PAGE 28
The Scarlet Car
by
“I’m afraid I’ll have to show you,” said the young man. He laid two fingers on Mr. Schwab’s wrist; looking at him, as he did so, steadily and thoughtfully, like a physician feeling a pulse. Mr. Schwab screamed. When he had seen policemen twist steel nippers on the wrists of prisoners, he had thought, when the prisoners shrieked and writhed, they were acting.
He now knew they were not.
“Now, will you promise?” demanded the grim young man.
“Yes,” gasped Mr. Schwab. “I’ll sit still. I won’t do nothing.”
“Good,” muttered Winthrop.
A troubled voice that carried to the heart of Schwab a promise of protection, said: “Mr. Schwab, would you be more comfortable back here with me?”
Mr. Schwab turned two terrified eyes in the direction of the voice. He saw the beautiful young lady regarding him kindly, compassionately; with just a suspicion of a smile. Mr. Schwab instantly scrambled to safety over the front seat into the body of the car. Miss Forbes made way for the prisoner beside her and he sank back with a nervous, apologetic sigh. The alert young man was quick to follow the lead of the lady.
“You’ll find caps and goggles in the boot, Schwab,” he said hospitably. “You had better put them on. We are going rather fast now.” He extended a magnificent case of pigskin, that bloomed with fat black cigars. “Try one of these,” said the hospitable young man. The emotions that swept Mr. Schwab he found difficult to pursue, but he raised his hat to the lady. “May I, Miss?” he said.
“Certainly,” said the lady.
There was a moment of delay while with fingers that slightly trembled, Mr. Schwab selected an amazing green cap and lit his cigar; and then the car swept forward, singing and humming happily, and scattering the autumn leaves. The young lady leaned toward him with a book in a leather cover. She placed her finger on a twisting red line that trickled through a page of type.
“We’re just here,” said the young lady, “and we ought to reach home, which is just about there, in an hour.”
“I see,” said Schwab. But all he saw was a finger in a white glove, and long eyelashes tangled in a gray veil.
For many minutes, or for all Schwab knew, for many miles, the young lady pointed out to him the places along the Hudson, of which he had read in the public school history, and quaint old manor houses set in glorious lawns; and told him who lived in them. Schwab knew the names as belonging to down-town streets, and up-town clubs. He became nervously humble, intensely polite, he felt he was being carried as an honored guest into the very heart of the Four Hundred, and when the car jogged slowly down the main street of Yonkers, although a policeman stood idly within a yard of him, instead of shrieking to him for help, “Izzy” Schwab looked at him scornfully across the social gulf that separated them, with all the intolerance he believed becoming in the upper classes.
“Those bicycle cops,” he said confidentially to Miss Forbes, “are too chesty.”
The car turned in between stone pillars, and under an arch of red and golden leaves, and swept up a long avenue to a house of innumerable roofs. It was the grandest house Mr. Schwab had ever entered, and when two young men in striped waistcoats and many brass buttons ran down the stone steps and threw open the door of the car, his heart fluttered between fear and pleasure.
Lounging before an open fire in the hall were a number of young men, who welcomed Winthrop delightedly and, to all of whom Mr. Schwab was formally presented. As he was introduced he held each by the hand and elbow and said impressively, and much to the other’s embarrassment, “WHAT name, please?”