Well, my dear," said Roger after supper that evening,
"I think perhaps
we had better introduce Miss Titania to our custom of
reading aloud."
"Perhaps it would bore her?" said Helen. "You know it
isn't
everybody that likes being read to."
"Oh, I should love it!" exclaimed Titania. "I don't think
anybody
ever read to me, that is not since I was a child."
"Suppose we leave you to look after the shop," said Helen
to Roger,
in a teasing mood, "and I'll take Titania out to the
movies.
I think Tarzan is still running."
Whatever private impulses Miss Chapman may have felt,
she saw by the
bookseller's downcast face that a visit to Tarzan would
break his heart,
and she was prompt to disclaim any taste for the screen
classic.
"Dear me," she said; "Tarzan--that's all that nature stuff
by John Burroughs; isn't it? Oh, Mrs. Mifflin, I think
it
would be very tedious. Let's have Mr. Mifflin read to
us.
I'll get down my knitting bag."
"You mustn't mind being interrupted," said Helen. "When
anybody
rings the bell Roger has to run out and tend the shop."
"You must let me do it," said Titania. "I want to earn
my wages,
you know."
"All right," said Mrs. Mifflin; "Roger, you settle Miss
Chapman
in the den and give her something to look at while we
do the dishes."
But Roger was all on fire to begin the reading. "Why don't
we
postpone the dishes," he said, "just to celebrate?"
"Let me help," insisted Titania. "I should think washing
up would
be great fun."
"No, no, not on your first evening," said Helen. "Mr.
Mifflin
and I will finish them in a jiffy."
So Roger poked up the coal fire in the den, disposed the
chairs,
and gave Titania a copy of Sartor Resartus to look at.
He then vanished into the kitchen with his wife, whence
Titania
heard the cheerful clank of crockery in a dishpan and
the splashing
of hot water. "The best thing about washing up," she
heard Roger say,
"is that it makes one's hands so clean, a novel sensation
for a
second-hand bookseller."
She gave Sartor Resartus what is graphically described
as a "once over,"
and then seeing the morning Times lying on the table,
picked it up,
as she had not read it. Her eye fell upon the column
headed
LOST AND FOUND
Fifty cents an agate line
and as she had recently lost a little pearl brooch, she
ran hastily
through it. She chuckled a little over
LOST--Hotel Imperial lavatory, set of teeth. Call or communicate
Steel,
134 East 43 St. Reward, no questions asked.
Then she saw this:
LOST--Copy of Thomas Carlyle's "Oliver Cromwell,"
between Gissing Street, Brooklyn, and the Octagon Hotel.
If found
before midnight, Tuesday, Dec. 3, return to assistant
chef, Octagon Hotel.
"Why" she exclaimed, "Gissing Street--that's here!
And what a funny kind of book for an assistant chef to
read.
No wonder their lunches have been so bad lately!"
When Roger and Helen rejoined her in the den a few minutes
later she
showed the bookseller the advertisement. He was very
much excited.
"That's a funny thing," he said. "There's something queer
about that book. Did I tell you about it? Last Tuesday--
I know it was then because it was the evening young Gilbert
was here--
a man with a beard came in asking for it, and it wasn't
on the shelf.
Then the next night, Wednesday, I was up very late writing,
and fell
asleep at my desk. I must have left the front door ajar,
because I
was waked up by the draught, and when I went to close
the door I saw
the book sticking out a little beyond the others, in
its usual place.
And last night, when the Corn Cobs were here, I went
out to look up
a quotation in it, and it was gone again."
"Perhaps the assistant chef stole it?" said Titania.
"But if so, why the deuce would he advertise having done
so?"
asked Roger.
"Well, if he did steal it," said Helen, "I wish him joy
of it.
I tried to read it once, you talked so much about it,
and I found it
dreadfully dull."
"If he did steal it," cried the bookseller, "I'm perfectly
delighted.
It shows that my contention is right: people DO really
care
for good books. If an assistant chef is so fond of good
books
that he has to steal them, the world is safe for democracy.
