<h2><SPAN name="chap13"></SPAN>CHAPTER XIII<br/> HE IS “OUR MR. WRENN”</h2>
<p class="letter">
D<small>EAR</small> I<small>STRA</small>,—I am back in New York feeling
very well & hope this finds you the same. I have been wanting to write to
you for quite a while now but there has not been much news of any kind & so
I have not written to you. But now I am back working for the Souvenir Company.
I hope you are having a good time in Paris it must be a very pretty city &
I have often wished to be there perhaps some day I shall go. I [several
erasures here] have been reading quite a few books since I got back & think
now I shall get on better with my reading. You told me so many things about
books & so on & I do appreciate it. In closing, I am yours very
sincerely,</p>
<p class="right">
W<small>ILLIAM</small> W<small>RENN</small>.</p>
<p>There was nothing else he could say. But there were a terrifying number of
things he could think as he crouched by the window overlooking West Sixteenth
Street, whose dull hue had not changed during the centuries while he had been
tramping England. Her smile he remembered—and he cried, “Oh, I want
to see her so much.” Her gallant dash through the rain—and again
the cry.</p>
<p>At last he cursed himself, “Why don’t you <i>do</i> something that
’d count for her, and not sit around yammering for her like a
fool?”</p>
<p>He worked on his plan to “bring the South into line”—the
Souvenir Company’s line. Again and again he sprang up from the
writing-table in his hot room when the presence of Istra came and stood
compellingly by his chair. But he worked.</p>
<p>The Souvenir Company salesmen had not been able to get from the South the
business which the company deserved if right and justice were to prevail. On
the steamer from England Mr. Wrenn had conceived the idea that a Dixieland
Ink-well, with the Confederate and Union flags draped in graceful cast iron,
would make an admirable present with which to draw the attention of the Southem
trade. The ink-well was to be followed by a series of letters, sent on the
slightest provocation, on order or re-order, tactfully hoping the various
healths of the Southland were good and the baseball season important; all to
insure a welcome to the salesmen on the Southem route.</p>
<p>He drew up his letters; he sketched his ink-well; he got up the courage to talk
with the office manager…. To forget love and the beloved, men have ascended in
aeroplanes and conquered African tribes. To forget love, a new, busy, much
absorbed Mr. Wrenn, very much Ours, bustled into Mr. Guilfogle’s office,
slapped down his papers on the desk, and demanded: “Here’s that
plan about gettin’ the South interested that I was telling you about.
Say, honest, I’d like awful much to try it on. I’d just have to
have part time of one stenographer.”</p>
<p>“Well, you know our stenographers are pretty well crowded. But you can
leave the outline with me. I’ll look it over,” said Mr. Guilfogle.</p>
<p>That same afternoon the manager enthusiastically O. K.’d the plan. To
enthusiastically—O. K. is an office technology for saying, gloomily,
“Well, I don’t suppose it ’d hurt to try it, anyway, but for
the love of Mike be careful, and let me see any letters you send out.”</p>
<p>So Mr. Wrenn dictated a letter to each of their Southern merchants, sending him
a Dixieland Ink-well and inquiring about the crops. He had a stenographer, an
efficient intolerant young woman who wrote down his halting words as though
they were examples of bad English she wanted to show her friends, and waited
for the next word with cynical amusement.</p>
<p>“By gosh!” growled Bill Wrenn, the cattleman, “I’ll
show her I’m running this. I’ll show her she’s got another
think coming.” But he dictated so busily and was so hot to get results
that he forgot the girl’s air of high-class martyrdom.</p>
<p>He watched the Southern baseball results in the papers. He seized on every
salesman on the Southern route as he came in, and inquired about the religion
and politics of the merchants in his district. He even forgot to worry about
his next rise in salary, and found it much more exciting to rush back for an
important letter after a quick lunch than to watch the time and make sure that
he secured every minute of his lunch-hour.</p>
<p>When October came—October of the vagabond, with the leaves brilliant out
on the Palisades, and Sixth Avenue moving-picture palaces cool again and
gay—Mr. Wrenn stayed late, under the mercury-vapor lights, making card
cross-files of the Southern merchants, their hobbies and prejudices, and
whistling as he worked, stopping now and then to slap the desk and mutter,
“By gosh! I’m gettin’ ’em—gettin’
’em.”</p>
<p>He rarely thought of Istra till he was out on the street again, proud of having
worked so late that his eyes ached. In fact, his chief troubles these days came
when Mr. Guilfogle wouldn’t “let him put through an idea.”</p>
<p>Their first battle was over Mr. Wrenn’s signing the letters personally;
for the letters, the office manager felt, were as much Ours as was Mr. Wrenn,
and should be signed by the firm. After some difficulty Mr. Wrenn persuaded him
that one of the best ways to handle a personal letter was to make it personal.
