Disentangling Old Duggie
by
Doesn’t some poet or philosopher fellow say that it’s when our intentions are best that we always make the worst breaks? I can’t put my hand on the passage, but you’ll find it in Shakespeare or somewhere, I’m pretty certain.
At any rate, it’s always that way with me. And the affair of Douglas Craye is a case in point.
I had dined with Duggie (a dear old pal of mine) one night at his club, and as he was seeing me out he said: “Reggie, old top”–my name’s Reggie Pepper–“Reggie, old top, I’m rather worried.”
“Are you, Duggie, old pal?” I said.
“Yes, Reggie, old fellow,” he said, “I am. It’s like this. The Booles have asked me down to their place for the week-end, and I don’t know whether to go or not. You see, they have early breakfast, and besides that there’s a frightful risk of music after dinner. On the other hand, young Roderick Boole thinks he can play piquet.”
“I should go,” I said.
“But I’m not sure Roderick’s going to be there this time.”
It was a problem, and I didn’t wonder poor old Dug had looked pale and tired at dinner.
Then I had the idea which really started all the trouble.
“Why don’t you consult a palmist?” I said.
“That sounds a good idea,” said Duggie.
“Go and see Dorothea in Forty-second Street. She’s a wonder. She’ll settle it for you in a second. She’ll see from your lines that you are thinking of making a journey, and she’ll either tell you to get a move on, which will mean that Roderick will be there, or else to keep away because she sees disaster.”
“You seem to be next to the game all right.”
“I’ve been to a good many of them. You’ll like Dorothea.”
“What did you say her name was–Dorothea? What do I do? Do I just walk in? Shan’t I feel a fearful chump? How much do I give her?”
“Five bucks. You’d better write and make a date.”
“All right,” said Duggie. “But I know I shall look a frightful fool.”
About a week later I ran into him between the acts at the Knickerbocker. The old boy was beaming.
“Reggie,” he said, “you did me the best turn anyone’s ever done me, sending me to Mrs. Darrell.”
“Mrs. Darrell?”
“You know. Dorothea. Her real name’s Darrell. She’s a widow. Her husband was in some regiment, and left her without a penny. It’s a frightfully pathetic story. Haven’t time to tell you now. My boy, she’s a marvel. She had hardly looked at my hand, when she said: ‘You will prosper in any venture you undertake.’ And next day, by George, I went down to the Booles’ and separated young Roderick from seventy dollars. She’s a wonderful woman. Did you ever see just that shade of hair?”
“I didn’t notice her hair.”
He gaped at me in a sort of petrified astonishment.
“You–didn’t–notice–her–hair!” he gasped.
I can’t fix the dates exactly, but it must have been about three weeks after this that I got a telegram:
“Call Madison Avenue immediately–Florence Craye.”
She needn’t have signed her name. I should have known who it was from by the wording. Ever since I was a kid, Duggie’s sister Florence has oppressed me to the most fearful extent. Not that I’m the only one. Her brothers live in terror of her, I know. Especially Edwin. He’s never been able to get away from her and it’s absolutely broken his spirit. He’s a mild, hopeless sort of chump who spends all his time at home–they live near Philadelphia–and has never been known to come to New York. He’s writing a history of the family, or something, I believe.
You see, events have conspired, so to speak, to let Florence do pretty much as she likes with them. Originally there was old man Craye, Duggie’s father, who made a fortune out of the Soup Trust; Duggie’s elder brother Edwin; Florence; and Duggie. Mrs. Craye has been dead some years. Then came the smash. It happened through the old man. Most people, if you ask them, will tell you that he ought to be in Bloomingdale; and I’m not sure they’re not right. At any rate, one morning he came down to breakfast, lifted the first cover on the sideboard, said in a sort of despairing way, “Eggs! Eggs! Eggs! Curse all eggs!” and walked out of the room. Nobody thought much of it till about an hour afterward, when they found that he had packed a grip, left the house, and caught the train to New York. Next day they got a letter from him, saying that he was off to Europe, never to return, and that all communications were to be addressed to his lawyers. And from that day on none of them had seen him. He wrote occasionally, generally from Paris; and that was all.