Mr. Crewe's Career
CHAPTER III
CONCERNING THE PRACTICE OF LAW
So instinctively do we hark back to the primeval man that there was a
tendency to lionize the prodigal in Ripton, which proves the finished
civilization of the East not to be so far removed from that land of outlaws,
Pepper County. Mr. Paul Pardriff, who had a guilty conscience about the
clipping, and vividly bearing in mind Mr. Blodgett's mishap, alone avoided young
Mr. Vane; and escaped through the type-setting room and down an outside stairway
in the rear when that gentleman called. It gave an ironical turn to the incident
that Mr. Pardriff was at the moment engaged in a "Welcome Home" paragraph meant
to be propitiatory.
Austen cared very little for lionizing. He spent most of his time with young
Tom Gaylord, now his father's right-hand man in a tremendous lumber business.
And Tom, albeit he had become so important, habitually fell once more under the
domination of the hero of his youthful days. Together these two visited haunts
of their boyhood, camping and fishing and scaling mountains, Tom with an eye to
lumbering prospects the while.
After a matter of two or three months bad passed away in this pleasant though
unprofitable manner, the Honourable Hilary requested the presence of his son one
morning at his office. This office was in what had once been a large residence,
and from its ample windows you could look out through the elms on to the square.
Old-fashioned bookcases lined with musty books filled the walls, except where a
steel engraving of a legal light or a railroad map of the State was hung, and
the Honourable Hilary sat in a Windsor chair at a mahogany table in the middle.
The anteroom next door, where the clerks sat, was also a waiting-room for
various individuals from the different parts of the State who continually sought
the counsel's presence.
"Haven't seen much of you since you've be'n home, Austen," his father
remarked as an opening.
"Your—legal business compels you to travel a great deal," answered Austen,
turning from the window and smiling.
"Somewhat," said the Honourable Hilary, on whom this pleasantry was not lost.
"You've be'n travelling on the lumber business, I take it."
"I know more about it than I did," his son admitted.
The Honourable Hilary grunted.
"Caught a good many fish, haven't you?"
Austen crossed the room and sat on the edge of the desk beside his father's
chair.
"See here, Judge," he said, "what are you driving at? Out with it."
"When are you—going back West?" asked Mr. Vane.
Austen did not answer at once, but looked down into his father's inscrutable
face.
"Do you want to get rid of me?" he said.
"Sowed enough wild oats, haven't you?" inquired the father.
"I've sowed a good many," Austen admitted.
"Why not settle down?"
"I haven't yet met the lady, Judge," replied his son.
"Couldn't support her if you had," said Mr. Vane.
"Then it's fortunate," said Austen, resolved not to be the necessary second
in a quarrel. He knew his father, and perceived that these preliminary and
caustic openings of his were really olive branches.
"Sometimes I think you might as well be in that outlandish country, for all I
see of you," said the Honourable Hilary.
"You ought to retire from business and try fishing," his son suggested.
The Honourable Hilary sometimes smiled.
"You've got a good brain, Austen, and what's the use of wasting it chasing
cattle and practising with a pistol on your fellow-beings? You won't have much
trouble in getting admitted to the bar. Come into the office."
Austen did not answer at once. He suspected that it had cost his father not a
little to make these advances.
"Do you believe you and I could get along, Judge? How long do you think it
would last?"
"I've considered that some," answered the Honourable Hilary, "but I won't
last a great while longer myself."
"You're as sound as a bronco," declared Austen, patting him.
"I never was what you might call dissipated," agreed Mr. Vane, "but men don't
go on forever. I've worked hard all my life, and got where I am, and I've always
thought I'd like to hand it on to you. It's a position of honour and trust,
Austen, and one of which any lawyer might be proud."
"My ambition hasn't run in exactly that channel," said his son.
"Didn't know as you had any precise ambition," responded the Honourable
Hilary, "but I never heard of a man refusing to be chief counsel for a great
railroad. I don't say you can be, mind, but I say with work and brains it's as
easy for the son of Hilary Vane as for anybody else."
"I don't know much about the duties of such a position," said Austen,
laughing, "but at all events I shall have time to make up my mind how to answer
Mr. Flint when he comes to me with the proposal. To speak frankly, Judge, I
hadn't thought of spending the whole of what might otherwise prove a brilliant
life in Ripton."
