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<h2> XXIII </h2>
<h3> FATHERS FORGET </h3>
<p>To the competent twenties, hundreds of miles suggesting no
impossibilities, such departures may be rending, but not tragic.
Implacable, the difference to Seventeen! Miss Pratt was going home, and
Seventeen could not follow; it could only mourn upon the lonely shore,
tracing little angelic footprints left in the sand.</p>
<p>To Seventeen such a departure is final; it is a vanishing.</p>
<p>And now it seemed possible that William might be deprived even of the last
romantic consolations: of the "last waltz together," of the last, last
"listening to music in the moonlight together"; of all those sacred lasts
of the "last evening together."</p>
<p>He had pleaded strongly for a "dress-suit" as a fitting recognition of his
seventeenth birthday anniversary, but he had been denied by his father
with a jocularity more crushing than rigor. Since then—in particular
since the arrival of Miss Pratt—Mr. Baxter's temper had been growing
steadily more and more even. That is, as affected by William's social
activities, it was uniformly bad. Nevertheless, after heavy brooding,
William decided to make one final appeal before he resorted to measures
which the necessities of despair had caused him to contemplate.</p>
<p>He wished to give himself every chance for a good effect; therefore, he
did not act hastily, but went over what he intended to say, rehearsing it
with a few appropriate gestures, and even taking some pleasure in the
pathetic dignity of this performance, as revealed by occasional glances at
the mirror of his dressing-table. In spite of these little alleviations,
his trouble was great and all too real, for, unhappily, the previous
rehearsal of an emotional scene does not prove the emotion insincere.</p>
<p>Descending, he found his father and mother still sitting upon the front
porch. Then, standing before them, solemn-eyed, he uttered a preluding
cough, and began:</p>
<p>"Father," he said in a loud voice, "I have come to—"</p>
<p>"Dear me!" Mrs. Baxter exclaimed, not perceiving that she was interrupting
an intended oration. "Willie, you DO look pale! Sit down, poor child; you
oughtn't to walk so much in this heat."</p>
<p>"Father," William repeated. "Fath—"</p>
<p>"I suppose you got her safely home from church," Mr. Baxter said. "She
might have been carried off by footpads if you three boys hadn't been
along to take care of her!"</p>
<p>But William persisted heroically. "Father—" he said. "Father, I have
come to—"</p>
<p>"What on earth's the matter with you?" Mr. Baxter ceased to fan himself;
Mrs. Baxter stopped rocking, and both stared, for it had dawned upon them
that something unusual was beginning to take place.</p>
<p>William backed to the start and tried it again. "Father, I have come to—"
He paused and gulped, evidently expecting to be interrupted, but both of
his parents remained silent, regarding him with puzzled surprise.
"Father," he began once more, "I have come—I have come to—to
place before you something I think it's your duty as my father to
undertake, and I have thought over this step before laying it before you."</p>
<p>"My soul!" said Mr. Baxter, under his breath. "My soul!"</p>
<p>"At my age," William continued, swallowing, and fixing his earnest eyes
upon the roof of the porch, to avoid the disconcerting stare of his father—"at
my age there's some things that ought to be done and some things that
ought not to be done. If you asked me what I thought OUGHT to be done,
there is only one answer: When anybody as old as I am has to go out among
other young men his own age that already got one, like anyway half of them
HAVE, who I go with, and their fathers have already taken such a step,
because they felt it was the only right thing to do, because at my age and
the young men I go with's age, it IS the only right thing to do, because
that is something nobody could deny, at my age—" Here William drew a
long breath, and, deciding to abandon that sentence as irrevocably
tangled, began another: "I have thought over this step, because there
comes a time to every young man when they must lay a step before their
father before something happens that they would be sorry for. I have
thought this undertaking over, and I am certain it would be your honest
duty—"</p>
<p>"My soul!" gasped Mr. Baxter. "I thought I knew you pretty well, but you
talk like a stranger to ME! What is all this? What you WANT?"</p>
<p>"A dress-suit!" said William.</p>
<p>He had intended to say a great deal more before coming to the point, but,
although through nervousness he had lost some threads of his rehearsed
plea, it seemed to him that he was getting along well and putting his case
with some distinction and power. He was surprised and hurt, therefore, to
hear his father utter a wordless shout in a tone of wondering derision.</p>
<p>"I have more to say—" William began.</p>
<p>But Mr. Baxter cut him off. "A dress-suit!" he cried. "Well, I'm glad you
were talking about SOMETHING, because I honestly thought it must be too
much sun!"</p>
<p>At this, the troubled William brought his eyes down from the porch roof
and forgot his rehearsal. He lifted his hand appealingly. "Father," he
said, "I GOT to have one!"</p>
<p>"'Got to'!" Mr. Baxter laughed a laugh that chilled the supplicant through
and through. "At your age I thought I was lucky if I had ANY suit that was
fit to be seen in. You're too young, Willie. I don't want you to get your
mind on such stuff, and if I have my way, you won't have a dress-suit for
four years more, anyhow."</p>
<p>"Father, I GOT to have one. I got to have one right away!" The urgency in
William's voice was almost tearful. "I don't ask you to have it made, or
to go to expensive tailors, but there's plenty of good ready-made ones
that only cost about forty dollars; they're advertised in the paper.
