Weekly classic film-related e-books from Meredy.com

Friday, May 8, 2009

Weekly Meredy.com E-book - Topper

I love reading the books on which many classic flicks are based. In fact, I collect them. I thought you might like to read them, too. So, I'm starting something new. A free classic movie-related e-book will be featured weekly on my blog. And there will be a surprise waiting for you at the end of each book. :)

For today, I've chosen an old favorite of mine: Topper by James Thorne Smith, Jr..

James Thorne Smith, Jr. (March 27, 1892 - June 21, 1934), was an American writer of humorous supernaturnal fantasy fiction.

Best known today for his creation of Topper, Smith's comic fantasy fiction (most of it involving sex, lots of drinking, and supernatural transformations, and aided by racy illustrations) sold millions of copies in the early 1930s. Smith drank as steadily as his characters; his appearance in James Thurber's The Years With Ross involves an unexplained week-long disappearance. Smith was born in Annapolis, Maryland the son of a Navy commodore, attended Dartmouth College, and after hungry years in Greenwich Village working part-time as an advertising agent, Smith achieved meteoric success with the publication of Topper in 1926. He died of a heart attack while vacationing in Florida.

Topper (1926) - This and its 1932 sequel, Topper Takes a Trip were probably Smith's most famous work, about a respectable banker called Cosmo Topper and his misadventures with a couple of ghosts, Marion and George Kerby. It was made into a film, Topper, for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer by Hal Roach in 1937 starring Roland Young and Billie Burke; the cast included Cary Grant as George Kerby and Constance Bennett as Marion Kerby. Two filmed sequels followed: Topper Takes a Trip in 1939 and Topper Returns in 1941. The books were adapted into an American television series, Topper, beginning in 1953, with Leo G. Carroll as Cosmo Topper, Robert Sterling and Anne Jeffreys as the ghosts. Seventy-eight episodes were made: the pilot episode and a few of the early episodes were written by Stephen Sondheim.





A Meredy.com E-book

Title: Topper (1926)
Author: James Thorne Smith, Jr.
Edition: 1
Language: English
Character set encoding: HTML--Latin-1(ISO-8859-1)--8 bit
Date first posted: March 2009
Date most recently updated: March 2009

This e-book was produced by: Meredy - mrs_skeffington at yahoo dot com

Meredy.com E-books are created from printed editions which are in the public domain, unless a copyright notice is included.
I do NOT keep any eBooks in compliance with a particular paper edition.

Copyright laws are changing all over the world.
Be sure to check the copyright laws for your country before downloading or redistributing this file.

This e-book is made available at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it.

To contact Meredy, go to http://www.meredy.com.

---

The Jovial Ghosts: The Misadventures of Topper
By
James Thorne Smith, Jr.



Dedication:

To Celia --to say the least--


CHAPTER I No Change


For  some  minutes  now Scollops had been gazing searchingly at Mr. Topper. And Mr. Topper was troubled. Not definitely troubled, but vaguely so,
which  to  some  persons is the most troublesome form of trouble. Mr. Topper was one of such persons. In fact he was highly representative of the
type. So free from trouble had Topper's days been that gradually he had come to regard with suspicion all creatures not likewise unencumbered. An
earthquake, an eruption or tidal wave would mildly move Cosmo Topper, arouse him to the extent of a dollar donation which would later be deducted
from  his  income tax; whereas a newspaper story dealing with bankruptcy, crimes of violence or moral looseness would cause him speedily to avert
his eyes to less disturbing topics. Mr. Topper could excuse nature and the Republican Party, but not man. He was an institutional sort of animal,
but  not  morbid.  Not apparently. So completely and successfully had he inhibited himself that he veritably believed he was the freest person in
the  world.  But  Mr.  Topper could not be troubled. His mental process ran safely, smoothly, and on the dot along well signalled tracks; and his
physical  activities,  such  as  they were, obeyed without question an inelastic schedule of suburban domesticity. He resented being troubled. At
least he thought he did. That was Mr. Topper's trouble, but at present he failed to realise it.

He  experienced now something of the same resentment that came to him upon being delayed in the tunnel on his way home from the city. Things were
going  on  round  him  in  the  tunnel,  dreadful things, perhaps, but he did not know what they were. He sat in a blaze of light in the midst of
clanking  darkness.  Surrounded  by familiar things he felt stuffy and uncomfortable. Even his newspaper lost its wonted stability. Yes, it was a
decidedly  objectionable  feeling  that Mr. Topper had to-night as he gave himself to the solicitous embrace of his arm chair and followed with a
dull  gaze  the  rug's  interminable  border  design--  a Doric motif, clean-cut and geometrically accurate. Once this design had appealed to his
abiding  sense  of  order.  To-night he hardly saw it, although without his knowledge it was wearying his eyes, and had been doing so for several
months.

In  Scollops'  eyes  there  was an expression difficult to fathom. Mr. Topper held the opinion that the expression was uncomfortably insinuating,
making  him  in  some sly way an accessory before the fact. But hang it all, what was the meaning of Scollops' look? The cat had been fed. He had
seen  to  that  himself as he had seen to it ever since he had adventurously brought her home from Wilson's, the grocer's, one evening four years
ago.  Four  years.  As long as that in this house; and once it had seemed so new. Now it was an old house, an uninteresting house. Perhaps he was
old,  too,  and  equally  uninteresting.  Mr.  Topper felt that he was, and for the first time in his life permitted himself to wonder about such
things.

His  intellectual  debauch  was rudely shattered by Scollops. The cat yawned and tentatively thrust her nails into her benefactor's thigh. It was
rather  a plump thigh. Long years of sedentary work had served to despoil it of its youthful charm. It was a tight thigh and a fleshy one, yet it
still  reacted  to  pain.  To  such  an  extent, in fact, that Mr. Topper's sensation of trouble instantly gave way to one of mild reproach as he
dropped Scollops softly thudding to the floor.

This  faint  discord in the domestic tranquillity caused Mrs. Cosmo Topper to look up from her needlework. Mr. Topper, glancing across the table,
met his wife's eyes. It was just for a moment, then he looked quickly away, but why, he did not know.

"She yawned," he remarked by way of explanation. "Yawned and scratched."

"I know it," apologised Mrs. Topper, mistaking his words for a direct accusation. "I've been doing it all evening. It must have been the veal."

Topper watched his wife remove her sewing-glasses and place them in their case. With an absorbed gaze he followed her movements as she folded her
sewing  and  wrapped  it  in  a piece of linen, which she then deposited in a basket. At this point his expression became almost desperate, then,
hopeless.  No,  there was going to be no change in the nightly routine--glasses, case, linen, basket. If she would only reverse the procedure, or
for  once forget her glasses, that would be something. Meantime Mrs. Topper, unconscious of tragedy, rose from her chair, came round to where her
husband  was  sitting, and brushed his forehead with her lips. Then, referring once more in a pained voice to the haunting qualities of veal, she
left the room.

Mr.  Topper  listened to her firm step upon the stairs. A certain squeaking of boards apprised him of the fact that she had achieved the landing.
For  a  moment  he thought idly about veal in relation to his wife. Then he did an unusual thing. Instead of knocking out his pipe and locking in
the  cat  whose vagrant nature had caused him some rather trying experiences in the past, he gently retrieved that animal from the floor and fell
to studying an old atlas which he had plucked from an obscure shelf.

"It made me sleepless, too," murmured Mrs. Topper an hour later as her husband settled down beside her.

And  that  night Mr. Topper dreamed of eating curried veal in Calcutta. He was surrounded by many maidens, all of whom partook amply of veal, and
none of whom complained. It was delicious. He gorged himself.


CHAPTER II Scollops Looks Inscrutable


Not  until the following afternoon, which was Saturday and therefore free, was Mr. Topper able to localise his trouble. The discovery came to him
as  a  shock  which gathered intensity as the days passed. It marked an epoch in his life. Even Mrs. Topper, who steadfastly refused to recognise
changes  taking  place  around her, detected something new and therefore annoying in her husband. But she reassured herself by believing that all
stomachs have their off seasons, and became almost pallidly cheerful when she considered the fact that her stomach's off season was always on--it
prevailed  the year around. To Mrs. Topper it was an endless source of comfort to be able to trace all mystifying cases of conduct, even her own,
to such a tangible and well-established institution as a stomach.

It  was  Scollops  again.  .  .  .  Scollops draped on her master's knee with a Saturday afternoon mist swimming in her eyes. . . . Scollops, the
inexplicable, narrowing infinity between two orange-coloured slits.

This  it was that gave Mr. Topper the shock. For the first time in their four years of companionable association Topper realised that the cat saw
nothing, that is, nothing immediate. Although her yellow, searching gaze included him, it passed far beyond him down distant vistas from which he
was excluded. Caressing and condoning on their way, Scollops' eyes seemed to be roving through the ages, dwelling on appalling mysteries with the
reminiscent indulgence of a satiated goddess.

Looking  into  Scollops'  eyes,  Mr. Topper discovered that there were things he did not know, colours of life beyond his comprehension, impulses
alien  to  his  reason.  With  his  wife's  eyes  it was different. He knew their every shade and meaning. Nothing in them lay unrevealed. He was
familiar  with  the  direct  gaze denoting finance, the confidential gaze denoting scandal, the patient gaze denoting servants, the motherly gaze
denoting superiority and the martyred gaze denoting indigestion.

Suddenly  Mr.  Topper  realised  what  was  troubling him. It was eyes. Old familiar eyes. He felt that he knew them all. He knew the eyes at the
office,  from  the  president's to the elevator boy's. It was surprising, he thought, how desperately well he knew eyes. Mr. Topper saw eyes. Mr.
Topper understood them. And be had an uncomfortable feeling that they understood him.

Now,  however,  he  was  alive to the fact that Scollops' eyes escaped all classification. This both pleased and shocked him. He realised that in
spite  of  four  years  of  close  companionship he had not the slightest idea of Scollops' private opinion of him, or of anything else, for that
matter. To what was going on behind her eyes Topper had no clue.

Mr.  Topper  found himself thinking that it would be a relief to have someone look at him in the manner of Scollops. Preferably a woman. Not that
Mr.  Topper  was loose, or romantic, or both. He had never loitered to pluck forbidden flowers beside the marital path, but had mechanically kept
to his schedule with Mrs. Topper at one end and the office at the other.

Once  in  his  youth  he  had  nerved himself to lurch in reckless pursuit of a shop girl in a skating rink, but the meeting with her had been so
sudden  and  demolishing  that when he arose from the dust of the floor he departed with a far sharper pain in his spine than in his heart. After
that he confined his amorous pursuits to the nice girls of his own set. He never called on them alone, but always with a jolly company of youths,
which  gave him a sense of security. Later he had met Mrs. Topper, who had already achieved individuality through smouldering indigestion, and he
had  decorously  followed  her through a summer of neat suburban Sundays, after which he had made the arrangement permanent in the presence of an
orderly gathering of neat suburban property owners. And that ended that side of Mr. Topper.

Now,  however,  he  was getting along. Nearly forty and acquiring flesh. Ten years married. He neither had to stretch to reach the electric light
nor stoop to walk under the bulb. His face was unremarkable save for his eyes, which were extremely blue and youthful, as if the fire in them had
been  banked  for the sake of conservation. His features would have been delicate had his appetite not been so good or his habits less sedentary.
Had  their  union  been  blessed  with issue, one of the children, probably Cosmo, Junior, would have been a sandy blond like his father, for Mr.
Topper's hair was of an indifferent shade. But there were no little Toppers. Scollops was undisturbed.

He  rose,  stretched  and  walked to the window. Scollops merely stretched and resumed her repose, with the austere resignation characteristic of
cats when bent on slumber or theft.

"I think I'll go for a walk," said Topper. "I'm in need of a bit of a change."

"There'll be a roast for dinner," replied Mrs. Topper. "Lamb," she added as he left the room. "You like lamb."

Mr.  Topper  winced  as he collected his hat and stick. Why should he be thus openly reminded that he liked lamb? Couldn't a person creep up on a
roast and surprise it some time? As a matter of fact he was not particularly lustful for lamb, or at least he would strive hereafter to dissemble
his emotions.

But all he said was "Good!" The exclamation point stuck in his throat.




CHAPTER III Mr. Topper Pursues the Sun


The  street  down  which Mr. Topper strolled was a nice street. No one needed to feel ashamed of it. No one did. And the people who lived on this
street had nice homes; nice, neat homes with well-groomed lawns, well-shingled roofs and well-stocked larders. The style of architecture showed a
sincere  desire  to  impress  the  eye  favourably.  The  effort had been based more on hope than on inspiration. The houses could have been--and
frequently  were--termed "homey," "quaint," and "comfortable," but after these terms had been exhausted little remained to be said save, perhaps,
"sweet."

Mr.  Topper  and  his  neighbours  were quietly proud of this street, and had borne their assessments as a tolerant father bears the extras of an
extravagant  son  at  college.  One  could  bring  one's  friends from the city to this street and let it speak for itself, which one seldom did.
Sewerage,  real  estate  and  the cost of building were subjects far too fascinating to be left to the imagination. So the visitors from the city
heard all about these things, and were not amused.

Being  on  a slightly higher elevation than the rest of the town, the street was happily called "Glendale Road." It is rather terrifying to think
that  the  real estate promoter responsible for this name is perhaps still unhung and busily engaged in giving equally stultifying names to other
nice little streets in other nice little towns situated in other nice little localities throughout the United States.

"You know that swamp?" he is, perhaps, saying to his wife at this very moment as he lights his cigar.

"Which one, my dear?" she asks. "You've bought so many swamps."

"And  sold  'em, too," he replies with a boyish chuckle. "But the one we drove by last week. I pointed it out to you. It was where they found the
body of--"

"Oh, yes," his wife exclaims, "the rag picker's wife! They had to vacate their shack, didn't they?"

"Well,  that  doesn't  matter,"  replies  her  husband rather quickly. "I've decided to run a drive through it. What do you think would be a good
name?"

Deep silence for several minutes. Her husband watches her anxiously. She reads a lot of books. Good things, books.

"Mayblossom Drive," she murmurs at last, with a dreamy look in her eyes. "That would be charming. Let's call it that."

Business of writing name down on back of soiled envelope. Husband departs for development in car and another street has come into being.

Nevertheless  Glendale Road was really a nice street. It was wide and well paved. There were trees on it at orderly intervals. And, now that June
was  here,  there  were  leaves  on  the  branches  of the trees and there were birds among the leaves. For some reason Mr. Topper's mind was not
occupied to-day with thoughts of sewers, real estate or building costs. Community pride was absent from his mood. He heard the birds chirping and
listened  to  them  intently. How many of them there must be and what a great to-do they were making. Little birds were always so excited. He had
held  a sparrow in his hand once and felt its heart beat. Somehow it had made him feel like crying. The little thing had been so excited, so bent
on  living.  Life  to the little sparrow had seemed so necessary and important. Topper had released it immediately. How busily it had flown away.
Well,  these  chaps  up  in the tree were having a good time just the same. They never needed a change. They could come and go as they pleased. A
nest  here and a nest there. A family hatched and a family fledged. Fresh branches in new lands. Adventurous flights in pursuit of the sun. Not a
bad life, that. Be a bird and see the world.

Topper  smiled and stopped in front of a public garage. He was now on a side street of the town proper, but Mr. Topper was not altogether sure as
to  how  he  had got there. He had been flying in pursuit of the sun, and on the following day, after church, two ladies protested to Mrs. Topper
that  he  had  looked  right  through them. What had they done to be so dreadfully treated, and what had come over her husband, who was always so
polite to the ladies?

"Sparrows," said Mr. Topper at this point, and walked away, leaving his wife to explain as best she could the meaning of his remark.

Seeing Mr. Topper smiling at him, the owner of the garage rested from his labours and called out an enthusiastic greeting.

"Isn't it lovely?" he asked, pointing to the machine on which he had been working.

Impressed by the man's earnestness, Mr. Topper approached the car and surveyed it with the vague gaze of an amateur.

"Really lovely," he said, looking hopefully at the man. "A really lovely car, Mark."

Mark beamed.

"It's the coyest little car in the town," he declared, "and it's carried more than gasoline in its time, though it is only this year's model."

"Bootlegging?"  asked  Mr. Topper, deciding, now that he came to consider it, the car did have rather vicious lines. Too much nickel and a trifle
too low to the ground.

"No, victims," said Mark. "There was a bottle in every flap when they found it."

"Then did the car manage to get lost?" Mr. Topper asked with growing interest.

"Wrecked," replied Mark briefly. "Head on to a tree. I've practically rebuilt it, but the motor's good as new."

"It's had rather a sad life for such a young car," remarked Topper. "Whose is it?"

"Mine,"  replied  Mark with pride. "But it did belong to George and Marion Kerby. You remember. Both killed three months back. The estate owed me
money so I took the car in settlement."

Mr.  Topper now looked at the automobile with unfeigned interest. Surely he remembered George and Marion Kerby, the fastest young couple in town.
At  least,  they  had been. People had always predicted that they would come to some such end. Kerby had never worked. No sedentary work for him.
Rich young devil. And he and his wife had been laid to rest to the tune of "I told you so." Kerby's wife, a slim girl, good-looking, quick in her
actions, a mocking sort of a creature. Then, like brushing against a cobweb on a dark woodland path, Mr. Topper's thoughts were suddenly arrested
by  little  dinging  threads  of  memory.  Marion  Kerby's  eyes? Ah, yes, he remembered them. The Kerbys had not belonged to his set, the solid,
substantial,  sedentary  set,  but  had  gathered round them, from all parts of the country, a group of irresponsible spirits, who would suddenly
appear  in a swarm of motors, riot around the town and countryside for a few days, and then as suddenly disappear in a cloud of dust and a chorus
of  brazen horns. No one had really known the Kerbys, that is, no respectable, accredited member of the community. But Topper had seen them often
enough as they darted through the streets of the town, and once he had met Marion Kerby at the dedication of the new twenty-thousand-dollar-fire-
house.

"Comic operas cost more and are less amusing," she had remarked, with a smile, then asked in a serious voice: "Do all white duck trousers have to
look so self-conscious?"

Mr.  Topper,  being a charter member of the organisation, had loyally donned his outfit and joined the ranks of his fellow fire-fighters. Now, at
the question, he looked down at his ducks and blushed. Marion Kerby mingled with the crowd, but she left behind her the seeds of rebellion in Mr.
Topper's  mind.  He  had  never  felt  in sympathy with white duck trousers, and now he actually hated them. They did look self-conscious, but it
showed  poor community spirit on Marion Kerby's part to ridicule the uniform. What would a fire company do without white duck trousers? Evidently
she  was  one  of those modern young women who had no respect for tradition. Furthermore, nice women did not talk about trousers on such a slight
acquaintance.

A few days after this he had encountered Marion Kerby on the morning train. She had nodded to him and smiled, and somehow her smile had seemed to
convey  the  impression  that they shared between them an unholy secret of a most delicious nature. Marion Kerby's smile had caused Mr. Topper to
feel  much  less  married.  He had puzzled all the way in that morning about her eyes. He had found himself unable to place them. They were never
quite the same. Thoughts danced behind them like fountains in the sun, hiding their liquid depth in a burst of dazzling spray.

And  now  as  Mr. Topper stood in the glittering presence of the car in which Marion Kerby and her husband had met their death, he remembered her
eyes  and  felt dismayed that their light had been snuffed from the world. A June heaviness settled down on Mr. Topper and he became conscious of
his stomach. It was too large. Indecent. Yes, he was certainly in need of a change.

Mark's monologue swam in on his ears.

"They  were  a wild pair, Mr. Topper," the man was saying, "but nice people at that. The nicest couple I ever knew. One minute they'd be fighting
with each other like a pair of wildcats and the next they'd be getting along like two tramps. Why, the way they went on would make you think of a
couple  of  kids.  They were always arguing about who was the best driver and often they'd ask me to decide. There'd be tears in their eyes, they
were so in earnest. You'd have thought it was a matter of life and death with them."

"That's about how it was, Mark," said Mr. Topper thoughtfully. "A matter of life and death. A gay life and a quick death."

"What's the odds," replied Mark, with a shrug. "They liked it that way and they got what they wanted."

"I've a feeling they got just a trifle more than they wanted," said Mr. Topper. "They didn't look like a pair that were extremely anxious to die.
They were too crammed with life."

"But  that's  the  way it goes," continued Mark, waxing philosophic. "There are lots of people in town I'd rather have seen get in trouble with a
tree."

This  remark  made  Mr.  Topper  feel  a  little  uneasy.  He realised that he had never enriched Mark's coffers with the purchase of gasoline or
automobile parts. To Mark he was perfectly useless, a fit subject for a tree.

"They had good stuff," Mark went on reminiscently, "and they were generous with it, too. I always had a drink whenever they came in the place. We
used to have regular little parties in my office over there."

Mr.  Topper  walked  deliberately  to  Mark's small office and peered through the door. In his mind's eye he could see Marion Kerby seated at the
desk.  He  had  a remarkably vivid picture of her. It was almost as if he had been present at the parties himself. There she sat, her slim ankles
crossed, her mad eyes dancing beneath the brim of a smart little hat, and her lips parted in a sarcastic smile. In one hand was a glass which she
was  holding  on high and in the other a cigarette. "Truly an unedifying sight," thought Mr. Topper, and yet he was fascinated by it. He dwelt on
the delicate lines of her face, the small impertinent chin and the fine lips curved in a roving, debonair smile. Then he returned to her eyes and
became lost in contemplation.

"They were mad," he mused to himself. "They could laugh the devil down."

Fearing  that  that was what they were probably doing at the very moment, Mr. Topper turned away from the door and looked at Mark, who was in the
act  of  hanging  a  "For  Sale"  sign  over  the  radiator  cap  of  the automobile. The deed done, Mark stepped back and surveyed his handiwork
ecstatically,  head  on  one  side  and hands on his hips. "Here," thought Mr. Topper, "is a master craftsman, one who loves his work for its own
sake."

"So you're going to sell it," he said, walking over to the bewitched garage man.

"Certainly,"  replied  Mark.  "And  cheap  too.  Couldn't  get  anyone  to believe she's sound. But she is, every nut and bolt in her. The Kerbys
themselves wouldn't know the difference except that she's quieter now. They always kept the old car rattling."

"Well,  they  rattled  their toy once too often," remarked Mr. Topper, looking moodily out at the street. "I hope the next owner will have better
luck."

"Lightning never strikes . . ."

"Twice  in  the same place," interrupted Mr. Topper. "I know, Mark, but an automobile can, and if it isn't the same place it's some place equally
unyielding."

With  a nod to Mark and a lingering look at the automobile, Mr. Topper left the garage and walked slowly down the street to the main thoroughfare
of  the  town, where he stopped and looked with unseeing eyes into a butcher's window. Behind him a steady trail of automobiles passed by. He was
dimly  aware  of  their  swift, hissing tyres whirling evenly over the smooth road. They were all going somewhere, he thought to himself, without
troubling  to  look  around,  all  out  for  a good time--a change. Some of them were going to new places, no doubt, places miles and miles away,
possibly as far off as the coast. People did such things, camping at night by the roadside or putting up at inns.

Presently  he became aware of the fact that he was looking a leg of lamb full in the face. There the thing was, hardly a foot from his nose. Back
at  home  its  mate  was  probably sputtering in the oven by this time. And Mrs. Topper was twittering about preparing new fields for indigestion
while  the  cook  struggled  to swallow her spleen. It was appalling. Mr. Topper considered the lamb with smouldering eyes, but the lamb held its
ground,  and  for  a  moment  they  confronted each other like two antagonists. Then Mr. Topper, at last outfaced by his less sensitive opponent,
whirled  about and walked back to the garage, this time with purpose in his step. But as he approached the garage he became troubled in his mind,
and  this trouble made him shuffle slightly in his gait. He had no doubt as to the ultimate outcome of his visit, but how to get it over with was
what  dismayed  him,  forcing him to drift about uneasily in front of the garage like a criminal released from the gates of durance. The sight of
the  "For  Sale" sign on the glittering object of his quest stimulated him to action. He lifted his head and walked casually up to the car. Mark,
emerging from the shadows like a proud but jealous god, greeted Mr. Topper with a slight show of surprise.

"How does the thing start?" asked Topper, without any preliminaries.

"How?" repeated Mark dumbly.

"The automobile," said Topper. "How do you start the damn thing?"

"Oh!" exclaimed Mark, now sparklingly alive to the situation. "Why, it starts like any other automobile. Put your foot on it and off she goes."

"Interesting if true," thought Mr. Topper. Nevertheless he regarded the starter with a contemplative eye.

"Is it hard to learn how to work them?" he continued. "I mean for a person like myself?"

"Why, Mr. Topper," Mark admonished, "there are bigger boobs than you messing up the roads everywhere."

"You shock me," remarked Topper, "but don't let's dwell on it. Now what is this thing for?"

"That's for the ventilator. It lets in the air."

"On what?"

"On your feet."

"An unpleasant inference," murmured Mr, Topper, "but I dare say the thing has its advantages. And this?" he added aloud.

"That lights your cigars."

Mr. Topper produced a cigar. Mark spoke the truth.

"A  nice  thing,"  said  Mr.  Topper, a little more at ease now that his lungs were refining smoke. "A handy thing, that. Very nice. Clever, too,
isn't it?

Mark, becoming more than serious, agreed that it was.

"Yes, yes," continued Topper, sliding into the front seat of the automobile as if he were not thinking of what he was doing. "A convenient little
gadget.  Adds to the pleasure of driving. Now come here, Mark, and show me what you do to make the old car go, but first take that invitation off
the front of the car. Some woman might come along and buy me. How about that, Mark?"

"Ha! Ha!" laughed Mark, whose false mirth was arrested by a sudden slap on the back.

"Take the damn sign off, Mark," commanded Topper, a new light gleaming in his eyes.




CHAPTER IV Mrs. Topper Is Not Delighted


The  first  stage  of  Mr.  Topper's  secret life dated from the Saturday on which he purchased the Kerby's ill-fated car from Mark, the ecstatic
garage  owner.  And  this  stage  lasted only a week, coming to a grand anti-climax on the following Saturday. But during that time Mr. Topper, a
novice in secret living, was hard pressed to maintain his customary calm either at home or abroad. The fire was no longer banked in his eyes, but
seemed to be smouldering through, and occasionally he found himself scrutinising his friends as if they were total strangers.

His  introductory driving lesson was of an anatomical nature. The automobile was discussed to its most intimate parts, from which only the finest
mechanism  could  have  refrained  from  shrinking.  The  lesson completed, Mr. Topper abjured Mark to silence and returned to his home, where he
settled  his  feud  with  the  leg of lamb through the process of absorption. In other words, it became one hundred per cent. Topper and for that
reason acquired merit while Topper acquired flesh.

"I  knew  you  would  like  it,"  said  Mrs. Topper as though she were addressing a sceptical cannibal who had just made a meal of a questionable
victim. "I've always said you liked lamb."

Mr. Topper could not deny the truth of her words, but in spite of their truth they made him wish that he could uneat the lamb. Not knowing how to
do this decently, he smiled at his wife and said, "I walked farther than I thought. Worked up an appetite."

The false smile and the black lie quelled the rebellion in his stomach. Without realising it, Topper was already far gone in sin.

On  Monday  morning, after exchanging pennies with a small Italian child for a stillborn edition of a New York paper, he greeted his friends with
his  habitual  placidity.  No, he had not heard the new one about Bill's furnace. He was sorry that Mrs. Thompson was having servant trouble. Too
bad.  Was that so? Jennings had made a killing again. Great stuff. Surely, he'd bring the Missus over first thing. Wednesday evening? Good! Good!
His  tulips?  Doing  splendidly!  A whole bed of them--all blooming. No, not brewing, just smousing about. Is that so! How about your own cellar?
None  of  that  stuff,  Jack!  The whole town knows about you. The farmer's daughter and the tramp? Sure he'd like to hear it. Wait till they got
aboard.

And off went Topper with his boon companions, all of whom he decided were perfect strangers to him.

At  the  office  Topper  treated the president with a commendable show of tolerance. Cosmo Topper really and sincerely pitied the man, pitied him
from  his heart. He was a good old thing, but out of touch, pathetically inadequate. However, his chauffeur looked like a keen enough young chap.
Funny  foreign-looking moustache, but then a good driver was like any other real artist. Better in fact. They had to have a little leeway. Topper
would  have  a  word  with  him one day. Exchange views on cars. Democratic. That was it. A man in his position could afford to be democratic. It
went. As for the president, it was too bad. Topper felt sorry for him.

Now  the  strange  thing about it was that on this particular morning the president, sighting his world-weary eyes between the bronze eyes of his
Great Dane desk ornament, felt pleased to permit Topper to occupy his gaze.

"A  solid  man,"  thought  the  president.  "A good man and a worker. I can count on him. The others"--and the president's eyes never flickered--
"brilliant,  but  they're waiting to cut my throat. To them this bank isn't home, it's something they want to control through votes and money and
chicanery. Now Topper's different. He's a man, at least. Loyal to a fault."

And the president, rousing his great body, towered like a devastating sun over the gleaming surface of his desk, then slowly advanced on Topper.

"You're looking fit, Topper," he said. "This man from Texas has been in again. Don't want to see him . . . Come upstairs. We'll talk it over."

Topper followed.

"Why this?" he thought. "Why have I been selected?

Topper  little  realised that there was a new light in his eyes that set him apart from his fellow men. It was young and fresh. The president was
an old man, and, like Topper, he had grown weary from watching eyes. He had peered into them for more than half a century . . . too deeply.

* * *

Topper  is  speeding  through the shadows like a virgin to a forbidden tryst. He is thrilled with secret alarm. In the close embrace of the night
there is something almost personal. It clings to Topper like a wronged woman, filling him with a desire to be elsewhere.