Usually the only books any one wants to steal are sheer
piffle,
like Making Life Worth While by Douglas Fairbanks or
Mother Shipton's
Book of Oracles. I don't mind a man stealing books if
he steals
good ones!"
"You see the remarkable principles that govern this business,"
said Helen to Titania. They sat down by the fire and
took up
their knitting while the bookseller ran out to see if
the volume
had by any chance returned to his shelves.
"Is it there?" said Helen, when he came back.
"No," said Roger, and picked up the advertisement again.
"I wonder why he wants it returned before midnight on
Tuesday?"
"So he can read it in bed, I guess," said Helen. "Perhaps
he suffers
from insomnia."
"It's a darn shame he lost it before he had a chance to
read it.
I'd like to have known what he thought of it. I've got
a great mind
to go up and call on him."
"Charge it off to profit and loss and forget about it,"
said Helen.
"How about that reading aloud?"
Roger ran his eye along his private shelves, and pulled
down
a well-worn volume.
"Now that Thanksgiving is past," he said, "my mind always
turns
to Christmas, and Christmas means Charles Dickens. My
dear,
would it bore you if we had a go at the old Christmas
Stories?"
Mrs. Mifflin held up her hands in mock dismay. "He reads
them to me every year at this time," she said to Titania. "Still, they're
worth it.
I know good old Mrs. Lirriper better than I do most of
my friends."
"What is it, the Christmas Carol?" said Titania. "We had
to read
that in school."
"No," said Roger; "the other stories, infinitely better.
Everybody gets the Carol dinned into them until they're
weary of it,
but no one nowadays seems to read the others. I tell
you,
Christmas wouldn't be Christmas to me if I didn't read
these tales
over again every year. How homesick they make one for
the good old
days of real inns and real beefsteak and real ale drawn
in pewter.
My dears, sometimes when I am reading Dickens I get a
vision of rare
sirloin with floury boiled potatoes and plenty of horse-radish,
set on a
shining cloth not far from a blaze of English coal----"
"He's an incorrigible visionary," said Mrs. Mifflin. "To
hear him
talk you might think no one had had a square meal since
Dickens died.
You might think that all landladies died with Mrs. Lirriper."
"Very ungrateful of him," said Titania. "I'm sure I couldn't
ask
for better potatoes, or a nicer hostess, than I've found
in Brooklyn."
"Well, well," said Roger. "You are right, of course. And
yet
something went out of the world when Victorian England
vanished,
something that will never come again. Take the stagecoach
drivers,
for instance. What a racy, human type they were! And
what have we
now to compare with them? Subway guards? Taxicab drivers?
I have
hung around many an all-night lunchroom to hear the chauffeurs
talk.
But they are too much on the move, you can't get the
picture of them
the way Dickens could of his types. You can't catch that
sort
of thing in a snapshot, you know: you have to have a
time exposure.
I'll grant you, though, that lunchroom food is mighty
good. The best
place to eat is always a counter where the chauffeurs
congregate.
They get awfully hungry, you see, driving round in the
cold,
and when they want food they want it hot and tasty. There's
a little
hash-alley called Frank's, up on Broadway near 77th,
where I guess
the ham and eggs and French fried is as good as any Mr.
Pickwick
ever ate."
"I must get Edwards to take me there," said Titania.
"Edwards is our chauffeur. I've been to the Ansonia for
tea,
that's near there."
"Better keep away," said Helen. "When Roger comes home
from those
places he smells so strong of onions it brings tears
to my eyes."
"We've just been talking about an assistant chef," said
Roger;
that suggests that I read you Somebody's Luggage, which
is all about
a head waiter. I have often wished I could get a job
as a waiter
or a bus boy, just to learn if there really are any such
head
waiters nowadays. You know there are all sorts of jobs
I'd like to have,
just to fructify my knowledge of human nature and find
out whether
life is really as good as literature. I'd love to be
a waiter,
a barber, a floorwalker----"
"Roger, my dear," said Helen, "why don't you get on with
the reading?"