The Honourable Hilary smiled again, and then he grunted.
"I tell you what I'll do," he said; "you come in with me and agree to stay
five years. If you've done well for yourself, and want to go to New York or some
large place at the end of that time, I won't hinder you. But I feel it my duty
to say, if you don't accept my offer, no son of mine shall inherit what I've
laid up by hard labour. It's against American doctrine, and it's against my
principles. You can go back to Pepper County and get put in jail, but you can't
say I haven't warned you fairly."
"You ought to leave your fortune to the railroad, Judge," said Austen.
"Generations to come would bless your name if you put up a new station in Ripton
and built bridges over Bunker Hill grade crossing and the other one on Heath
Street where Nic Adams was killed last month. I shouldn't begrudge a cent of the
money."
"I suppose I was a fool to talk to you," said the Honourable Hilary, getting
up.
But his son pushed him down again into the Windsor chair.
"Hold on, Judge," he said, "that was just my way of saying if I accepted your
offer, it wouldn't be because I yearned after the money. Thinking of it has
never kept me awake nights. Now if you'll allow me to take a few days once in a
while to let off steam, I'll make a counter proposal, in the nature of a
compromise."
"What's that?" the Honourable Hilary demanded suspiciously.
"Provided I get admitted to the bar I will take a room in another part of
this building and pick up what crumbs of practice I can by myself. Of course,
sir, I realize that these, if they come at all, will be owing to the lustre of
your name. But I should, before I become Mr. Flint's right-hand man, like to
learn to walk with my own legs."
The speech pleased the Honourable Hilary, and he put out his hand.
"It's a bargain, Austen," he said.
"I don't mind telling you now, Judge, that when I left the West I left it for
good, provided you and I could live within a decent proximity. And I ought to
add that I always intended going into the law after I'd had a fling. It isn't
fair to leave you with the impression that this is a sudden determination.
Prodigals don't become good as quick as all that."
Ripton caught its breath a second time the day Austen hired a law office, nor
did the surprise wholly cease when, in one season, he was admitted to the bar,
for the proceeding was not in keeping with the habits and customs of prodigals.
Needless to say, the practice did not immediately begin to pour in, but the
little office rarely lacked a visitor, and sometimes had as many as five or six.
There was an irresistible attraction about that room, and apparently very little
law read there, though sometimes its occupant arose and pushed the visitors into
the hall and locked the door, and opened the window at the top to let the smoke
out. Many of the Honourable Hilary's callers preferred the little room in the
far corridor to the great man's own office.
These visitors of the elder Mr. Vane's, as has been before hinted, were not
all clients. Without burdening the reader too early with a treatise on the
fabric of a system, suffice it to say that something was continually going on
that was not law; and gentlemen came and went—fat and thin, sharp-eyed and
red-faced—who were neither clients nor lawyers. These were really secretive
gentlemen, though most of them had a hail-fellow-well-met manner and a hearty
greeting, but when they talked to the Honourable Hilary it was with doors shut,
and even then they sat very close to his ear. Many of them preferred now to wait
in Austen's office instead of the anteroom, and some of them were not so
cautious with the son of Hilary Vane that they did not let drop certain
observations to set him thinking. He had a fanciful if somewhat facetious way of
calling them by feudal titles which made them grin.
"How is the Duke of Putnam this morning?" he would ask of the gentleman of
whom the Ripton Record would frequently make the following announcement: "Among
the prominent residents of Putnam County in town this week was the Honourable
Brush Bascom."
The Honourable Brush and many of his associates, barons and earls, albeit the
shrewdest of men, did not know exactly how to take the son of Hilary Vane. This
was true also of the Honourable Hilary himself, who did not wholly appreciate
the humour in Austen's parallel of the feudal system. Although Austen had set up
for himself, there were many ways—not legal—in which the son might have been
helpful to the father, but the Honourable Hilary hesitated, for some
unformulated reason, to make use of him; and the consequence was that Mr.