For  nearly  a  week  now Topper had been lying steadily, mostly to his wife. Once he had stooped so low as to lie to the garbage man. Topper had
come  to  that.  It  was excusable in this case, for the man collected garbage of the better sort throughout the town, and in order to forget his
occupation, he continually busied his tongue with other people's affairs.

The  seal of sin is settling on Topper's brow. He looks healthier and less uninteresting. He suspects everyone and, without being aware of it, he
has been having a tremendous change.

At the garage, Mark is waiting for him. Good old Mark! Topper loves the man.

Topper  arrives.  There  is  a  hurried  conversation.  Then each through his appointed door slides into the seat and they are off like a pair of
conscience-stricken  grave  robbers.  Mark  is  driving  and  Topper  is  doing  strange, futile things with the brim of his felt hat. Instead of
concealing  his  face,  he  succeeds in making himself look like a foppish desperado. He is hoping that he appears both sinister and repulsive so
that  people  will  avert  their gaze without recognising him, whereas, in truth, had any of Topper's friends seen him at this moment, they would
have been astonished beyond measure, their cherished belief in the eternal sameness of things completely demolished.

The  car  proceeds  down  a  side  street  to that section of the town near which no nice people care to build. In this belittered and uncorseted
neighbourhood  Topper  feels  more  at  ease.  This place which he once considered a reproach to the community, when he considered it at all, has
become pleasantly familiar to him, a part of his secret life. It is the hidden door that leads to the open road. The dour houses and dim shops no
longer  make  him uneasy. He regards them with a friendly eye which does not drop disapprovingly at the sight of a woman nursing her child on the
least  populous  step  of a front stoop. And when a mulatto maid swings down the street and stops to talk with the technically white youth in the
livery  stable,  the  moral responsibility of the race question does not weigh down Topper's heart. "Whose business is it?" he thinks to himself.
"People should mind their own affairs." Anyway, she was an upstanding figure of a woman.

Soon the town is left behind and the car spins along an unfrequented road.

"What did you tell her to-night, Mr. Topper?" asks Mark.

"Meeting of the Town Guardians," replies Topper, emerging from his hat.

"Last night it was a Fire Council," continues Mark. "What's it going to be to-morrow?"

"The Assessment Club," snaps Topper promptly.

Mark gives a low whistle of admiration and the conversation languishes.

"They were killed some way down the road," Mark announces presently. "Want to see the tree? It's on the other end of the old bridge."

"Certainly  not,"  says Topper. "To gaze upon the departing point of my predecessors would hardly add to my skill. I want to shift the gears, not
chatter through them."

"All  right,"  replies  Mark,  bringing the car to a stop. "You take the wheel and turn her around. Drive down the line a bit and then come back.
Keep turning, and if anything comes along pull in close to the side and stop. I'll keep an eye out."

Like  a  dog  beneath the caress of an unfamiliar hand the gears shivered nervously at Mr. Topper's touch. They did not exactly chatter, but from
time to time uttered cries of protest, like a child aroused from sleep by a convulsive pain in its stomach. Mr. Topper drove wisely but not well.
He obeyed all the dictates of common sense, but still there was something lacking. Through no discernible fault of his own he seemed to bring out
all  the  wayward  traits  of the car. It stopped without reason and started without grace. It darted as if pursued, then loitered alluringly. It
displayed  all the varied moods of a temperamental woman, one moment purring soothingly, the next scolding petulantly, now running ahead blind to
caution,  now  holding back in virtuous alarm. It strayed from the path and returned again, and it treated its ardent possessor with the arrogant
indifference  of a beautiful thing. Mr. Topper was charmed. Not so Mark. Nevertheless, after three-quarters of an hour of conscientious objecting
the car was turned over to Mark, and Mr. Topper, moistly relinquishing the wheel, surveyed the June evening and found it good.

"You'll get by," remarked Mark as he headed the car for home.

And Mr. Topper did get by, what with the influence of Mark and a handful of cigars. Characteristically enough it was not until Mr. Topper held in
his  hands  the official card entitling him to drive that he felt sure of his ability. The card dispelled all lingering doubt. He belonged to the
brotherhood  of the road. He had been tested and received. He could now speak on equal terms with the boy who delivered the ice. He had something
in common with practically all the world.

* * *

There  were  several  surprises  in  store  for  Mrs. Cosmo Topper on the Saturday following the purchase of the car. The first one came when Mr.
Topper,  returning  from  the  city,  announced  without  previous  warning  that he was starting a two weeks' vacation. Mrs. Topper successfully
punctured  the  glory of this surprise by feeling audibly sorry that she was hardly up to going anywhere. Topper, not to be outdone, snatched her
fleeting  triumph  by  saying  that  he was just as well pleased. Of course he was sorry about her not feeling well, but then he was always sorry
about that--stoically so, thought his wife.

Her  second  surprise  came when Topper informed her that immediately after luncheon he proposed to attend a meeting of the Defence Society. Mrs.
Topper saw scant reason for this, but made no comment until the meal was finished.

"What's  this?"  she said as he rose from the table. "What are all these meetings about? First it's the Town Guardians, then the Fire Council . .
."

"The other way 'round," corrected Mr. Topper, artistically cherishing his lies.

"Well, it doesn't very much matter, does it?" she replied. "What's got into this town? All these meetings!"

"Sparrows," said Mr. Topper as he jauntily left the room.

Mrs.  Topper  followed her husband with wondering eyes. What a terse and uninforming answer! How unlike the usually explicit Cosmo! Sparrows. Why
that?

A  few  hours  later  a  third  surprise caused Mrs. Topper to emerge with unwonted haste from the house. Topper, abandoning his secret life, was
sounding  his horn in the driveway. Mrs. Topper, from the front porch, saw a rather flushed and foolish-looking man of middle age gazing brightly
at her from the driving seat of a glittering automobile.

"Well,  what  do  you think of us now?" asked the man in a voice which conveyed the impression that Mrs. Topper would never be able adequately to
express her admiration in words.

Mrs.  Topper  did  not  answer  immediately.  He  had  not expected her to. That was partly the fun of it--the dawning of delight, the wonder and
unbelief and then the appreciation. Indigestion would be forgotten. A new era would start for them.

"You gave me such a start," said Mrs. Topper. "What on earth are you trying to do with that garish-looking car?"

"Trying?"  replied Mr. Topper, making a brave effort to retain his smile. "Trying? Why, I'm not trying, my dear. I'm actually driving it. I drove
it here all the way from the garage. It's ours. Yours and mine. We own it."

"You  might  own  it,"  Mrs.  Topper said, "but we don't. Keep me out of it. I won't be involved. Everybody in town knows the Kerbys' car. Even I
recognise it. I've seen it thousands of times. A second-hand car. What a thing to do!"

Topper's smile would not stay fixed. No matter how he strove, his lips refused to respond. Everything was so different from what he had expected.

"I know," he explained, looking down at the wheel. "This is only our practice car. New one next year. Nice though, isn't it?"

"I  don't  think it's a bit nice," said Mrs. Topper. "Nor do I think it nice of you to sit there and enjoy yourself. Buying an automobile and not
letting me know, picking up the most vulgar car in town, coming home at this hour and making noises on the lawn, upsetting my nerves and spoiling
the leg of lamb . . ."

Then Mrs. Topper received her last surprise.

"Damn the leg of lamb!" he shouted, embittered beyond endurance by his wife's reception of his surprise. "I'm going for a drive."

An offensive honking or the horn overfilled Mrs. Topper's cup of woe.

"He seems to be able to drive it," she reluctantly admitted to herself as the automobile wavered down Glendale Road.




CHAPTER V The Nebulous Lap


It  could  not  be  said  of  Mr. Topper that he was in a brown study as he drove away from his wife. He was keenly alive to the fact that he was
sitting  alone in a moving automobile entirely dependent on him for pace and direction. He alone was now responsible for the safety of the car as
well  as  for  his own safety. This knowledge never for a moment left his mind. In spite of it, Mr. Topper was preoccupied, or as reoccupied as a
person  in  his position could afford to be. Violence had been done to his feelings, and a reaction had set in. After a week of tremendous lying,
during  which  time  life had seemed to be disclosing new and splendid vistas, Topper suddenly felt that after all life was no whit different. It
was as flat and stale as ever. Automobiles were no use, nor were little attempts, nor anything.

"Oh, damn that leg of lamb," he muttered, slowing down with elaborate caution at the sight of a car two blocks distant.

As  the  automobile passed Mr. Topper, the eyes of the man at the wheel grew incredulous with wonder. He leaned over the side and looked back. He
came to a stop and continued to stare.

"That's Hart," said Topper to himself. "Well, damn him, too. He'll spread the news around. Let him. See if I care."

And Topper stepped on the gas.

Through  force of habit he took the same road he had learned to know so well with Mark. This was not the drive he had intended taking--not if she
had been decent and friendly about things, but now it did not matter. He drove along, occupied with his thoughts, keeping his eye on the road and
paying  very  little  attention to the scenery. Presently he became aware that he had passed his usual limits. Ahead of him was the bridge on the
other  end  of  which  the  Kerbys  had  met their fate. Topper had never driven over a bridge before and the rattling of planks unnerved him. He
stopped on the after-side to regain his composure.

The  tree  must  be  somewhere close at hand, for Mark had said it was just at the end of the bridge. Topper got out of the automobile and looked
morbidly  about  him.  At the edge of the road stood a stunted tree with a gashed and splintered trunk. Undoubtedly it was the one, the very tree
that had caused George and Marion Kerby hastily to withdraw from their questionable circle of friends. Topper surveyed the tree thoughtfully. Two
human  lives,  two warm and vigorous creatures, had been sped into eternity against the age-old bark of that tree. He glanced up. Leaves were out
on  the  upper branches, and wings were flitting through them. Life still went on with the tree. It drank in the moist earth and tossed its palms
to  the  sun.  It was made of sterner stuff than mortals. It was more firmly rooted to the earth. Topper had a funny thought. If he had had a son
this  tree  would  still  be  green and filled with birds when the boy was gray and gazing back on life. Topper wanted a son, he felt the need of
youth,  an enthusiastic, unspoiled soul, to stimulate his ebbing interest in the automobile, someone to admire his daring and to speak favourably
of his newly acquired art. Topper was on the point of becoming a shade self-sympathetic.

An  observer  of character seeing him at that moment would have paused to ponder over his unremarkable figure. He looked rather small beneath the
majestic  reaches  of  the  tree,  and  his  stomach seemed pitifully brave, thrusting itself out aggressively into a world that could trump with
mountains.  The  observer  would  have noted Topper's stomach and the sturdily planted legs, and without exactly forgetting these features, would
have  really  remembered Topper's face. There dwelt the Prince of Denmark, shadowed and filled with trouble, an inarticulate prince, perhaps, run
to  flesh  and  bland  of  mien,  but  a  prince  withal,  probing the problem of life and the mystic charm of death, a man existing reluctantly,
unconsciously seeking release.

Mr.  Topper turned from the tree and wormed himself into the automobile. And the observer, had he been endowed with cattish curiosity, would have
noted  by  the  labourings  of Topper's body that he had not long been familiar with the driving seat of an automobile. Once in he relaxed, then,
collecting his scattered members, arranged his feet and hands as Mark had patiently instructed him.

"Just  the  same," thought Topper with an important feeling of ownership, "these trees shouldn't grow so close to the road. There should be a law
about trees. A sort of a movement. Something done."

At  this  particular  time  Mr.  Topper's conception of the ideal tour was limited only by the skyline of the Sahara Desert, a wide, unobstructed
expanse  affording  adequate room for turning. Topper's social instincts did not extend to motoring. He preferred an unfrequented road where only
nature could hear the neighing of the gears, and where there would be naught of alarm to galvanise his nerves.

Mr.  Topper  made  the  customary movements, and with delightful regularity the scenery began to slide by. He became aware of an oncoming line of
trees,  flashing  things  filled with shadows, he felt a dip and a gentle rise and gazed across a sunken plain soft with grass, scarred by fences
and  heckled  by  an  astonishingly undecided brook that turned and doubled on its path. Mr. Topper found himself enjoying this hollow expanse of
green.  It  was  longer  than it was wide and it seemed to extend for miles. Only the woods on the other side put a stop to its triumphant march.
There  were  dots of trees on the sunken plain, intimate groups of clustering green, but they did not rob the plain of its vastness. Instead they
emphasised its majesty like a contentious family huddled beneath the vaulting dome of a deserted railroad station.

"Take those fences down," thought Topper, "and what a space you'd have. Cavalry could charge across those fields."

What  a  lovely  place it was . . . the unexpectedly good road, the sunken fields, the sky closing them in and the occasional farmhouse bereft of
life.  The  road  puzzled  Topper.  It was as if the world had planned a secret path to nowhere. He felt that he was riding on through an endless
dusky  solitude.  He  no  longer troubled about the car. It seemed to be running itself. There were trees on one side, green curving space on the
other,  and  an unobstructed road ahead. Topper had become blended with his surroundings. His body was blotting up the landscape and his mind, no
longer  functioning, seemed to be absorbing the lights and shades and smells along the road. The colour of the sky, now churning red with sunset,
dropped like a mantle on Mr. Topper and filled the world with stillness.

And out of the stillness a voice spoke to Mr. Topper.

"Topper," it said, "Topper, perhaps you do not realise you are sitting on my wife's lap--or do you?"

Topper's  hands grew white on the wheel. He made an effort to stop the car, but as the machine seemed disinclined to stop he abandoned the effort
and  looked  steadfastly  in  front of him, blindly refusing to admit the fact that he had heard a voice without seeing its owner. The thing just
could  not  be.  He,  Topper,  was at fault, or at least he heartily hoped so. Driving had overtaxed his imagination. The strange solitude of the
place and the calm, mysterious beauty of the landscape had affected him. It would have affected anybody.

So  Mr.  Topper  drove  on.  The  behaviour of the automobile disturbed him, although he would not admit to himself that it was acting in any way
unusual. Nevertheless it was. It had become a self-propelled vehicle in the fullest sense of the term. It no longer concerned itself with Topper,
but  obeyed  the dictates of its newly acquired independence. It did not hitch and spurt along the road, but progressed smoothly at a speed which
the  discreet  Topper viewed with sincere alarm. Once when the motor slowed down he made an attempt to shift the gears, only to be paralysed by a
voice exclaiming irritably:

"Don't do that!"

After  this  Mr.  Topper  withdrew completely from the management of the car and dropped to the rather unimportant position usually allotted to a
pig-iron  image  arbitrarily  spiked to the front seat of a toy fire engine. And Mr. Topper looked the part. His face was a mask and his arms had
become  angular  and rigid. He was certain of this, however: the first voice had been a man's, whereas the second had been unmistakably feminine.
After making a mental note of this Mr. Topper closed his mind. It was better not to think--safer.

"Topper,"  began  the  first voice, sounding quite polite and reasonable, "must I remind you again that you are sitting on my wife's lap? Why not
squeeze over now and . . ."

"Stop!"  cried Mr. Topper, coming to a quick decision, and with an extraordinary effort arresting the speed of the car. "Stop," he repeated, "and
for God's sake don't begin again. I can't stand it."

"Come, come now, Mr. Topper," admonished the voice.

"Don't,"  pleaded  Topper.  "Let me speak. Please listen. I've bought and paid for this automobile. With great mental anguish I've learned how to
make it work, but I'll give it to you, give it gladly, if you'll let me step quietly out, and you then drive on as fast and as far as you can."

Mr. Topper looked earnestly at the vacant seat beside him. He wanted a reply and yet he waited for it with dread.

"Why so tragic?" the voice began. "Why shun our company? Three can sit just as comfortably on this seat as two. We've done it often. Just squeeze
over a little."

"  You don't seem to understand," said Mr. Topper, with the patience of desperation. "If the seat were a thousand leagues wide I would still feel
cramped.  Take the car. You're welcome to it. Take it to some far place. Have a nice drive, a good time, but leave me behind. Let me get out. I'm
not enjoying myself."

"Still tragic," retorted the voice. "And all the time you are wallowing on my wife's lap."

Topper  had  a  strange  and  uncomfortable  sensation. He felt, or imagined he felt, a pair of arms passing through his body on their way to the
wheel.  He  was  almost  sure that for some minutes these arms had been playfully hugging him around the waist, and once more he became painfully
aware of his stomach. It was indeed an objectionable feature.

"How about my wife's lap?" questioned the voice.

"Hang it all!" Topper exclaimed. "Why doesn't she move over? I didn't sit on her lap, you know. She got it there."

"Topper," rebuked the voice. "You surprise us. I might say, you offend us. I might, mind you, Topper, but I don't."

"Offend you!" cried Mr. Topper. "Great God! What next?"

"Now, taking up the matter of my wife's lap," continued the voice, "I still maintain . . ."

Mr.  Topper  became mentally unfit to hear the remainder of the remark. He had passed into one of those distracted calms that precede lunacy. Out
of this calm he heard himself saying, with tastefully garnished sarcasm:

"After all, the car really does belong to me. I bought the thing, but not your wife's lap. I'm sorry, but I wash my hands of your wife's lap. You
can take the lap or leave it. I'm not responsible. If her lap insists on sitting under me I'm not to blame. However, if you and your wife and her
everlasting lap would disappear as speedily as possible, the countryside would not bear witness to my grief. Certainly not."

"We've already disappeared as much as possible," said the voice rather gloomily.

"Not enough for me," replied Topper.

"All right, then," said the voice. "Move over, Marion. Topper wants to hog the car."

"Hog  the car!" retorted Mr. Topper. "Whose car is it? Answer me that. Answer me fairly that. Whose car is it, I ask you? If your wife's lap were
at all ladylike . . ."

"What's this about my wife's lap?" interrupted the voice, a trifle excitedly. "Make one unfavourable reference to my wife's lap. Just one. Let me
hear it."

"Now,  for  God's  sake,  boys,  don't  let's  have  any trouble," put in a woman's voice pleadingly. "Come on, let's get together. That's how it
happened the last time. Be sensible, George. Topper seems to be a game old bird."

"Old birds are inclined to be gamey," remarked Topper.

"Ah, there, Topper," said the woman's voice. "Getting common? And still sitting on my lap?"

"just  so,"  joined  in  the  man's  voice.  "Don't  go any further. Try to remember that you're still sitting on my wife's lap. I don't want any
trouble."

Topper's  whole  mental  system  was  undergoing  a revolution. It did not occur to him that he was having a row with space, or that he was being
calculatingly nasty to nothingness. So absorbed had he become in the injustice done to himself that, for the moment, the unconventionality of the
situation had slipped his mind. Topper was thoroughly aroused.

"Prove to me that I am sitting on your wife's lap," he said.

"Do you understand the fourth dimension?" politely inquired the man's voice.

"Why should I?" said Topper.

"Well,  we  do,"  continued  the  voice.  "As a matter of fact you might almost say that we are the fourth dimension. Not of the oldest families,
perhaps,  but  pretty well sponsored at that. It would be a waste of time to attempt to explain it to you, so you'll have to take my word for it.
You,  Topper,  are  sitting most heavily, most grossly, on my wife's lap. No man has ever done it, with my knowledge, for the same length of time
that you have. I repeat--with my knowledge."

"Don't indulge your jealous nature," said the woman's voice. "Don't irritate me."

"I'm going to leave this car," announced Topper. "I hate bickering."

Topper  made  an effort to rise, then sank back in his seat. He had an odd feeling. Two arms were holding him round the waist. They were the most
material  arms  he  had  ever encountered, yet he could not see them. They held him firmly, and made a noticeable depression in his stomach. This
impression without the arms was too much for Topper.

"She's holding me," he gasped, sweat beading his lips. "Tell her to take her arms away."

"Not until you promise to be good," replied the woman's voice.

"Let me go," pleaded Topper, "and I'll promise anything. If you'll only take your arms away from my--my--"

"Your stomach?" suggested the woman.

"All right," exclaimed Topper. "Have it your way. If you'll only remove your arms I'll slide over gladly."

Topper  drew  a  deep  breath as he felt himself released. Casting a timid glance on either side of him, he slid to the middle of the seat with a
movement which for him was voluptuously sinuous.

"At  last  you've succeeded in getting me between you," he said with spiteful resignation. "Go on now and drive me mad. Finish the job. Smash the
car. I don't want it and my wife can't stand it."

"Why can't your wife stand it?" asked the woman's voice.

"Oh,  I  don't  know,"  replied Topper. "All her reasons are rather obscure. She says the thing belonged to the Kerbys and that's enough for her.
It's too notorious."

"Go on, Mr. Topper," said the woman's voice as the automobile gathered pace. "What else did she say?"

Mr.  Topper  was  neither  the  wisest nor the most observant of men. His ears were attuned to only one danger signal, Mrs. Topper. The beautiful
simplicity of the man lay in the fact that at his age he still thought of his wife as being quite an exceptional woman. His optimistic nature led
him  to  believe  that  she  alone  of all her tribe had been cursed with an unfortunate disposition, that she alone was the victim of implacable
indigestion,  that she alone was the only woman who considered herself a martyr and who forced her husband so to consider her. There was only one
Mrs.  Topper.  It  was  inconceivable that there could be two. Topper clung to this hope. It comforted him a little to imagine that all the other
women  in  the world were different, that they had no small animosities, that they did not spend an hour in saying something that could have been
as  easily  stated  in three minutes, that they did not take advantage of the fact that they were women and as a consequence nervous wrecks, that
they  did  not spasmodically attempt to please their husbands while consistently endeavouring to crush them, that they were not interested in the
puerile  mystery  surrounding the sudden departure of Mrs. Smith's cook or the Robinsons' trip to Maine, or the fact that the Harts were still in
town.  Mr. Topper honestly believed that his wife had been especially set aside for him by a kind but casual god. In this belief he accepted her,
but not without some mental reservations.

"What else did Mrs. Topper say?" continued the woman's voice.

"I forget," he replied. "She's said so many things."

"For instance?"

"Well,  that  Marion Kerby was no better than she should be and that her husband was a sot who consumed all his time and money in keeping himself
numb with drink."

"That will do," broke in the man's voice. "I've heard enough. Do you happen to know who we are--or were?"

"I had hoped that our acquaintance would never become so intimate," said Topper with the utmost earnestness.

"Well, it has," said the man's voice. "You are speaking to and driving with both George and Marion Kerby. Now how does that make you feel?"

"I ceased to feel some time ago," replied Mr. Topper, "but if I hadn't, your information would be like tossing a paralytic in a blanket."

"The  old  crow,"  came contemplatively from the driving seat. "So that sombre old fogey said that I was no better than I should be. Did you hear
what he said, George? Hit him."

"He didn't say it," said George. "Be reasonable. He's not responsible for his wife's remarks. No man is. The race would perish."

"But just the same she said it," the wheel replied broodingly.

At this point Mr. Topper felt forced to interpose an objection. Routine loyalty compelled him to speak.

"In  the  first place you are a woman," he said, "and in the second you're invisible, and for that reason you're taking a doubly unfair advantage
of your sex and lack of substance by calling my wife an old crow and a fogey."

Mr.  Topper  made  a mental note of the two expressions. He would never apply them directly to his wife, but it would be quite a comfort to think
them at times.

"Look  here,"  exclaimed the man's voice. "I'll knock your block off if you begin to pull that first and second place stuff with us. Where do you
get . . ."

"Now for God's sake don't let's have any trouble, boys," the wheel pleaded. "Remember, George, we were smashed up the last time."

"Then why did you start things now?"

"Start things? Me?"

"Yes, you, with all your personal injuries."

"I must say you're extremely unreasonable."

"Me unreasonable? Hell's bells! That's a good one."

"Don't be despicable."

Mr.  Topper  had  been  watching  the  casual  conduct of the car with increasing anxiety. He thought that it was now high time to enter into the
discussion.

"I  hope,"  he  said, carefully considering the advisability of each word, "that you won't take it in ill part if I say that at present I have no
desire  to  join  your  nebulous  state.  The  situation,  bad as it is, would be less desperate if I could only feel that someone, no matter how
invisible, was paying attention to the car."

Topper was silent for a moment, then his true feelings triumphed.

"I hate bickerings," he said.

He was astounded by hearing a hearty peal of laughter from the steering wheel. Manifestations of mirth encompassed him.

"Stick to the road," he urged.

"'Stick-to-the-road-Topper!'" the woman's voice exulted. "That's a good name. Let's call him that."

"Only for introductions," replied the other voice consideringly. "Too long for ordinary use. 'Cosmo' is rather crisp. Why paint the lily?"

"What do you mean about introductions?" inquired Mr. Topper uneasily. "Have you any friends? I don't want to meet them. Remember that. Absolutely
no."

"I hope you wouldn't embarrass us in case we met a group of our friends," replied the man.

"Embarrass you? Oh, I don't know what I'd do. My God, a group! Not just a friend, but a group!" Topper's voice was distracted.

"Well, how about meeting some of yours?" suggested George. "There are quite a few over here. Not an honest piece of ectoplasm in the bunch."

"Look  where  you're driving," breathed Topper, reaching for something to cling to, yet unwilling to thrust his arms through the invisible bodies
beside him. "I never wanted less to die in all my life."

"Tactful Topper," said Marion.

A  slight  difficulty with a rail fence momentarily retarded conversation. When the car emerged from the dispute bearing a battered fender Topper
voiced  his  unhappiness  by remarking that there was scant comfort to be gained by sitting between two ethereal bodies while one's very soul was
being shot through space.

"I have nothing to cling to save hope," he said. "And even that grows dim."

A  turn in the road disclosed in the distance the lights of a small town. Mr. Topper gave a sigh of relief. During the course of the conversation
he  had  not  actually  believed  in  its reality. He had preferred to accustom his mind to the fact that he had gone mad, mildly mad, and, as he
fervently hoped, temporarily so. The best way to combat this madness, he concluded, was to give in to it, to make no effort to regain sanity, but
gradually to feel his way back to his normal state like a man delicately shaking a leg that had fallen asleep. Topper felt that a village street,
stark  and  solid beneath the glare of the lights, and thronged with the usual Saturday night collection of rustics, would do much to restore his
mental  poise.  He  would  leave  the car and mingle with these people. He would not actually kiss and hug them, but he would feel like doing so.
Spiritually  he  would  shower  them  with  embraces,  and as he absorbed the life of the town the imaginings of the road would fade away and he,
Topper, would once more be a full-fledged member of the human race instead of a rebellious participant in an occult phenomenon.

"For the sake of appearance," he remarked to the wheel, "we had better exchange positions as we drive into the town. People have grown accustomed
to  seeing someone sitting at the steering gear of automobiles. It may seem silly to you, but if we drove down the main street of this town under
the present arrangement I would probably be burned for a witch or thrust into solitary confinement."

"You need never fear solitude, Topper, so long as we're around," replied Marion.

"Don't misunderstand me," Topper hastened to explain. "I have no fear of solitude. I yearn for it. . . absolute solitude unbroken by the sound of
a voice or the knowledge of a presence."

"All right," said Marion. "Let's change seats. Move over."

"How can I be sure that we are changing seats?" Mr. Topper inquired.

"I'll see that she does," replied George Kerby. "Stop at the nearest garage. We need gas." A few minutes later Mr. Topper drew up at a garage. He
had never before bought gasoline. The situation perplexed him.

"How much shall I get?" he whispered over his shoulder.

"Ten gallons will be enough," Kerby announced. "Get some oil, too."

"Not  so  loud,"  Topper  pleaded as he got out of the automobile and approached the unenterprising deity of the place. The deity regarded Topper
with  aversion  and  his  car with disgust. He was almost hostile in his disapproval. Topper could sense it by the angle of the man's hat and the
tilt of his cigar. Nevertheless, Topper addressed the deity, tactfully suggesting his co-operation in procuring oil and gasoline.

"Bring  your  car under the pump," commanded the deity, filling Topper's face with smoke. Topper objected to the smoke, but felt that at least it
was more tangible than phantoms.

"One  moment,"  he replied, turning round, then he froze in his tracks, his last hope banished. After all he was not mad, not even mildly so. The
automobile,  apparently  unassisted,  was  busily  edging  itself  up  to the pump. He glanced guiltily at the deity as if to seek comfort in his
repellent  countenance, but no comfort was there to be found. The deity had momentarily become a mortal. You could tell that by the gold fillings
in his teeth twinkling through his widely separated lips.

"How  did  you do that?" asked the man. Topper laughed a trifle wildly, as he waved a protesting hand at the car. "Quite a trick, eh? Well, I had
her all set, but I guess the brakes slipped."

The  man's  face cleared, his mouth closed and once more he became a deity. But as he approached the tube to the tank his features again altered.
This  time  his  eyes became prominent. As he gazed at the brass cap of the gasoline tank they were much more eloquent with astonishment than the
gold fillings. The thing was slowly and mysteriously unscrewing itself. Suddenly it moved through the air, then came to repose on the mudguard of
the car. Topper stood by fascinated.

"How did you do that?" demanded the man.

"What?"  said  Topper  wearily,  taking out his handkerchief and hiding his face therein. "I wish you'd stop asking me how I do things. I just do
them, that's all. Automatic springs. New device. Haven't time to go into all that."

As the man filled the tank with gasoline Topper hurried to the front of the car and leaned in.

"For God's sake stop trying to be so helpful," he whispered. "I'll do everything."

An ineffectually stifled giggle smote his ears. "Who's laughing?" called the man from the rear of the car.

Topper  had  not  the  time to answer. Something was taking place in front that demanded all his attention. A water bucket insecurely balanced on
thin air was emptying its contents into the radiator. Topper sprang forward and seized the bucket.

"I'm just giving her water," he shouted. "You must have heard the gurgle. This car always gurgles like that. It's a habit."

When  the radiator was filled Mr. Topper became engaged in a violent struggle with the bucket, for George Kerby, still bent on being helpful, was
trying  to  take  the  thing back to the garage. For a few moments the bucket danced crazily in the air, then fell clattering to the ground, from
which  it was seized by some unknown agent and carried swiftly in the direction of the garage. Mr. Topper sped after the bucket, his outstretched
hand separated from the handle by several inches of space.