Roger knocked out his pipe, turned Bock out of his chair,
and sat
down with infinite relish to read the memor able character
sketch
of Christopher, the head waiter, which is dear to every
lover of taverns.
"The writer of these humble lines being a Waiter," he
began.
The knitting needles flashed with diligence, and the
dog by
the fender stretched himself out in the luxuriant vacancy
of mind
only known to dogs surrounded by a happy group of their
friends.
And Roger, enjoying himself enormously, and particularly
pleased
by the chuckles of his audience, was approaching the
ever-delightful
items of the coffee-room bill which is to be found about
ten pages
on in the first chapter--how sad it is that hotel bills
are not
so rendered in these times--when the bell in the shop
clanged.
Picking up his pipe and matchbox, and grumbling "It's
always the way,"
he hurried out of the room.
He was agreeably surprised to find that his caller was
the young
advertising man, Aubrey Gilbert.
"Hullo!" he said. "I've been saving something for you.
It's a quotation from Joseph Conrad about advertising."
"Good enough," said Aubrey. "And I've got something for
you.
You were so nice to me the other evening I took the liberty
of
bringing you round some tobacco. Here's a tin of Blue-Eyed
Mixture,
it's my favourite. I hope you'll like it."
"Bully for you. Perhaps I ought to let you off the Conrad
quotation
since you're so kind."
"Not a bit. I suppose it's a knock. Shoot!" The bookseller
led the way back to his desk, where he rummaged among
the litter
and finally found a scrap of paper on which he had written:
Being myself animated by feelings of affection toward
my fellowmen,
I am saddened by the modern system of advertising. Whatever
evidence
it offers of enterprise, ingenuity, impudence, and resource
in certain individuals, it proves to my mind the wide
prevalence
of that form of mental degradation which is called gullibility.
JOSEPH CONRAD.
"What do you think of that?" said Roger. "You'll find
that in the story called The Anarchist."
"I think less than nothing of it," said Aubrey. "As your
friend
Don Marquis observed the other evening, an idea isn't
always
to be blamed for the people who believe in it. Mr. Conrad
has been
reading some quack ads, that's all. Because there are
fake ads,
that doesn't condemn the principle of Publicity. But
look here,
what I really came round to see you for is to show you
this.
It was in the Times this morning."
He pulled out of his pocket a clipping of the LOST insertion
to which Roger's attention had already been drawn.
"Yes, I've just seen it," said Roger. "I missed the book
from
my shelves, and I believe someone must have stolen it."
"Well, now, I want to tell you something," said Aubrey.
"Tonight I
had dinner at the Octagon with Mr. Chapman." "Is that
so?" said Roger.
"You know his daughter's here now."
"So he told me. It's rather interesting how it all works
out.
You see, after you told me the other day that Miss Chapman
was
coming to work for you, that gave me an idea. I knew
her father
would be specially interested in Brooklyn, on that account,
and it suggested to me an idea for a window-display campaign
here
in Brooklyn for the Daintybits Products. You know we
handle all his
sales promotion campaigns. Of course I didn't let on
that I knew
about his daughter coming over here, but he told me about
it himself
in the course of our talk. Well, here's what I'm getting
at.
We had dinner in the Czecho-Slovak Grill, up on the fourteenth
floor,
and going up in the elevator I saw a man in a chef's
uniform
carrying a book. I looked over his shoulder to see what
it was.
I thought of course it would be a cook book. It was a
copy of
Oliver Cromwell."
"So he found it again, eh? I must go and have a talk with
that chap.
If he's a Carlyle fan I'd like to know him."
"Wait a minute. I had seen the LOST ad in the paper this
morning,
because I always look over that column. Often it gives
me
ideas for advertising stunts. If you keep an eye on the
things
people are anxious to get back, you know what they really
prize,
and if you know what they prize you can get a line on
what goods
ought to be advertised more extensively. This was the
first time I
had ever noticed a LOST ad for a book, so I thought to
myself "the
book business is coming up." Well, when I saw the chef
with the book
in his hand, I said to him jokingly, "I see you found
it again."