Hamilton Tooting and other young men of a hustling nature in the Honourable
Hilary's office found that Austen's advent did not tend greatly to lighten a
certain class of their labours. In fact, father and son were not much nearer in
spirit than when ode had been in Pepper County and the other in Ripton. Caution
and an instinct which senses obstacles are characteristics of gentlemen in Mr.
Vane's business.
So two years passed,—years liberally interspersed with expeditions into the
mountains and elsewhere, and nights spent in the company of Tom Gaylord and
others. During this period Austen was more than once assailed by the temptation
to return to the free life of Pepper County, Mr. Blodgett having completely
recovered now, and only desiring vengeance of a corporal nature. But a bargain
was a bargain, and Austen Vane stuck to his end of it, although he had now begun
to realize many aspects of a situation which he had not before suspected. He had
long foreseen, however, that the time was coming when a serious disagreement
with his father was inevitable. In addition to the difference in temperament,
Hilary Vane belonged to one generation and Austen to another.
It happened, as do so many incidents which tend to shape a life, by a seeming
chance. It was a Tune evening, and there had been a church sociable and basket
picnic during the day in a grove in the town of Mercer, some ten miles south of
Ripton. The grove was bounded on one side by the railroad track, and merged into
a thick clump of second growth and alders where there was a diagonal grade
crossing. The picnic was over and the people preparing to go home when they were
startled by a crash, followed by the screaming of brakes as a big engine flew
past the grove and brought a heavy train to a halt some distance down the grade.
The women shrieked and dropped the dishes they were washing, and the men left
their horses standing and ran to the crossing and then stood for the moment
helpless, in horror at the scene which met their eyes. The wagon of one—of their
own congregation was in splinters, a man (a farmer of the neighbourhood) lying
among the alders with what seemed a mortal injury. Amid the lamentations and
cries for some one to go to Mercer Village for the doctor a young man drove up
rapidly and sprang out of a buggy, trusting to some one to catch his horse,
pushed, through the ring of people, and bent over the wounded farmer. In an
instant he had whipped out a knife, cut a stick from one of the alders, knotted
his handkerchief around the man's leg, ran the stick through the knot, and
twisted the handkerchief until the blood ceased to flow. They watched him,
paralyzed, as the helpless in this world watch the capable, and before he had
finished his task the train crew and some passengers began to arrive.
"Have you a doctor aboard, Charley?" the young man asked.
"No," answered the conductor, who had been addressed; "my God, not one,
Austen."
"Back up your train," said Austen, "and stop your baggage car here. And go to
the grove," he added to one of the picnickers, "and bring four or five carriage
cushions. And you hold this."
The man beside him took the tourniquet, as he was bid. Austen Vane drew a
note-book from his pocket.
"I want this man's name and address," he said, "and the names and addresses
of every person here, quickly."
He did not lift his voice, but the man who had taken charge of such a
situation was not to be denied. They obeyed him, some eagerly, some reluctantly,
and by that time the train had backed down and the cushions had arrived. They
laid these on the floor of the baggage car and lifted the man on to them. His
name was Zeb Meader, and he was still insensible. Austen Vane, with a peculiar
set look upon his face, sat beside him all the way into Ripton. He spoke only
once, and that was to tell the conductor to telegraph from Avalon to have the
ambulance from St. Mary's Hospital meet the train at Ripton.
The next day Hilary Vane, returning from one of his periodical trips to the
northern part of the State, invaded his son's office.
"What's this they tell me about your saving a man's life?" he asked, sinking
into one of the vacant chairs and regarding Austen with his twinkling eyes.
"I don't know what they tell you," Austen answered. "I didn't do anything but
get a tourniquet on his leg and have him put on the train."
The Honourable Hilary grunted, and continued to regard his son. Then he cut a
piece of Honey Dew.
"Looks bad, does it?" he said.
"Well," replied Austen, "it might have been done better. It was bungled. In a
death-trap as cleverly conceived as that crossing, with a down grade approaching
it, they ought to have got the horse too."
The Honourable Hilary grunted again, and inserted the Honey Dew. He resolved
to ignore the palpable challenge in this remark, which was in keeping with this
new and serious mien in Austen.
"Get the names of witnesses?" was his next question.
"I took particular pains to do so."