"I'm  just returning the bucket," he called over his shoulder. "I'll be right with you." Then under his breath, "Kerby, don't run so fast. Let me
at least catch up with the bucket. I merely want to pretend I'm carrying it."

The  deity,  now  transformed  into  one  of  the most disturbed creatures that had ever watered gasoline, stood watching Topper's pursuit of the
bucket. He saw it describe an arc in the air, and Topper leaping after it with great agility and determination. He saw the bucket rolling rapidly
across  the floor and Topper, lost to dignity, rolling after it. Finally he saw Topper rise triumphantly with the bucket in his hand and place it
under  the  water faucet, where for a short space it bounced gaily up and down, then settled to rest beneath the weight of Mr. Topper's body. The
man  did  not  stay  to see any more, but faced about and hurried down the street. As he did so the automobile began to honk vociferously, a door
flew  open  and  a  woman's voice called impatiently to Mr. Topper. The man increased his pace, then broke into an earnest dogtrot. Still honking
madly, the automobile turned into the road and sped away in the opposite direction. But the man did not stop to watch its tail light disappear.

In  the  automobile  Topper  was  sitting  in  silence and perspiration. George and Marion Kerby were talking to him at the same time, but Topper
refused  to  answer.  He was a crushed man, a hurt man. The scene still lived in his eyes, that ghastly pursuit of the bucket. And it lingered in
his  eyes until the automobile came to a stop beside the great tree that had dispatched the Kerbys. Here Topper began to laugh softly to himself.
He  was  thinking  of the amazement on the garage-man's face. Mr. Topper's laugh gathered in volume. It was swelled by the laughter of George and
Marion  Kerby.  The  night  was  filled  with their mirth. The old tree rustled its remonstrating branches above the automobile, but the laughter
mocked  its  rebuke.  A  farmer  driving  home  from market warily skirted the glare of the headlights and clicked to his mare. Down the road and
through the night the wild laughter followed the creaking cart.

"They  were  all sittin' in the front seat huggin' and kissin' and carryin' on crazy," the farmer told his wife at the end of the drive. "I could
see 'em as plain as day. Women smokin' and goin' on scandlous."

"Them townspeople drink too much," replied the wife as she filled the old man's glass with a generous allotment of good old Jersey cider.




CHAPTER VI Disaster at the Curb


Thus  began  for  Mr. Topper an unusual experience, to say the least. Not knowing the circumstances, his friends chastely called it demoralising.
But  not  so  Mr.  Topper.  For  the  first  time  in his life he consciously, nay, deliberately, assumed a minority rôle. For the first time he
permitted himself to deal with abstract things without feeling that he had sinned. For the first time Topper's established routine of living gave
place to a disorderly desire to live. And for the first time on an evening in June, Topper wonderingly considered the stars, not in relation to a
smart New Jersey town, but in the relation of the town to the stars.

This  was  the second phase of Topper's secret life. It was in this phase that he came to regard the place in which he lived as a pool fed by the
withering  souls  of people who had passed up life. They were usual people, the people who fed this pool. They had been accepted and asked out to
places. They commuted, propagated, and entertained with impartial uniformity. In all the things of life they used the same time-table. Mr. Topper
could not call them vicious. That was the trouble. Topper bent his brain over an abstract problem. His friends would have been surprised had they
seen the man actually screwing his face into childish wrinkles over such a time-consuming thought.

And  all  was not well at home with Topper. He had cursed a leg of lamb. He had actually damned the thing. Mrs. Topper could not forget that. Had
he  cursed  her  she  might have dimly understood, but to hurl imprecations at a tender leg of lamb, a thoughtfully selected leg of lamb--oh, no,
that  could  not  be forgotten. Men might rebel against their God, but a leg of lamb, a household deity, a savory roast . . . sacrilege, its very
seat and circle!

In spite of her husband's offence Mrs. Topper maintained the brooding sameness of things. It gave her a better opportunity than an open breach to
confound  him  with the seriousness of the situation, the utter hopelessness of it, the black despair. They still occupied their appointed chairs
on  opposite  sides  of  the  sitting-room  table. Topper still read his paper while Mrs. Topper did darting things with her needle to a piece of
linen.  Each  dart  picked a little fibre out of Topper's nerves. So terrible did it all seem that at times he could hardly restrain himself from
dodging  as  the  needle  sought  its  mark.  On these occasions Topper clung to Scollops for bodily comfort and moral support. And Scollops with
luxurious  undulation  yawned  callously  in  the  face  of  tragedy. It was not of her making. She was gloatingly out of it. What was important,
however,  was  a good sound sleep. Topper's thigh was a comfortable place for a good sound sleep, though of late, Scollops daintily decided, this
erstwhile unimpeachable mattress had been growing a trifle too muscular.

In  vain  did  Mr.  Topper  try to recapture romance in the eyes of Scollops. Her eyes were closed in slumber. In vain did he seek distraction in
market  quotations. Industrial bonds no longer inspired him with a feeling of solid security. In vain did he let his eyes shirt round the room in
search  of  some  object  to hold his attention. The room was filled with objects, but for Topper they were bereft of interest. Once, in a fit of
desperation,  he  faltered  out  an  invitation  to  Mrs. Topper. It was a beautiful afternoon, pervaded with dripping sunlight and carpeted with
leagues  of  green.  It  would  be  nice to go driving on such an afternoon. The roads would be almost free from traffic and nobody much would be
around to observe them. It would be quite exciting. Mrs. Topper would enjoy it. He imagined that there would be a nice, fresh breeze and that the
fields  would look quite young and new. They could stop at a roadhouse, a respectable one, the "Rose-Marie," and have tea. Well, what did she say
to that?

Topper  looked  hopefully at his wife, then looked away. He knew exactly what she was going to say to that. He could have said it for her. But he
did  not  have  to. She said it for herself. She was just a little too tired today to risk the roads. They might upset her even more than she was
already  if  such  an  upheaval  were  possible.  Last  night  had  been a bad one--sleepless. A dragging night. Anyway, she was not particularly
interested in automobiles, but he, Topper, was. Why didn't he go out and take a nice drive? She, too, was sure there would be a lovely breeze and
that  the fields would be lovely also. She would stay at home. A sigh. She was better off at home. A look. Home was the place for her. A sigh and
a look.

"But,"  said  Topper,  his voice trembling slightly as he rose from his chair and confronted his wife, "you haven't even so much as looked at the
automobile.  You  haven't  touched  one  part of it with the tip of your little finger. Aren't you interested at all? There's lots of nice things
about  it.  Come out and watch me light a cigar. You'd be surprised, Mary." His voice grew low with excitement. "I'll teach you how to drive. You
could do it. Look at me! It would help you with your indigestion."

Mrs.  Topper  put  down  her  sewing  and  looked  up  at  her  husband's  earnest face. What absurdly young eyes he had, she thought. Behind her
unsympathetic  expression  struggled  a sincere desire to smile at Topper, to go out and pat the automobile, to marvel over the cigar-lighter, to
sit  in  the  front  seat  and  to  tell Topper how wonderful he was. Just a little smile would have altered the situation, but the smile was not
forthcoming.  Topper  was  making  her  resentful.  He was committing a terrible crime. He was destroying her good opinion of herself. Topper was
making  her  realise  how calculatingly cruel and unsympathetic she was, how stubborn as a wife and inadequate as a friend. No man could make her
feel  like  that  and  gain  her  forgiveness.  No matter how the reconciliation came about, she must be the generous spirit and Topper the self-
centred.  She  could  not  conceive of herself playing any other rôle. Furthermore, Topper was showing himself up in altogether too favourable a
light.  She was aware of that. She realised that Topper was an exceptionally decent person. This added to her resentment. What right had he to be
like  that?  Was  he  deliberately  trying  to  emphasise  the  difference  in  their  characters? Finally, Mrs. Topper had no desire to lose her
indigestion.  It  was  the  very  last  thing  in  the  world  she  wanted  to lose. Mrs. Topper needed her indigestion. She lived in and for her
indigestion.  It took the place of a child. She was tender about it. And in her mistaken mind she hoped that, like a child, her indigestion would
help her to hold her husband. It gave her an extra claim on him. Mrs. Topper, folding her hands in her lap, spoke to her husband in a dead, level
voice deliberately tuned to dash all hope.

"You  bought  the automobile," she said. "You bought it behind my back. You selfishly robbed me of my pleasure. Selfishly. Yes, that's it. You're
so selfish and self-centred, so interested in your own affairs, that you don't know I'm alive. And I'm not. I'm not even--"

"I  know, dear," Topper broke in. "You're not even half alive. I realise it. That indigestion! But really now I wasn't selfish. That is, I didn't
mean to be. I figured on surprising you and I worked so hard to--"

"Don't! " commanded Mrs. Topper. "You have told me to my face that I'm not even half alive."

"But I thought that was what you were going to say," hastened Topper. "I just wanted to agree."

"You had better go driving," said Mrs. Topper coldly. "Find somebody who is a little less dead than I am."

Topper  drooped  his shoulders and turned away without answering. He was thinking to himself that there was more excitement in the company of two
completely dead persons than he would ever find at home.

When  he  had gone Mrs. Topper buried her face in her hands and presently tears trickled through her fingers. "Why am I this way?" she whispered.
"I don't want to be. I don't mean to be. But he shouldn't look so hurt. I hate that look."

She  started  up  and  ran  to  the  window. Topper was labouring in the driveway. He looked like a man driving to his own execution. Mrs. Topper
hurried out on the porch and called to him.

"Let me get my things," she said. "I'll be right out."

Inside she dried her tears on the precious piece of linen.

Topper was radiant as his wife got into the car.

"Look  here," he said, pulling at the electric lighter. "Too bad I lighted my cigar, but here's how it works. See how red she's getting. Put your
finger near it. Feel that heat. Some heat, eh?"

Mrs. Topper obediently approached her finger to the lighter and agreed that it was indeed some heat. However, she was not quite satisfied. Topper
should  say  something  more.  He  had  not admitted that he was selfish and self-centred. Nor had he drawn favourable attention to Mrs. Topper's
generous conduct. She suffered an acute relapse and heartily wished herself out of the car, but Topper was already turning down Glendale Road.

"Now  I'm shifting the gears," he explained. "Not so hard when you get the knack. I'm not an expert yet, but you don't have to worry. Well, Mary,
it's great you're along," he added a little bashfully.

No,  it  was not quite adequate. It should have been longer and laden with a deeper appreciation of her character. Mrs. Topper was not mollified.
However, she kept her peace. She would not spoil the drive--not yet.

Now  it  was  unfortunate that as they crossed the main street of the town Mrs. Topper decided she wanted to shop at the butcher's. It was doubly
unfortunate,  because  Topper  was not accustomed to stopping on the main streets of towns and had a perilous time wedging himself in between two
intimately  parked automobiles. It was even more unfortunate that, after Mrs. Topper's departure, Mr. Topper attempted to improve on his position
by  ramming,  with no little violence, the automobile directly in front of him. People stopped and stared at Topper, then stared at the assaulted
car.  Several  examined the damaged fender from which Mr. Topper hastily averted his woeful eyes. Where was the owner? Topper hoped that his wife
would  hurry  so  that they could get away as speedily as possible. Topper could never face the man. He felt like pinning a twenty-dollar bill to
the fender with a note asking forgiveness. He would sign it "An Unknown Admirer," to make the man feel better about it.

But  more unfortunate than anything else was the reappearance of Mrs. Topper in company with Clara Stevens. Mr. Topper little realised how really
unfortunate this was. Clara was talking brilliantly and Mrs. Topper was absorbing with gloomy interest.

"And  so Harris told him to his face that he would as soon consider buying a second-hand car as oil stock from a third cousin," she was saying as
the two women drew near Topper.

The remark did not sound reassuring to Topper. But then, Mary was a sensible woman. Everyone knew how Clara went on.

"Clara  was  in  town  last  week  buying  a new car," announced Mrs. Topper, with meaning in her voice, after the customary hypocrisies had been
exchanged. "She spent a whole week going from place to place until she was completely satisfied she had made a wise selection."

Topper  thought that it was rather remiss of Clara to make no reference to the fact that he was lounging picturesquely over the steering wheel of
an automobile, but perhaps he looked so natural that the unusualness of the situation had not occurred to her.

"Clara picked out the car herself," continued Mrs. Topper, "and it's registered in her name. She says Harris was a dear about it, so patient with
her and unselfish."

"And here it is!" exclaimed Clara, turning to the victim of Mr. Topper's skill. "Why . . . what . . . has . . . happened . . . to . . my ... car.
. . my . . . nice . . . new . . . car?"

Topper thought she would never finish.

"Oh,  God,"  he  prayed to himself, "take me out of this. Translate me to the heavens. Make me a fixed star or a shooting star. I don't much care
which, but deliver me now from these two women. Let me be somewhere else."

"Whatever will Harris say?" Clara tearfully asked the street.

Topper could see that the girl was moved, that her reputation as a driver was seriously involved. He knew Harris, and he knew that he was neither
patient  nor generous, nor was he a dear. Topper was also afraid that some helpful bystander would point a denouncing finger at him before he had
time to explain.

"I guess Harris will have to talk with me," said Topper quietly. "You see, I did it. I did it with my little car. Fix it as good as new. Stick on
another fender in a minute. Sorry. The man behind me just wouldn't budge."

Mrs. Topper was being repaid for her momentary weakness. Before Clara could speak she did, which showed that she had been toeing the mark.

"You  should  at  least  have thought of me," she said. "Come, Clara, take me home, will you? I am not feeling well. I knew it would be this way.
Cosmo will see that everything is arranged."

"Just a minute," called Cosmo, as the two women entered the other machine. "Aren't you coming driving with me?"

"With you?" said Mrs. Topper, her eye-brows slightly arched.




CHAPTER VII Topper Calls on a Tree


Mr Topper viciously pressed his foot down on the self-starter. In his imagination he was crushing the human race, especially the female branch of
it,  and  in  particular Clara Stevens. He had one desire now and only one. He wanted to cut himself off entirely from people and faces and eyes,
and  from  tongues,  too.  Idle, insincere tongues. He was an embittered man and a confused one. Events had occurred too rapidly. Mentally he had
tried  to  catch  up  with them. There had been a little unpleasantness at home. That had fortunately subsided. Then quite amazingly he had found
himself  driving  off  in  triumph  with  his  wife.  He  had  talked  to her engagingly about gears and electric devices. She had appeared to be
interested.  After  all,  it  was going to be a successful afternoon. Everything was set for it. Then that fatal butcher shop and the accident--a
slight  thing. Swift on this had come Clara Stevens and exposure, followed by the contained but depressing departure of Mrs. Topper. That was the
sequence  of  events, but Mr. Topper searched in vain for the logic. What was the good of scaling an emotional ladder if only to have its topmost
rung yield beneath one's feet? "No good," thought Mr. Topper.

He  was  driving now with a purpose. He was going back to the tree beneath which nearly a week ago he had taken light-hearted leave of George and
Marion  Kerby.  He  was going back to the tree now and he was glad he was going back. In spite of their rather peculiar ideas of a good time, Mr.
Topper  felt  that  he understood the Kerbys far better than his more obvious friends. And George and Marion Kerby were vastly more acceptable to
him than the people who constituted his social circle. He was surprised at this, but not alarmed.

Since his first experience with the Kerbys, Mr. Topper had steadfastly refrained from driving past the tree. Several times he had felt like doing
so,  but  discretion  had  forced  him to master the temptation. He considered communing with spirits much in the same light that he regarded the
smoking  of  opium.  It  was unnatural. For all he knew it might even be habit-forming. God knows where it might end. If the Kerbys had only been
sensible spirits, orderly and law-abiding, and much less active, the situation would have been different--better. Mr. Topper could have created a
little  club  around  them.  On  Thursday nights, for instance, they could have given interesting and uplifting talks to his friends. He, Topper,
having sponsored them, would have become famous in a serious and conservative way.

"There  goes Topper," people would have said. "Psychic devil. He controls two spirits." He might even have corresponded with Sir Oliver Lodge. As
a matter of fact there were commercial possibilities in a pair of good tame spirits. Mr. Topper could have incorporated them. But not the Kerbys.
They  could hardly be trusted. Many of their actions would be too difficult to explain. If they were not quite so willing, so callously unabashed
about being dead. A certain reluctance would seem more fitting.

Nevertheless,  Mr. Topper was strangely attracted to the Kerbys. They were different, refreshingly set apart from the usual run of people. On his
modest  excursions  during  the  past week George and Marion Kerby had been much in his mind. He had come to accept them without reservation. The
ringing  quality  of Marion Kerby's voice still lingered in his ears. He was able to recall without too great compunction that her arms had quite
unmistakably encircled his waist. Mr. Topper's vanity was secretly gratified by the fact that the Kerbys had accepted him in all good fellowship.
He  knew  that  they  considered  the  rest  of  his  friends as alien beings endowed with singularly worm-like qualities. But with him they were
perfectly natural. Almost too natural.

So  Mr.  Topper was on his way to the tree--quite definitely on his way. Like a dead eye in a grey face the sun above him gazed starkly through a
film of sickly clouds. There was going to be rain or something else equally unpleasant.

Topper  hoped  that  it  would clear up, and no sooner had he hoped this than it did clear up. The cloud slipped from the face of the sun and the
world grew bright again beneath its rays. Mr. Topper became suspicious. There was something ominous in the alacrity of the weather to comply with
his wishes. Nothing ever happened the way he hoped. Why should the weather be so obliging? Perhaps through his brief acquaintance with the Kerbys
he  was  becoming endowed with occult powers. To test this alarming suspicion he tentatively hoped for rain. The sun plunged its face into a scum
of  grey  vapours,  and Mr. Topper immediately stopped hoping. His credulity was becoming stronger than his nerves. He feared that if he indulged
further  in this dangerous business of hoping he might innocently commit an entire community to a swift and painful death, Clara Stevens and Mrs.
Topper prominently included.

A  sudden  rattling  of planks startled him from his thoughts. He was crossing the dilapidated bridge. Directly ahead of him the old scarred tree
shook  its  vigorous  branches. To Mr. Topper this ancient landmark was not so much a tree as a place of residence. And he approached the tree in
that  spirit.  When  he  came  abreast of it he stopped the automobile and waited. Nothing unusual happened and Mr. Topper began to feel a little
self-conscious.

"Anyone want a ride?" he moved himself to call. His voice sounded lonely in the branches of the tree. "I say there, Mr. Kerby, would you and your
wife like to take a spin?"

"Why, it's Topper! " a voice cried out excitedly. "Hey, Marion! Topper's back. How about a ride!"

"Who's back?" came a woman's voice as if from a great distance.

"Topper is," shouted the first voice. "Wants to know if you'd like a ride. He's waiting."

"If  you don't mind," Topper suggested, "I wish you'd stop that shouting. There's a waggon coming. Just run over to your wife and ask her quietly
if she wants to use the car. Hold a whispered conversation."

But George Kerby was far too excited at the prospect of a ride to follow Mr. Topper's injunctions.

"Damn it, Marion," he shouted. "Make up your mind. Do you want to go or don't you? Say yes or no."

"Come, George," admonished the woman's voice. "Pull yourself together. Mr. Topper will think you never saw an automobile before. Of course I want
to go driving. It was lovely of Cosmo to call. I'd about decided that he had deserted us."

The waggon had stopped beside the automobile and the driver was gazing at Mr. Topper with obstinate curiosity. Ordinarily this driver was not one
easily  aroused  from his trance-like contemplation of his horses' moving flanks, but these strange voices coming from God knew where gave him an
unpleasant sensation. Mr. Topper glanced at the man and winced.

"Come on out of the woods, you two," he commanded. "Where the devil have you got to? Why I can't even see you."

"We're picking flowers," called Marion Kerby. "We'll be right with you."

The driver's face resumed its normal mould. "Nice day," he said to Topper.

"Splendid," Mr. Topper beamed.

The  driver  settled back in his seat and waited. Mr. Topper, closely regarding the man, decided that from his expression he was prepared to wait
indefinitely.  It  was an unfortunate situation. Mr. Topper got out of the automobile and surreptitiously pinched one of the horses. The offended
animal  immediately  put  himself  in  motion.  The  driver, as if desiring to conserve his energy, allowed his team to have its head. Mr. Topper
returned to the automobile and waited.

"We're  so  forgetful,"  said  Marion Kerby remorsefully as soon as the waggon was out of earshot. "But George is such a common creature with his
great throat."

"Then why are you always moping about?" demanded George Kerby angrily. "If you had any mind at all--"

"I would never have married you," his wife triumphantly interrupted. "And I certainly wouldn't have died with you. When I was alive I put a great
deal of faith in that optimistic line 'until death do us part,' but it tricked me."

"May I put in a word?" began Mr. Topper, but Kerby's voice cut him short.

"I know," he recriminated bitterly. "You tried to poison me more than once."

"When the bootleggers failed I tried my hand just for the sake of experiment," his wife replied, "but your stomach defied all natural laws."

"It seems that you both are defying a few natural laws," put in Mr. Topper.

"Listen  to  this,"  said George Kerby hurriedly. "You can judge the sort of woman she is, Topper--the terribleness of her. She claims that we're
not  married  any  more  and that anything goes just because we were bumped off. How's that for depravity. Not that I care. The line said, 'until
death do us part.' Well, as a matter of fact death didn't us part. And so there you are. Tell her how silly she is, Topper."

"It's  a  delicate point for an outsider to settle," Mr. Topper cautiously replied. "Suppose we go for a ride. It's rather trying to be listening
to the pair of you squabbling all over the landscape."

"All right, let's forget it," Kerby agreed. "Come, Marion. Topper's right."

"Just the same it isn't legal any more," said Marion. "I want Topper to understand that."

"Are you both in?" asked Mr. Topper. "All set," replied Kerby.

"No funny stuff now," warned Mr. Topper as he started the car. "I've had a hard day, a terrible day. I'd like to have a good time."

"You would?" cried Kerby. "Then let me take the wheel. Marion drove last time. I've got a great idea."

"Frankly, I mistrust your ideas," said Mr. Topper, but rather than be sat on I'll let you take the wheel."

"He's all right," Marion said in a reassuring voice. "Especially when he has an idea. For a fool he's funny that way. Slide over to me."

As Mr. Topper slid over the car gathered speed. Once more he let his eyes wander over the sunken plain. It was smooth and green and peaceful, and
it  was  bathed  in  a  subdued light which recalled to Mr. Topper's mind a certain matchless Easter egg he had once possessed in the days of his
youth. It was made of sugar and tastefully decorated with pink confection. The egg was hollow and there was a piece of glass set in a peephole at
one  end.  Mr. Topper had applied his eyes to this peephole and he had never quite forgotten the beauty of the scene on which he had gazed. Never
on  earth  could he catch again such completely satisfying beauty. Never would he meet such a shepherdess or see such lamb-like lambs. The sunken
plain  had some of the romance of that Easter egg. He felt like running across the dipping meadows in search of his lost shepherdess. Perhaps she
was  waiting  for  him in the woods on the other side. The woods looked cool and interesting. They ran away along the skyline like the mysterious
fringe  of  a  new  life.  Mr. Topper keenly appreciated this spot. It had something to do with him. For the moment he forgot that he was sitting
between  all  that  remained of George and Marion Kerby. As on the previous occasion, his mind now dropped into a dim repose which was lined with
green and tinted by the glowing rays of the sun. Romance was close at hand, but before it could come any closer Mr. Topper's repose was shattered
by an alarming report from the automobile and an oath from George Kerby.

"Damn it!" said Kerby. "A puncture." Mr. Topper looked helplessly about as the car came to a sudden stop.

"What do we do now?" he asked. "I don't know the first thing about changing a tyre."

"But  I  do,"  Kerby  replied  briskly.  "Don't  worry your head about it. You and Marion get out and sit down somewhere. I'll be finished in ten
minutes. You've got a brand new spare all loaded and everything."

"Come on, Cosmo," said Marion. "Let's crouch in the grass and leer at George. He's good with tyres and corks."

With  a  feeling  of  relief Mr. Topper abandoned his car. He felt really grateful to George Kerby. In spite of his reputation there must be some
good  in  the young devil. He did not appear to be afraid of hard work. He was as willing as the next to soil his hands in disagreeable toil. Mr.
Topper idly wondered if spirits ever washed their hands. What with, if so? Just the same George Kerby was decidedly helpful in an emergency.

To Mr. Topper a punctured tyre was an emergency of the first order.

"You'd better follow me," said Mr. Topper, "because I can't follow you. When I come to a place you like just let me know."

"This  will  do,"  she announced when they came to a smooth, grassy space near the roadside. "Let's seethe here like a pair of indolent worms. Do
you like seething?"

Topper hardly knew. He had never tried it.

"Wallowing is more in my line," he remarked. "I'm afraid I'm not built for seething, as you call it. Too fat."

"It's easy for me to seethe," she went on, and from the direction of her voice she was lying at Mr. Topper's feet. "All I do is wriggle a hole in
space and curl up."

This  sounded  horrible  to  Mr.  Topper,  but he made no reply as he lowered himself to the grass, his mind and body occupied with the grace and
agility of his descent.

"Do you find it pleasant the way you are?" he began in a conversational voice after he had carefully arranged himself.

"How do you mean?" asked Marion. "Being a spirit," replied Topper.

"It's rather thin at times," she said, "but fortunately I'm not always this way."

"No?" said Mr. Topper with a rising inflection. "Oh, no," she answered. "Sometimes I'm quite different."

"How?" Topper bluntly demanded.

"I materialise," she said. "I get thick like you, only not quite so thick, if you get what I mean."

"I'm afraid I do," Mr. Topper replied. "You mean that it would be impossible to achieve my state of thickness. Go on."

"I didn't mean that at all," she said. "Don't be a zug."

"Don't be a what?" he demanded.

"A zug," she replied.

"What's that?" he asked.

"It's my name for a person who doesn't act the way he feels," answered Marion.

"Oh, you mean a gentleman," said Topper. "Well, if I acted the way I felt I probably wouldn't be here now."

"Why?"

"I'd  probably be in jail for wife-beating or arson or poisoning wells," Mr. Topper said thoughtfully. "I've felt like doing all those things to-
day."

"I rather suspected you were down on your luck," Marion answered emphatically. "Poor old Topper!"

"If  you  must  be  good  to me," replied Mr. Topper, "try to be practical about it. Don't get me into any more scrapes like the last time. Don't
giggle  at people and don't fight with your husband. Emotional people are bad enough, but emotional spirits are impossible. That's that. Now tell
me what you meant when you said that at times you were quite different."

"It's like this," she began. "We are what you might call low-planed spirits, George and myself." Topper nodded appreciatively.

"I can well understand that," he said.

"We are authentic spirits," she continued. "Quite authentic, but still low-planed."

"And no doubt you rejoice in it," put in Mr. Topper.

"We do," said Marion, "particularly after what we've seen of the high ones."

"Death has changed you little," remarked Mr. Topper.

"That's  exactly  what  I  tell George," replied Marion. "If anything it's made him worse. You wouldn't believe it if I told you, but that man is
actually mad. I wouldn't admit it while I was alive, but now with a lot of space on my hands . . ."

"You were telling me about low-planed spirits," interrupted Mr. Topper.

"Oh,  yes," she said. "Well, low-planed spirits to keep well must have a certain amount of ectoplasm. High-planed spirits don't need it, wouldn't
know what to do with it, but low-planed spirits must have their ectoplasm."

"Do they serve it in glasses?" asked Mr. Topper.

"All  things you cannot be told," Marion replied, "but it's like time with you. We can squander it or use it wisely just as we please. It doesn't
matter. We get so much ectoplasm and no more. They're strict about it. Just to show you. George went to the races last month. He'd been saving up
his allotment. He loves races. That's why, according to vital statistics, we're officially deceased. Well, this track was down south. George went
there  and  no  one  recognised  him  at  first.  Even  when  they  did  they acted as if they hadn't. People are funny that way. They hate to be
disillusioned.  That's  why  so  few  of  us  ever come back. George cleaned up on the horses. Whenever he wanted to place a bet he faded out and
listened  to  the  wise  ones.  George knows where to listen. But the money got the best of him. He started in drinking and didn't stop until his
ectoplasm  had  run out. About 2 week later he came back to me with a terrible hangover and a sad story about a twenty-dollar bill he hadn't been
able  to  spend because no one had the nerve to pluck it from the air. He said that he had wandered over several counties with that twenty-dollar
bill  until  he  got so sick of it he threw it away. Since then he's been saving his ectoplasm. I've got a lot of it, but I never feel like using
it. I'm afraid I'm becoming high-planed, but I might be persuaded to materialise for you."

"Don't trouble yourself," said Mr. Topper hastily. "Some other time. I've had a particularly hard day. Don't upset me."

Marion Kerby laughed. Topper liked her laugh.

"I wonder what sort of a little boy you were," she said, musingly.

"Not  much of a sort," Mr. Topper admitted. "A pretty poor type of little boy. I messed around a lot and didn't go right or wrong. I think I must
have been rather an unofficial little boy."

"And what did you plan to become?" she asked.

Mr.  Topper looked uneasily around him. He had a strange feeling that a pair of lovely eyes were floating in the air. It was like being lost in a
fog with a strange, but desirable, person.

"I never got so far as planning," he said in a low voice, "but I wanted to be an actor."

"And no one encouraged you?" Marion Kerby's voice was equally low. There was a deep, feminine quality in it which to Mr. Topper was more intimate
than  a  caress,  more  tender than a smile. The sound of her voice fortified him against all the perils of life. Everything could go to smash as
long as that voice continued. He could sink to the sunless depth of a lonely sea with the memory of such a voice still living in his ears.

"One person encouraged me," he replied. "A drunken uncle. He gave me a book."

"What kind of a book?" asked Marion.