He was a foreign-looking fellow, with a big beard, which
is unusual
for a chef, because I suppose it's likely to get in the
soup.
He looked at me as though I'd run a carving knife into
him, almost scared
me the way he looked. "Yes, yes," he said, and shoved
the book out
of sight under his arm. He seemed half angry and half
frightened,
so I thought maybe he had no right to be riding in the
passenger
elevator and was scared someone would report him to the
manager.
Just as we were getting to the fourteenth floor I said
to him in
a whisper, "It's all right, old chap, I'm not going to
report you."
I give you my word he looked more scared than before.
He went
quite white. I got off at the fourteenth, and he followed
me out.
I thought he was going to speak to me, but Mr. Chapman
was there
in the lobby, and he didn't have a chance. But I noticed
that
he watched me into the grill room as though I was his
last chance
of salvation."
"I guess the poor devil was scared you'd report him to
the police
for stealing the book," said Roger. "Never mind, let
him have it."
"Did he steal it?"
"I haven't a notion. But somebody did, because it disappeared
from here."
"Well, now, wait a minute. Here's the queer part of it.
I didn't think anything more about it, except that it
was a funny
coincidence my seeing him after having noticed that ad
in the paper.
I had a long talk with Mr. Chapman, and we discussed
some plans
for a prune and Saratoga chip campaign, and I showed
him some
suggested copy I had prepared. Then he told me about
his daughter,
and I let on that I knew you. I left the Octagon about
eight
o'clock, and I thought I'd run over here on the subway
just to show you the LOST notice and give you this tobacco.
And when I got off the subway at Atlantic Avenue, who
should I
see but friend chef again. He got off the same train
I did.
He had on civilian clothes then, of course, and when
he was out
of his white uniform and pancake hat I recognized him
right off.
Who do you suppose it was?"
"Can't imagine," said Roger, highly interested by this
time.
"Why, the professor looking guy who came in to ask for
the book
the first night I was here."
"Humph! Well, he must be keen about Carlyle, because he
was horribly
disappointed that evening when he asked for the book
and I couldn't
find it. I remember how he insisted that I MUST have
it, and I hunted
all through the History shelves to make sure it hadn't
got misplaced.
He said that some friend of his had seen it here, and
he had come
right round to buy it. I told him he could certainly
get a copy
at the Public Library, and he said that wouldn't do at
all."
"Well, I think he's nuts," said Aubrey, "because I'm damn
sure he followed me down the street after I left the
subway.
I stopped in at the drug store on the corner to get some
matches,
and when I came out, there he was underneath the lamp-post."
"If it was a modern author, instead of Carlyle," said
Roger,
"I'd say it was some publicity stunt pulled off by the
publishers.
You know they go to all manner of queer dodges to get
an author's name
in print. But Carlyle's copyrights expired long ago,
so I don't see
the game."
"I guess he's picketing your place to try and steal the
formula
for eggs Samuel Butler," said Aubrey, and they both laughed.
"You'd better come in and meet my wife and Miss Chapman,"
said Roger.
The young man made some feeble demur, but it was obvious
to the
bookseller that he was vastly elated at the idea of making
Miss
Chapman's acquaintance.
"Here's a friend of mine," said Roger, ushering Aubrey
into the little
room where Helen and Titania were still sitting by the
fire.
"Mrs. Mifflin, Mr. Aubrey Gilbert, Miss Chapman, Mr.
Gilbert."
Aubrey was vaguely aware of the rows of books, of the
shining coals,
of the buxom hostess and the friendly terrier; but with
the intense focus
of an intelligent young male mind these were all merely
appurtenances
to the congenial spectacle of the employee. How quickly
a young man's
senses assemble and assimilate the data that are really
relevant!