They nearly cursed each other before Mr. Wrenn was allowed to use his own
judgment.</p>
<p>It’s not at all certain that Mr. Guilfogle should have yielded.
What’s the use of a manager if his underlings use judgment?</p>
<p>The next battle Mr. Wrenn lost. He had demanded a monthly holiday for his
stenographer. Mr. Guilfogle pointed out that she’d merely be the worse
off for a holiday, that it ’d make her discontented, that it was a
kindness to her to keep her mind occupied. Mr. Wrenn was, however, granted a
new typewriter, in a manner which revealed the fact that the Souvenir Company
was filled with almost too much mercy in permitting an employee to follow his
own selfish and stubborn desires.</p>
<p>You cannot trust these employees. Mr. Wrenn was getting so absorbed in his work
that he didn’t even act as though it was a favor when Mr. Guilfogle
allowed him to have his letters to the trade copied by carbon paper instead of
having them blurred by the wet tissue-paper of a copy-book. The manager did
grant the request, but he was justly indignant at the curt manner of the
rascal, whereupon our bumptious revolutionist, our friend to anarchists and
red-headed artists, demanded a “raise” and said that he
didn’t care a hang if the [qualified] letters never went out. The
kindness of chiefs! For Mr. Guilfogle apologized and raised the madman’s
wage from seventeen dollars and fifty cents a week to his former nineteen
dollars. [He had expected eighteen dollars; he had demanded twenty-two dollars
and fifty cents; he was worth on the labor market from twenty-five to thirty
dollars; while the profit to the Souvenir Company from his work was about sixty
dollars minus whatever salary he got.]</p>
<p>Not only that. Mr. Guilfogle slapped him on the back and said:
“You’re doing good work, old man. It’s fine. I just
don’t want you to be too reckless.”</p>
<p>That night Wrenn worked till eight.</p>
<p>After his raise he could afford to go to the theater, since he was not saving
money for travel. He wrote small letters to Istra and read the books he
believed she would approve—a Paris Baedeker and the second volume of
Tolstoi’s <i>War and Peace</i>, which he bought at a second-hand
book-stall for five cents. He became interested in popular and inaccurate
French and English histories, and secreted any amount of footnote anecdotes
about Guy Fawkes and rush-lights and the divine right of kings. He thought
almost every night about making friends, which he intended—just as much
as ever—to do as soon as Sometime arrived.</p>
<p>On the day on which one of the Southern merchants wrote him about his
son—“fine young fellow, sir—has every chance of rising to a
lieutenancy on the Atlanta police force”—Mr. Wrenn’s eyes
were moist. Here was a friend already. Sure. He would make friends. Then there
was the cripple with the Capitol Corner News and Souvenir Stand in Austin,
Texas. Mr. Wrenn secreted two extra Dixieland Ink-wells and a Yale football
banner and sent them to the cripple for his brothers, who were in the
Agricultural College.</p>
<p>The orders—yes, they were growing larger. The Southern salesmen took him
out to dinner sometimes. But he was shy of them. They were so knowing and had
so many smoking-room stories. He still had not found the friends he desired.</p>
<p class="p2">
Miggleton’s restaurant, on Forty-second Street, was a romantic discovery.