Father, wouldn't you spend just forty dollars? I'll pay it back when I'm
in business; I'll work—"</p>
<p>Mr. Baxter waved all this aside. "It's not the money. It's the principle
that I'm standing for, and I don't intend—"</p>
<p>"Father, WON'T you do it?"</p>
<p>"No, I will not!"</p>
<p>William saw that sentence had been passed and all appeals for a new trial
denied. He choked, and rushed into the house without more ado.</p>
<p>"Poor boy!" his mother said.</p>
<p>"Poor boy nothing!" fumed Mr. Baxter. "He's about lost his mind over that
Miss Pratt. Think of his coming out here and starting a regular debating
society declamation before his mother and father! Why, I never heard
anything like it in my life! I don't like to hurt his feelings, and I'd
give him anything I could afford that would do him any good, but all he
wants it for now is to splurge around in at this party before that little
yellow-haired girl! I guess he can wear the kind of clothes most of the
other boys wear—the kind <i>I</i> wore at parties—and never
thought of wearing anything else. What's the world getting to be like?
Seventeen years old and throws a fit because he can't have a dress-suit!"</p>
<p>Mrs. Baxter looked thoughtful. "But—but suppose he felt he couldn't
go to the dance unless he wore one, poor boy—"</p>
<p>"All the better," said Mr. Baxter, firmly. "Do him good to keep away and
get his mind on something else."</p>
<p>"Of course," she suggested, with some timidity, "forty dollars isn't a
great deal of money, and a ready-made suit, just to begin with—"</p>
<p>Naturally, Mr. Baxter perceived whither she was drifting. "Forty dollars
isn't a thousand," he interrupted, "but what you want to throw it away
for? One reason a boy of seventeen oughtn't to have evening clothes is the
way he behaves with ANY clothes. Forty dollars! Why, only this summer he
sat down on Jane's open paint-box, twice in one week!"</p>
<p>"Well—Miss Pratt IS going away, and the dance will be her last
night. I'm afraid it would really hurt him to miss it. I remember once,
before we were engaged—that evening before papa took me abroad, and
you—"</p>
<p>"It's no use, mamma," he said. "We were both in the twenties—why, <i>I</i>
was six years older than Willie, even then. There's no comparison at all.
I'll let him order a dress-suit on his twenty-first birthday and not a
minute before. I don't believe in it, and I intend to see that he gets all
this stuff out of his system. He's got to learn some hard sense!"</p>
<p>Mrs. Baxter shook her head doubtfully, but she said no more. Perhaps she
regretted a little that she had caused Mr. Baxter's evening clothes to be
so expansively enlarged—for she looked rather regretful. She also
looked rather incomprehensible, not to say cryptic, during the long
silence which followed, and Mr. Baxter resumed his rocking, unaware of the
fixity of gaze which his wife maintained upon him—a thing the most
loyal will do sometimes.</p>
<p>The incomprehensible look disappeared before long; but the regretful one
was renewed in the mother's eyes whenever she caught glimpses of her son,
that day, and at the table, where William's manner was gentle—even
toward his heartless father.</p>
<p>Underneath that gentleness, the harried self of William was no longer
debating a desperate resolve, but had fixed upon it, and on the following
afternoon Jane chanced to be a witness of some resultant actions. She came
to her mother with an account of them.</p>
<p>"Mamma, what you s'pose Willie wants of those two ole market-baskets that
were down cellar?"</p>
<p>"Why, Jane?"</p>
<p>"Well, he carried 'em in his room, an' then he saw me lookin'; an' he
said, 'G'way from here!' an' shut the door. He looks so funny! What's he
want of those ole baskets, mamma?"</p>
<p>"I don't know. Perhaps he doesn't even know, himself, Jane."</p>
<p>But William did know, definitely. He had set the baskets upon chairs, and
now, with pale determination, he was proceeding to fill them. When his
task was completed the two baskets contained:</p>
<p>One "heavy-weight winter suit of clothes."</p>
<p>One "light-weight summer suit of clothes."</p>
<p>One cap.</p>
<p>One straw hat.</p>
<p>Two pairs of white flannel trousers.</p>
<p>Two Madras shirts.</p>
<p>Two flannel shirts.</p>
<p>Two silk shirts.</p>
<p>Seven soft collars.</p>
<p>Three silk neckties.</p>
<p>One crocheted tie.</p>
<p>Eight pairs of socks.</p>
<p>One pair of patent-leather shoes.</p>
<p>One pair of tennis-shoes.</p>
<p>One overcoat.</p>
<p>Some underwear.</p>
<p>One two-foot shelf of books, consisting of several sterling works upon
mathematics, in a damaged condition; five of Shakespeare's plays,
expurgated for schools and colleges, and also damaged; a work upon
political economy, and another upon the science of physics; Webster's
Collegiate Dictionary; How to Enter a Drawing-Room and Five Hundred Other
Hints; Witty Sayings from Here and There; Lorna Doone; Quentin Durward;
The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes, a very old copy of Moths, and a small
Bible.</p>
<p>William spread handkerchiefs upon the two over-bulging cargoes, that their
nature might not be disclosed to the curious, and, after listening a
moment at his door, took the baskets, one upon each arm, then went quickly
down the stairs and out of the house, out of the yard, and into the alley—by
which route he had modestly chosen to travel.</p>
<p>... After an absence of about two hours he returned empty-handed and
anxious. "Mother, I want to speak to you," he said, addressing Mrs Baxter
in a voice which clearly proved the strain of these racking days. "I want
to speak to you about something important."</p>
<p>"Yes, Willie?"</p>
<p>"Please send Jane away. I can't talk about important things with a child
in the room."</p>
<p>Jane naturally wished to stay, since he was going to say something
important. "Mamma, do I HAF to go?"</p>
<p>"Just a few minutes, dear."</p>
<p>Jane walked submissively out of the door, leaving it open behind her.