"Hand 'em over to Tooting. What kind of man is this Meagre?"
"He is rather meagre now," said Austen, smiling a little. "His name's
Meader."
"Is he likely to make a fuss?"
"I think he is," said Austen.
"Well," said the Honourable Hilary, "we must have Ham Tooting hurry 'round
and fix it up with him as soon as he can talk, before one of these cormorant
lawyers gets his claw in him."
Austen said nothing, and after some desultory conversation, in which he knew
how to indulge when he wished to conceal the fact that he was baffled, the
Honourable Hilary departed. That student of human nature, Mr. Hamilton Tooting,
a young man of a sporting appearance and a free vocabulary, made the next
attempt. It is a characteristic of Mr. Tooting's kind that, in their efforts to
be genial, they often use an awkward diminutive of their friends' names.
"Hello, Aust," said Mr. Tooting, "I dropped in to get those witnesses in that
Meagre accident, before I forget it."
"I think I'll keep 'em," said Austen, making a note out of the Revised
Statutes.
"Oh, all right, all right," said Mr. Tooting, biting off a piece of his
cigar. "Going to handle the case yourself, are you?"
"I may."
"I'm just as glad to have some of 'em off my hands, and this looks to me like
a nasty one. I don't like those Mercer people. The last farmer they ran over
there raised hell."
"I shouldn't blame this one if he did, if he ever gets well enough," said
Austen. Young Mr. Tooting paused with a lighted match halfway to his cigar and
looked at Austen shrewdly, and then sat down on the desk very close to him.
"Say, Aust, it sometimes sickens a man to have to buy these fellows off.
What? Poor devils, they don't get anything like what they ought to get, do they?
Wait till you see how the Railroad Commission'll whitewash that case. It makes a
man want to be independent. What?"
"This sounds like virtue, Ham."
"I've often thought, too," said Mr. Tooting, "that a man could make more
money if he didn't wear the collar."
"But not sleep as well, perhaps," said Austen.
"Say, Aust, you're not on the level with me."
"I hope to reach that exalted plane some day, Ham."
"What's got into you?" demanded the usually clear-headed Mr. Tooting, now a
little bewildered.
"Nothing, yet," said Austen, "but I'm thinking seriously of having a sandwich
and a piece of apple pie. Will you come along?"
They crossed the square together, Mr. Tooting racking a normally fertile
brain for some excuse to reopen the subject. Despairing of that, he decided that
any subject would do.
"That Humphrey Crewe up at Leith is smart—smart as paint," he remarked. "Do
you know him?"
"I've seen him," said Austen. "He's a young man, isn't he?"
"And natty. He knows a thing or two for a millionaire that don't have to
work, and he runs that place of his right up to the handle. You ought to hear
him talk about the tariff, and national politics. I was passing there the other
day, and he was walking around among the flowerbeds. 'Ain't your name Tooting?'
he hollered. I almost fell out of the buggy."
"What did he want?" asked Austen, curiously. Mr. Tooting winked.
"Say, those millionaires are queer, and no mistake. You'd think a fellow that
only had to cut coupons wouldn't be lookin' for another job, wouldn't you? He
made me hitch my horse, and had me into his study, as he called it, and gave me
a big glass of whiskey and soda. A fellow with buttons and a striped vest
brought it on tiptoe. Then this Crewe gave me a long yellow cigar with a band on
it and told me what the State needed,—macadam roads, farmers' institutes,
forests, and God knows what. I told him all he had to do was to get permission
from old man Flint, and he could have 'em."
"What did he say to that?"
"He said Flint was an intimate friend of his. Then he asked me a whole raft
of questions about fellows in the neighbourhood I didn't know he'd ever heard
of. Say, he wants to go from Leith to the Legislature."
"He can go for all I care," said Austen, as he pushed open the door of the
restaurant.
For a few days Mr. Meader hung between life and death. But he came of a stock
which had for generations thrust its roots into the crevices of granite, and was
not easily killed by steam-engines. Austen Vane called twice, and then made an
arrangement with young Dr. Tredway (one of the numerous Ripton Tredways whose
money had founded the hospital) that he was to see Mr. Meader as soon as he was
able to sustain a conversation. Dr. Tredway, by the way, was a bachelor, and had
been Austen's companion on many a boisterous expedition.