Though it had “popular prices”—plain omelet, fifteen
cents—it had red and green bracket lights, mission-style tables, and
music played by a sparrowlike pianist and a violinist. Mr. Wrenn never really
heard the music, but while it was quavering he had a happier appreciation of
the Silk-Hat-Harry humorous pictures in the <i>Journal</i>, which he always
propped up against an oil-cruet. [That never caused him inconvenience; he had
no convictions in regard to salads.] He would drop the paper to look out of the
window at the Lazydays Improvement Company’s electric sign, showing
gardens of paradise on the instalment plan, and dream of—well, he
hadn’t the slightest idea what—something distant and deliciously
likely to become intimate. Once or twice he knew that he was visioning the girl
in soft brown whom he would “go home to,” and who, in a Lazydays
suburban residence, would play just such music for him and the friends who
lived near by. She would be as clever as Istra, but “oh, more so’s
you can go regular places with her.”… Often he got good ideas about
letters South, to be jotted down on envelope backs, from that music.</p>
<p>At last comes the historic match-box incident.</p>
<p>On that October evening in 1910 he dined early at Miggleton’s. The
thirty-cent table d’hote was perfect. The cream-of-corn soup was, he went
so far as to remark to the waitress, “simply slick”; the Waldorf
salad had two whole walnuts in his portion alone.</p>
<p>The fat man with the white waistcoat, whom he had often noted as dining in this
same corner of the restaurant, smiled at him and said “Pleasant
evening” as he sat down opposite Mr. Wrenn and smoothed the two sleek
bangs which decorated the front of his nearly bald head.</p>
<p>The music included a “potpourri of airs from ‘The Merry
Widow,’” which set his foot tapping. All the while he was conscious
that he’d made the Seattle Novelty and Stationery Corner Store come
through with a five-hundred-dollar order on one of his letters.</p>
<p>The <i>Journal</i> contained an editorial essay on “Friendship”
which would have been, and was, a credit to Cicero.</p>
<p>He laid down the paper, stirred his large cup of coffee, and stared at the
mother-of-pearl buttons on the waistcoat of the fat man, who was now gulping
down soup, opposite him. “My land!” he was thinking,
“friendship! I ain’t even begun to make all those friends I was
going to. Haven’t done a thing. Oh, I will; I must!”</p>
<p>“Nice night,” said the fat man.</p>
<p>“Yuh—it sure is,” brightly agreed Mr. Wrenn.</p>
<p>“Reg’lar Indian-Summer weather.”</p>
<p>“Yes, isn’t it! I feel like taking a walk on Riverside
Drive—b’lieve I will.”</p>
<p>“Wish I had time. But I gotta get down to the store—cigar-store.
I’m on nights, three times a week.”</p>
<p>“Yuh. I’ve seen you here most every time I eat early,” Mr.
Wrenn purred.</p>
<p>“Yuh. The rest of the time I eat at the boarding-house.”</p>
<p>Silence. But Mr. Wrenn was fighting for things to say, means of approach, for
the chance to become acquainted with a new person, for all the friendly human
ways he had desired in nights of loneliness.</p>
<p>“Wonder when they’ll get the Grand Central done?” asked the
fat man.</p>
<p>“I s’pose it’ll take quite a few years,” said Mr.