Without seeming even to look in that direction he had
performed the most
amazing feat of lightning calculation known to the human
faculties.
He had added up all the young ladies of his acquaintance,
and found the sum total less than the girl before him.
He had subtracted the new phenomenon from the universe
as he knew it,
including the solar system and the advertising business,
and found the remainder a minus quantity. He had multiplied
the contents of his intellect by a factor he had no reason
to assume
"constant," and was startled at what teachers call (I
believe)
the "product." And he had divided what was in the left-hand
armchair into his own career, and found no room for a
quotient.
All of which transpired in the length of time necessary
for Roger
to push forward another chair.
With the politeness desirable in a well-bred youth, Aubrey's
first
instinct was to make himself square with the hostess.
Resolutely he occluded blue eyes, silk shirtwaist, and
admirable
chin from his mental vision.
"It's awfully good of you to let me come in," he said
to Mrs. Mifflin.
"I was here the other evening and Mr. Mifflin insisted
on my staying
to supper with him."
"I'm very glad to see you," said Helen. "Roger told me
about you.
I hope he didn't poison you with any of his outlandish
dishes.
Wait till he tries you with brandied peaches a la Harold
Bell Wright."
Aubrey uttered some genial reassurance, still making the
supreme
sacrifice of keeping his eyes away from where (he felt)
they belonged.
"Mr. Gilbert has just had a queer experience," said Roger.
"Tell them about it."
In the most reckless way, Aubrey permitted himself to
be
impaled upon a direct and interested flash of blue lightning.
"I was having dinner with your father at the Octagon."
The high tension voltage of that bright blue current felt
like ohm
sweet ohm, but Aubrey dared not risk too much of it at
once.
Fearing to blow out a fuse, he turned in panic to Mrs.
Mifflin.
"You see," he explained, "I write a good deal of Mr.
Chapman's advertising
for him. We had an appointment to discuss some business
matters.
We're planning a big barrage on prunes."
"Dad works much too hard, don't you think?" said Titania.
Aubrey welcomed this as a pleasant avenue of discussion
leading into
the parkland of Miss Chapman's family affairs; but Roger
insisted
on his telling the story of the chef and the copy of
Cromwell.
"And he followed you here?" exclaimed Titania. "What fun!
I had no idea the book business was so exciting."
"Better lock the door to-night, Roger," said Mrs. Mifflin,
"or he may walk off with a set of the Encyclopaedia Britannica."
"Why, my dear," said Roger, "I think this is grand news.
Here's a man, in a humble walk of life, so keen about
good books
that he even pickets a bookstore on the chance of swiping
some.
It's the most encouraging thing I've ever heard of. I
must write to
the Publishers' Weekly about it."
"Well," said Aubrey, "you mustn't let me interrupt your
little party."
"You're not interrupting," said Roger. "We were only reading
aloud.
Do you know Dickens' Christmas Stories?"
"I'm afraid I don't."
"Suppose we go on reading, shall we?"
"Please do."
"Yes, do go on," said Titania. "Mr. Mifflin was just reading
about a most adorable head waiter in a London chop house."
Aubrey begged permission to light his pipe, and Roger
picked up the book.
"But before we read the items of the coffee-room bill,"
he said,
"I think it only right that we should have a little refreshment.
This passage should never be read without something to
accompany it.
My dear, what do you say to a glass of sherry all round?"
"It is sad to have to confess it," said Mrs. Mifflin to
Titania,
"Mr. Mifflin can never read Dickens without having something
to drink.
I think the sale of Dickens will fall off terribly when
prohibition
comes in."
"I once took the trouble to compile a list of the amount
of liquor
drunk in Dickens' works," said Roger, "and I assure you
the total
was astounding: 7,000 hogsheads, I believe it was. Calculations
of
that sort are great fun. I have always intended to write
a little
essay on the rainstorms in the stories of Robert Louis
Stevenson.
You see R. L. S. was a Scot, and well acquainted with
wet weather.