When Austen, in response to the doctor's telephone message, stood over the
iron bed in the spick-and-span men's ward of St. Mary's, a wave of that intense
feeling he had experienced at the accident swept over him. The farmer's beard
was overgrown, and the eyes looked up at him as from caverns of suffering below
the bandage. They were shrewd eyes, however, and proved that Mr. Meader had
possession of the five senses—nay, of the six. Austen sat down beside the bed.
"Dr. Tredway tells me you are getting along finely," he said.
"No thanks to the railrud," answered Mr. Meader; "they done their best."
"Did you hear any whistle or any bell?" Austen asked.
"Not a sound," said Mr. Meader; "they even shut off their steam on that
grade."
Austen Vane, like most men who are really capable of a deep sympathy, was not
an adept at expressing it verbally. Moreover, he knew enough of his fellow-men
to realize that a Puritan farmer would be suspicious of sympathy. The man had
been near to death himself, was compelled to spend part of the summer, his
bread-earning season, in a hospital, and yet no appeal or word of complaint had
crossed his lips.
"Mr. Meader," said Austen, "I came over here to tell you that in my opinion
you are entitled to heavy damages from the railroad, and to advise you not to
accept a compromise. They will send some one to you and offer you a sum far
below that which you ought in justice to receive, You ought to fight this case."
"How am I going to pay a lawyer, with a mortgage on my farm?" demanded Mr.
Meader.
"I'm a lawyer," said Austen, "and if you'll take me, I'll defend you without
charge."
"Ain't you the son of Hilary Vane?"
"Yes."
"I've heard of him a good many times," said Mr. Meader, as if to ask what man
had not. "You're railroad, ain't ye?"
Mr. Meader gazed long and thoughtfully into the young man's face, and the
suspicion gradually faded from the farmer's blue eyes.
"I like your looks," he said at last. "I guess you saved my life. I'm—I'm
much obliged to you."
When Mr. Tooting arrived later in the day, he found Mr. Meader willing to
listen, but otherwise strangely non-committal. With native shrewdness, the
farmer asked him what office he came from, but did not confide in Mr. Tooting
the fact that Mr. Vane's son had volunteered to wring more money from Mr. Vane's
client than Mr. Tooting offered him. Considerably bewildered, that gentleman
left the hospital to report the affair to the Honourable Hilary, who, at
intervals during the afternoon, found himself relapsing into speculation.
Inside of a somewhat unpromising shell, Mr. Zeb Meader was a human being, and
no mean judge of men and motives. As his convalescence progressed, Austen Vane
fell into the habit of dropping in from time to time to chat with him, and
gradually was rewarded by many vivid character sketches of Mr. Meader's
neighbours in Mercer and its vicinity. One afternoon, when Austen came into the
ward, he found at Mr. Meader's bedside a basket of fruit which looked too
expensive and tempting to have come from any dealer's in Ripton.
"A lady came with that," Mr. Meader explained. "I never was popular before I
was run over by the cars. She's be'n here twice. When she fetched it to-day, I
kind of thought she was up to some, game, and I didn't want to take it."
"Up to some game?" repeated Austen.
"Well, I don't know," continued Mr. Meader, thoughtfully, "the woman here
tells me she comes regular in the summer time to see sick folks, but from the
way she made up to me I had an idea that she wanted something. But I don't know.
Thought I'd ask you. You see, she's railrud."
"Railroad!"
"She's Flint's daughter."
Austen laughed.
"I shouldn't worry about that," he said. "If Mr. Flint sent his daughter with
fruit to everybody his railroad injures, she wouldn't have time to do anything
else. I doubt if Mr. Flint ever heard of your case."
Mr. Meader considered this, and calculated there was something in it.
"She was a nice, common young lady, and cussed if she didn't make me laugh,
she has such a funny way of talkin'. She wanted to know all about you."
"What did she want to know?" Austen exclaimed, not unnaturally.
"Well, she wanted to know about the accident, and I told her how you druv up
and screwed that thing around my leg and backed the train down. She was a good
deal took with that."