Wrenn, conversationally.</p>
<p>“Yuh. I s’pose it will.”</p>
<p>Silence.</p>
<p>Mr. Wrenn sat trying to think of something else to say. Lonely people in city
restaurants simply do not get acquainted. Yet he did manage to observe,
“Great building that’ll be,” in the friendliest manner.</p>
<p>Silence.</p>
<p>Then the fat man went on:</p>
<p>“Wonder what Wolgast will do in his mill? Don’t believe he can
stand up.”</p>
<p>Wolgast was, Mr. Wrenn seemed to remember, a pugilist. He agreed vaguely:</p>
<p>“Pretty hard, all right.”</p>
<p>“Go out to the areoplane meet?” asked the fat man.</p>
<p>“No. But I’d like to see it. Gee! there must be kind of—kind
of adventure in them things, heh?”</p>
<p>“Yuh—sure is. First machine I saw, though—I was just getting
off the train at Belmont Park, and there was an areoplane up in the air, and it
looked like one of them big mechanical beetles these fellows sell on the street
buzzing around up there. I was kind of disappointed. But what do you think? It
was that J. A. D. McCurdy, in a Curtiss biplane—I think it was—and
by golly! he got to circling around and racing and tipping so’s I thought
I’d loose my hat off, I was so excited. And, say, what do you think? I
see McCurdy himself, afterward, standing near one of the—the
handgars—handsome young chap, not over twenty-eight or thirty, built like
a half-miler. And then I see Ralph Johnstone and Arch Hoxey—”</p>
<p>“Gee!” Mr. Wrenn was breathing.</p>
<p>“—dipping and doing the—what do you call it?—Dutch
sausage-roll or something like that. Yelled my head off.”</p>
<p>“Oh, it must have been great to see ’em, and so close, too.”</p>
<p>“Yuh—it sure was.”</p>
<p>There seemed to be no other questions to settle. Mr. Wrenn slowly folded up his
paper, pursued his check under three plates and the menu-card to its
hiding-place beyond the catsup-bottle, and left the table with a regretful
“Good night.”</p>
<p>At the desk of the cashier, a decorative blonde, he put a cent in the machine
which good-naturedly drops out boxes of matches. No box dropped this time,
though he worked the lever noisily.</p>
<p>“Out of order?” asked the cashier lady. “Here’s two
boxes of matches. Guess you’ve earned them.”</p>
<p>“Well, well, well, well!” sounded the voice of his friend, the fat
man, who stood at the desk paying his bill. “Pretty easy, heh? Two boxes
for one cent! Sting the restaurant.” Cocking his head, he carefully
inserted a cent in the slot and clattered the lever, turning to grin at Mr.
Wrenn, who grinned back as the machine failed to work.</p>
<p>“Let me try it,” caroled Mr. Wrenn, and pounded the lever with the
enthusiasm of comradeship.</p>
<p>“Nothing doing, lady,” crowed the fat man to the cashier.</p>
<p>“I guess <i>I</i> draw two boxes, too, eh? And I’m in a
cigar-store. How’s that for stinging your competitors, heh? Ho, ho,
ho!”</p>
<p>The cashier handed him two boxes, with an embarrassed simper, and the fat man
clapped Mr. Wrenn’s shoulder joyously.</p>
<p>“My turn!” shouted a young man in a fuzzy green hat and a
bright-brown suit, who had been watching with the sudden friendship which
unites a crowd brought together by an accident.</p>
<p>Mr. Wrenn was glowing. “No, it ain’t—it’s mine,”
he achieved. “I invented this game.” Never had he so stood forth in
a crowd. He was a Bill Wrenn with the cosmopolitan polish of a floor-walker. He
stood beside the fat man as a friend of sorts, a person to be taken perfectly
seriously.</p>
<p>It is true that he didn’t add to this spiritual triumph the triumph of
getting two more boxes of matches, for the cashier-girl exclaimed, “No
indeedy; it’s my turn!” and lifted the match machine to a high
shelf behind her. But Mr. Wrenn went out of the restaurant with his old friend,
the fat man, saying to him quite as would a wit, “I guess we get stung,
eh?”</p>
<p>“Yuh!” gurgled the fat man.</p>
<p>Walking down to your store?”</p>
<p>“Yuh—sure—won’t you walk down a piece?”</p>
<p>“Yes, I would like to. Which way is it?”</p>
<p>“Fourth Avenue and Twenty-eighth.”</p>
<p>“Walk down with you.”</p>
<p>“Fine!”</p>
<p>And the fat man seemed to mean it. He confided to Mr. Wrenn that the fishing
was something elegant at Trulen, New Jersey; that he was some punkins at the
casting of flies in fishing; that he wished exceedingly to be at Trulen fishing
with flies, but was prevented by the manager of the cigar-store; that the
manager was an old devil; that his (the fat man’s own) name was Tom
Poppins; that the store had a slick new brand of Manila cigars, kept in a swell
new humidor bought upon the advice of himself (Mr. Poppins); that one of the
young clerks in the store had done fine in the Modified Marathon; that the Cubs
had had a great team this year; that he’d be glad to give Mr.—Mr.
