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<h2> Chapter XX. BREAKING OUT IN A NEW PLACE </h2>
<p>Hunger roused everybody early the next morning, Friday. Leila Mercer had
discovered a box of bonbons that she had forgotten, and we divided them
around. Aunt Selina asked for the candied fruit and got it—quite a
third of the box. We gathered in the lower hall and on the stairs and
nibbled nauseating sweets while Mr. Harbison examined the telephone.</p>
<p>He did not glance in my direction. Betty and Dal were helping him, and he
seemed very cheerful. Max sat with me on the stairs. Mr. Harbison had just
unscrewed the telephone box from the wall and was squinting into it, when
Bella came downstairs. It was her first appearance, but as she was always
late, nobody noticed. When she stopped, just above us on the stairs,
however, we looked up, and she was holding to the rail and trembling
perceptibly.</p>
<p>“Mr. Harbison, will you—can you come upstairs?” she asked. Her voice
was strained, almost reedy, and her lips were white.</p>
<p>Mr. Harbison stared up at her, with the telephone box in his hands.</p>
<p>“Why—er—certainly,” he said, “but, unless it’s very important,
I’d like to fix this talking machine. We want to make a food record.”</p>
<p>“I’d like to break a food record,” Max put in, but Bella created a
diversion by sitting down suddenly on the stair just above us, and burying
her face in her handkerchief.</p>
<p>“Jim is sick,” she said, with a sob. “He—he doesn’t want anything to
eat, and his head aches. He—said for me—to go away and let him
die!”</p>
<p>Dal dropped the hammer immediately, and Lollie Mercer sat petrified, with
a bonbon halfway to her mouth. For, of course, it was unexpected, finding
sentiment of any kind in Bella, and none of them knew about the scene in
the den in the small hours of the morning.</p>
<p>“Sick!” Aunt Selina said, from a hall chair. “Sick! Where?”</p>
<p>“All over,” Bella quavered. “His poor head is hot, and he’s thirsty, but
he doesn’t want anything but water.”</p>
<p>“Great Scott!” Dal said suddenly. “Suppose he should—Bella, are you
telling us ALL his symptoms?”</p>
<p>Bella put down her handkerchief and got up. From her position on the
stairs she looked down on us with something of her old haughty manner.</p>
<p>“If he is ill, you may blame yourselves, all of you,” she said cruelly.
“You taunted him with being—fat, and laughed at him, until he
stopped eating the things he should eat. And he has been exercising—on
the roof, until he has worn himself out. And now—he is ill. He—he
has a rash.”</p>
<p>Everybody jumped at that, and we instinctively moved away from Bella. She
was quite cold and scornful by that time.</p>
<p>“A rash!” Max exclaimed. “What sort of rash?”</p>
<p>“I did not see it,” Bella said with dignity, and turning, she went up the
stairs.</p>
<p>There was a great deal of excitement, and nobody except Mr. Harbison was
willing to go near Jim. He went up at once with Bella, while Max and Dal
sat cravenly downstairs and wondered if we would all take it, and Anne
told about a man she knew who had it, and was deaf and dumb and blind when
he recovered.</p>
<p>Mr. Harbison came down after a while, and said that the rash was there,
right enough, and that Jim absolutely refused to be quarantined; that he
insisted that he always got a rash from early strawberries and that if he
DID have anything, since they were so touchy he hoped they would all get
it. If they locked him in he would kick the door down.</p>
<p>We had a long conference in the hall, with Bella sitting red-eyed and
objecting to every suggestion we made. And finally we arranged to shut Jim
up in one of the servants’ bedrooms with a sheet wrung out of disinfectant
hung over the door. Bella said she would sit outside in the hall and read
to him through the closed door, so finally he gave a grudging consent. But
he was in an awful humor. Max and Dal put on rubber gloves and helped him
over, and they said afterward that the way he talked was fearful. And
there was a telephone in the maid’s room, and he kept asking for things
every five minutes.</p>
<p>When the doctor came he said it was too early to tell positively, and he
ordered him liquid diet and said he would be back that evening.</p>
<p>Which—the diet—takes me back to the famine. After they had
moved Jim, Mr. Harbison went back to the telephone, and found everything
as it should be. So he followed the telephone wire, and the rest followed
him. I did not; he had systematically ignored me all morning, after having
dared to kiss me the night before. And any other man I know, after looking
at me the way he had looked a dozen times, would have been at least
reasonably glad to find me free and unmarried. But it was clear that he
was not; I wondered if he was the kind of man who always makes love to the
other man’s wife and runs like mad when she is left a widow, or gets a
divorce.</p>
<p>And just when I had decided that I hated him, and that there was one man I
knew who would never make love to a woman whom he thought married and then
be very dignified and aloof when he found she wasn’t, I heard what was
wrong with the telephone wire.</p>
<p>It had been cut! Cut through with a pair of silver manicure scissors from
the dressing table in Bella’s room, where Aunt Selina slept! The wire had
been clipped where it came into the house, just under a window, and the
scissors still lay on the sill.</p>
<p>It was mysterious enough, but no one was interested in the mystery just
then. We wanted food, and wanted it at once. Mr. Harbison fixed the wire,
and the first thing we did, of course, was to order something to eat. Aunt
Selina went to bed just after luncheon with indigestion, to the relief of
every one in the house. She had been most unpleasant all morning.</p>
<p>When she found herself ill, however, she insisted on having Bella, and
that made trouble at once. We found Bella with her cheek against the door
into Jim’s room, looking maudlin while he shouted love messages to her
from the other side. At first she refused to stir, but after Anne and Max
had tried and failed, the rest of us went to her in a body and implored
her. We said Aunt Selina was in awful shape—which she was, as to
temper—and that she had thrown a mustard plaster at Anne, which was
true.</p>
<p>So Bella went, grumbling, and Jim was a maniac. We had not thought it
would be so bad for Bella, but Aunt Selina fell asleep soon after she took
charge, holding Bella’s hand, and slept for three hours and never let go!</p>
<p>About two that afternoon the sun came out, and the rest of us went to the
roof. The sleet had melted and the air was fairly warm. Two housemaids
dusting rugs on the top of the next house came over and stared at us, and
somebody in an automobile down on Riverside Drive stood up and waved at
us. It was very cheerful and hopelessly lonely.</p>
<p>I stayed on the roof after the others had gone, and for some time I
thought I was alone. After a while, I got a whiff of smoke, and then I saw
Mr. Harbison far over in the corner, one foot on the parapet, moodily
smoking a pipe. He was gazing out over the river, and paying no attention
to me. This was natural, considering that I had hardly spoken to him all
day.</p>
<p>I would not let him drive me away, so I sat still, and it grew darker and
colder. He filled his pipe now and then, but he never looked in my
direction. Finally, however, as it grew very dusk, he knocked the ashes
out and came toward me.</p>
<p>“I am going to make a request, Miss McNair,” he said evenly. “Please keep
off the roof after sunset. There are—reasons.” I had risen and was
preparing to go downstairs.</p>
<p>“Unless I know the reasons, I refuse to do anything of the kind,” I
retorted. He bowed.</p>
<p>“Then the door will be kept locked,” he rejoined, and opened it for me. He
did not follow me, but stood watching until I was down, and I heard him
close the roof door firmly behind me.</p>
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