Excuse me a moment, I'll just run down cellar and get
up
a bottle."
Roger left the room, and they heard his steps passing
down into
the cellar. Bock, after the manner of dogs, followed
him.
The smells of cellars are a rare treat to dogs, especially
ancient
Brooklyn cellars which have a cachet all their own. The
cellar
of the Haunted Bookshop was, to Bock, a fascinating place,
illuminated by a warm glow from the furnace, and piled
high with
split packing-cases which Roger used as kindling. From
below came
the rasp of a shovel among coal, and the clear, musical
slither
as the lumps were thrown from the iron scoop onto the
fire.
Just then the bell rang in the shop.
"Let me go," said Titania, jumping up.
"Can't I?" said Aubrey.
"Nonsense!" said Mrs. Mifflin, laying down her knitting.
"Neither of
you knows anything about the stock. Sit down and be comfortable.
I'll be right back."
Aubrey and Titania looked at each other with a touch of
embarrassment.
"Your father sent you his--his kind regards," said Aubrey.
That was not what he had intended to say, but somehow
he could not
utter the word. "He said not to read all the books at
once."
Titania laughed. "How funny that you should run into him
just
when you were coming here. He's a duck, isn't he?"
"Well, you see I only know him in a business way, but
he certainly
is a corker. He believes in advertising, too."
"Are you crazy about books?"
"Why, I never really had very much to do with them. I'm
afraid
you'll think I'm terribly ignorant----"
"Not at all. I'm awfully glad to meet someone who doesn't
think
it's a crime not to have read all the books there are."
"This is a queer kind of place, isn't it?"
"Yes, it's a funny idea to call it the Haunted Bookshop.
I wonder what it means."
"Mr. Mifflin told me it meant haunted by the ghosts of
great literature.
I hope they won't annoy you. The ghost of Thomas Carlyle
seems
to be pretty active."
"I'm not afraid of ghosts," said Titania.
Aubrey gazed at the fire. He wanted to say that he intended
from now on to do a little haunting on his own account
but he did
not know just how to break it gently. And then Roger
returned
from the cellar with the bottle of sherry. As he was
uncorking it,
they heard the shop door close, and Mrs. Mifflin came
in.
"Well, Roger," she said; "if you think so much of your
old Cromwell,
you'd better keep it in here. Here it is." She laid the
book on
the table.
"For the love of Mike!" exclaimed Roger. "Who brought
it back?"
"I guess it was your friend the assistant chef," said
Mrs. Mifflin.
"Anyway, he had a beard like a Christmas tree. He was
mighty polite.
He said he was terribly absent minded, and that the other
day he was
in here looking at some books and just walked off with
it without knowing
what he was doing. He offered to pay for the trouble
he had caused,
but of course I wouldn't let him. I asked if he wanted
to see you,
but he said he was in a hurry."
"I'm almost disappointed," said Roger. "I thought that
I had turned
up a real booklover. Here we are, all hands drink the
health
of Mr. Thomas Carlyle."
The toast was drunk, and they settled themselves in their
chairs.
"And here's to the new employee," said Helen. This also
was dispatched,
Aubrey draining his glass with a zeal which did not escape
Miss
Chapman's discerning eye. Roger then put out his hand
for the Dickens.
But first he picked up his beloved Cromwell. He looked
at it carefully,
and then held the volume close to the light.
"The mystery's not over yet," he said. "It's been rebound.
This isn't the original binding."
"Are you sure?" said Helen in surprise. "It looks the
same."
"The binding has been cleverly imitated, but it can't
fool me.
In the first place, there was a rubbed corner at the
top;
and there was an ink stain on one of the end papers."
"There's still a stain there," said Aubrey, looking over
his shoulder.
"Yes, but not the same stain. I've had that book long
enough
to know it by heart. Now what the deuce would that lunatic
want
to have it rebound for?"
"Goodness gracious," said Helen, "put it away and forget
about it.
We'll all be dreaming about Carlyle if you're not careful." |