Wrenn, eh?—one of those Manila cigars—great cigars they were, too;
and that he hadn’t “laughed so much for a month of Sundays as he
had over the way they stung Miggleton’s on them matches.”</p>
<p>All this in the easy, affectionate, slightly wistful manner of fat men. Mr.
Poppins’s large round friendly childish eyes were never sarcastic. He was
the man who makes of a crowd in the Pullman smoking-room old friends in half an
hour. In turn, Mr. Wrenn did not shy off; he hinted at most of his lifelong
ambitions and a fair number of his sorrows and, when they reached the store,
not only calmly accepted, but even sneezingly ignited one of the “slick
new Manila cigars.”</p>
<p>As he left the store he knew that the golden age had begun. He had a friend!</p>
<p>He was to see Tom Poppins the coming Thursday at Miggleton’s. And now he
was going to find Morton! He laughed so loudly that the policeman at
Thirty-fourth Street looked self-conscious and felt secretively to find out
what was the matter with his uniform. Now, this evening, he’d try to get
on the track of Morton. Well, perhaps not this evening—the Pennsylvania
offices wouldn’t be open, but some time this week, anyway.</p>
<p>Two nights later, as he waited for Tom Poppins at Miggleton’s, he lashed
himself with the thought that he had not started to find Morton; good old
Morton of the cattle-boat. But that was forgotten in the wonder of Tom
Poppins’s account of Mrs. Arty’s, a boarding-house “where all
the folks likes each other.”</p>
<p>“You’ve never fed at a boarding-house, eh?” said Tom.
“Well, I guess most of ’em are pretty poor feed. And pretty sad
bunch. But Mrs. Arty’s is about as near like home as most of us poor
bachelors ever gets. Nice crowd there. If Mrs. Arty—Mrs. R. T. Ferrard is
her name, but we always call her Mrs. Arty—if she don’t take to you
she don’t mind letting you know she won’t take you in at all; but
if she does she’ll worry over the holes in your socks as if they was her
husband’s. All the bunch there drop into the parlor when they come in,
pretty near any time clear up till twelve-thirty, and talk and laugh and rush
the growler and play Five Hundred. Just like home!</p>
<p>“Mrs. Arty’s nearly as fat as I am, but she can be pretty spry if
there’s something she can do for you. Nice crowd there, too except that
Teddem—he’s one of these here Willy-boy actors, always out of work;
I guess Mrs. Arty is kind of sorry for him. Say, Wrenn—you seem to me
like a good fellow—why don’t you get acquainted with the bunch?
Maybe you’d like to move up there some time. You was telling me about
what a cranky old party your landlady is. Anyway, come on up there to dinner.
On me. Got anything on for next Monday evening?”</p>
<p>“N-no.”</p>
<p>“Come on up then——East Thirtieth.”</p>
<p>“Gee, I’d like to!”</p>
<p>“Well, why don’t you, then? Get there about six. Ask for me.