"It  was  a  very  thorough  book,"  replied  Mr.  Topper. "It's old now, of course, and no doubt there are better books to-day, but this one had
recitations in it, and photographs that showed you how to do Hate and Fear and Modesty and Surprise and practically all the emotions."

Unconsciously  Mr.  Topper  pressed his hands to his cheeks and did Surprise. The effect was startling, but he failed to realise how startling it
was  until  he  found  himself  staring  into  the eyes of three seemingly fascinated bystanders who had quietly gathered from nowhere. It was an
interesting  grouping.  Mr.  Topper appeared to be leading a class in dramatic elocution. His pupils were registering the most eloquent surprise.
Mr. Topper's expression congealed.

"I'm rehearsing for an act," he explained, with a hesitating smile.

The first young farmer looked at the second young farmer and the second young farmer looked at the third, then all three looked at Mr. Topper and
Mr. Topper looked away.

"I'm rehearsing," he repeated in an obstinate voice. "Go away."

But the youthful group held its ground. Mr. Topper was on the point of doing Fury with extras when he saw the spare tyre of the automobile neatly
detach  itself from the rack and roll jauntily up to the denuded wheel. Then he saw the flat tyre wobble over the ground and with a delicate leap
attach  itself  to  the  rack. Topper's eyes turned to glass. He was no longer able to register his emotions, but the features of the three young
farmers  were  contorted  with amazement. They could find no comforting explanation for the purposefully acting tyres. And when they saw a wrench
performing  masterful  revolutions  in  the  air  they  decided  to  go  somewhere else to think things over. With great speed and with admirable
solidarity  they  departed. Nothing could have separated them. Mr. Topper breathed a sigh of relief as they disappeared in single file formation.
Like the three witches in Macbeth, they were destined to appear later at an equally unpropitious moment in Mr. Topper's life.

"You're splendid!" exclaimed Marion Kerby before he could voice his woe. "Prepare to be hugged."

For  an  instant  Mr.  Topper  presented the appearance of a man with a stiff neck, whereas in reality he was resting his troubled head on Marion
Kerby's surprisingly adequate breast. It was just for an instant, but Mr. Topper never quite succeeded in ridding himself of the memory.




CHAPTER VIII Wayward Ghosts


Kerby's  destination  was  shadowed by the woods. It was an old abandoned inn, lying far back from the roadway in the arms of its guardian trees.
Like  a  royal drunkard, spent by years of purple debauchery, the ancient structure wearily settled down among the trees and listened to tales of
vanished  splendour  drifting  through the branches overhead. Hard days had fallen on the inn. It attracted no longer now the flower of the land.
Laughter  warmed  its  heart  no more and the silvery chiming of goblets filled with honest liquor was forever stilled. And the great paunch-like
cellar  of  the  inn was empty. Gone the bottles that flashed beneath the lamplight. Gone the stout old soul who used to carry the lamp. Even the
smell  of the place was different. The inspiriting fragrance of old wine had been subtracted from the air, leaving it flat and dead. The spiders,
too,  had lost caste. There was not a cork to cling to, only empty bins that had once contained the mellow yield of distant vineyards stepping up
the hillside to the sun that had given them life.

The  inn  was  built on sandy soil. The sea had once been there. If you looked between the trees at moonlight you could see white patches of sand
lying in the woods. And if you stood quite still and listened to the wind thrumming through the pines you could catch an echo of waves falling on
vanished beaches. The sea had once been there. The rhythm of its surf still lingered in the air and the healing tang of its salt blended with the
smell  of pine. All was silent in the woods. Nobody ever came to them now. No couples flitted across the patches, no whispering voices were heard
among the trees.

Mr. Topper stood on the back veranda of the inn and gazed into the woods. A breeze, fresh and soothing, filled with a lonesome fragrance, brought
peace  and  a  strange excitement to his heart. He felt happy and almost young. He had forgotten about his stomach. It was as if he had withdrawn
from  the  old life and was digging with his toes in new and magic soil. How unreal and far away Mrs. Topper seemed. How delightfully remote from
him was everyone he knew. Only Scollops retained her personality. Mr. Topper wanted his cat. Scollops would have loved this place. She would have
approved  of  the  rambling  old inn with its soft, brown shingles and its long veranda broken by sun-filled angles, ideally arranged for a quiet
nap, a warm, sensuous, sun-bathed nap. And Scollops would have found many interesting things in the woods. Mr. Topper unconsciously possessed one
of the rarest and most precious faculties of the memory, a graphic and olfactory sense of childhood. He could visualise Scollops stalking between
the  trees, enter into her little, but intense, curiosities, and smell the things she smelled. There were grasshoppers and ant-hills and exciting
holes  in  the  trees.  What  a place for Scollops! Mr. Topper let his eyes travel along the weather-browned side of the old inn. Far away in the
distance the checker-board fields cupped down to an indolent river. Mr. Topper did not know the name of the river. He was equally ignorant of its
beginning  and  its end. These things were matters of small importance to Mr. Topper. He did know, however, that the river added another touch of
beauty to the landscape. It garnished the general effect. Curving out in a great leisurely horseshoe, it moved between smooth banks, and here and
there  a  tree  or  two  had crept up to its brink to gaze at its pretty limbs in the flowing mirror below. The sky swept down over the world and
dropped  behind the stepping hills, on the highest of which rose the turrets of a castle dating back as far as 1922. Under ordinary circumstances
Mr.  Topper  would have become involved in calculations regarding the probable cost of building such a place, but to-day he was content to accept
it as a part of the scene that was filling his eyes with beauty.

"You like it here," said a quiet voice behind him. "What makes your eyes so sad?"

"I  didn't  know they were sad," replied Mr. Topper, with an uneasy smile. "Perhaps they've looked too long on desk tops and plumbing and legs of
lamb. Perhaps they've looked on loveliness too late."

"Perhaps  they've  looked on loveliness too late," Marion Kerby softly repeated. "The world does wicked things to us with its success and routine
and  morality.  Topper,  it either cheats us with wealth or numbs us with want, steals away from us all the colour and wonder of being alive, the
necessary useless things. Only savages and children do proper honour to the sun, and children soon grow up into perfectly rational--"

"Toppers,"  interrupted  Mr.  Topper rather bitterly. "I know what you're thinking. Those white duck trousers. I never wore them again, not since
the day you said they looked self-conscious."

There was a flash of laughter in the air and Mr. Topper felt a small hand brush lightly across the top of his.

"There was something wonderful about those trousers," she said. "Something pitiful, too. Do you know what I mean?"

"Perfectly," replied Mr. Topper. "The pitiful part was me."

"No," she continued. "I mean that they expressed in a futile way the desire to be dashing and picturesque, the need to slip a little beyond life.
They  were  the starched symbol of rebellion. I liked you the moment I saw you in those white duck trousers. You were shifting from foot to foot,
rather guiltily, I thought."

"Don't go on about those trousers," Mr. Topper pleaded. "Try to forget that I ever wore them."

"If it will make you feel any better," Marion said comfortingly, "I'll try to forget that you ever wore any trousers at all."

"You don't have to go so far as that," he replied. "You and your husband have taken my dignity, I have only my decency left."

"Look!" exclaimed Marion. "The sun is sinking behind the castle. How fine it is!"

Topper took a deep breath. His very being seemed to merge with the crazy-quilt of colours streaming across the low sky.

"It  is  fine," he said. "The way it fans out above the towers makes me think of Ivanhoe. I don't know why. There was a girl in it named Rebecca.
She was always jumping out of windows."

"Well, the Rebecca living in that castle isn't jumping out of any windows," said George Kerby jarringly, his voice coming from the doorway of the
inn.  "You couldn't even push the old woman through. She's fat, quarrelsome, and very rich. Always falling in love with her gardeners. That's why
she loses them all the time. She's too tough a bud even for a gardener to pick."

"George, dear," Marion remarked in her sweetest voice, "you always sound the right note at sunset. It's a part of your irresistible charm. You're
so deliciously low at all times."

"Oh, so that's it," replied Kerby. "I'm not too low to be collecting wood for a fire. While you two have been idling out here detracting from the
natural  beauty  of  the  scene, I've been looking for stuff to keep you warm outside and in. I've been useful and busy while you've been useless
and--and--"

"Indolent, supine or loutish," suggested Marion. "Take your choice."

"You're awfully funny," Kerby retorted.

"Please go away and continue being useful and busy," said his wife.

"All  right,"  answered  Kerby  in  a  sulky voice, "but if Topper wants anything to drink he'd better tear himself away from that meagre-looking
sunset and help me hunt. I've a good idea that the law didn't know all the ropes of this cafeteria."

Topper  obediently turned from the sunset. He would much rather have remained with Marion to watch the evening die, but Kerby was a man demanding
a man's co-operation in an enterprise that smacked of devilishness. Topper felt that he could not afford to be found wanting. There was something
rugged  and masculine about leaving a sunset flat to go in search of drink. He would show Marion Kerby that he was as game for a good time as the
next one.

"Are you coming, Marion?" asked Kerby. "Not now," she replied.

"Come  on, Topper," said George Kerby briskly; then in a lower voice, "If we find anything to drink we'll jolly well help ourselves before we let
her know."

He nudged Topper in the ribs and Topper sprang back, startled.

"Pardon me," he said. "I must have been crowding you."

Kerby laughed.

"No,"  he  replied,  "I'm  merely  over-eager.  I'm a dead man parched for a drink, an intangible body with a palpable thirst. Search diligently,
Topper. We must find a bottle."

Kerby's  voice  trailed  away across the twilight of the inn. Topper heard things moving about, felt clouds of dust descending upon his head, saw
empty  boxes  sliding  mysteriously through the gloom, and in the midst of this he stood unmoved. The room had taken possession of him. He looked
about like a tourist in a tomb.

The  vague,  slanting roof extending above his head was filled with ancient dusk solidified by cross-beams, great reaching things, rough-hewn and
low.  High  up  in  a pointed section of the wall a small window strained through its dirty panes the departing light of day. The little shaft of
yellow  light  sifting  through the darkness fingered a yawning fireplace, filled with bits of wood and dusted white with blown ashes. From where
Topper  stood  the  room  on  either  side of him ran on forever into shadows. Cross-beams and shadows and ebbing daylight--Topper absorbed these
elements, but was unable to blend them harmoniously in his mind. He was like a man in a dream, quite willing to accept, but unable to explain.

And  as  he  stood there, in the great dark room, the wood in the fireplace suddenly sprang into flame. Waves of red sparkled over the stones and
warmth  carved  a  pocket  in  the dampness of the place. The cross-beams, caught in the glow of the firelight, twisted and swam in the quivering
parade  of  the  flames. Shadows that had once been dead came back to life and trembled rhythmically on the floor. The old inn seemed to sigh and
find  itself,  like  a  man  waxing  expansive  after a long period of rigorous domestic hypocrisy. Topper edged up to the fireplace and absorbed
reassurance  from  its  warmth.  He  had  a  feeling  that  something was taking place in the room, something very near him. An unseen person was
breathing heavily almost at Mr. Topper's feet.

"Topper!" exclaimed a strained voice as a square section of the flooring flew open. "Topper, my heart's blood, the world is ours."

Firelight  fell  into  the  aperture  disclosed  by  the  lifted boards. Little jets of flame danced redly on deep green glass. Golden fire-beams
trickled through jackets of spotted straw and girdled the liveried necks of ancient bottles. A box emerged from the pocket and cut a path through
the  dust.  With  a  business-like  snap  the board settled back into place. Mr. Topper gave a slight start, then smiled nervously in the general
direction of his invisible accomplice.

"You've found a lot, haven't you?" said Mr. Topper with false enthusiasm.

"I've a good mind to materialise just for to-night," muttered Kerby in a preoccupied voice.

Mr.  Topper  drew  a  quick breath. From where he was standing he had an excellent view of this much discussed phenomenon. It was, if anything, a
trifle too excellent a view to suit Mr. Topper. He would have preferred to have witnessed it from the back row of a crowded hall.

"Why," he thought to himself, "should I of all people be privileged to undergo such unpleasant experiences when thousands of spirit hunters would
gladly take my place? Why was not Sir Conan Doyle selected? I am not the man."

Mr.  Topper  stopped  asking  himself  questions. He became incapable of self-interrogation. An appalling thing was taking place before his eyes.
George  Kerby's  legs  were  appearing,  quietly and without undue haste, but nevertheless his legs were quite unmistakably appearing. Mr. Topper
began to shiver as if caught in a chill wind. With perfect self-possession and unconcern the legs arched up from the floor. With dilated eyes Mr.
Topper  followed the ribs in the golf stockings and dwelt reluctantly on the criss-cross pattern of the trousers. No detail of those legs escaped
him.  Years  after he could have modelled them in clay. Then, quite suddenly, he realised that another section had been added to the legs. It was
the central and after part of George Kerby's anatomy. In a thoroughly detached manner it was flaunting itself in the air. Mr. Topper's feet began
to  shuffle wistfully. They wanted to go to the door and be let out, but, before they had time to obey this impulse, they clung to the floor like
expiring  flounders.  Mr.  Topper  was  gazing  into George Kerby's face, gazing into it, not as Mr. Topper would have liked, but in a peculiarly
upsetting  way.  Kerby's  face was oddly suspended between his legs, and it was upside down. Mr. Topper had no precedent to follow. Not even in a
side-show  had  he  ever seen a face placed in such a novel position, but this fact seemed to make no difference to the face, for it smiled up at
Topper  as  gaily  as  if  it had been in its conventional location. The wide-mouthed, inverted smile nearly did for Mr. Topper. He found himself
unable to return it.

"Oh, dear," he said, moving back, "oh, dear me, is that the way you're going to be?"

"What way do you mean?" demanded the face, its mouth wagging snappily in a manner most horrifying to Mr. Topper.

"The way you are," muttered Mr. Topper. "You know. Is it always going to be like this?"

"Now  what  the  devil's  got into you?" asked Kerby, rising to his full height and confronting the troubled Topper with a bottle in either hand.
"Can't a man bend over?"

"My mistake," replied Mr. Topper, licking his dry lips. "I thought that probably you'd sprained your back in the accident and that..."

Kerby cut him short with a laugh and moved over to the fireplace.

"You  still  believe  in  ghost  stories,  I see," he said, good-humouredly. "Well, I'm all here, every inch of me. Never felt better in my life.
Shake. I'm glad you see me."

"I'm  overjoyed I do," replied Mr. Topper, gingerly accepting the proffered hand. "Would you mind opening one or both of those bottles? A drop of
something would help a lot."

"Topper, I love you," whispered Kerby, hurrying away in the gloom.

Topper looked consideringly after the retreating figure. He found it rather hard to accept Kerby in his materialised form after having with great
difficulty  become  reconciled to his voice. Topper felt that there was a lamentable lack of stability in his relationship with George and Marion
Kerby.  They  should  be either one thing or the other, but certainly not both. It required too swift and radical an adjustment of the mind to be
talking with space at one moment and the next to be shaking hands with a perfectly tangible body. After all, a person could absorb only a certain
limited number of shocks in a lifetime. Mr. Topper felt that he had already absorbed his full quota.

With  the  firelight  at  his  back, Topper, his eyes now grown adjusted to the darkness, looked about the room. At one end he saw a gathering of
shadowy  tables,  one  table  carrying  the other on its back as though retreating from the field with a wounded comrade. The legs of the wounded
tables  formed a forest in the darkness. At the other end of the room a huge, many-caverned sideboard flattened its rugged back defiantly against
the wall and waited. It was a sideboard that would stand just so much and no more. After the limit had been reached all the prohibition agents in
the  world would be unable to make it budge. One more indignity, another outrageously intimate searching of its secret recesses might cause it to
fly  from  the  wall  and fall on its tormentors. Like the last of the barons it stood guard over the desecrated inn. Dust covered its honourable
veneer  with a delicate pall, but the old sideboard remained at its post and guarded the room it had so often seen filled with the revellers of a
freer generation.

George  Kerby  was standing in front of the side-board, diligently rummaging through its drawers. As Topper watched the deftly searching hands he
decided  that  Kerby  was  bereft of fear and respect. Certainly, no ordinary person could thus casually search through such an imposing piece of
furniture.  With  a  low exclamation of satisfaction, Kerby left the sideboard and returned to the fireplace with a corkscrew in one hand and two
glasses in the other.

"Hold  these,"  he  said,  giving  Topper  the glasses, "but don't make any noise. Marion's really childish about nature. If we don't disturb her
she'll blither around outside all night and let us peacefully fill our skins."

With  professional  skill he extracted the cork from one of the bottles, then filled the glasses and politely extended one of them to Mr. Topper,
who  was  extremely  glad to receive it. He was honestly convinced that if any man in the world deserved a drink, he, Topper, was that man. Kerby
emptied his glass at a gulp and pulled a couple of boxes within range of the fire's warmth.

"Take it easy, Topper," he said. "This Scotch is worth a couple of yards of ectoplasm. Do you get drunk?"

Topper,  emerging  with  a brilliant colour from his glass, paused before answering the question. A swift, rollicking revolution accompanied by a
pleasant  tingling  sensation  was  taking place within him. He felt himself growing lighter and less material. Perhaps he was going to disappear
altogether. That would be splendid. Then he would be a spirit, too, like George and Marion Kerby.

"Never  had  much  chance,"  he  replied, "but I did get drunk once. No one noticed it, so I didn't have much fun. They were all so stuffy at the
party.  The kind that know when they've had just enough. Then they become heavily jolly and wink at each other with wise eyes. I went to sleep in
a hammock. Mrs. Topper doesn't like drinking. It makes her nervous. I suppose you get drunk most of the time?"

Kerby replenished the glasses before he answered.

"Whenever  I  get  the  chance,"  he said. "Marion says I'm never sober. And she sticks to it, but of course she exaggerates. The moment I take a
drink she begins to remind me about the last time and helps me along by auto-suggestion."

"It's  really  too bad about women," Mr. Topper answered sympathetically. "They don't seem to have any sense of proportion at all. If Mrs. Topper
should  walk into the room right now I'd be forced to speak to her quite pointedly to keep her from raising a row. But I've never beaten her," he
went on thoughtfully. "Not yet, I haven't. Thanks, Kerby. This Scotch is delicious. Do you feel like dancing?"

Kerby  quickly  looked  up  from  his  drink.  Mr.  Topper appeared to be perfectly normal. He was sitting solidly on his box and gazing into the
fireplace.

"Do I feel like what?" Kerby demanded.

"Dancing, George," replied Mr. Topper in a reasonable voice. "Dancing or singing."

"Certainly not," said Kerby, shortly.

"That's odd," replied Mr. Topper. "I seem to."

"Well, don't do it," Kerby commanded. "You'll spoil everything."

"Then let's each have a bottle of our own," suggested Mr. Topper. "It will seem more abandoned."

"Drink up this one first," said Kerby.

Mr. Topper promptly extended his empty glass.

"Listen, George," he asked humbly, "if I just sit quietly here by the fire and feel like dancing it will be all right, won't it?"

"But don't let your feeling get the best of you," admonished Kerby. "We're all set for a good party."

"I suppose you're a pretty swell dancer," Mr. Topper said rather moodily after a short silence. "I dare say you know all about roadhouses and gay
parties and the latest steps and everything like that."

"What's got into Topper?" Kerby demanded. "Why are you so broken-hearted about dancing?"

"Oh,  I  don't know," Mr. Topper replied, resting his chin on his hands and staring into the flames. "I've passed up all the good things of life,
the  dancing  and  the singing and the drinking. I haven't had any good times at all. I've had a sad life, George. You can't imagine how terribly
sad  my  life  has  been.  I've only one friend in the world and she sleeps all the time. You ought to get to know Scollops, George. She's a good
cat."

A tear trickled down Mr. Topper's glowing cheek.

"Open another bottle," he said in a broken voice. "Open two."

George Kerby was a creature of quick sympathies. The sight of Mr. Topper in tears moved him profoundly. In the presence of his companion's sorrow
his  rude  humour  deserted  him.  He  was  plunged  into  grief. Getting up from his box, he came over to Mr. Topper and placed an arm round his
shoulder.

"Don't  cry, Topper," he said. "I've had a sad life, too. At the age of five I lost both my parents. Then I was struck down in the prime of life.
Look at me."

Mr. Topper tearfully looked at him.

"Then you're an orphan, too," said Mr. Topper.

Kerby bowed his head.

"By all means make it two bottles," continued Mr. Topper. "The occasion calls for it." Kerby hurried over to the box.

"That's a funny thing," he remarked, returning with the bottles. "There were twelve bottles of Scotch in that case when we found it and now there
are only eight. These two and the one we had make three. Where's the other one got to?"

"Maybe  you left it about some place," replied Mr. Topper as he wiped away his tears and smiled upon the bottles. "We'll come across it later on.
Let's be thankful for what we have."

For several minutes they sipped their drinks in silence; then Mr. Topper suggested timidly: "Perhaps you wouldn't mind if I danced quietly around
on tiptoe. You can give me some pointers, seeing we're both orphans."

Fearing that Mr. Topper might once more break into tears, Kerby reluctantly consented.

"Do it nice and easy," he warned. "Don't fall down or knock anything over."

Topper finished his drink and arose with purpose.

"Now  this  is the way I waltz," he explained, spreading his arms and gliding away in the darkness with surprising agility. "Are you watching me,
George?"

A  humming  noise  floated through the air. Mr. Topper was supplying his own music. As he revolved through the firelight on the first turn around
the  room  his  body  was  swaying  alluringly from the hips, and his arms, rising and falling airily, gave him the appearance of a large bird in
fastidious  flight.  George Kerby watched Mr. Topper with growing astonishment. Evidently the poor chap's soul had taken wings. It must have been
starved for dancing.

"How am I doing?" breathed Topper as he once more passed through the firelight.

"It's beautiful!" whispered Kerby. "Didn't know it was in you."

"Do you like it?" said Topper in a pleased voice, as he circled into outer darkness.

Kerby's  spontaneous praise awoke in Mr. Topper a desire to be worthy of it. Accordingly he redoubled his exertions. His feet flew over the floor
and  his  arms  stirred  up  whirlpools  of  life  in  the shadows. A chair got in his way, but he kicked it aside without losing a step. It fell
clattering in a corner and Kerby cried out:

"Stop, it, Topper. You've danced enough."

But  Topper was deaf to Kerby's entreaties. His blood was up. He was both surprised and delighted. It was like a dream in which one found oneself
riding a bicycle with the utmost ease and confidence.

"Will you stop ricocheting around the room like the Dancing Faun of Praxiteles?" asked Kerby, threateningly.

Like  a  blooded horse Topper continued his maddened flight. His veins were quick with Scotch and his imagination fired with a new realisation of
the  rapture  of  motion.  Nothing  could  stop  him  now save forcible intervention. This was supplied by the revengeful chair. Mr. Topper still
contends  that  the  thing sprang at his legs, deliberately tripped him and hurled him to the floor. However this may be, the chair put an end to
Mr. Topper's dancing. Like a spent lizard he uncoiled himself from the courageous piece of furniture and returned to the fireplace.

"That's how I waltz," he said, looking anxiously at Kerby. "How was it, George?"

"The most convincing demonstration I'veever witnessed," replied Kerby. "You deserve a drink."

"It's so good of you to like my dancing," said Mr. Topper with becoming modesty as he swallowed what he deserved. "You know I think I could learn
how to live. I can drink all right and I can dance pretty well. Now about singing--let's try a song."

"Let's," said a voice from the cross-beams. "Why not?"

Topper and Kerby regarded each other uneasily, then Kerby hastily took another drink and Topper, with doglike fidelity, followed his example.

"I  was  an  orphan at nine minutes past eight of a blue Monday in the great blizzard of 1891," continued the voice. "And what's worse, after all
the weary years I'm still an orphan."

"It's Marion," groaned George, setting down his glass. "I wonder how long she's been there."

Topper looked up at the cross-beams and became partially sober. On one of the cross-beams an angel, or a woman who gave every indication of being
an  angel,  was reclining. The angel had Marion Kerby's eyes. Topper was sure of this. The angel also had a bottle, the contents of which she was
transferring  to  a  glass. As Mr. Topper watched this dangerous operation he shivered for her safety. The angel dexterously sipped her drink and
began to speak in a voice that was far from angelic.

"So  you  thought  I'd  blither  around  outside  all night," she said, "while you acquired a skin-full, gentle George, deceitful George, drunken
Topper!"

"She's heard every word we said," muttered Kerby under his breath.

Topper took a drink and looked defiantly at the angel. All his married life he had been quietly insulted by his own wife, but in his present mood
he objected to being insulted by another man's wife.

"Chase her down, George," he said. "She's calling me names."

"Why don't you come up and get me, you drunken dervish?" challenged the angel, sticking her tongue out at Mr. Topper.

Topper blinked his eyes and looked up as if he were going to bark at her.

"I refuse to be called a drunken dervish," he said with dignity.

"Well, that's what you are," replied the angel calmly. "And George is an unsuccessful little snipe."

"Don't  mind  her,  Topper," said Kerby, with resignation. "That's where the other bottle went. I should have known it all the time. What are you
doing up there, Marion?"

"Loathing a couple of orphans," she replied.

"But why the funny disguise?" he asked. "You look awful in that outfit. Why not your usual regalia?"

"I  had  planned  to impress your twin orphan until I discovered how depraved he was," she answered. "His name should be Toper instead of Topper.
But  let's  see.  Topper rhymes with cropper." She began to laugh, then stopped suddenly and recited in a tantalising voice: "Topper, Topper, the
big grasshopper, tried to dance and came a cropper. How's that, Cosmo?"

Mr. Topper was stung to the quick. His recent triumph was being held up to ridicule.

"I  don't  like  it,"  he  said,  seating  himself  heavily  on his box. "It's very poor, very poor indeed.. Furthermore, you seem to be drinking
yourself, so how can you talk?"

"Less thickly than you, plump orphan," she replied.

"Kerby,"  said  Mr.  Topper  in  an  offended voice, "I'm afraid I'll have to ask you to request your wife not to talk to me any more. I can well
understand  why  you  drove  her  into a tree. With such a wife heroic methods are the only way out. Use your influence. If you haven't any, beat
her."

"All right, all right," replied Kerby, his resistance yielding to his alcoholic contents. "Anything for peace. I'll talk to her."

"Topper wants to sing," he began mildly. "We'll all sing. Come on down, Marion, and make friends."

Marion looked suspiciously at her husband. "You'll take my bottle," she said.

"If you think I'm capable of such a trick you can roost up there all night," Kerby replied haughtily as he returned to the fireplace.

"But how am I going to get down?" the angel asked in a more reasonable voice.

"How did you get up there to begin with?" demanded Kerby.

"I materialised here for safety's sake," she said.

If you were any kind of a spirit," interposed Mr. Topper, "you'd let go and float down like a zephyr."

"And if you were any kind of a man you'd let me float down on top of you," she replied.

Mr.  Topper accepted the challenge. Swaying slightly as he walked, he maneuvered himself to a position directly under the cross-beam on which the
white  figure  was  reclining.  As  he stood there with outstretched arms he looked like the statue of a grieving father pleading with his young.
Marion Kerby laughed.

"I'm waiting," said Mr. Topper.

George  Kerby  poured  out  a  drink  and  regarded  the  scene with happy detachment. All the parties in his life returned to him. He remembered
impossible  situations  and  dwelt  lovingly  on  them. Things as silly as this he had seen, had been a part of, had played, perhaps, the leading
r�le. He shrugged his shoulders and laughed without much merriment. Pageants of past escapades passed before his eyes.

"Hurry up, Marion," he called out. "Topper's waiting."

Without  a  moment's hesitation, Marion Kerby slipped from the cross-beam and descended on Mr. Topper's aggressively upturned face. After several
seconds of Homeric indecision, he decided to give up the struggle and to accompany his charge to the floor. It was hardly a matter of choice with
Mr. Topper. Marion Kerby's weight bore him to the echoing planks, whereon he lay concealed beneath a smother of celestial raiment.

"I'm dying," he groaned in a muffed voice. "Drag this woman off."

"A fat man has his uses," Marion Kerby remarked, carefully picking her way across Mr. Topper's stomach.

"Had  I  known  you  were  going  to say that," he managed to get out of him, "I'd have given you the shock of your life. Help me up, George, I'm
crippled."

When Mr. Topper had been restored to his seat he looked across at Marion Kerby sitting opposite him on a box near the fireplace. She was clinging
to  her  bottle  and  looking  watchfully about her. There was something in her bearing that reminded Mr. Topper of a defiant child at a party at
which  none  of  the  other  children  wanted  to play with her. She was prepared for the slightest hostile move. Her little face was filled with
resolution  and  glowing  colour, and her eyes were bright and darting like those of an inquisitive young bird. The white robe floating about her
made  her  small head, appearing so bravely above it, seem a little lost and pathetic. Mr. Topper decided that the robe was not a success. Marion
Kerby had never been intended for an angel. She was far too alert and human, and a trifle too suspicious.

"Well,  if I looked silly in white duck trousers," he announced, "you certainly take the cake in that. It does my heart good to see you look such
a fright."

Marion  Kerby  gazed  at him out of her large, serious eyes, then most surprisingly her lips began to tremble and she buried her head in her lap.
Stifled  sobs  issued  from  the  folds of her robe. Mr. Topper experienced a strange sensation. It was one of triumph and alarm, but as the sobs
continued with unabated anguish he began to feel sorry for his unkind remark.

"Give her another bottle, George," he suggested.

"Don't want another bottle," she replied without looking up.

"Then give it to me," said Mr. Topper. "I can't stand hearing her make that noise. Do something about it, George."

Kerby tried to put his arm around his wife, but she flung it off angrily.

"You  go  'way  from  me," she sobbed. "I never made fun of his trousers, although God knows they were funny enough, and now he calls me a fright
simply because I tried to dress up like an angel for him."

"I'm  sorry,  Marion,"  said  Mr.  Topper.  "I  was only fighting back, honestly I was. Let's take a drink and make up. We were good friends this
evening."

