PAGE 17
The Pursuit Of The Piano
by
He hardly knew how to dissemble the feeling of humiliation mixed with indignation which flashed up in him, and which, he was afterwards afraid, must have made him seem rather curt in his response to the head waiter’s civilities. Miss Axewright left the dining-room first, and he hurried out to look her up as soon as he had despatched the coffee and steak which formed his breakfast, with a wholly unreasoned impulse to offer her some sort of reparation for the slight the conditions put upon her. He found her sitting on the veranda beside the friendly tabby of his last night’s acquaintance, and far, apparently, from feeling the need of reparation through him. She was very nice, though, and after chatting a little while she rose, and excused herself to the tabby, with a politeness that included Gaites, upon the ground of a promise to Miss Desmond that she would come up, the first thing after breakfast, and see how the piano was getting along.
When she reappeared, in her hat, at the front of the Inn, Gaites happened to be there, and he asked her if he might walk with her and make his inquiries too about the piano, in which, he urged, they were mutually interested. He had a notion to tell her all about his pursuit of Miss Desmond’s piano, as something that would peculiarly interest Miss Desmond’s friend; but though she admitted the force of his reasoning as to their common concern in the fate of the piano, and had allowed him to go with her to rejoice over its installation, some subtle instinct kept him from the confidence he had intended, and they walked on in talk (very agreeable talk, Gaites found it) which left the subject of the piano altogether intact.
This was fortunate for Miss Desmond, who wished to talk of nothing else. The piano had arrived in perfect condition. “But I don’t know where the poor thing hasn’t been, on the way,” said the girl. “It left Boston fully two weeks ago, and it seems to have been wandering round to the ends of the earth ever since. The first of last week, I heard from it at Kent Harbor, of all places! I got a long despatch from there, from some unknown female, telling me it had broken down on the way to Burymouth, and been sent by mistake to Kent Harbor from Mewers Junction. Have you ever been at Kent Harbor, Mr. Gaites?”
“Oh, yes,” said Gaites. This was the moment to come out with the history of his relation to the piano; but he waited.
“And can you tell me whether they happen to have a female freight agent there?”
“Not to my knowledge,” said Gaites, with a mystical smile.
“Then do you know anybody there by the name of Elaine W. Maze?”
“Mrs. Maze? Yes, I know Mrs. Maze. She has a cottage, there.”
“And can you tell me why Mrs. Maze should be telegraphing me about my piano?”
There was a note of resentment in Miss Desmond’s voice, and it silenced the laughing explanation which Gaites had almost upon his tongue. He fell very grave in answering, “I can’t, indeed, Miss Desmond.”
“Perhaps she found out that it had been a long time on the way, and did it out of pure good-nature, to relieve your anxiety.”
This was what Miss Axewright conjectured, but it seemed to confirm Miss Desmond’s worst suspicions.
“That is what I should like to be sure of,” she said.
Gaites thought of all his own anxieties and interferences in behalf of the piano of this ungrateful girl, and in her presence he resolved that his lips should be forever sealed concerning them. She never would take them in the right way. But he experimented with one suggestion. “Perhaps she was taken with the beautiful name on the piano-case, and couldn’t help telegraphing just for the pleasure of writing it.”
“Beautiful?” cried Miss Desmond. “It was my grandmother’s name; and I wonder they didn’t call me for my great-grandmother, Daphne, and be done with it.”