Monday. Monday, Wednesday, and Friday I don’t have to get to the store
evenings. Come on; you’ll find out if you like the place.”</p>
<p>“By jiminy, I will!” Mr. Wrenn slapped the table, socially.</p>
<p class="p2">
At last he was “through, just <i>through</i> with loafing around and not
getting acquainted,” he told himself. He was tired of Zapps. There was
nothing to Zapps. He would go up to Mrs. Arty’s and now—he was
going to find Morton. Next morning, marveling at himself for not having done
this easy task before, he telephoned to the Pennsylvania Railroad offices,
asked for Morton, and in one-half minute heard:</p>
<p>“Yes? This is Harry Morton.”</p>
<p>“Hullo, Mr. Morton! I’ll just bet you can’t guess who this
is.”</p>
<p>“I guess you’ve got me.”</p>
<p>“Well, who do you think it—”</p>
<p>“Jack?”</p>
<p>“Hunka.”</p>
<p>“Uncle Henry?”</p>
<p>“Nope.” Mr. Wrenn felt lonely at finding himself so completely
outside Morton’s own world that he was not thought of. He hastened to
claim a part in that world:</p>
<p>“Say, Mr. Morton, I wonder if you’ve ever heard of a cattle-boat
called the <i>Merian?</i>”</p>
<p>“I—Say! Is this Bill Wrenn?”</p>
<p>“Yes.”</p>
<p>“Well, well, well! Where are you? When’d you get back?”</p>
<p>“Oh, I been back quite a little while, Morty. Tried to get hold of
you—almost called up couple of times. I’m in my
office—Souvenir Company—now. Back on the old job. Say, I’d
like to see you.”</p>
<p>“Well, I’d like to see <i>you</i>, old Bill!”</p>
<p>“Got a date for dinner this evening, Morty?”</p>
<p>“N-no. No, I don’t <i>think</i> I’ve got anything on.”
Morton’s voice seemed to sound a doubt. Mr. Wrenn reflected that Morton
must be a society person; and he made his invitation highly polite:</p>
<p>“Well, say, old man, I’d be awful happy if you could come over and
feed on me. Can’t you come over and meet me, Morty?”</p>
<p>“Y-yes, I guess I can. Yes, I’ll do it. Where’ll I meet
you?”</p>
<p>“How about Twenty-eighth and Sixth Avenue?”</p>
<p>“That’ll be all right, Bill. ’Bout six o’clock?”</p>
<p>“Fine! Be awful nice to see you again, old Morty.”</p>
<p>“Same here. Goo’-by.”</p>
<p class="p2">
Gazing across the table at Miggleton’s, Mr. Wrenn saw, in the squat
familiar body and sturdy face of Morton of the cattle-boat, a stranger,
slightly uneasy and very quiet, wearing garments that had nothing whatever to
do with the cattle-boats—a crimson scarf with a horseshoe-pin of
“Brazilian diamonds,” and sleek brown ready-made clothes with
ornately curved cuffs and pocket flaps.</p>
<p>Morton would say nothing of his wanderings after their parting in Liverpool
beyond: “Oh, I just bummed around. Places…. Warm to-night. For this time
of year.” Thrice he explained, “I was kind of afraid you’d be
sore at me for the way I left you; that’s why I’ve never looked you
up.” Thrice Mr. Wrenn declared that he had not been “sore,”
then ceased trying to make himself understood.</p>
<p>Their talk wilted. Both of them played with their knives a good deal. Morton
built a set of triangles out of toothpicks while pretending to give hushed
attention to the pianist’s rendition of “Mammy’s Little
Cootsie Bootsie Coon,” while Mr. Wrenn stared out of the window as though
he expected to see the building across get afire immediately. When either of
them invented something to say they started chattering with guilty haste, and
each agreed hectically with any opinion the other advanced.</p>
<p>Mr. Wrenn surprised himself in the thought that Morton hadn’t anything
very new to say, which made him feel so disloyal that he burst out, effusively:</p>
<p>“Say, come on now, old man; I just got to hear about what you did after
you left Liverpool.”</p>
<p>“I—”</p>
<p>“Well—”</p>
<p>“I never got out of Liverpool! Worked in a restaurant…. But next
time—! I’ll go clean to Constantinople!” Morton exploded.
“And I did see a lot of English life in Liverpool.”</p>
<p>Mr. Wrenn talked long and rapidly of the world’s baseball series, and
Regal <i>vs.</i> Walkover shoes.</p>
<p>He tried to think of something they could do. Suddenly:</p>
<p>“Say, Morty, I know an awful nice guy down here in a cigar-store.