She  raised  her  head  and looked at Mr. Topper's troubled face. He smiled at her and held out his arms. More than ever she appealed to him as a
small  child  recovering  from some devastating disappointment. This impression was heightened when he found her clinging to him and pressing her
wet  cheeks to his face. Mr. Topper swayed beneath this outburst of affection. For a moment he thought he had been attacked, but when he felt two
soft lips kissing the lobe of his ear he concluded that the demonstration was of a peaceable nature.

"That's all right now," he said, thumping her back with the flat of his hand. "I was only getting back at you for calling me a plump orphan. It's
true enough. I'll admit it."

George Kerby was regarding the scene with surprise.

"I say, Marion," he remarked, "don't you think that just shaking hands would he sufficiently convincing? This is a party, not an orgy, you know."

Marion laughed and sprang away from Mr. Topper.

He was such a penitent old sot," she explained. "I just had to hug him. Do you want one for yourself?"

Kerby submitted himself to her violence with the polished indifference of a tolerant husband.

"Now that that's over," he remarked, "we can all have a drink."

His  suggestion  was received with enthusiasm and acted upon several times. The crest of Mr. Topper's wave was on its downward curve. It had been
an  eventful  night for him. He bowed several times in the direction of Marion Kerby, and at last in an excess of politeness he bowed himself off
the box on to the floor, where he rested motionless on his nose. When he had been replaced by George and Marion Kerby, it was learned that he had
been  trying  to  ask  Marion for the honour of a dance, but before she had time to accept his invitation he closed his eyes in sleep. Presently,
however,  he  had a confused impression that he was flying through the colours of an evening sunset with an angel clasped in his arms. Two bright
stars  were  looking  into his eyes and two red lips, parted in a smile, were thrillingly close to his. An odour of Scotch whiskey filled the sky
and  made it friendly and stimulating. Mr. Topper breathed deeply. New vigour was returning to his body. The president of the bank was peering at
him  over  the glistening edge of a burning cloud. The old man looked pained and puzzled. Mr. Topper gracefully blew the president a kiss and the
venerable  financier  ducked  behind  his fleecy barrier. On another cloud, that resembled the platform of his station, Mr. Topper saw a group of
people.  They  were  holding  an  indignation  meeting and pointing furiously at Mr. Topper, who, as he sailed by, made a vulgar gesture in their
direction  and  laughed  down  at  the angel. The members of the meeting fell screaming from the cloud and were lost in the darkness below, their
cries of anguish drifting pleasantly up to his ears. Low down on the horizon Mr. Topper distinguished the pale eyes of his wife. They sent a path
of  reproach  across  the  interweaving colours. He tried to look away, but the eyes clung to him. His anger mounted and he shook his fist at the
eyes.

"Damn that leg of lamb!" he shouted. "I'm in love with Kerby's wife! "

"One minute," whispered the angel. "I must take a tuck in my ectoplasm. This dress is tripping me."

George  Kerby,  gazing  over the rim of his glass into the dying embers of the fire, was oblivious of his surroundings. So Mr. Topper danced with
the angel as the room grew dark. A visitor standing in the doorway of the inn would have seen nothing, but would have heard a soft, humming sound
in  the  darkness  and  the scraping of flying feet. And had the visitor listened very closely he might have heard George Kerby pouring himself a
drink  and  poking  the  cooling  embers  with the charred end of a stick. Little breezes sighed round the old inn and tiptoed along its rambling
verandas. Like a cat closing a watchful eye the last red spark winked out.




CHAPTER IX Local Historians Disagree


Later  that  night, in a near-by village, Mr. Topper's automobile stopped aggressively in front of a cheerfully lighted drug store. This much has
been  established and freely admitted, but what follows has become complicated by a multiplicity of facts, furnished by various local historians,
dealing  at  white  heat  with events still too vivid in their minds to be impartially recorded. In spite of this it is to these local historians
that one must turn for further information, because, unfortunately, Mr. Topper alone of all the participants is unable to present his version. To
be more accurate, it should be known that Mr. Topper had no version to present, his mind having ceased consciously to function some hours earlier
in the evening.

The  collected  data  are  full  of conflicting statements and unconsidered conclusions. Vanity and prejudice have as usual played havoc with the
truth,  and  Mr.  Topper's reputation has been tossed into a furnace of frantically wagging tongues. The druggist and his soda clerk are still in
disagreement  on  many important points, and it is doubtful if anyone will ever agree with the chief of police, although many may sympathise with
him.  On  one  point, however, all are in complete accord, the point being that Mr. Topper was to blame for everything, and that, had it not been
for him, the little village would have continued to lead its tranquil existence to the end of recorded time.

It  seems,  then, that around eleven o'clock in the evening, Mr. Topper, after driving with great speed down the main street of the town, stopped
abruptly  in  front of a drug store in which were gathered the flower and youth of the neighbourhood. As witness to this fact we have three young
rustic  glee-singers,  who, having finished their evening's singing, were comparing notes in the ruddy glow of the drug store window. It is to be
regretted that these three gentlemen were merely the washed and oiled refinements of the farm hands who earlier in the day had been privileged to
come upon Mr. Topper by the roadside in the act of doing Surprise. This incident had made a profound impression on their minds, and had only been
forgotten  for the more serious business of convincing various sceptical maidens that shadows and moonshine do not necessarily lead to perdition.
The first glee-singer supplies the prelude. He is speaking to an attentive audience and he does not have to be cajoled to speak. He is saying:

"As  soon  as  he  staggered outer the orter I knew his face and I says to Joe, 'Damn if it ain't the same guy and he's still drunk.' Joe laughed
right  out  loud because the guy had fallen down on the pavement and was sprawling there at our feet. Then the guy got up unsteady like and asked
in  an  ugly voice just who had been doing all the laughing, and Joe in that comical way he has said that he had and that he was the mayor of the
town and a lot of other funny things. Well, the guy didn't say much for a minute because he was brushing his trousers and looking at Joe, and Joe
was  about  to  give  him a push so he would fall down and we could laugh some more, when the guy asks Joe in a dopy voice how he'd like to get a
punch  on the nose. At that Joe just laughed in his face, it was so comic, and Joe having such a good sense of humour, but before Joe had laughed
much  he stopped sudden because that guy had hauled off and hit him on the nose. Then Joe said, 'Come on, boys,' and we all pitched in and showed
the guy just where he got off."

From this naively significant account of the opening of the hostilities it must be concluded that Mr. Topper's question concerning Joe's nose was
purely  rhetorical,  as  Joe  was  given  hardly  sufficient  time in which to answer, and what little time he did have was wasted in ill-advised
laughter.  In  his  lust for action, Mr. Topper was perhaps at fault, but a plea for tolerance might be advanced on the ground that after all Joe
was  such  a  "comical  feller"  and  for this reason, if for none other, deserved to have his nose punched whenever and wherever the opportunity
conveniently offered itself to any public-spirited person.

Thus  far  Mr.  Topper's  actions  have  been  traced  up to the moment when he was borne down to the sidewalk beneath the combined weight of his
opponents. Just what he did there will never be clearly known, for Mr. Topper was, of course, hidden, and the three young rustics refuse to tell.
But  according  to  the throng gathered inside the drug store, the cries issuing from the avengers of Joe's deflowered nose were so eloquent with
anguish  that everyone rushed to the door. It may be inferred then, not without reason, that Mr. Topper did as well, if not better, than could be
expected of him under the rather trying circumstances.

The druggist, a person of authority and much unsavoury knowledge, adds his contribution to the history of this tremendous fray.

"As I was crowding there in the doorway," he is explaining to an absorbed group of loungers, "the strangest thing happened I ever saw in my life,
and you've got to admit that we druggists see some mighty queer things."

This being admitted without the slightest opposition, the druggist proceeds:

"I'd have sworn on the stand that the automobile was empty. From where I was standing I could look right into it and see every inch of leather on
the  seats.  There  wasn't  nobody there--nobody. They couldn't even have crouched. But as I was saying, I was crowding there in the doorway just
where that dog is now and I was watching this out-of-town drunk getting what was coming to him when right out of the automobile swarm two people,
an angel and a man in plus fours."

"Not a real angel," objects one of the loungers.

"Can't  say  about  that,"  the  druggist earnestly replies, "but she looked the part, flying robes and all. She didn't act like an angel though,
except maybe an avenging one, but at that there was something about her different. Nobody but an angel could have been in so many places at once.
She was the busiest party I ever saw. She and her friend with the plus fours on sort of took the boys by their legs and just naturally threw them
away.  Joe  went  some  way up the street, and Fred went down, and Alf landed up against the hitching post, where he stayed looking quite natural
with  a  sort  of  gentle smile on his face. Then the angel and her gentleman friend lifted up the drunk and pushed their way into the store, the
angel cussing like mad and the man with the plus fours telling her not to mention names."

"When the three of them came in I was standing behind the counter," proclaims the soda clerk, rudely breaking in on his employer's story.

An imperceptible shifting of shoulders indicates that the centre of interest has been transferred to the boy.

"Well, I was that surprised and excited," he continues. "The angel walks up to the counter dragging the drunk with her and asks as cool and sweet
as you please for some spirits of peppermint."

"You  keep  calling this angel her," breaks in one of the loungers. "Angels ain't neither one thing nor the other. That's why they're angels. Was
this here angel a woman?"

"Sure,"  says  the  boy.  "She  had black silk stockings, thin ones, and she was a good looker to boot. 'Mix it up, Alonzo,' she says to me, 'and
don't stint,' but before I could do any mixing the crowd came surging in."

"Thin ones," remarks one of the listeners. "And black silk," says another.

"Some angel," puts in a third, rolling his eyes unpleasantly.

"And  that's when the man with the plus fours on began to get gay with my siphons," the chemist hastens to explain. "When he saw the crowd coming
at  him,  up  he jumps on the counter with a bottle in each hand and lets loose two streams on the nearest heads. Everybody stopped and some went
away, and the angel yelled after them, 'Come back here, you boll-weevils, a bath will do you no harm.' While this was going on, the drunk had got
behind  the  counter and was playing with the soda taps. You'd have thought he was at a party, he was that pleased and satisfied. 'Look, George,'
he kept calling out. 'See the damn thing fizz.' The man jumps down from the counter and says to the angel, 'Get him, kid, we've got to organise.'
Then  the  angel  collected the drunk and told him that they'd go somewhere else and have a lot of fun, and he suddenly came to life and made for
the  door, his head down and his arms swinging. And all the time he's yelling something about a leg of lamb he didn't seem to like. The angel and
her  friend  with  the  plus  fours  on  closed  in  on  each side of him and the three of them charged through us to the street and got into the
automobile and then they were copped."

It  is  generally admitted that the three of them were, as the chemist put it, copped. The method of copping is also a point of local harmony and
is acclaimed as being nothing short of a stroke of sheer genius. The method, it must be admitted, was not without its more imposing features.

When  Mr.  Topper  and  his companions emerged from the drug store they found that their only means of escape had been more or less surrounded by
several  and  various  circles of civic activity. The Quoits Club was staunchly occupying the car. As a club it was none too cheerful. Around the
automobile  itself,  in hushful alertness, marched the local fire brigade. This depressed body of manhood was comfortingly reinforced by an outer
circle  composed  of  the  more active members of the Security Association. A rotary movement, far on the outskirts, dimly illuminated by a fiery
signal,  gave  staunch  assurance  that  the  business  element  of the town was heartily, if not helpfully, endorsing the procedure. This latter
organisation was making up in activity what it lacked in actual contact.

In the face of this display of civic co-operation neither Mr. Topper nor the Kerbys were convinced. They continued on. Like a splendid truth they
denied facts. It has not been refuted that, on his way to the automobile, Mr. Topper assaulted and felled the chief of police and that the Kerbys
scrambled over the body of the stricken man, cursing him vilely the while for being in their way. A submerged and vague-looking person, over whom
the  chief of police was chief, is responsible for this illuminating addition to the record of Mr. Topper's swift descent from the dead crater of
suburban virtue:

"I  was  practising  away on my clarinet, practising away like a good one, the Belvedere concert being only ten days off, when in rushes William,
little  William,  you know, he's always rushing in, and he tells me that a riot has broke out in the town and that a couple of guys with an angel
were  smashing  up  the drug store. Well, I wasn't much set back by the riot, because I knew that if everybody in the town should get drunk or go
mad  at  the  same  time  there  would still be plenty of room on the street for a quiet stroll, but the angel part of it did set me back. It did
certainly set me back, that angel part of it."

To  make  this  record strictly unbiassed it should be mentioned that the chief of police's staff was not the most popular young man in town. The
only  thing  he  could  do was play the clarinet, and he did not do that badly enough to make him funny nor well enough to win him fame. When not
engaged  in  playing  or practising on the instrument of his choice he had an unfortunate way of making unconstructive observations about life in
general  and  the  town in particular, and these observations, in spite of their sincerity, did not add to the young man's popularity. His casual
lack  of  faith  in  the  town's  ability  to  work up a first-class riot alienated from him even the sympathy of the most tolerant member of the
community, and according to the wiser heads of the town his story should not be taken too seriously.

"So  I  put  my  music away," his story goes, "and I went out to take a look at this angel. Up by the chemist's it looked like a rehearsal of the
'Covered  Waggon.'  Everybody  was  swarming  around  so and making such important noises. So I edged in and stood there, waiting to look for the
angel,  when,  all of a sudden, I realised that I was the police force. This thought started me edging out, but before I could get away they came
through  the  crowd  and  I saw them. They looked like nice people to me, and a little drunk. The woman was just beautiful. She must have been an
angel because she did queer things to my eyes, sort of made me glad I had them, and that's more than any of the girls round this place ever done.
I  couldn't  make head or tail out of the fight. It struck me as being sort of unfair. I thought of monkeys and lions and dogs and I decided that
they  wouldn't have acted like that under the circumstances, and I sort of felt sorry about it all and a little ashamed. But I felt better when I
saw  them walking on the chief, although I felt sorry for him, too, realising all the time that a little walking on would do him no harm. So when
these  people  had passed completely over the chief I helped him up and shoved him in the car. 'You come along too,' he said in a shaky voice and
took  me along with him. He seemed to want me for some reason or other. The car was already crowded, but I got in with the chief and watched them
all  pile  down  on  the angel and the two men. It seemed kind of silly and over-done to me, and I tried to help the angel a little, but the fire
brigade,  not  having  had  any  fires for a long time, was wild for action and did fine, considering that there were only twelve of them against
three,  not  counting  the  chief  and  myself,  and the Quoits Club, and I didn't count for much of course. Then after a while everybody stopped
squirming  and began to get up, and when they looked at what they had, there was only the drunken man seeming less drunk, but much more battered.
'Where  my  friends?  '  he  says,  but  nobody could give him the right answer, so they told him to shut up and mind his own business, and began
looking  about  for  the other two, who just weren't there at all. And that's a strange thing. I could say something else, but it wouldn't do any
good. So they put the battered man in the lock-up and stood outside chewing the rag."

What  he  could have said, but did not say, was withheld because the boy had been endowed with an instinctive sense of delicacy, a shred of which
still  survived  in spite of its unfavourable environment. He was right. It certainly would have served no useful purpose had he told his friends
that,  as he was walking down the street in the direction of the lock-up, he stopped beside a hedge to inhale its fragrance. Vaguely he was aware
of  the  fact  that  the  hedge had no business to be smelling the way it did at that time of the year, or at any other time, in fact. It was not
intended  to  be a fragrant hedge and had never previously laid any claims to fragrance, but to-night an odour rose from it which stopped the boy
and  held  him  wondering.  It  made him think of a forest swept by the notes of violins. He saw a deep cathedral filled with nude, white figures
dancing  madly  in  the  radiance of stained-glass windows. Romance descended on the village youth, and for the moment carried him away to realms
where  only  his  dreams  had  dared  to dwell. That was all there was to it, but he knew there was more. He felt that he had stood very close to
someone who was both beautiful and real. The impression perhaps remains with him to-day.

The  "battered  man"  was  borne  in  triumph to the lock-up. An uninformed observer might have mistaken the event for a procession staged in the
honour of some honoured local deity, so well was it attended as the automobile moved down the street and stopped before the jail. Here Mr. Topper
was  produced without ovation and disappeared from view without acknowledging the silent tribute of his followers. He was felt, searched, written
about in a book, re-felt with great interest and thrust into a cell from which he did not emerge until the following morning. When he asked to be
allowed to telephone Mrs. Topper, the chief of police refused this request, but agreed to convey his message.

"Tell her I'm well and happy, but that I won't be home to-night."

Nothing loath, the chief aroused Mrs. Topper from a sleepless bed.

"Your  husband is well and happy, but he won't be home to-night," said the faithful chief. "Yes, he's safe all right. We've got him safe enough--
too safe for him. He's in jail, locked up in jail. What for? Why I wouldn't like to keep you up all night telling you what for. He's done plenty.
Yes. It will be held in the morning. You'll hear about it then--all about it."

After a few more words the chief hung up the receiver and sat back, looking pleased. The enemy was his. The village knew how to deal with out-of-
town  drunks; and he, as chief of police, stood for the village, guarding its dignity, defending its rights, incarcerating its victims. Who could
tell? Next year he might be post-master. He got up and surveyed Mr. Topper, who was thoughtlessly sleeping on his cot. The chief felt grateful to
him, but just a little disappointed in him.




CHAPTER X The Haunted Courtroom


Owing to the public nature of Mr. Topper's various offences, the trial was held in the Town Hall in the presence of the town's entire population,
minors  and  morons  rightfully  included.  Even  dogs  were  not  successfully barred from the trial. Mr. Topper noticed several of them and was
favourably  impressed  by  their  non-partisan  attitude,  their  utter  detachment of mind. On the morning of the trial very little business was
transacted in that village, the majority of its inhabitants being either complainants or voluntary witnesses. Instead of opening his hardware and
furniture  shop as was his accustomed wont, the Justice of the Peace arose with unhabitual briskness from the breakfast table, and, surrounded by
the  numerous  members of his family, proceeded with Jove-like mien to the place of the trial, where for some minutes the more vociferous members
of the community had been impatiently awaiting his coming.

That  much  was expected of him the Justice clearly realised. And he solemnly promised himself that not even the most sanguine expectant would be
left unsatisfied. There was a duty to perform. A public duty in a public place. That was good. In a public place. That was very good. If only the
baby  would forget to cry. He hoped that the baby would forget to cry, but in his heart of hearts the Justice knew that the baby would not forget
to  cry.  It  never  did. In vain had he tried to prevail on his wife to leave the baby at home, impressing on her the importance of the business
before  him.  "Who  with?" his wife had asked quite reasonably, and, rather than participate in a breakfast-table riot, the Justice had refrained
from  nominating  one  of  his  numerous  daughters.  So  the baby, not at all appreciating the fact that it was to be present at one of the most
brilliant passages of its father's all too few moments in the sun, was conveyed to the trial of Mr. Topper, in its mother's resolute arms.

The  Town  Hall  was  a  barn-like structure, harsh without and unsympathetic within. Two long rows of benches, now filled with eager spectators,
formed  a  narrow aisle down which the Justice walked a little in advance of his family, as if anxious to leave it behind. It would scarcely have
surprised  him  had  his  wife and children followed him to the platform and arranged themselves behind him in a proudly silent semi-circle. They
were forever basking in the lustre of his name.

No such misfortune occurred, however, and, after making much noise himself, the Justice succeeded in reducing the village to silence.

This  was  the  cue  for  the  chief of police to become active. He responded promptly. With the air of one producing a rabbit from a high hat he
pulled  Mr.  Topper  through  a  side  door  and  modestly displayed him to the multitude. And Topper Iooked not widely unlike a rabbit, a rather
battered rabbit that had nibbled on something more potent than cabbage leaves.

This  tableau  over,  the  chief  of  police pushed his pearl into the presence of the Justice, while the chief's reluctant staff, like a hostage
maiden being led naked through an alien street, brought up an unenthusiastic and highly sceptical rear.

"The prisoner, your Honour," announced the chief.

"So this is the prisoner," said the Justice, rubbing his hands juicily and beaming down on. Mr. Topper.

Topper felt that had not so many spectators been present the Justice would have kissed him out of sheer gratitude.

"So this is the prisoner," repeated the Justice, his grateful countenance now shedding its rays over the entire room.

Mr. Topper made friendly movements with his features.

"I am," he said. "You're about the first person in this place, with the exception of the chief, who seems really pleased to see me."

The beam was blotted from the Justice's face.

"Silence, prisoner!" he boomed.

Topper stepped back affrighted.

"Sorry," he muttered. "I knew there was a string to that smile."

"He's  a  tough bird," the chief hastened to explain. "I didn't close my eyes all night. He kept singing. Your Honour, he sang in three different
voices, one of them quite girlish and off key."

"That lie alone should discredit him forever," Mr. Topper protested with unexpected heat. "Anyway, his remark is unimportant."

The Justice swooped down over the table like a conventional eagle trade-mark.

"Prisoner," he said, "it is all-important. In fact, it is exactly three times more important than if you had sung in only one voice. I shall make
a note of it."

Mr.  Topper  looked up hopefully. Surely the Justice was exercising his sense of the ridiculous. After all the man was human. But when he met the
direct  gaze  of  the  Justice, Mr. Topper looked wearily away. The Justice was not human. He was in deadly earnest. He was even making notes. No
hope from that quarter.

After a portentous interlude, devoted to the scanning of official documents, the Justice raised his head.

"Your  name is Topper," he announced. "Cosmo Topper. Everything is known. Now, prisoner, speak up in a clear voice and tell us where you live and
what you do for a living. I am asking you to verify rather than testify, if you can make that distinction."

The Justice felt that he was doing very well. The principal of the Grammar School had laughed out loud. That was a plume.

"But I thought that they didn't do things like that until after you'd been convicted," Mr. Topper replied. "My pedigree comes later, doesn't it?"

"We are trying to save that time," said the Justice.

"But  you  don't  have  to  hurry so far as I am concerned," replied Mr. Topper earnestly. "My time is at your disposal. As a matter of fact, I'd
rather waste a few minutes here than spend several years elsewhere, if you can make that distinction."

"Address the court as 'your Honour,'" put in the chief of police, using an unfriendly elbow on Mr. Topper's ribs.

"You make me feel embarrassed for you," said Mr. Topper. "Try to remember where you are. This is serious, now."

"Stop! " whispered the Justice, a pleading note in his voice. "Don't quarrel. I'll get him sooner or later, chief. Let him hang himself."

"You  don't have to let me hang myself," said Mr. Topper in a resolute voice. "Let me say right off that you'll have to make me hang myself. If I
killed  anyone  last  night  I'm  sincerely  sorry,  terribly, terribly sorry, but for all that I deny everything. I'm innocent to the tips of my
fingers."

Once more the Justice beamed. The case was shaping up.

"Deny this, then," he challenged, his eyes greedily watching the faces of the spectators. "Deny that you, Topper, struck, attacked and maimed the
body  and  person of one Joseph Williams, and that, not satisfied with this unwarranted display of ferocity, you brutally assaulted Fred Scafford
and Alfred Slides, both of whom together with Joseph Williams are in good standing in this community."

"All right, then, I deny it," said Mr. Topper. "I deny everything so long as you're going to get stuffy about it."

After  the  night  he  had put in, Mr. Topper was feeling none too well. Standing there, in the presence of the Justice and the hostile throng, a
nauseating  dizziness  swept  down  on  him.  He  swayed  slightly  and  for support placed his hand on the edge of the platform. Little beads of
perspiration  gathered  round  his lips and eyes. He mopped his face with a crumpled handkerchief and tried to look defiantly at the Justice, who
was  obviously  enjoying  Mr.  Topper's  discomfiture.  With a swimming head and a morbid sensation in his stomach, Mr. Topper braced himself and
waited. The situation was slowly dawning on him. He was beginning to realise that he, Topper, a man who up to the past night had been a respected
member  of  his  community,  was  now actually a prisoner before the bar of justice, that for all he knew he was a murderer and that he was being
tried in the presence of a large gathering of hateful people, in a little village very close to his home--too close to his home. This realisation
still further depressed his stomach and brought dismay to his mind. He thought of the bank, he thought of his wife, he thought of his reputation,
and  fearfully  he thought of George and Marion Kerby. And, as if in answer to his thought, Mr. Topper felt two hands fumbling at his bare throat
and  was  petrified  to  find that the collar which had gone by the board in the course of the evening's activities was being replaced by a fresh
one. The Justice, who had never seen a collar attach itself to a prisoner's neck, can be excused for the interest he displayed in the phenomenon.
He moistened his lips with the tip of his tongue and looked fixedly at Mr. Topper.

"The collar," said the Justice. "There's something wrong about your collar. It seems to be getting beyond control."

For  a  moment Mr. Topper was too busy to reply. His head was being violently jerked from side to side as invisible hands attempted to adjust the
knot in a new tie, insisting on getting it just right.

"We're  trying  to spruce you up a bit," whispered the voice of George Kerby. "How do you feel this morning? There, that's about right. Hold your
head on one side so I can see."

"This is no place for a talk," muttered Mr. Topper, pretending to arrange the tie. "I feel like hell. Go away."

Then he glanced up at the Justice and smiled. "Had them in my pocket," he said. "Thought I'd make myself a bit presentable."

The Justice looked unconvinced. Then his eyes once more grew large with interest. A comb was being passed through Mr. Topper's hair and a washrag
was spreading itself over Mr. Topper's face. Mr. Topper became suddenly active. With one hand he attempted to control the comb and with the other
he snatched at the washrag.

"Don't produce a towel," he whispered. "It would be too hard to explain."

Again he smiled at the Justice.

"There," he said, thrusting the comb and washrag into his pocket. "I feel better already. Where were we?"

"Frankly, I don't know," replied the Justice. "You'll have to stop all this."

The  hall  was in an uproar. People were asking questions and standing on the benches to get a better view of this strangely-acting prisoner. The
Justice  banged  on the table and the chief of police raised his voice in admonition. His staff looked sympathetically at Mr. Topper, who, taking
advantage of the noisy interlude, was attempting to explain the situation to his over-zealous friends.

"You've been lovely," he whispered. "Very thoughtful. I appreciate everything, but don't go any further. You can see for yourself."

"We're with you, old boy," replied Kerby. "We're with you to the end."

"But  don't  be  with  me here," pleaded Mr. Topper. "Go outside and wait for the end. It's a lovely day. Take a walk round the village. It's not
half bad. I'll join you later."

"Marion won't budge," Kerby whispered. "Says she wants to see that you get a fair trial."

"They'll put me away for life if this keeps up," breathed Mr. Topper. "Tell her to go away."

"Not  a step do I budge," whispered a voice in his other ear. "I'm going to stand right here and hold your hand. Get ready now, old Zobo is going
to ask you something. Brush him off, George. He's all mussed."

"Righto," said George.

"Please, please," Mr. Topper whispered. "Not so loud."

As  the Justice fixed Mr. Topper with a distracted eye, Topper felt himself being vigorously brushed and adjusted. His coat flew back and Kerby's
busy  hands  yanked  his  vest  into  position.  The  activity  was then transferred to Mr. Topper's trousers, which were spanked and patted with
surprising energy. Mr. Topper, attempting to follow the rapid movements of Kerby's hands, looked like a man fighting hornets.

"Prisoner,"  said  the  Justice,  "I  wish  you'd stop making such peculiar movements with your hands and body. If you want this case to continue
you'll have to give up trying to bewilder me."

"A nervous eccentricity," explained Mr. Topper. "Sometimes it gets the best of me."

"It's almost got the best of me," replied the Justice. "Let's get back to business. As I remember it you were denying everything. Were you?"

"It seems to me that I was," said Mr. Topper.

"Very  well then," continued the Justice. "Deny these charges if you have the temerity. Deny that you, Topper, Cosmo Topper, forced entrance with
your  companions  into  Frederick  Schultz's  drug store, that there you attacked a body of peaceable citizens, using the most offensive language
against  them,  that  you resisted arrest and made possible the escape of your companions, and finally, that you were driving an automobile while
under the influence of strong drink. Deny these charges. Did or did you not commit them?"

"I haven't the slightest idea," said Mr. Topper, truthfully, "but I'm glad it's not any worse."

"We shall try to refresh your memory," replied the Justice. "Joe Williams! Step up, Joe, and testify."

Joe  Williams  was  not  loath  to appear. He hurried down the aisle and stood before the Justice. "Now look well at the prisoner, Joe," said the
Justice, "and tell us if he is the person who assaulted you in front of Schultz's drug store."

Joe looked so long and so well at the prisoner that Mr. Topper thought the young man was Irving to hypnotise him.

"He is, your Honour," answered Joe emphatically. "As I was standing there talking--you know, calm and peaceful-like--down the street comes this .
. ."

"Later, Joe, if ever," interrupted the Justice promptly.

Joe's face clouded with disappointment as he turned reluctantly away.

"Are you satisfied, Topper?" the Justice asked.

"I am if you are," replied Topper, "but Joe doesn't look so pleased."

"Perhaps then you will tell us the names of your two friends," continued the Justice. "We might try to make things a little easier for you."

"George and Marion Kerby," said a voice unlike Mr. Topper, but apparently issuing from him.

"And where do these two depraved people live?" the Justice asked.

"They're not depraved," snapped the voice. "And anyway they are safely outside your jurisdiction."

"Try to speak in your natural voice," the Justice commanded. "Do you refuse to answer my question?"

"Well, it's mighty hard to answer," said Mr. Topper. "You see they travel about a lot--almost too much."

A note was passed by the chief of police to the Justice, who, after reading it, looked severely at Mr. Topper.

"I  have  a note here from your wife," he said. "She states that you are either drunk or crazy, because the people you refer to were killed in an
automobile  accident  several  months  ago.  Such  attempts to deceive will not succeed with this court. Nor will they materially strengthen your
case."

Mr. Topper looked through the hall until he had located his wife. She was sitting with several friends. He recognised Clara and Harris Stevens.