"I think you are inclined to make too much of it," said Austen.
Three days later, as he was about to enter the ward, Mr. Meader being now the
only invalid there, he heard a sound which made him pause in the doorway. The
sound was feminine laughter of a musical quality that struck pleasantly on
Austen's ear. Miss Victoria Flint was sated beside Mr. Meader's bed, and
qualified friendship had evidently been replaced by intimacy since Austen's last
visit, for Mr. Meader was laughing, too.
"And now I'm quite sure you have missed your vocation, Mr. Meader," said
Victoria. "You would have made a fortune on the stage."
"Me a play-actor!" exclaimed the invalid. "How much wages do they git?"
"Untold sums," she declared, "if they can talk like you."
"He kind of thought that story funny—same as you," Mr. Meader ruminated, and
glanced up. "Drat me," he remarked, "if he ain't a-comin' now! I callated he'd
run acrost you sometime."
Victoria raised her eyes, sparkling with humour, and they met Austen's.
"We was just talkin' about you," cried Mr. Meader, cordially; "come right
in." He turned to Victoria. "I want to make you acquainted," he said, "with
Austen Vane."
"And won't you tell him who I am, Mr. Meader?" said Victoria.
"Well," said Mr. Meader, apologetically, "that was stupid of me—wahn't it?
But I callated he'd know. She's the daughter of the railrud president—the 'one
that was askin' about you."
There was an instant's pause, and the colour stole into Victoria's cheeks.
Then she glanced at Austen and bit her lip-and laughed. Her laughter was
contagious.
"I suppose I shall have to confess that you have inspired my curiosity, Mr.
Vane," she said.
Austen's face was sunburned, but it flushed a more vivid red under the tan.
It is needless to pretend that a man of his appearance and qualities had reached
the age of thirty-two without having listened to feminine comments of which he
was the exclusive subject. In this remark of Victoria's, or rather in the manner
in which she made it, he recognized a difference.
"It is a tribute, then, to the histrionic talents of Mr. Meader, of which you
were speaking," he replied laughingly.
Victoria glanced at him with interest as he looked down at Mr. Meader.
"And how is it to-day, Zeb?" he said.
"It ain't so bad as it might be—with sech folks as her and you araound,"
admitted Mr. Meader. "I'd almost agree to get run over again. She was askin'
about you, and that's a fact, and I didn't slander you, neither. But I never
callated to comprehend wimmen-folks."
"Now, Mr. Meader," said Victoria, reprovingly, but there were little creases
about her eyes, "don't be a fraud."
"It's true as gospel," declared the invalid; "they always got the better of
me. I had one of 'em after me once, when I was young and prosperin' some."
"And yet you have survived triumphant," she exclaimed.
"There wahn't none of 'em like you," said Mr. Meader, "or it might have be'n
different."
Again her eyes irresistibly sought Austen's,—as though to share with him the
humour of this remark,—and they laughed together. Her colour, so sensitive, rose
again, but less perceptibly this time. Then she got up.
"That's unfair, Mr. Meader!" she protested.
"I'll leave it to Austen," said Mr. Meader, "if it ain't probable. He'd ought
to know."
In spite of a somewhat natural embarrassment, Austen could not but
acknowledge to himself that Mr. Meader was right. With a womanly movement which
he thought infinitely graceful, Victoria leaned over the bed.
"Mr. Meader," she said, "I'm beginning to think it's dangerous for me to come
here twice a week to see you, if you talk this way. And I'm not a bit surprised
that that woman didn't get the better of you."
"You hain't a-goin'!" he exclaimed. "Why, I callated—"
"Good-by," she said quickly; "I'm glad to see that you are doing so well."
She raised her head and looked at Austen in a curious, inscrutable way.
"Good-by, Mr. Vane," she said; "I—I hope Mr. Blodgett has recovered."
Before he could reply she had vanished, and he was staring at the empty
doorway. The reference to the unfortunate Mr. Blodgett, after taking his breath
away, aroused in him an intense curiosity betraying, as it did, a certain
knowledge of past events in his life in the hitherto unknown daughter of
Augustus interest could she have in him? Such a Flint. What question, from
similar sources, has heightened the pulse of young men from time immemorial.