Then, having gone about six feet farther, she halted and, preserving a
breathless silence, consoled herself for her banishment by listening to
what was said, hearing it all as satisfactorily as if she had remained in
the room. Quiet, thoughtful children, like Jane, avail themselves of these
little pleasures oftener than is suspected.</p>
<p>"Mother," said William, with great intensity, "I want to ask you please to
lend me three dollars and sixty cents."</p>
<p>"What for, Willie?"</p>
<p>"Mother, I just ask you to lend me three dollars and sixty cents."</p>
<p>"But what FOR?"</p>
<p>"Mother, I don't feel I can discuss it any; I simply ask you: Will you
lend me three dollars and sixty cents?"</p>
<p>Mrs. Baxter laughed gently. "I don't think I could, Willie, but certainly
I should want to know what for."</p>
<p>"Mother, I am going on eighteen years of age, and when I ask for a small
sum of money like three dollars and sixty cents I think I might be trusted
to know how to use it for my own good without having to answer questions
like a ch—"</p>
<p>"Why, Willie," she exclaimed, "you ought to have plenty of money of your
own!"</p>
<p>"Of course I ought," he agreed, warmly. "If you'd ask father to give me a
regular allow—"</p>
<p>"No, no; I mean you ought to have plenty left out of that old junk and
furniture I let you sell last month. You had over nine dollars!'</p>
<p>"That was five weeks ago," William explained, wearily.</p>
<p>"But you certainly must have some of it left. Why, it was MORE than nine
dollars, I believe! I think it was nearer ten. Surely you haven't—"</p>
<p>"Ye gods!" cried the goaded William. "A person going on eighteen years old
ought to be able to spend nine dollars in five weeks without everybody's
acting like it was a crime! Mother, I ask you the simple question: Will
you PLEASE lend me three dollars and sixty cents?"</p>
<p>"I don't think I ought to, dear. I'm sure your father wouldn't wish me to,
unless you'll tell me what you want it for. In fact, I won't consider it
at all unless you do tell me."</p>
<p>"You won't do it?" he quavered.</p>
<p>She shook her head gently. "You see, dear, I'm afraid the reason you don't
tell me is because you know that I wouldn't give it to you if I knew what
you wanted it for."</p>
<p>This perfect diagnosis of the case so disheartened him that after a few
monosyllabic efforts to continue the conversation with dignity he gave it
up, and left in such a preoccupation with despondency that he passed the
surprised Jane in the hall without suspecting what she had been doing.</p>
<p>That evening, after dinner, he addressed to his father an impassioned
appeal for three dollars and sixty cents, laying such stress of pathos on
his principal argument that if he couldn't have a dress-suit, at least he
ought to be given three dollars and sixty CENTS (the emphasis is
William's) that Mr. Baxter was moved in the direction of consent—but
not far enough. "I'd like to let you have it, Willie," he said, excusing
himself for refusal, "but your mother felt SHE oughtn't to do it unless
you'd say what you wanted it for, and I'm sure she wouldn't like me to do
it. I can't let you have it unless you get her to say she wants me to."</p>
<p>Thus advised, the unfortunate made another appeal to his mother the next
day, and, having brought about no relaxation of the situation, again
petitioned his father, on the following evening. So it went; the torn and
driven William turning from parent to parent; and surely, since the world
began, the special sum of three dollars and sixty cents has never been so
often mentioned in any one house and in the same space of time as it was
in the house of the Baxters during Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, and
Thursday of that oppressive week.</p>
<p>But on Friday William disappeared after breakfast and did not return to
lunch.</p>
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