"Thanks," he called out with a terrible smile. "You are very helpful, my dear. The Justice thanks you, too."

"Silence! prisoner," shouted the Justice. "I'll not have you abusing spectators."

"Not even if she's my wife?" asked Mr. Topper.

"Not now," said the Justice. "Later."

"You don't know her," replied Topper.

"That's  neither  here  nor  there,"  the  Justice  complained irritably. "You're always getting me off on something else. This is a trial, not a
conversation. Answer questions and stop asking them."

"All right, what shall I answer now?" asked Topper.

"Were you driving your automobile while drunk? Answer that," said the Justice.

"You'll have to ask someone else that question," replied Mr. Topper. "I can't answer it."

The Justice motioned to the chief's staff.

"Come here, Albert," he said. "Did you smell whiskey on the prisoner's breath."

"Why, your Honour," answered Albert, in a voice of surprise, "I didn't even try to."

"Answer the question," the Justice commanded. "Did you smell whiskey on the prisoner's breath?"

"I'm not in the habit, your Honour, of smelling perfect strangers' breaths," said Albert with quiet dignity.

"Albert," explained the Justice, "I'm not inquiring into your habits. I'm trying to establish a fact. Please answer the question."

"Well, your Honour," said Albert, "at that time of night everybody's breath smells of whiskey in this town."

A  wave  of  protest  from  the  outraged spectators fortunately drowned the Justice's remarks to Albert. When order had been restored Mr. Topper
turned to the Justice.

"If you'll only stop making this public inquiry into the state and nature of my breath," he said, "I'll admit everything."

A cloud of disappointment settled down on the Justice's brow. "Do you mean to say you'll plead guilty to every charge?" he asked.

"Most elaborately," replied Mr. Topper.

At  this  moment the wailing of an infant filled the hall. The Justice reared his head like a stricken war horse. This was indeed unfortunate. He
felt  that  he  was  going  to  have  a  violent  attack  of  nerves.  So far the trial had been a complete failure and now without the slightest
consideration  for  his  feelings  the prisoner was pleading guilty. It was too bad, the whole affair. And the baby was not making it any better.
With  a  sigh,  the Justice decided to put an end to an intolerable situation. He refused to compete with his own child to see whose voice should
dominate the hall.

"So, prisoner," he said in a loud voice, a false light of triumph in his eyes, "so at last we have forced you to plead guilty."

"Driven me to it," said Mr. Topper.

"I am glad that you have at least decency enough to admit your guilt after we have clearly established it," continued the Justice.

"I couldn't resist you," smiled Mr. Topper. "Haven't a leg to stand on."

"Don't  I  get  a  chance  to  tell about all the strange things that happened in the lock-up last night?" asked the chief of police in a peevish
voice. "Ain't you going to hear about the disappearing clock, and how cigarettes kept smoking in the dark, and matches striking without any hands
holding them, and all the funny noises, the hooting and insults and everything."

"It seems that I am," replied the Justice curtly. "But I don't want to and I don't think I shall. Now, Topper, I have it in my power to do either
one of two things. I can hold you for the county court or fine you and let you go. I would like to do both. It would give me pleasure to do both,
but as I can do only one I am going to fine you and adjourn the court."

"A thrifty decision," said Mr. Topper. "I'm unusually well supplied with ready cash."

"You won't be long," replied the Justice. "Hand over one hundred and fifty dollars."

The Justice thrust the bills in his coat pocket and rose to his feet.

"The court is adjourned! " he shouted. "Clear the hall, chief!"

As  the  Justice  was about to descend the steps leading from the platform he suddenly gave the appearance of a man who had been violently pushed
from  behind.  With an expression of incredulity on his face he flew through the air and landed prostrate on the floor. As the chief bent over to
assist  him to rise, he, too, as if not to be outdone by his superior, gave a remarkable demonstration of levitation. Without any apparent effort
he  projected  himself  through  space,  sailing lightly over the Justice and stopping with a thud against the base of the platform. The room was
filled  with  wild  laughter  and the table at which the Justice had been sitting danced crazily in the air. Luckily Mr. Topper could not be held
responsible for this disorder. He was standing outside the hall talking with his wife and her friends.

"Why didn't you bring your lunch with you and make a real picnic of it?" he asked with elaborate politeness.

"You're hardly in a position to be sarcastic," answered Mrs. Topper. "A little common humility would be more becoming."

"I  can  hardly see that," said Mr. Topper. "I've afforded you more enjoyment than you have me. There will be a tremendous demand for the company
of those who attended the trial. You'll be fed free for weeks."

"Come, Topper," put in Harris Stevens "We were only trying to help you."

"By writing nasty notes to the Justice," said Topper.

"Well,  I  merely dictated it," replied Stevens. "Your wife thought of it. We didn't want you to get into any more trouble. You've been through a
lot. What a time you must have had. Was there a woman in the party?"

"The Follies Chorus," said Topper. "In tights. Pink, blue, red and green."

"Come, Clara," Mrs. Topper interrupted, "we'll be getting home."

"And some of them were in less than that!" Mr. Topper shouted furiously as the party moved off. "Much less than that! Tell everybody I said so."

"May I get a few lines for the local paper?" asked a young man, stepping up to the gesticulating Topper.

"Yes! " cried Mr. Topper, "a few lines in your face if you don't take the silly thing away."

The  youth  withdrew  and  Mr.  Topper  was  left  comparatively  alone.  That is, he was surrounded, but at a distance, by an absorbed circle of
observers.

"Now where the hell's the car?" he muttered.

As  he  spoke  he  heard  a  loud  honking  of an automobile horn and the car, like a playful puppy, came darting through the crowd. The Justice,
standing  on  the  porch  of the Town Hall, witnessed the scene and shut his eyes tightly. The car was driverless. He could not stand that. As he
leaned against the wall he feared he was going to lose his mind. When he opened his eyes again Mr. Topper had stepped into the automobile and was
driving off while the people stood about with panic in their midst.

"Here's the money," said George Kerby. "I snatched it out of the old bird's pocket."

A roll of bills found its way into Mr. Topper's hand.

"Oh, my God," he groaned. "Are you two back again?"

"Sure," said the Kerbys in a breath. "Aren't you glad?"

Mr. Topper was unable to reply.




CHAPTER XI Antics of a Hat Stand


The  Topper's  house was not one of mirth. Great quantities of gloom had descended upon the place. Women had hastened to Mrs. Topper's side as if
in  the  hour  of  her  bereavement.  They  sat  in subdued rooms and conversed in subdued voices. Mr. Topper came to regard himself as a corpse,
without, however, enjoying a corpse's immunity to its surroundings. At any moment he expected Mrs. Topper to place candles round him. He had been
requested  to  withdraw  from  the Town Council and the honorary residue of the now professionally organised fire brigade. Why a person had to be
moral  in order to be useful at a fire was difficult for Mr. Topper to understand. Nevertheless, he sent in his resignation and felt better about
it. He was now officially divorced from white duck trousers. That was something to cling to in the ruins.

Twenty-four hours after his release from durance the craving for a smoke had driven him into town. On that trip he had purchased enough cigars to
relieve  himself  of  all further necessity of appearing again in public. Topper had only a hazy idea about fallen women, but he imagined he felt
very  much  as  they did when adversity had forced them to return to their home towns. Topper had lost everything but his money, and because that
still remained he was not stoned. He was still a solid man, but terribly soiled. He read about himself in the local newspaper and stopped reading
almost  immediately.  Mrs.  Topper  displayed no such delicacy. The paper was seldom out of her hands. Topper, observing her absorbed expression,
wondered what pleasure she could be deriving from poring over such morbid stuff. Mrs. Topper was deriving a lot of pleasure. Seeing her husband's
crimes in print gave her a feeling of security. There could now be no doubt about it. The story was down in black and white. Mr. Topper could not
deny it. She was vexed with the reporters, however. They had used altogether too much literary restraint. Now if she had been writing the report-
-headlines flashed through her mind. It was well for Topper that he could not read them.

Three  days  had  elapsed  since  Mr.  Topper's  arrest. Three days passed by him for the most part in the backyard. Whenever sympathetic callers
arrived  Mr. Topper disappeared. He feared that the women might ask his wife for the privilege of viewing the remains. For this reason he quietly
removed himself and his bruises to the backyard. To this retreat Scollops followed him. She was waiting impatiently to resume the repose that had
been  so  rudely  interrupted by his unwarranted absence from the house. The man must sit down some time. This tragic stalking about was all very
well  for a while, but on the other hand something was due to a cat, especially such a cat as Scollops. There was little comfort in a peripatetic
couch. If Topper wanted to think and be gloomy let him do so in a stationary position. But why think? Sleep was much more vital. There were a few
slight  irregularities in her own life. Scollops remembered, not without pride, a certain alienation affair in which she had become involved, but
she  had no intention of letting the memory make her haggard. Several times she had honestly tried to think about the affair, to figure out if in
any  way  she  had  justified  various backyard references, but the effort had made her drowsy. Why was not this man affected in the same manner?
Human beings placed too great importance on the game of morals. That was why they were constantly breaking the rules. They really did not want to
play  and  yet they insisted on giving the appearance of playing. So Scollops waited while Topper walked. Then Topper sat and Scollops slept. And
in the darkened house Mrs. Topper delicately arched her eyebrows and was happy, quite, quite happy in a sane and refined manner.

After  three  days  of  morbid seclusion Mr. Topper came to a decision. His secret life was developing, growing more complex. When he came to the
decision  he  was  sitting on the lawn roller because it had been previously warmed by the sun. And what made him come to a decision arose from a
sudden and upsetting realisation that at heart he felt neither grieved nor chastened by anything that had come to pass. He found himself actually
gloating  over  his  night in the lock-up--what little he could remember of it. He relished his memory of the old abandoned inn tucked away among
the  trees.  He  felt with pleasure that he had done some fairly splendid dancing and he was sure that for the first time in his life he had sung
without  constraint  and fought without fear. Sitting there on the lawn roller, he was surprised to find that each little memory brought him some
satisfaction and no regret, and as the indirect rays of the sun sent courage through his spinal column he deliberately denounced the town and all
its  works in terms both round and rough. His whole past life had been modelled on false standards which would have to be adjusted at once. There
was only one way to accomplish this. Mr. Topper's fingers abstractly touched one of Scollops' ears and Scollops with equal abstractness scratched
one  of  Mr.  Topper's fingers. But Topper disregarded the sleepy rebuke of his cat. He was going away. He was going quite far away. That was Mr.
Topper's  decision. He would drive himself to some great distance from the town and his wife and her friends. Before he officially proclaimed the
new  order of things he must first be alone. He had to think a little. That was quite important. He wondered now how he had ever got along so far
with  so  little  thought.  He  became  quite  elated  about  his  brain.  It  was like a new toy to him. He had always believed that it had been
providentially  arranged  for  the  purpose  of making money, acquiring possession and paying for legs of lamb. He found that his brain was quite
playful,  that it broke rules and was indifferent, that it entertained the most disreputable thoughts without becoming panic-stricken. Mr. Topper
felt like dancing, but he restrained this inclination. He realised that if Mrs. Topper saw him making movements of joy she would immediately call
in another mourner for a whispered conversation. And Topper felt so liberated that he feared he might assault the next woman who heaved a sigh in
his house.

So  instead  of  dancing he buried his head in his hands and held on to himself. It was silly about his eyes. He did not feel at all like crying.
Yet his face was growing wet.

The  next  day  Mr.  Topper went to the city. To show his indifference to public opinion he took the usual morning train. His appearance at first
caused the respectful silence usually accorded to criminals in transit to the place of incarceration. As he walked down the platform he felt that
life  had not been lived in vain. He enjoyed the situation. Men who had once greeted him with respect now slapped him on the back with hands that
were  moist with condescension. Friends who had hitherto received him warmly nodded thoughtfully in his direction and resumed their conversation.
Two representatives of civic virtue were honest enough to ignore his presence. Harris Stevens, however, was not to be downed. On seeing Topper he
threw  himself  headlong  into  the  rôle  of official protector. Stevens' mind was so tolerant that he could have attended a lynching every day
without becoming critical. He thrust his arm through Mr. Topper's and led him up to a group of mutual friends.

"If I were handcuffed to him," thought Mr. Topper, "his happiness would be complete."

Nevertheless Topper made no protest. He was still enjoying the situation.

"Look out, boys!" cried the jovial Stevens, "he's dangerous. Wild women and everything. What do you think of our Cosmo now?"

Of course the assembled gentlemen hardly said exactly what they thought of their Cosmo now, but to a man they all displayed a glittering interest
in  the  mysterious  and therefore immoral woman in the case. Several travellers of the more serious and orderly type even went so far as to draw
Mr.  Topper aside and intimate roguishly that they would appreciate his confiding absolutely in them. Mr. Topper understood all too well and gave
each  inquirer  a  different name and address. He was thanked by each, nudged playfully in the ribs, and assured that everything would be done on
the quiet.

"What vile devils they are!" thought Mr. Topper as he smiled knowingly into their eyes, already touched with the fever of the hunt.

His trip to the city that morning provided him with much food for thought, each morsel of which was more unpalatable than the last.

The atmosphere was clearer at the office. News of Mr. Topper's evil ways had not entered there. Boys were answering bells, girls were serving the
files and customers were beginning to transact business.

"To  what end all this?" speculated Mr. Topper, making his way to his desk and hanging his hat and stick on a near-by stand. From his position on
the  platform he could look down over the activity taking place on the bank's vast floor. Like a lesser god he observed with preoccupied eyes the
ordered  movement  of  those below him. What he saw neither pleased Mr. Topper nor made him feel particularly proud of his elevated place in this
little  world.  Mr. Topper had already progressed too far for that, but the quiet briskness of the bank, the crisp little people coming and going
on  sure  feet  beneath the vast dome of the place, and the massive splendour of the institution's architecture gave him a feeling of permanence.
Men  and  women  were  engaged  in  earning a living there. They were paying strict attention to their own affairs. Round him on the platform his
brother officers were busy with callers and correspondence. Here Mr. Topper felt safe from the oily eyes of his friends. He drew a sigh of relief
and  touched  a  bell. Miss Johnson appeared with his letters and he thanked her with elaborate politeness. His secretary was a middle-aged woman
who  valiantly strove to draw attention from that depressing fact by decorating various parts of her body with the tender ribbons of infancy. Mr.
Topper's  attention  was not so easily misdirected, but nevertheless he was fond of Miss Johnson. He had seen the ribbons increase with the years
and  had  decided that when infirmity at last forced the good woman to withdraw from the bank she would depart under full colour like an aged but
fluttering  May-pole.  In  spite of her little weaknesses Miss Johnson knew her business, or, better, Mr. Topper's business. She knew how to save
him  both  time  and trouble, and the more time and trouble she saved the more tolerant was Topper, the more he forgave the ribbons. As far as he
was concerned Miss Johnson could have appeared in beads so long as she made up the difference with efficiency.

Mr.  Topper's first letter was from a wholesale grocer in Texas, an old fellow on whom the bank had been making a decent profit for years. He was
now  in  trouble.  Things  were  bad.  He  wanted an extension of credit. As Mr. Topper read the letter he caught a mental picture of the old man
laboriously writing it from an old-fashioned roll-top desk in Texas. Mental pictures are not good for banking. Mr. Topper was well aware of this,
but  the  knowledge  did  not  succeed  in  closing  his eyes on the man's plight. Instead he opened them all the wider and dispatched a telegram
designed  to  bring  back  the  courage  to a cornered customer thousands ofmiles away. It was not an outstanding stroke of business, but on this
particular morning Mr. Topper relished it the more for that very reason.

Up  to  eleven  o'clock  Mr.  Topper  occupied  himself  with  routine  details,  then he rose and informed the president that because of various
considerations due to certain hitherto unknown maladies of both mind and body an extended vacation was highly essential. Should such an extension
be  withheld, Mr. Topper's physician would not be responsible for the consequences. Mr. Topper felt inclined to agree with the physician, a thing
he  seldom  did.  The  extension  was  not  withheld, although its cause was not fully believed. With an unnecessarily spiritless step Mr. Topper
returned  to his desk as if reluctant to leave it. Now that his vacation was assured he lingered over the parting. He had already set his affairs
in  order,  but he diligently began to reset them now. He dallied with meaningless papers and dictated meaningless memoranda. There was a certain
satisfaction  in  wasting  the  precious  minutes  in  useless drudgery now that they were his to waste. In the back of his mind, however, danced
colourful  thoughts  of  golf stockings, caps and outing shoes, and other equipment necessary to his trip. Soon he would arise and purchase these
things, going out into the street like a free man with a new consignment of golden days. For a moment he delayed, prolonging anticipation. In the
middle of his fifth meaningless memo he was surprised by Miss Johnson's unusual behaviour.

Instead  of  gazing devoutly at her notes as was her invariable custom, her eyes had become disconcertingly jerky. For a moment they would remain
fixed  on the point of the pencil, then, as if drawn against their will by invisible wires, they would painfully lift and stare with a fascinated
gaze  directly  over  Mr.  Topper's  left  shoulder. At the sound of Mr. Topper's voice they would struggle for a moment before they were able to
descend once more to the pad. Mr. Topper was at first puzzled, then hurt and at last exasperated. Finally he could stand it no longer.

"What the devil's the matter, Miss Johnson?" he exclaimed.

"Look!" was all Miss Johnson said, pointing over his shoulder.

There  was  something  in the tone of her voice that made Mr. Topper disinclined to look. In spite of himself he turned in his chair and followed
the  direction  of  her  finger. He would have been more relieved had he seen a party of bank robbers quietly slaying the entire office force and
looting  the  safe  deposit  vault.  It  would have seemed less personal, less fraught with complications. Yet what Mr. Topper saw would not have
arrested  the  attention  of  the casual passer-by unless he had chanced to be especially interested in hat stands. This particular hat stand was
situated  in a corner near Mr. Topper's desk. On it were Mr. Topper's hat and cane, or rather, on it they should have been, but the terrible part
of  it  was  that  they were not where they should have been. The canehad assumed an independent position and was standing unsupported on its own
tip. The hat was rakishly poised above it about three feet in the air. As Mr. Topper turned, the hat and cane resumed their normal position as if
afraid of being discovered out of place.

At this Miss Johnson gasped and once more uttered, "Look!"

Mr. Topper swung quickly back to his desk. He would look no more. Already he had seen too much.

"I wish, Miss Johnson," he said in a reproving voice, "I do wish you'd stop telling me to look. I see nothing and my time is valuable. What was I
saying?"

Training came to Miss Johnson's aid. She dropped her eyes and studied her notes.

"You were saying," she said, "that, owing to your enforced absence, steps should be . . ."

"Ah, yes," interrupted Mr. Topper. "I was saying that."

His voice trailed away and he began to tap on the edge of his desk with the tip of a pencil. Now why had he been saying that, he wondered. Was it
possible that the Kerbys had followed him to town? Marion had said that George occasionally ranged abroad, but he could hardly believe that Kerby
would follow him to the bank. Miss Johnson's eyes were lifting again. Topper cleared his throat and hastily began to dictate.

"Owing to my enforced absence," he repeated, "I feel that it is important for certain steps to be..."

Unable  to stand Miss Johnson's eyes he stopped dictating. What was happening behind him? At any moment the hat might thrust itself down over his
eyes and make him appear ridiculous. The Kerbys were capable of such an outrage.

"Look now!" exclaimed Miss Johnson.

Mr.  Topper  turned  quickly,  and  just  in  time to see his cane and hat retreating to the stand. He noticed with dread that this time they had
ventured farther away from their appointed place.

"Oh," murmured Miss Johnson in an expiring voice. "Oh! " she repeated.

"Miss  Johnson,"  said  Mr.  Topper  with  fatherly  severity,  "you  must  be  ill, otherwise you would not be trying to upset me with your wild
exclamations."

"Didn't you see anything?" asked Miss Johnson, studying Mr. Topper's face with troubled eyes. "Anything strange?"

"Nothing," lied Mr. Topper. "Nothing strange at all. Now let's try again."

"Then I must be very sick," replied Miss Johnson. "Sicker than I've ever been before."

"It will pass off," Mr. Topper assured her. "Pick up where I left off."

"Certain steps should be taken," began Miss Johnson. "You keep saying something about certain steps."

At  this  point  Miss  Johnson  capitulated  and  seized Mr. Topper's hand. The hat stand was swaying from side to side and the cane was rattling
against its post.

"I'm not as sick as that," she said with conviction. "If you don't see what I see you're the one that's sick."

"All  right, all right," Mr. Topper called out, this time directly addressing the hat stand. "I'll finish up at once. Don't worry about that last
memo, Miss Johnson. Go home and take a rest. Your nerves are upset. Stay home for a week or so. I won't be needing you for some time."

Mr.  Topper got up briskly and swept some papers into a basket. The animated hat stand came to rest. Miss Johnson, her hands full of ribbons, was
gazing at it with horror in her eyes.

"See, Miss Johnson," said Mr. Topper, walking over to the stand. "See, it's nothing after all. Only your nerves."

But  before  he could reach for his hat and cane these articles eagerly sprang from their pegs and presented themselves to his grasp. He snatched
them from the air and turned to Miss Johnson.

"Nothing at all," he said with a forced smile. "It was purely your imagination."

For  a  moment  they  looked  into  each other's eyes. There was a prayer in Mr. Topper's. No missionary ever struggled more fervently to implant
belief. Miss Johnson was regarding the hat and cane suspiciously, and Mr. Topper realised he had failed.

"Nothing  at  all,"  he  repeated  in  a  dead voice as he felt himself being gently pushed by some unseen force. "You can see for yourself, Miss
Johnson. Go home and take rest. And if I were in your place I wouldn't speak with anyone. You might be misunderstood."

This  last  remark was tossed over his shoulder, for by this time Mr. Topper was being propelled with increasing rapidity across the floor. As he
left the bank he looked like a man leaning against a strong wind.

"Not so fast," he muttered.

The doorman, thinking the remark intended for him, arrested the speed of the revolving doors.

"That's a queer way for a body to walk," he thought, peering after the slanting Topper. "Especially an officer at this time of day."




CHAPTER XII A Smoky Lady in Knickers


Mr Topper was in an unspeakable frame of mind. He shook himself free from the invisible grasp that had made a retreat of his departure, and fumed
up  the  street,  escape his one desire. And every time he passed a drug store a slight tugging at his sleeve informed him that he was not alone,
that for him escape was impossible.

"Stop doing things to my sleeve," he growled. "Stop pushing."

"But I want you to buy me a soda," came the whispered reply.

"After  all you've done to me you ask me that?" exclaimed the outraged man, for the moment forgetting his fear of being caught talking to himself
in the streets. "Fiddling with my hat and stick. Giving my secretary a nervous fit. Why didn't you bawl and scream?"

"But  you took such a long time in that horrid old place," the voice pleaded. "And that ridiculous woman looked at you so familiarly. I wanted to
pull her ribbons off, but . . ."

"Let me understand this," interrupted Mr. Topper, seeking refuge in a near-by doorway. "Am I no longer to dictate to my secretary? Do you object?
By  what  right?  I've never compromised you, although God knows you've ruined my reputation--you and your husband. Why don't you torture him and
leave me alone?"

"He's left me," the voice replied with just a hint of moisture. "He's gone to sea for a change."

"He needs one," said Mr. Topper. "Haven't you any friends?"

"None that I like as well as you. Please don't go on any more. It would be funny to see tears dropping from no place in particular."

The  woman  was  actually  hugging him in broad daylight. Mr. Topper swayed forward, then with a supreme effort regained both his balance and his
composure.

"Don't do that again, ever," he commanded.

"Let's be glad," Marion pleaded. "I didn't mean any harm. George was gone and I didn't have anything to do, so I just went down to the station to
see the trains come in and then I saw you and I wanted to go along It's awfully lonely being a low-planed spirit. You don't know."

Now  there  had  been  very  little  wheedling practised on Mr. Topper in the course of his married life. Mrs. Topper had arranged everything and
Topper  had followed the arrangements. On those rare occasions when he had balked Mrs. Topper had instantly assumed the rôle of a martyred woman
and  in  pallid  silence cherished her indigestion. It was a strange, fearful and fascinating sensation that Mr. Topper now experienced as Marion
Kerby  clung  to  his  neck  and asked him to buy her a soda. He forgot the humiliation of the office out of sheer sympathy for the poor, parched
spirit who had been the cause of it.

"But hang it, Marion," he said in a softer voice, "be reasonable. How can I buy you a soda?"

"You  can  pretend  to  be  drinking it," she relied eagerly, "and when you hold your glass aside to look at your newspaper I can sip through the
straw. No one will notice it. Just hold your glass a little to one side and I'll come close to you and sip through the straw--little, quiet sips.
But you must only pretend to be drinking it. Don't forget yourself."

"I'd rather risk the chance of a scandal and have you materialise," said Mr. Topper thoughtfully.

"All right," replied Marion. "I'll do that in a jiffy."

"Not here! " Mr. Topper protested. "For once show some restraint. Can't you go somewhere to materialise and then come back to me?"

"How about that shop?" suggested Marion.

The shop she referred to was a small notion shop which owed its existence to the fact that women, regardless of their means, must be clad in silk
or  near  silk  against  the ever-present dangers of being run over, unexpectedly married or caught in a sudden gale. The shop seemed suitable to
Topper  for  the  business of materialisation. He said as much and Marion Kerby departed, declaring that she would be right back in a minute. Mr.
Topper  waited ten before he became impatient, then he walked slowly past the shop and peered through the door. As he did so a hatless woman came
bounding  forth  with stark terror gleaming in her eyes. She was speedily followed by a small boy, who in turn was closely pursued by a man whose
features were working frantically. Before Mr. Topper could recover from his surprise three girls dashed from the shop and joined their companions
in  flight,  now  huddled  compactly  at  a  safe  distance from the shop. Mr. Topper felt like running, too, but curiosity overcame his fear. He
approached the group and asked questions. One of the girls looked at him and began to cry.

"Mamma!" she gulped. "Mamma!" He quickly transferred his gaze to the man. "What's happened in there?" asked Mr. Topper.

"Don't go in, sir," pleaded the man, for the first time in his life discouraging a prospective customer from entering his place of business. "For
God's sake, sir, stay here with us."

Topper looked at the boy.

"Little boy," he said, "tell me what frightened all these people."

"I'm not frightened," declared the boy, "but they all started to run and I just got ahead."

"Yes, but why did they start to run?" continued Mr. Topper patiently.

"Because of her," said the boy, pointing to the shop.

"Of whom?" demanded Topper.

"The smoky lady who was trying on knickers and everything," answered the boy.

At  this point the woman who had been the first to seek comfort in flight found her tongue. A crowd had begun to gather and she addressed herself
to the crowd.

"She  was  all smoky," the woman announced. "And you could see right through her. How I first came to notice her was when I pulled back a curtain
to  show one of these girls some knickers. There she was, as calm as life, trying on a pair of knickers, a pair of our best knickers, and she was
all  smoky  and  transparent  so  that  only the knickers seemed real. When she saw us she got scared and went bounding round the shop so that it
looked like a pair of knickers come to life and gone mad. I started to run . . ."

"And  I  made  a  grab  for  the knickers," interrupted the man, "but the smoky woman wouldn't let go, so I just decided that, before any trouble
started, I'd run out and see what had happened to Lil."

"It was awful," proclaimed one of the girls "I'll never forget those knickers dancing round the shop."

"Our best knickers," said the woman. "A good pair," added the man.

"Perhaps they are not a total loss," Mr. Topper suggested. "Why not go back and find out? I'll buy the knickers if this smoky woman hasn't walked
off with them."

As attractive as the offer was to the proprietor he seemed reluctant to accept.

"Come on," said Mr. Topper. "I'll lead the way."

"But, sir, you don't understand," the man protested earnestly. "Have you ever seen a transparent woman dancing about in a real pair of knickers?"

"That  depends on what you mean by transparent," replied Mr. Topper judiciously. "Anyway, it's much better than seeing a real woman dancing about
in a transparent pair of knickers."

At this remark the young lady who had been sobbing for mamma suddenly giggled and looked archly at Mr. Topper. The proprietor seemed unconvinced.

"No,  it isn't," he said, with a shake of his head. "Nowadays you can see that at most any good show, but not the other, thank God. It isn't what
I call natural entertainment--not for me at any rate."

"And while you're standing here talking," Mr. Topper reminded him, "the smoky lady is probably trying on every blessed thing in your shop."

Well,  I'm  not  going  back  to  watch  her,"  the  proprietor proclaimed to the crowd. "If any of you gents want to see a smoky woman trying on
underwear you can step right in, but I don't budge without a cop--two cops," he added as an afterthought.

Mr. Topper felt a soft, flimsy article being thrust stealthily into his coat pocket. His hand flew to the spot and shoved the thing out of sight.
A  gentle  pressure  on  the arm indicated that it was time to depart, and a policeman, pushing through the crowd, strengthened Mr. Topper in his
belief.  He permitted himself to be led away by his invisible guide. After several blocks of silent companionship he could no longer restrain his
annoyance.

"Now what the devil do you mean by trying on a pair of those things?" he demanded.

"What a crude question!" Marion murmured. "Your conduct has given me the privilege to ask it," replied Mr. Topper.

"Cosmo," she whispered, leaning heavily against him, "I just love nice things."

"You should leave all that stuff behind you now that you're dead," he answered.

"Even spirits have to be modest," said Marion. "And anyway they frightened me. I was getting along fine until that woman pulled back the curtain.
I was pretty nearly completely materialised, but that made me so startled I couldn't finish it."

"That was fortunate, to say the least," replied Mr. Topper, "considering the condition you were in."

Topper heard a low laugh.

"You're vile all the way through," said Marion Kerby. "Here's a soda shop. Come on in--chocolate with vanilla ice cream."

Mr. Topper felt himself being pulled in the direction of the soda shop. He resisted feebly, feeling that he had gone through enough for one day.

