which tumult subsiding, William returned
at a tragic gallop to his room and, having removed his trousers, began a
feverish examination of the garments hanging in a clothes-closet. There
were two pairs of flannel trousers which would probably again be white and
possible, when cleaned and pressed, but a glance showed that until then
they were not to be considered as even the last resort of desperation.
Beside them hung his "last year's summer suit" of light gray.</p>
<p>Feverishly he brought it forth, threw off his coat, and then—deflected
by another glance at the mirror—began to change his collar again.
This was obviously necessary, and to quicken the process he decided to
straighten the bent collar-button. Using a shoe-horn as a lever, he
succeeded in bringing the little cap or head of the button into its proper
plane, but, unfortunately, his final effort dislodged the cap from the rod
between it and the base, and it flew off malignantly into space. Here was
a calamity; few things are more useless than a decapitated collar-button,
and William had no other. He had made sure that it was his last before he
put it on, that day; also he had ascertained that there was none in, on,
or about his father's dressing-table. Finally, in the possession of
neither William nor his father was there a shirt with an indigenous
collar.</p>
<p>For decades, collar-buttons have been on the hand-me-down shelves of
humor; it is a mistake in the catalogue. They belong to pathos. They have
done harm in the world, and there have been collar-buttons that failed
when the destinies of families hung upon them. There have been
collar-buttons that thwarted proper matings. There have been
collar-buttons that bore last hopes, and, falling to the floor, NEVER were
found! William's broken collar-button was really the only collar-button in
the house, except such as were engaged in serving his male guests below.</p>
<p>At first he did not realize the extent of his misfortune. How could he?
Fate is always expected to deal its great blows in the grand manner. But
our expectations are fustian spangled with pinchbeck; we look for tragedy
to be theatrical. Meanwhile, every day before our eyes, fate works on,
employing for its instruments the infinitesimal, the ignoble and the petty—in
a word, collar-buttons.</p>
<p>Of course William searched his dressing-table and his father's, although
he had been thoroughly over both once before that day. Next he went
through most of his mother's and Jane's accessories to the toilette;
through trinket-boxes, glove-boxes, hairpin-boxes, handkerchief-cases—even
through sewing-baskets. Utterly he convinced himself that ladies not only
use no collar-buttons, but also never pick them up and put them away among
their own belongings. How much time he consumed in this search is
difficult to reckon;—it is almost impossible to believe that there
is absolutely no collar-button in a house.</p>
<p>And what William's state of mind had become is matter for exorbitant
conjecture. Jane, arriving at his locked door upon an errand, was bidden
by a thick, unnatural voice to depart.</p>
<p>"Mamma says, 'What in mercy's name is the matter?'" Jane called. "She
whispered to me, 'Go an' see what in mercy's name is the matter with
Willie; an' if the glass cut him, after all; an' why don't he come down';
an' why don't you, Willie? We're all havin' the nicest time!"</p>
<p>"You g'way!" said the strange voice within the room. "G'way!"</p>
<p>"Well, did the glass cut you?"</p>
<p>"No! Keep quiet! G'way!"</p>
<p>"Well, are you EVER comin' down to your party?"</p>
<p>"Yes, I am! G'way!"</p>
<p>Jane obeyed, and William somehow completed the task upon which he was
engaged. Genius had burst forth from his despair; necessity had become a
mother again, and William's collar was in place. It was tied there. Under
his necktie was a piece of string.</p>
<p>He had lost count of time, but he was frantically aware of its passage;
agony was in the thought of so many rich moments frittered away;
up-stairs, while Joe Bullitt and Johnnie Watson made hay below. And there
was another spur to haste in his fear that the behavior of Mrs. Baxter
might not be all that the guest of honor would naturally expect of
William's mother. As for Jane, his mind filled with dread; shivers passed
over him at intervals.</p>
<p>It was a dismal thing to appear at a "party" (and that his own) in "last
summer's suit," but when he had hastily put it on and faced the mirror, he
felt a little better—for three or four seconds. Then he turned to
see how the back of it looked.</p>
<p>And collapsed in a chair, moaning.</p>
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