Let’s go down and see him.”</p>
<p>“All right.”</p>
<p>Tom Poppins was very cordial to them. He dragged brown canvas stools out of the
tobacco-scented room where cigars were made, and the three of them squatted in
the back of the store, while Tom gossiped of the Juarez races, Taft,
cigar-wrappers, and Jews. Morton was aroused to tell the time-mellowed story of
the judge and the darky. He was cheerful and laughed much and frequently said
“Ah there, cull!” in general commendation. But he kept looking at
the clock on the jog in the wall over the watercooler. Just at ten he rose
abashedly, hesitated, and murmured, “Well, I guess I’ll have to be
beating it home.”</p>
<p>From Mr. Wrenn: “Oh, Morty! So early?”</p>
<p>Tom: “What’s the big hurry?”</p>
<p>“I’ve got to run clear over to Jersey City.” Morton was
cordial, but not convincing.</p>
<p>“Say—uh—Morton,” said Tom, kindly of face, his bald
head shining behind his twin bangs, as he rose, “I’m going to have
Wrenn up to dinner at my boarding-house next Monday. Like to have you come
along. It’s a fine place—Mrs. Arty—she’s the
landlady—she’s a wonder. There’s going to be a vacant room
there—maybe you two fellows could frame it up to take it, heh?
Understand, I don’t get no rake-off on this, but we all like to do what
we can for M—”</p>
<p>“No, no!” said Morton. “Sorry. Couldn’t do it. Staying
with my brother-in-law—costs me only ’bout half as much as it would
I don’t do much chasing around when I’m in town…. I’m going
to save up enough money for a good long hike. I’m going clean to St.
Petersburg!… But I’ve had a good time to-night.”</p>
<p>“Glad. Great stuff about you fellows on the cattle-ship,” said Tom.</p>
<p>Morton hastened on, protectively, a bit critically: “You fellows sport
around a good deal, don’t you?… I can’t afford to…. Well, good
night. Glad to met you, Mr. Poppins. G’ night, old Wr—”</p>
<p>“Going to the ferry? For Jersey? I’ll walk over with you,”
said Mr. Wrenn.</p>
<p>Their walk was quiet and, for Mr. Wrenn, tragically sad. He saw Morton
(presumably) doing the wandering he had once planned. He felt that, while
making his vast new circle of friends, he was losing all the wild
adventurousness of Bill Wrenn. And he was parting with his first friend.</p>
<p>At the ferry-house Morton pronounced his “Well, so long, old
fellow” with an affection that meant finality.</p>
<p>Mr. Wrenn fled back to Tom Poppins’s store. On the way he was shocked to
find himself relieved at having parted with Morton. The cigar-store was closed.</p>
<p>At home Mrs. Zapp waylaid him for his rent (a day overdue), and he was very
curt. That was to keep back the “O God, how rotten I feel!” with
which, in his room, he voiced the desolation of loneliness.</p>
<p>The ghost of Morton, dead and forgotten, was with him all next day, till he got
home and unbelievably found on the staid black-walnut Zapp hat-rack a letter
from Paris, in a gray foreign-appearing envelope with Istra’s intensely
black scrawl on it.</p>
<p>He put off the luxury of opening the letter till after the rites of brushing
his teeth, putting on his slippers, pounding his rocking-chair cushion into
softness. Panting with the joy to come, he stared out of the window at a giant
and glorious figure of Istra—the laughing Istra of breakfast
camp-fire—which towered from the street below. He sighed joyously and
read:</p>
<p class="letter">
Mouse dear, just a word to let you know I haven’t forgotten you and am
very glad indeed to get your letters. Not much to write about. Frightfully busy
with work and fool parties. You <i>are</i> a dear good soul and I hope
you’ll keep on writing me. In haste, I. N.<br/>
Longer letter next time.</p>
<p>He came to the end so soon. Istra was gone again.</p>
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