"Must you have that soda?" he asked.

"Oh, no," Marion replied in a resigned voice. "I can do without it. I'm used to being miserable. One more disappointment will make no difference.
Keep me hanging round your office all morning, then send me in to a place to be scared to death, and after that refuse to buy me a soda. Go on, I
like harsh treatment. You remind me of my husband, the low creature."

With the chattering courage of a man being placed in the electric chair, Mr. Topper walked into the soda shop and seated himself at the counter.

"Vanilla soda with a chocolate ice," he muttered darkly in the direction of a white-clad individual.

"No! No!" whispered Marion excitedly. "You've got it all wrong. Tell him quick. It's chocolate soda with a vanilla ice."

Mr. Topper could feel her fluttering on his lap.

"Be  still,"  he  whispered,  then  smiling ingratiatingly at the clerk he added, "I'm afraid, old man, I got that wrong. I want it the other way
'round."

The  clerk  looked long at Mr. Topper, then walked to the other end of the counter and engaged a colleague in a whispered conversation. From time
to time they stopped talking to look back at Mr. Topper, whose anxiety was mounting with each look.

Marion Kerby in her eagerness was pinching Topper's hand. He pulled his newspaper from his pocket and hid behind it.

"You and your sodas," he growled. "Why can't you keep quiet?"

"But you had it all wrong," protested Marion. "Look out, here he comes now."

When the attendant had placed the glass on the counter Mr. Topper idly reached for it with the air of one too deeply engrossed in the news of the
day to be interested in a trivial beverage. Leisurely he placed the glass to his lips, then held it aside.

"The straws," whispered Marion. "Must have straws."

"My God," murmured Mr. Topper. "Won't you ever be satisfied?"

He  procured  two  straws, plunged them viciously into the soda, then held the glass behind his paper. The liquid immediately began to descend in
the glass. From the rapidity of its descent Mr. Topper decided that George Kerby had bought his wife very few sodas during her earthly existence.

"Now dig out the ice cream with the spoon," she whispered. "Pretend to be eating it. I'll nibble it off."

"This  is  going  to  be pretty," murmured Mr. Topper with as much sarcasm as can be packed into a murmur. "You'll have to do better than nibble.
You'll fairly have to snap it off."

The  nibbling or snapping operation required the use of both of Mr. Topper's hands and forced him to abandon the protection of his paper. With an
earnest  expression, which was perfectly sincere, he endeavoured to give the impression of a man publicly lusting after ice cream. The spoon flew
to  his  avid  mouth,  but,  just before his lips concealed their prize, the ice cream mysteriously vanished. It must be said in favour of Marion
Kerby  that  she met the demands of the occasion. Not once did she fail to claim her own. Not once was Mr. Topper allowed to sample that which he
most  abhorred. When the ice cream had run its course Mr. Topper resumed his paper and waited, with a knowledge bred of experience, for the dregs
of  the  soda to be drawn. He had little time to wait. Hollow, expiring, gurgling sounds loudly proclaimed the welcome ending of the soda. With a
sigh  of  relief  Mr.  Topper was about to return the hateful vessel to the counter when he met the eyes of the clerk peering at him over the top
margin  of the newspaper. They were cold, worldly eyes, yet curious, and they fixed themselves on Mr. Topper like two weary suns regarding a new-
born star. A nervous muscular reaction contorted Mr. Topper's mouth into a smile.

"Do that again," the clerk said. "Do that trick again without me guessing it and I'll give you this."

He dangled some crumpled bills alluringly in Mr. Topper's face.

"I can't," replied Mr. Topper. "It's hard enough to drink one of your nauseating concoctions, much less two."

"You didn't drink the first one," said the attendant. "What's your game, anyway? I was watching you all the time. Trying to be funny?"

"Not  funny," Mr. Topper answered, delicately slipping from his seat. "You're wrong there. That was one of the most serious sodas in my life--one
of the worst."

"You're one of those funny guys," said the attendant menacingly. "Come back here and I'll tell you exactly what you are."

But Mr. Topper did not wait to be told. He hurried from the store and mingled with the crowd.

"It's awful to be cut off from sodas," breathed Marion Kerby.

"I have no sympathy to waste on you," said Mr. Topper.

He  was  hungry,  yet  he  dared  not eat. If she had behaved so excitedly in the presence of a soda, what would she do at the sight of food. Mr.
Topper shuddered. He was thinking of a plate of soup. No, it would never do. He would have to forego luncheon. This was an overwhelming decision.
It left Mr. Topper shaken. Never had he missed a meal save when his adenoids had been surreptitiously removed many years before. Mr. Topper gazed
up  at  the  lean cascades of the Woolworth tower through the tragic eyes of a deflated stomach. There was no fortitude in him. He was the abject
slave  of  a  passion  he longed but feared to indulge. All his friends were eating luncheon now. He wondered what they were having. Menus danced
before  his eyes. The "blue plate" of the day brought savoury odours to his nose. Strangely enough it was in this dismal crisis that Marion Kerby
came to his aid.

"Isn't it time for your luncheon?" she suggested.

"Past time," said Mr. Topper, "but how can I eat with you with me?"

"Food means nothing to me," she replied. "I can take it or leave it as I choose, but you're different. You must eat."

"I  feel  that  way  about it myself," admitted Mr. Topper. "For once I think you're right, but, frankly, I'm afraid to enter a public place with
you. My nerves can't stand it. Too much has happened."

"Come,"  she said in a changed voice, taking him forcibly by the arm. "I'm going to see that you get your luncheon. Don't bother at all about me.
I'm  different now. The city went to my head at first. I'll admit it. Those knickers and the ice cream soda got the best of me. I lost control of
myself, but now you don't have to worry. Just a cup of tea--nothing more."

"That  ends it," declared Mr. Topper. "That's enough. I don't eat. I dare say you fully expect me to crouch under a table and hold a plate of tea
while you make strangling noises."

Marion Kerby laughed softly.

"I  was  only joking about the tea," she said. "Honestly, now, I don't really want it. That's true. I should want it, but I don't. There was only
one  person I ever knew, not counting myself, who couldn't stand tea, and he was a fine but fanatical drunkard. Graze with the herd and I'll keep
quiet."

So  Mr.  Topper had his luncheon. It was a tense luncheon, a suspicious, waiting sort of luncheon, one filled with false starts and empty alarms.
In  spite of everything it was a good luncheon and Marion Kerby behaved splendidly. Once, when Mr. Topper used the pepper too violently, a fit of
sneezing  came  from  the opposite chair. The waiter was momentarily startled, but immediately adjusted himself to the situation. He realised, as
does  everyone who knows anything at all about sneezing, that there are no two sneezes alike and that most anything can be expected of a sneezer.
He  regarded  Mr.  Topper with the commiseration of one whose sneezes were infrequent and well under control, and departed in stately search of a
pie  a  la  mode. Nevertheless, he considered Mr. Topper as being not quite the usual customer. He had noticed certain little things. Nothing you
could  put  your finger on, but still a trifle different. For instance, why had the tray containing bread risen to meet Mr. Topper's outstretched
hand? And why had the salt stand behaved so obligingly? How could one account for a menu tilted in space? And, if that was perfectly natural, why
had Mr. Topper made such strange fluttering movements with his hands? Deep within himself the waiter sensed that all was not well with his table,
but  the  clatter  of  plates,  the  demands  of  his occupation, and the deep-rooted instinct of all people to deny the existence of the unusual
successfully  maintained  him  in  his poise of sharply chiselled indifference. The generous size of the tip he washed up in his obsequious hands
completely restored his faith in the normal order of things. There had been nothing unusual. Mr. Topper was a man who desired to dine. The waiter
hoped  he  would do so more frequently at his table. The waiter was one of those people whose tolerance increases with the size of the tip. For a
ten-dollar bill he would have respectfully tidied up after a murder and made excuses for the toughness of the corpse.

Later  that  afternoon  Mr. Topper was trying on a cap. He was a diffident man about such things, but on this occasion his heart was in his task.
The  brownish  thing  that  was  making  his  head ridiculous had vague, temporising lines in it of a nervous blue, but to Mr. Topper the cap was
lovely.  To  a  man or to a woman he would have said harshly that the cap "would do," but to himself he had to admit it was lovely. He admired it
hugely. It was a good cap. Mr. Topper had no difficulty in convincing the salesman that it was a good cap. With suitable apologies the man agreed
that  it was a very good cap and that it suited Mr. Topper well. Mr. Topper found himself admiring the salesman. He knew his business, this man--
one of the few salesmen with unimpeachable taste. The cap was practically Topper's. All the salesman had to do was to snatch it from Mr. Topper's
vain-glorious  head and wrap it up. Mr. Topper was willing. He had never purchased such a cap in his life. With the eager timidity of a virgin he
hoped  to  demolish  the record of years. He was brazen about it, yet he was shy almost to the point of tenderness. The cap was in the salesman's
hands.  Mr.  Topper was reaching for money. The salesman's free hand was politely waiting for the object of Mr. Topper's reaching. Then something
happened.  A  new and different cap appeared in the salesman's outstretched hand. With the instinct of his calling he automatically began to sell
the new cap. Then he stopped in confusion and looked helplessly at Mr. Topper, who was convulsively clutching a roll of bills. Mr. Topper refused
to  meet  the  salesman's  gaze.  Instead  he  glared  at the new cap. It was a terrible cap, an obscene, gloating, desperate cap. Its red checks
displayed the brazen indifference of deep depravity. Mr. Topper was revolted.

"Take it away," he said. "I don't want it."

At this remark the new cap shook threateningly in the salesman's hand. He tried to give it to Mr. Topper, but was unsuccessful. Mr. Topper backed
away.

"I don't want it," he repeated. "I don't like that cap. Please take it away."

The salesman was deeply moved.

"I'm not trying to sell it to you, sir," he said in a low voice, "but somehow I can't help it."

He stood before Mr. Topper with a cap in either hand. One cap he held almost lovingly, the other he clung to in spite of himself, like a man with
a  live  coal  in  a  nest of dynamite. His lips trembled slightly. He tried to smile. He was mortally afraid that at any moment Mr. Topper would
depart  with a bad opinion of the shop. He could never permit that to happen. With an effort he turned away, but before he had gone many yards he
abruptly swung around and came back at a dog-trot. To Mr. Topper he gave the appearance of a man who was being held by the scruff of his neck and
the  seat  of  his  trousers by someone intent on motivating him from the rear. He stopped suddenly in front of Mr. Topper and, in an attitude of
supplication, offered him the red checked cap. Mr. Topper again refused it.

"I must apologise," the man said rather breathlessly, "but I really think you had better take this cap."

In spite of his irritation Mr. Topper regarded the salesman with quick sympathy.

"Why have you changed your mind?" he asked. "I've already told you that I hate that cap. It isn't a nice cap. I don't like it."

The salesman was almost chattering. He shook himself like a dog and glanced quickly over his shoulder. Then he approached Mr. Topper.

"I haven't changed my mind," he whispered. "I've lost my mind. It isn't the shop. It's me. I'm mad."

Mr.  Topper was beginning to feel extremely sorry for the salesman. He wanted to do what he could, but he refused to be bullied into buying a cap
he utterly loathed, a cap that went against all his instincts.

"It's too bad about your mind," said Mr. Topper, "but I don't want that cap. I won't buy it. And if I do buy it I won't wear it. I'm honest about
that."

"Listen," whispered the salesman. "I'll give you the cap if you'll only take it away."

"If you're as anxious as all that to get rid of the cap," Mr. Topper replied, "I'll buy them both. How much are they?

"Practically nothing," said the salesman, his face clearing. "I'll wrap them up myself." He hurried away.

"But I won't wear it," said Mr. Topper, addressing space. "You won't be able to force the thing on my head."

"Here they are," announced the salesman, returning with the package. "You've been very nice about it, I'm sure."

As the elevator bearing Mr. Topper to the ground floor began its descent a low gasp was heard in the car.

"I can't stand these things," whispered Marion Kerby. "They always take my breath."

At  each  floor the gasp was repeated, whereat Mr. Topper cringed under the curious eye of the operator. Mr. Topper pretended to gasp in order to
protect himself. He smiled sickly at the operator and said:

"Did it affect you that way at first? It always does me."

The  operator  continued  to  look at him, but made no answer. He was glad to sec the last of Mr. Topper. He was afraid that the man was going to
swoon in his car.

On  the  train  that  evening  Mr. Topper tried to hide himself in his newspaper, but was unsuccessful. Marion Kerby insisted on turning back the
pages  and scanning the advertisements. At last Mr. Topper abandoned the newspaper and looked out of the window. Presently he became conscious of
the  fact  that several passengers were regarding the vacant seat beside him with undisguised interest. The newspaper was slanted against the air
as though it were being held by unseen hands. Mr. Topper seized the paper and thrust it into his pocket.

"Rotter!" whispered Marion Kerby. "Fiend! " muttered Mr. Topper.

A  heavy  personage  attempted  to  occupy  the  seat, but arose with a grunt of surprise. For a moment he regarded Mr. Topper bitterly, but that
distraught gentleman was gazing at the landscape with the greedy eyes of a tourist.

At the end of the trip he hurried home. His day had been crammed with desperate events. There would be nothing for him at home save Scollops, but
at present Mr. Topper preferred a sleepy cat to an active spirit. He yearned for repose.

"Good-bye," said Marion Kerby as he was turning into the driveway. "I've had an awfully nice time and I want to thank you."

"Why did you make me buy that cap?" demanded Mr. Topper.

"Because I knew it would look well on you," she answered. "George had one once and everybody liked it."

"Well, I don't, and I won't wear it," said Mr. Topper. "Good-bye."

Marion Kerby clung to his arm.

"Don't  be  angry,"  she pleaded. "I've got to go back now and it's going to be lonely out there without even George to haggle with. Say good-bye
nicely and call me Marion."

Mr. Topper had a twinge of conscience. He was going away in the morning without even telling her about it. He was running away from her. Although
he  realised  that  he  was  in  no  way bound to Marion Kerby, he nevertheless felt guilty in abandoning her, particularly in the absence of her
irresponsible husband. However, if he confided in her everything would be ruined. She would be sure to come along. He knew he would never be able
to  drive  her off. After all, why should he not take her along? Then he remembered the events of the day and decided that there was every reason
in the world for leaving her behind. He was going away for a rest and not a riot. With Marion Kerby with him rest would be out of the question.

"Well,"  he  said in a mollified voice, "it's not going to be any too crisp for me at home, but I'll look you up in a few days. We'll take a ride
together."

"Good-bye," she said, her voice sounding strangely thin and far away. "Don't forget. I'll be waiting for you."

The  house  had lost none of its funereal atmosphere during Mr. Topper's absence. Mrs. Topper was sitting in the shadows with her hands folded in
her lap. She was the picture of resignation.

"Are you feeling better, my dear?" asked Mr. Topper.

"I haven't been thinking about myself," she replied. "There are other things on my mind."

Mr.  Topper discreetly refrained from asking her what they were. He sat down and read the paper until the maid announced dinner, then he followed
his  wife  into  the  dining-room,  where  the  evening  meal  was consumed in silence. He felt like a convict being entertained by a member of a
Christian  Endeavour Society. Mrs. Topper made it a point to see that he was properly served. She seemed to derive a sort of mournful pleasure in
watching him chew his food.

When  they were once more in the sitting-room Mr. Topper announced the fact that he was going away for a trip. It was a difficult announcement to
make and Mrs. Topper was not helpful. She listened in silence until he was through, then she said without looking at him:

"I hope that for my sake you'll try to keep out of jail."

"It's not a habit," replied Mr. Topper. "It was an accident, an unfortunate misunderstanding."

Mrs. Topper bent over her sewing and compressed her lips.

"I'll never forget it to my dying day," she said. "The shame and humiliation of it."

"You could forget it if you wanted to," answered Mr. Topper. "If you liked me instead of yourself you could forget a lot of things."

Mrs. Topper regarded her husband with melancholy eyes.

"You ask me to forget that?" she asked.

"Come, Mary," replied Mr. Topper in an earnest voice. "I don't know what got into me. I was all wrong, but lust the same . . ."

He  stopped  and,  pulling  the  knickers  from  his  pocket,  began  to mop his face with them. They were orchid-coloured knickers heightened in
attractiveness  by  crimson  butterflies and lace insertion. They gave Mr. Topper a foppish appearance. As he stood before his wife with his face
nonchalantly  buried  in  the silken fabric Mr. Topper looked almost giddy. A new light came into Mrs. Topper's eyes. It was the light of despair
masking behind outraged modesty. At the height of his mopping Mr. Topper must have realised the situation, for he suddenly withdrew his face from
its  tender  concealment  and  peered  at  Mrs.  Topper over the knickers. Mrs. Topper had risen. As she confronted her husband she was trembling
slightly. He tried to speak, but she held up a restraining hand.

"I refuse to remain in the room and have you flaunt your infidelity in my face," she said. "Don't speak o me. Don't try to explain. Everything is
perfectly clear."

"But I bought them for you," gasped Mr. Topper. "They were to be a surprise."

"They were a surprise," replied Mrs. Topper, recoiling from the offending garment. "They were a shock."

As  she left the room Mr. Topper hurled the knickers to the table and departed to the garage, where he remained the rest of the evening. Scollops
curled  up  on the evidence of guilt and tried to forget the late unpleasantness in sleep. When Mr. Topper returned to the house the knickers had
disappeared from the table. Upstairs a tear-stained woman was clutching them in her hand. Gradually her sobbing quieted and she looked timidly at
the  knickers. Perhaps after all he had bought them for her. But she never wore such things. Mr. Topper knew it. Why didn't she wear such things?
She  was  startled.  Perhaps  that  was  the reason. With a feeling of guilt she slipped on the knickers and looked at herself in the mirror. She
thought they were vulgar and pointedly immoral, but in her heart she gloated over them. After all they were quite nice if worn in a proper manner
and  for  an  equally proper purpose. Beauty for beauty's sake. She would have to consider knickers and other things. Absorbed in these thoughts,
her  eyes  travelled  up the mirror and encountered her face. After a moment's scrutiny she turned away, her shoulders drooping. She felt foolish
and  defeated.  Desolation  filled  her heart. As she lay on the bed in her startling attire she looked like a bedraggled doll which some worldly
person had dressed in a moment of caprice and then abandoned for other pursuits.

Her  outbursts  of  grief  expended,  she sprang up and, tearing off the offending garment, trampled it under her feet. Then quite reasonably she
picked  up  the  knickers, carefully folded them and put them away for safe keeping. After this she prepared herself for bed and switched off the
light. Later, when her husband wearily sank down beside her, she pretended to be asleep.




CHAPTER XIII Escape


Before the sun had set Mr. Topper had left a trail of dust across his native state and carried warfare deep into the heart of Connecticut. Like a
floating  mine  in  an  ocean lane he endangered the safety and ruined the happiness of all creatures who came his way. His intentions were above
reproach  had  he  been  able to execute them, but in this he failed lamentably. He was a travelling display of frightfulness, a menace to moving
traffic.  The  curses of his fellow-creatures followed him down the road. He had never before realised how vindictive, how utterly given to fury,
automobilists  were.  Sarcasm, insults and jeers, all were flung at Mr. Topper, and all found their mark. He shrank within himself and placed his
destiny  in  the hands of God. But long hours of sustained driving effected a gradual change in his spirits, and towards sunset it was Topper who
was  shouting  bitter  oaths  at  passing  automobiles. Each oath increased his confidence and self-respect, until at last he came to regard with
malicious pleasure the approach of another car, epithets fairly boiling on his tongue.

"They've tried to ruin my day for me," he thought. "I might as well get back at them now."

When not engaged in roadside altercations, Mr. Topper's thoughts strayed back to home. He was heavily depressed to find that he lacked the thrill
of escape.

In  the  early  morning, under the stimulus of the previous evening's scene, he had left his wife, his bed and the knickers to settle the dispute
among  themselves,  and  stolen  forth  to  the  garage, where the secretly prepared automobile was waiting to carry him to liberty. As he passed
through the sitting-room Scollops, abandoned to sleep, was lying in his chair. Lying is hardly the word. Moulded would be more descriptive of the
cat's  contact with the yielding upholstery. Given a sufficient length of time, Scollops might have grown to the chair, so much a part of her had
she made it already.

It  was  not  without  pride that Topper regarded his cat. She had selected his chair for her slumbers. Possibly she sensed he was near. Topper's
unconscious  craving  to  be  loved  made  him  overlook  the  fact that his was the most comfortable chair in the room, and being such naturally
recommended  itself  to  Scollops'  practical mind. His knowledge of cats was hardly more extensive than his knowledge of women. In some respects
Topper was more fortunate than he realised.

He had stooped over the sleeping creature and run his hand along her luxurious side. A short,surprised bubbling sound signified that although she
appreciated  the attention, she could do nothing about it at present, complete rest being her most urgent need. However, he could stand there and
continue to stroke her if it gave him any pleasure. She rather enjoyed it.

Topper  was  now  thinking  of  Scollops as he had last seen her. He was wondering whether he should have brought her along. Perhaps she might be
forced to suffer vicarious atonement for his sins. That would be too bad. After due consideration he decided that an automobile was as much as if
not  more  than  he  could  well manage, and that Scollops would have complicated things to the breaking point. Yet the fact remained that he was
lonely.  He  almost  wished he had taken Marion Kerby along for at least the first stage of the trip, but when he recalled the humiliation of the
previous day, he felt glad that he had not given in to this weakness--nay, madness.

A  slight  misunderstanding with an inter-urban trolley car forced him to concentrate on the business of keeping alive, and when next he had time
to glance at his surroundings he found with relief that he was in a town which gave the appearance of being large enough to support life.

The hotel was even more than he had hoped for or expected. It was so self-consciously modern that it wore an injured air. A negro bell boy fairly
snapped  at  his  bags  and bore them away in triumph down a colonnaded hall. Mr. Topper, hardly less triumphant at having arrived intact at some
destination,  no matter where, followed at a more leisurely pace. Then it was that the hotel, or at least that part of it assembled in the lobby,
received  a  decided  shock.  As  Mr. Topper approached the desk two books pursued him down the hall. The negro bell boy on seeing the phenomenon
dropped  the bags and began to look for wires or for any other rational explanation of this unprecedented occurrence. Unable to find a comforting
solution,  he  held  on  to  the desk and shivered while looking pathetically at the clerk. Unfortunately for the bell boy the clerk was too much
preoccupied with his own feelings to share his moral courage with others. By the strained attention of the clerk's features Mr. Topper could tell
that  something  was  wrong. And when the two books thrust themselves under Mr. Topper's arm he knew that all was wrong. He snatched at the books
and offered them to the clerk.

"They're not mine," announced Mr. Topper lyingly. "You'd better take care of them."

"I won't touch them," replied the clerk, withdrawing from the books.

"Well, you take them," said Mr. Topper, turning to the bell boy. "Someone here must own them."

The bell boy shivered himself out of reach.

"They followed you," he muttered. "They didn't follow me. I don't read, boss. Please point those books the other way."

"Damn it, then, I'll throw them here,"exclaimed Topper, tossing the books into a chair. "Give me a room and bath."

The clerk, still eyeing the books suspiciously, reached for a key and handed it to the reluctant bell boy.

"Take him away," he said, briefly.

As Topper turned to follow his bags he cast it swift, pleading glance at the abandoned books.

"Don't follow me," he muttered. "This is serious."

On  his  way  to  the elevator he could not resist the temptation to look back. He felt sure that he saw the books fluttering entreatingly in the
chair.  It  was  like  leaving  a  dog  behind, one that was not to be trusted. Only when the elevator door had closed with a satisfying clang of
finality did Mr. Topper breathe a sigh of relief.

Once in his room he endeavoured to regain his composure. Looking coldly at the bell boy, he said, "Bring me some ice water and the evening paper,
a New York paper if they have them here."

The  sound of the closing door synchronised with a terrible scream. Mr. Topper, completely unnerved, rushed to the door and looked out. Two books
were  coming  stealthily down the hall. The bell boy was flattened against the wall, and every time he screamed the books stopped as if undecided
what  course  to  pursue  under  the circumstances. And every time the books stopped the bell boy put his hands over his eyes and replenished his
spent lungs with air for further efforts.

Mr. Topper was speechless. He wanted to tell the bell boy not to scream, but he could only speak in a whisper.

"Don't scream, little bell boy," he heard himself saying. "Don't scream and I'll give you a dollar."

But  money made no impression on the bell boy. Avarice had been cleansed from his soul. He was purified by fear. And as the books drew abreast of
him  and made a vicious dart in his direction he sank to the floor. For a moment the two volumes danced wickedly over the fallen negro, then with
surprising  swiftness  flashed  into  Mr. Topper's room, and with an ill-tempered bang deposited themselves upon the table. Mr. Topper closed the
door, but not before he had had time to catch a glimpse of the bell boy worming his way in the direction of the elevator.

Still  unable  adequately  to  express  his feelings in words, Mr. Topper sank into a chair and gazed down on the street. The worst had happened.
Nothing  hereafter could ever be quite so bad. Had he remained at home with Scollops he would have been far better off. Even Mrs. Topper with her
indigestion  and her sighs would have been preferable to this. He should have stopped at the local mad-house instead of the hotel. What were they
talking  about  downstairs?  The  long  twilight was streaming out and the room was growing dark. Fearfully he let his eyes rest on the books. He
cleared his throat suggestively.

Well," he said at last, "you might as well speak. I know you're here. Why deny it?"

"But I haven't said a word," came a surprised voice from the direction of the wastepaper-basket.

"Then don't," said Mr. Topper. "And try to pick out less disturbing places to settle in."

There  was  no  reply,  but  the  window  shade rolled down with a sudden snap and the electric lights as suddenly flashed into being. Mr. Topper
started nervously.

"You're always trying to be so helpful," he remarked petulantly. "Where the devil are you?"

Like a blind man endeavouring to locate a voice he looked round the room, a baffled light in his eyes.

"For God's sake say something," he exclaimed. "What are you doing now? What are you going to do?"

"For the moment I'm roosting on the chandelier," came Marion Kerby's familiar voice, "but I'll be down presently."

"When are you going for good?"

"Why, I hadn't intended to go," she replied. "I'd decided we'd better take a good long rest and make an early start in the morning."

"We," he said. "How do you mean 'we'? I won't ever go to bed unless you clear out."

"What's the difference?" she asked. "What's so strange about 'we'?"

"You're  too  depraved  to understand," replied Mr. Topper. "Merely because you claim you're not legally bound to your husband don't get the idea
that you are to me."

"But there are twin beds here," she protested. "And it's been such a long day."

"If they were triplets it wouldn't change my mind," said Mr. Topper.

"Prude," she jeered.

"Why?"  asked Topper. "You seem to think that you should enjoy not only all the privileges of a spirit but also the few comforts that are left to
mortal beings."

"Why not?" she answered. "You forget I am quite low-planed."

"Not for a moment," said Mr. Topper. "You never give me the chance."

Marion Kerby laughed.

"I choose the bed by the window," she said. "You can sleep on the inside. You'll be out of the draught."

"That's  very  thoughtful  of  you," replied Mr. Topper, "but you don't quite understand. I have a lot of things to do, none of which requires an
invisible  audience.  I  must  shave  and  exercise and take my bath, and damn me if I'll have you floating about this room while I'm doing these
things."

"I'll hide my head in the pillow," she suggested.

"But it wouldn't be humanly possible for you to keep it there."

"Don't judge others by yourself."

"I can't in this case," said Mr. Topper. "It isn't fair. You're invisible and I can't see you, but I'm quite solid and you can see me."

"Are you making advances?" asked Marion Kerby.

"Not at all! " exclaimed Mr. Topper.

"For if you are," she continued, "I can very easily alter the situation. Just to show you what a good sport I am I'll materialise."

"Don't  do  that,"  said  Mr.  Topper.  "Most  emphatically  not.  Get the idea out of your head. There are laws against such things, unpleasant,
illogical laws. Do you want me arrested again?"

As Marion Kerby began to laugh at Mr. Topper's consternation there was a knock on the door and a bell boy entered, a new bell boy.

"Stop laughing," commanded Mr. Topper.

"But I'm not, sir," said the bell boy.

"Oh, I thought you were," replied Mr. Topper. "It must have been my suit-case. It squeaks."

A smothered sound descended from the chandelier. Both Topper and the bell boy glanced up.

"That pipe needs fixing," remarked Mr. Topper.

"Anything else, sir?" said the boy, hastily placing the water and the newspaper on the table.

"I hope not," Topper replied earnestly. "I certainly hope not."

The bell boy withdrew without waiting for a tip. Mr. Topper locked the door.

"That sounds interesting," said the chandelier. "I'm so excited."

"Don't be lewd," Mr. Topper snapped. "Do you realise I haven't dined?"

For an answer he felt two arms twining round his neck and two lips touching his cheeks. In spite of himself he was thrilled.

"Stop all this," he said. "I dislike any show of emotion."

A low laugh sounded in his ears and his hair began to move strangely on his head. Marion Kerby was playfully rumpling her victim.

"Please," protested Mr. Topper. "This is most uncanny."

"I'm  just bidding you good night," she replied. "You lied to me about going away, but I'll forgive you. Don't worry. I wouldn't sleep in here if
you begged me. You go down and have your dinner, get a good night's sleep and I'll be waiting for you in the morning."

"Where?" he asked suspiciously.

"In the car," she replied. "Good night."

Topper  suddenly  felt himself alone. He could not tell why, but he knew that Marion Kerby was no longer in the room. The place seemed empty. And
strangely enough he did not feel relieved. Nevertheless as he left the room he took the precaution to remark aloud:

"I'm not going to read. Leave the books alone."

After a hearty dinner, taken outside the hotel, he returned to his room and prepared himself for bed. For some reason he trusted Marion Kerby. He
felt  sure  that  she  would  not  take advantage of his solidity. Yet why had he not taken advantage of her offer to materialise? Topper was not
accustomed  to  sleeping  alone.  It would have been jolly to have had a companion. A real one. With a backward thought of Scollops and a forward
thought of the morrow he switched off the lights and settled into bed. Mrs. Topper stalked his dreams. She was standing at a cross-roads gloomily
directing traffic, and every time he attempted to go her yellow hand held back his car.

It was after one of these irritating dreams that he awoke to hear regular breathing coming from the bed at his side. He was shocked beyond words.
What an outrageous thing to do after her promise. He thrust his hand out in the darkness and shook the bed.

"Wake up," he whispered piercingly. "Wake up. You can't stay in here."

"Oh, let me alone," came the sleepy rejoinder. "Don't bother me. I've had to stand your driving all day long."

"Don't argue," whispered Mr. Topper. "Get up at once and go away. Sleep in the garage."

"Sleep there yourself."

"But, Marion," continued Topper, trying another tack. "This isn't right. Your husband is a friend of mine."

"Well, I slept with him for years."

"How shameless."

Not at all. One would think I was trying to seduce you."

"I know you're not, but you're making a nervous wreck out of me. I value your husband's friendship."

Marion Kerby laughed mirthlessly.

"It wouldn't be worth a cent if he saw us now," she said.

"When's he due back?" asked Mr. Topper, after a moment's thought.

"You can't tell," she replied. "He might drop in at any minute."

This information contributed little to Mr. Topper's happiness. He looked morosely out into the darkness.

"I could never explain," he remarked as if to himself.

"You wouldn't have time," said Marion.

"Then why not be sensible and go away?"

"Because I'm very comfortable where I am, thank you."

"Oh, dear," he said to the darkness. "I'd rather sleep in the bathtub."

"Go on and sleep in the bathtub. Turn on the water and pull it up over your ears."

Mr. Topper made no answer, but sat hunched up in his bed. Suddenly he jumped. Marion Kerby was yawning in his ear.

"Oh, give me a kiss," she said, "and let's get some sleep."

"This is downright ghastly," he muttered. "Haven't you any morals at all?"

"Hardly any."

"Well, I have a few left. Try to remember that."

He  sank  back  into  the  bed  and  gathered the coverings tightly about him. Several minutes of silence passed as he listened to Marion Kerby's
regular breathing.

"Won't you please go away?" he said at last.

"If you don't stop waking me up," she replied irritably, "I'll start screaming and let in the whole hotel."

Before  this  threat Mr. Topper wilted. He buried his head in the pillow and remained silent. His desperate desire to be elsewhere drove him into
oblivion,  but  this  time  Mrs.  Topper  did not disturb his dreams. Instead, he was in his pyjamas and Marion Kerby was chasing him through the
corridors  of  the  hotel.  All the doors were open and people were crowding in them. As he sped down innumerable miles of carpet, grinning faces
greeted  him  on  either  side and ironical cheers of encouragement followed his headlong flight. And the most terrible thing of all was that his
pyjamas were threatening to part.

"If I trip now," he thought to himself, "I'll be a marked man for life."




CHAPTER XV The Singing Shower-Bath


Like  a spent runner breasting the tape with his last stride Topper awoke in the morning. By languid stages he rolled himself to the floor, where
his feet unconsciously fumbled the carpet for their slippers. As he stood in the middle of the room tentatively fingering his disordered hair, he
allowed  his  eyes to dwell on the other bed. For some moments he regarded this object with scant interest, then gradually his sluggish faculties
assimilated  the  fact  that  what he beheld gave every appearance of having been occupied. The coverings of the bed presented a scene of opulent
disorder.  Once  Mr.  Topper  fully appreciated the significance of this discovery it was but a matter of a moment for him to act on it. With far
greater speed and decision than he had displayed in quitting his own bed the dismayed man now returned to it. There, huddled in the coverings, he
considered his desperate plight, his eyes bleakly searching the room for some source of comfort.

"Marion," he called at last, his voice softly pleading with space. "Marion, I must get up now. Do be a good girl and run along."

As  if  in  answer to his words the shower began merrily to prattle in the bathroom. To Mr. Topper's shrinking ears it sounded like a deluge. And
out  of  the  rush of water a slight song came winging through the door. The words and music belonged to Marion Kerby. Topper's fingers nervously
plucked at the sheets as he listened to the song:

"I  once  was  a lady as you may divine, Though the fact it is hard for to see, Rare beauty and riches and romance were mine, Before I ran into a
tree. My husband he did it. The devil would drive, The high-flying, low-lying soak. And that is the reason I'm no more alive, For he ran me smack
into an oak."

Mr.  Topper  shuddered  at  the  word "smack" and sprang from the bed. It was all too horrible. How could she sing about the accident? And such a
song!  "Smack  into  an  oak"--a  ghastly  picture. Casting his robe round him, he walked with dignity to the door of the bathroom, upon which he
knocked vigorously.

"Come out of there," he commanded, transferring his attention to the knob. "Stop that wailing noise. You're splashing water all over everything."

"You  just  leave me alone now," came the reply with unexpected heat. "I'm tired of your airs and graces. Only wait until you take a shower. I'll
raise hell with you then."

Topper  regarded the door with a mixture of fear and reproach. What a creature of fury she was. And he had only said a word. The possibilities of
her  retaliations  made  him  thoughtful.  There  was no telling what she might do. Then once more the indignity of the situation over-topped his
better judgment. He returned to the combat.

"I'd  very  much like to know," he demanded, "why you persist in considering this situation as normal when obviously there's nothing normal about
it.  Answer  me  that.  What  right have you to become so threatening and furious? You're haunting me. I'm not haunting you. This is my vacation.
Can't you get that through your head?"

"Nonsense," came from the shower. "Ladies must bathe."

"But,  Marion,  you're  not  a  lady,"  Mr. Topper protested. "Not any longer. Once you might have been, although I have good reason to doubt it.
You're only a spirit now and you're supposed to have taken your last bath. If you overlooked your opportunities when you had them, why monopolise
mine now?"

"What low insinuations," the shower retorted. "Just wait till I get you in here."

"You'll never get me in there," Mr. Topper answered. "Never! "

"But it's such a lovely shower."

"Then hurry up and come out of it. I've lots of things to do."

"You don't know what you're asking," came insinuatingly from the shower. "You see I materialised just for the occasion, but if you insist . . ."

"I don't," Mr. Topper interrupted hastily. "Only please dematerialise and go away."

"Then where are my knickers?"

"Good God, what a question to ask! I know nothing about your knickers."

"You do so. We stole them in New York."

"Oh," he replied, his face clearing. "I gave them to my wife."

The shower was seized with convulsions.

"She'd look like a staggering sunset in those knickers," it gasped moistly.

"Stop saying things about my wife," Mr. Topper replied, shaking the door knob.

"Not unless you try to be more pleasant."

"How about yourself? Will you try to keep within reason?"

"Yes," she replied. "I'll try. I'll do my best."

"And you'll respect my privacy hereafter and get me into no more scrapes?"

"Absolutely, my little chastling."

Mr. Topper thought quickly. He realised the futility of continuing hostilities. Marion Kerby had every advantage in her favour, and she would use
it without honour. Perhaps after all it would be wiser to call a truce with this untamed spirit.

"All right," he said. "I'm game. From now on we'll try to enjoy ourselves. This sort of thing is spoiling my trip. What do you say to a truce?"

"I say yes," she heartily agreed.

The  flood  suddenly  subsided  and the door flew open. Topper stepped back, but not in time to save himself from the embrace of two fresh though
invisible arms.

"Behold," said a voice in his ear, "your instruments of torture have been laid out by loving hands. Come in and see what I've done."

"That's  all very nice," replied Mr. Topper. "And I appreciate your thought, but don't go too far. I know all about shower-baths. I will join you
later."

"Then hurry like everything," she urged as she released him. "Let's prepare for fresh adventures now that we're friends again."

"No more fresh adventures," admonished Topper, thrusting his head through the partly opened door. "Leave fresh adventures out of it. The few I've
had with you will never stale."

Topper  was  one who dwelt lovingly over his toilet. In his blood there was something of the Roman emperor. He gloried in steam and tiles. He was
never  happier  than when allowed to occupy his bathroom unmolested, an occasion which occurred only too rarely in his own household. He made the
most  of  his  new-found  freedom  and soaked himself to his heart's content. When at last he emerged glowing from the sweating walls he was both
surprised  and delighted to find breakfast already awaiting him. It was appetisingly arranged on a table, from which a fork was busily engaged in
conveying  scrambled  eggs  to  nowhere. To Mr. Topper it was a painful sight. As the fork rose from the plate and daintily poised itself for the
thrust he watched with fascinated eyes the amazing disappearance of its burden. Marion Kerby's voice interrupted his contemplation.

"Sit down," she said briskly. "Everything is getting cold. I couldn't wait."

The fork made a quick jab in his direction.

"Don't apologise," he replied, sliding into a chair. "I'll sit down, but before I begin to eat answer me one question. How is it that you can put
something into nothing and make it disappear?"

"It's a gift," she explained. "I just gulp it down into the fourth dimension and there it is changed into so much extra ectoplasm."

Mr. Topper tried to smile, but he felt that he was rapidly losing his appetite.

"Its all clear," he said, "but the gulping. Do you have to gulp when you eat?"

"Don't  be insulting," she replied, with the fork poised in mid air. "It's merely that I'm ravenous after the shower. Absolutely starved. I don't
get a chance to eat very often."

"Then don't let me stand in your way now," Mr. Topper urged gallantly. "Go right ahead and gulp. I'm a trifle greedy myself."

For  several  minutes  no  sounds disturbed the tranquillity of the room save those occasioned by eating. Presently, however, Mr. Topper, who had
been glancing at his companion with increasing alarm, was forced to speak.

"You'll pardon me," he said, "if I seem to turn away when you gulp your coffee. I can't quite get used to the sight and it gives me the strangest
feeling. Every time you tilt your cup I expect to see the coffee splash all over the table."

"Oh, you'll get used to that in time," she answered encouragingly.

"I'm no longer in rompers," he remarked. "But I never miss," she assured him.

"That's just it," he replied. "It would seem more natural if you did."

In the middle of his next mouthful a new fear interrupted his activities.

"How," he demanded, swallowing quickly, "how did you manage to bring this breakfast into being?"

"I telephoned for it," she answered.

Mr. Topper started from his chair.

"My God! " he cried. "They'll think I had a woman in my room all night."

"Sit down," she commanded, "and don't be so jumpy or I will spill my coffee. I imitated your voice perfectly. In fact, I was quite ladylike."

As Mr. Topper resumed his chair Marion Kerby began to laugh.

"Why that?" he asked.

"Because  I made one mistake," she answered. "I told the boy to set the tray down outside the door, but when I went to get it he was still there.
Well, naturally you can picture to yourself how mystified he was when he saw the tray slide in, as it were, by itself."

"Only too vividly," said Mr. Topper.

"He did look so upset," she added.

"Don't dwell on it," pleaded Mr. Topper. "I've seen too much tragedy as it is. Was it the first boy?"

"It was."

"Then you have probably killed him."

He poured another cup of coffee and drank deeply.

"If not you have driven him mad," he concluded. "Completely unhinged his mind."

He  rose  wearily  from  the  table and prepared to depart. Marion Kerby made herself helpful. Combs and brushes, shirts and shaving things moved
mysteriously  across the room and arranged themselves in the suit-case. Mr. Topper, observing this, felt surprised that he was no longer alarmed.
He was becoming accustomed to the situation. Placing the books securely in one of the bags, he strapped his luggage and locked it.

"Remember," he said, "I trust you. No monkey business, no helpfulness. If I'm not arrested I'll meet you in the car. Wait for me there."

"I won't do a thing," she promised. "Our first night was delightful."

"Such remarks are better left unsaid," he replied as he closed the door.

Marion  Kerby  was  as good as her word. She allowed him to leave the hotel without further complications. In spite of this Mr. Topper was hardly
regarded  with  warmth by the personnel of the establishment. The bell boys seemed inclined to avoid him, and had he desired to take advantage of
his  sinister  reputation  it  is  highly  possible  the  management  would  have  accepted  his absence in lieu of payment. The leave-taking was
characterised  by  a  spirit  of  mutual  relief.  As  no  one  offered  to take his bags he carried them himself and was well satisfied with the
arrangement. Marion Kerby was waiting for him in the car.

"You know," she said, "I'm afraid you'll have to take me shopping. If I'm to go along with you I'll need a few things."

Mr.  Topper  protested  strongly,  and  it  was only after the threat of strange and fearful embarrassments swiftly to follow his refusal that he
finally  agreed to stop his car in front of the lavishly littered windows of a department store. Here at the girl's dictation he wrote out a list
of purchases.

"Not that," he objected after the mention of a certain article.

"Absolutely," she insisted. "You gave my knickers to your wife. Now you must buy me knickers. I revel in them."

"Well, you won't revel with me," he said as he mopped his face and made for the store.

Marion  Kerby  kept  close  to his elbow and nudged him whenever she had decided on a purchase. In a faint voice Mr. Topper asked for the various
articles  and stood perspiring until his invisible companion had made her selection. The saleswomen eyed him suspiciously, but he refused to meet
their  eyes.  Had  it  not  been  for  a disturbing disposition on Marion Kerby's part to possess herself unlawfully of certain small articles by
slipping  them  into  his  pockets,  Mr. Topper would have found nothing radically wrong with her conduct. Whenever he endeavoured to replace the
things,  she  pinched  his  arm  so  viciously that he was forced to abandon his attempts to remain an honest man. After innumerable purchases he
consulted the list, then mutteringly addressed his arm.

"We've bought all the things," he said. "Let's get out."

"All right," she whispered. "I'll go first."

As  she  did  so  she succeeded in attaching herself to a red cape and sport hat draped on a near-by model. The model swayed perilously as it was
being bereft of its attire. Mr. Topper stepped back and regarded the scene with despairing eyes. Then he looked about for another exit, but could
find  none. The model, looking rather summery, settled back to rest, and the hat and cape proceeded jauntily down the aisle. At first no one save
Mr.  Topper noticed the unusual spectacle, but as the hat and cape continued on their triumphal progress the early morning shoppers began to fall
back until finally the passage was lined with mute, inquiring faces.

Mr. Topper, vividly recalling his dream of the previous night, refused to follow the retreating garments. He mingled with the crowd and pretended
to look surprised. The effect was that of a dangerously ill man.

"I would have bought the damn things," he kept thinking. "Why didn't she give me the chance?"

Finally, a shopwalker caught sight of the animated hat and cape. Perhaps he did not fully understand the situation, but he did seem to appreciate
the fact that high-class merchandise was rapidly departing from the store in a new and altogether unauthorised manner. Whether he was an intrepid
man  or  an  extremely  dull  one  can  never be established. Perhaps he was both, as so often is the case. The fact remains that this particular
shopwalker  uttered  a  cry  of  protest  and darted in pursuit of the hat and cape. At the sound of his voice these articles stopped and the hat
peered back inquiringly over the shoulder of the cape. It was a bizarre effect. A woman screamed and fainted, her parcels rolling over the floor.
The  hat  and  cape,  as if startled, bounded down the aisle and, with a final flourish of red, disappeared through the door. But the shop-walker
followed no further. He had completely changed his mind. All resolution had departed from his body. The poised, almost near-sighted expression of
the hat as it had looked back over the shoulder of the cape had overcome his sense of duty. He recalled the awful galloping motion of the runaway
articles  and pressed his hands to his eyes. Before he would involve himself any further in this strange business every stitch of clothing in the
establishment could march away in ghastly single file.

For  a few seconds after the disappearance of the hat and cape a solemn silence settled over all beholders, then this was shattered by the babble
of  many voices. Mr. Topper, suddenly realising that his pockets were bulging with stolen goods, and that his arms were filled with bundles, took
advantage of the confusion and hurried to his automobile, driving off at full speed. He thought he heard voices, but he refused to look back.

"I would have bought those things," he muttered. "Why didn't you ask me?"

"But  you  had  bought so many things already," Marion Kerby's voice replied. "I didn't want to put you to so much expense . . . and they were so
attractive. I've always wanted something red."

"I'd rather be paupered than paralysed," he retorted, eyeing the road ahead for some luckless automobilist to assault.

A promising candidate came in sight, but at the same moment a red cape swam before his eyes and out of the mist he heard Marion Kerby saying:

"Look at it, old dear. Wasn't it worth the trouble?"

"Put that thing away," he shouted. "I can't see to drive. You'll have us both arrested and killed."

The cape fluttered dejectedly to the floor of the car.

"From the way you fling it about," he grumbled, "you'd think I'd been born in a bull ring." The cape quivered timidly.

"Stop doing that!" he exclaimed. "It makes me nervous."

Several miles of silence ensued, then Mr. Topper remarked moodily, "I wish I had."

"What?" asked Marion Kerby, unable to restrain her curiosity.

"Been born in a bull ring," he flung back. "I might never have lived to see this day."

At  this  the cape rose from the floor and sat down by Mr. Topper. Its shoulders were shaking gleefully. He regarded the garment with a jaundiced
eye.

"Your sense of humour," he remarked, "would do justice to a hangman."

At this moment an automobile flashed by and Mr. Topper automatically transferred his insults to its driver, but Marion Kerby paid no attention to
his mood. She was happily counting the bundles and searching through his pockets with nimble fingers.




CHAPTER XV Such a Restful Place!


Mid-afternoon on a back country road. Shadows from close-pressing trees cast scrolls across the dust. An automobile snakes gracefully past a farm
waggon  and  disappears  round  a  bend  in  the road. With a disturbed expression in his eyes, the driver of the waggon gazes after the vanished
automobile.  Presently  he  sighs deeply, and gathering up the reins in a preoccupied manner urges his team onward. Little profit, he decides, in
idle  speculation.  What  he has just seen he has not seen. That was the only satisfactory way out of it. In spite of this philosophic conclusion
the  man  knew  in  his heart that the driving seat of the automobile had been unoccupied, and that the machine had performed a difficult passing
apparently  unaided  by  any  human  guidance.  He  never spoke of the incident to any of his friends. The mere thought of it gave him a helpless
feeling. But the memory lay buried in his heart, and to his dying day it remained a mystifying and inexplicable fact, but nevertheless a fact.

A few miles down the road the automobile had halted in a clearing. From the automobile emerged a red cape and hat accompanied by several bundles.
This  singular  group,  after a moment's hesitation, disappeared into the woods. Presently from the automobile drifted a blue cloud of smoke. The
smoke  had  in  turn  drifted  from  Mr.  Topper.  He  was smoking one of his favourite cigars and feeling quite set up about it. In spite of her
momentary weakness in the department store, Marion Kerby had succeeded in restoring him to a high state of good humour. So much so, in fact, that
he had permitted her to drive the car. It had been a secret relief to him. He had sat and rested his nerves.

"I know every road in the state," she had said. "Let's get off the beaten track."

"By all means," he had answered. "As far off as possible."

Now  Mr. Topper sat smoking and comfortably considering life. He was far off the beaten track and soothed by a feeling of security. After all, he
mused, Marion Kerby was not so hopeless as at times he had considered her to be. Unscrupulous she was, to be sure, and unreliable to a fault, but
just  the  same she was an amusing companion. What experiences he had been through since he had first met her. What mad, unbelievable adventures.
And  he, the staid Topper, had played a part in them. Almost too prominent a part, he thought, as he leaned back with a smile and fondly eyed his
cigar.  Then,  as  if  from  the sting of a wasp, he straightened up. Hadn't she told him the previous night that her husband might return at any
moment?  It  was  an  alarming  thought.  Topper  knew  he was blameless, but would George Kerby take a similar view of the situation? Marion had
deliberately  wished  herself  on an upright man. Any reasonable person would quickly understand that. However, George Kerby was not a reasonable
person. Anything but that. Charming and generous he might be, but certainly not reasonable. Topper moved uneasily and glanced at the woods.

"Marion," he called in a subdued voice.

"Presently," came the cheerful reply. "Just a minute now."

It  was  slightly  more  than  a  minute  before  the hat and cape came out of the woods, but Mr. Topper felt well repaid for waiting. The looted
garments  were  now splendidly filled by a sprightly young woman whose disturbing eyes impertinently mocked at Topper from beneath the brim of an
exceedingly smart red hat. Mr. Topper, observing her with approval, had to admit that she had stolen with discrimination.

"You look great," he said with eloquent inadequacy.

"Do you think so?" she asked. "I'm just as pretty all over. Want to see? Everything's so new."

"Don't," exclaimed Mr. Topper. "You're always trying to upset me."

"Very well," she replied, getting into the car, "but just the same I am. I'm very pleased with me."

"Then don't be childish."

"I'd like to be," she sighed. "It was so lovely there in the woods."

"And you were the loveliest thing in them," Mr. Topper replied, in site of himself.

For an answer she violently embraced him, smiting his cheek with a kiss. Topper, highly indignant, managed to free himself.

"Every time I say a kind word to you," he complained, "you practically assault me."

"But I receive so few kind words," she explained. "And I'm terribly impulsive."

"Then  try  to  appreciate  my position," admonished Mr. Topper, "and try to respect it. And while we are on the subject, when do you expect your
husband back? Last night you said . . ."

"Oh,  that was just to frighten you," she interrupted. "George won't be back for months, and even if he did return he'd never find us where we're
going."

"Where's that?" asked Topper with interest.

"I'll show you presently."

"Not presently, but instantly," he urged. "Let's go there without delay. I long for peace and quiet."

Marion  Kerby took the wheel and, after several hours of what seemed to Mr. Topper to be exceedingly obscure driving, they paused on the crest of
a  high  hill  before taking the dip into the valley below. Far across the intervening space, many green leagues away, Topper saw the setting sun
sending  its  streams of colours across a field ofdeepening blue. The clouds seemed like castles with ramparts edged with gold. There was turmoil
in  the  sky.  Cohorts  of  silver and scarlet charged down the west and assaulted the castle clouds. And in the vast confusion of the sunset Mr.
Topper  saw,  low  to  the  horizon,  dim lights drifting behind the trees. Both Topper and his companion watched this kaleidoscopic overthrow of
nature  with  deep,  thoughtful  eyes,  a little touched with the melancholy appreciation of those who look too long upon the sun at its setting.
Topper moved a cramped leg and looked at the girl beside him.

"It's quite good," he remarked diffidently. "What do you think?"

"Don't ask me what I think," she replied. Then with a shrug of her shoulders, "I find the damn thing garish."

"It struck me, too, as being a trifle overdone." She threw him a quick smile and pressed his hand.

"Remember the last one we saw together?"

Topper  made  no reply, but looked unhappily at his shoes. He had a feeling inside of being quite lost. He attributed it to hunger, but strangely
enough he was wishing that for once in his life he had fallen desperately and forgetfully in love. It was like trying to trace a vague perfume to
its  source.  Once  in  the lobby of a hotel a woman had passed Mr. Topper's chair. After she had gone there remained behind a subtle, disturbing
fragrance.  Mr.  Topper had failed to notice the woman, but he had become keenly aware of the perfume lingering in the air. It was floating round
him  now.  Why had he not risen and followed the woman instead of sitting troubled by the faint breath of romance? Why had he always lost himself
in  the  evening  paper  instead of looking over its edge for possible adventures? Had Mrs. Topper anything to do with it? Perhaps. He remembered
that on this occasion he had been patiently waiting for her. Romance? No go, there. She had arrived with voluble indigestion and a secret craving
for  food.  In propitiating the one and appeasing the other, the desire for romance and adventure had collapsed in Mr. Topper's heart. Instead of
following a haunting fragrance he had followed his wife through the tube, while listening to the trials of an unsuccessful shopping day.

With  a  start  he came back to his surroundings and glanced down at the small brown hand resting lightly on his rather fleshy one. At his glance
the  hand  was  quickly  withdrawn  and  Topper  was  surprised  to see two spots of pink appear on Marion Kerby's cheeks. He had not believed it
possible. Even now he was suspicious. She was probably plotting some crime.

"Don't look at me like that," she said.

"Like what?" Topper asked.

"Like a thwarted pup," she answered. "A pup bereft of milk. I never could stand hungry eyes."

"Are mine hungry?"

"Starved."

"Well, so am I. It's been a full day, but we've succeeded in remaining rather empty. When and where do we eat?"

"Do you see that lake down there?" she asked, pointing to the valley.

"I do now," he replied, "but I hadn't noticed it before. It looks so lost among the trees."

"That's  just  what  it  is,"  she  answered. "Years ago that little lake strayed away from its mother, and ever since then these hills have been
nursing  it here in secret. And every year the mother lake sends the streams and rivers in search of her lost lakelet, but these hills, which are
inclined to be barren, consider the foundling as theirs and jealously keep it locked away in the valley."

"Well,"  remarked  Mr.  Topper,  after a short pause, "now that you've about rung the change on that theme, let's go down and take a look at this
lost lake of yours. Perhaps there's some food to be found."

"No doubt there is, you prosaic beast," the girl replied as she started the machine. "There used to be a store at one end."

As  the  car descended the winding way the road grew deeper in shadows, and when they reached the border of the lake a dim film of daylight still
lingered over its still surface as if reluctant to leave this quiet spot.

To  Mr. Topper the lake seemed truly lost. And everything about the place partook of the same atmosphere. On its shores he could distinguish only
a  few  cottages,  and  even  these had an abandoned look about them. He felt that they must have crept away from some populous summer colony and
hidden  themselves  among  the  trees  to  rest.  About half-way up the opposite hill a large stone house cut a breach in the trees. A few lights
twinkled  in  the  upper windows, these golden specks of life serving only to intensify the solitude of the scene. For the first time in his life
Mr.  Topper  felt  really secure from the world and all its works. In such a place as this Marion Kerby could do her worst without disturbing his
peace of mind. It occurred to Mr. Topper that it would be a delightful sensation to strip himself naked and go running through the trees, to feel
the night on his body and to meet the earth like a free, unabashed creature of the earth. This was a radical thought for Mr. Topper, and happily,
some may feel, a passing one. It left him slightly sobered.

"Have you ever been here before?" he asked, sensing the precarious condition of his mind.

"Didn't I just tell you?" she answered. "I've been here lots of times. I used to come here to hide from George when he got on my nerves."

"God grant that we may be as successful this time," Mr. Topper breathed with unfeigned sincerity.

"Don't worry your head about him," she replied carelessly. "He's probably sound asleep in some low café at this very minute. We'll drive down to
the other end in search of food and shelter."

"Is there some sort of an inn about?"

"No, but the cottages look deserted."

Mr.  Topper did not entertain with enthusiasm the prospect of breaking into a deserted cottage, but as the only other alternative lay in sleeping
in the automobile he held his peace.

At  the end of the lake they found a small shop from which they purchased provisions of a compressed nature. By the time they had completed their
transactions  under  the  suspicious eye of the shopkeeper daylight had faded from the face of the lake. A world of stars looked down on them and
showered the dark water with a spray of golden coins, which danced and sparkled whenever a breeze moved from the shore.

"We'll have to park the car on this side," Marion Kerby said in a low voice. "The road ends here. We can walk round to the cottages by the path."

They  arranged  the automobile for the night and Mr. Topper, taking a suit-case in either hand, followed his guide along a root-filled path. From
time to time he tripped and cursed bitterly, but Marion Kerby urged him on to greater efforts with derisive words of encouragement. After passing
two  cottages  steeped  in  shadows, she selected the third and more imposing one. Leaving Topper perspiring on the veranda with his luggage, she
disappeared in the darkness. After what seemed to him an eternity of time he was startled to hear the door opening stealthily behind him.

"It's all jake," Marion whispered. "I found a reasonable window. Bring in the bags. This is a swish abode."

"It may be swish to you," he grumbled, stumbling in with the bags, "but to me it's far from homelike. We don't even know the owners."

"Would you like to meet them?" she asked from the darkness.

"Not at this minute," he admitted, dropping the bags to the floor. "Light up and let's see where we are."

With  the lighting of a candle the house sprang into terrifying reality to Mr. Topper. Every corner contained a shadow and every shadow contained
a possible danger. But Marion Kerby was delighted. The house, after a swift investigation, proved to be in a fair state of order. There were beds
and  they  were  ready  to receive occupants. Other equipment was present. Most gratifying of all there was an oil stove all ready to fulfill its
destiny.  These  discoveries  which, to Marion Kerby, were occasions for congratulation were, to Mr. Topper, sources of dismay. As Marion flitted
cheerfully round the place he edged towards the door.

"Stop chirping like that! " he exclaimed at last. "It's all clear to me. The owners have just gone out. They'll be back at any moment. Let's go."

"You'd  make  a  dangerous detective," she answered. "Doesn't your nose tell you that this place hasn't been open since last summer? Look at this
glass. It's dusty. And the table. I could write your name on it."

"Don't," said Mr. Topper. "Write yours. I require no publicity."

"Come back here then and sit down," she replied. "I'm going to air out the beds in our room."

Mr. Topper looked at her in blank astonishment.

"Do you mean to tell me," he finally managed to get out, "that in spite of all the beds in this house you're so depraved as to insist on sleeping
with me?"

"I just thought it would be more fun."

"Fun,"  he  repeated. "What has that to do with it? It might be fun to live in a harem, but right-thinking men don't do it. Fun fills the divorce
courts and digs untimely graves. Anyway, under the circumstances, I don't feel funny."

"Why don't you get up on the table and preach down at me?" she jeered. "Bring me back to the fold. Point the way to salvation."

"You should know more about the hereafter than I do," he remarked moodily.

She came over to him and placed her hands on his shoulders. He stepped back and tried to avoid her eyes.

"Now  don't  begin  to coax me," he said. "I won't hear a word of it. It was bad enough before you materialised, but now it is utterly out of the
question. Absolutely."

"Oh, give me a kiss," was all she said, and she took it.

Topper,  though  remarkably  pleased,  remained  adamant,  and after a certain amount of haggling they arrived at a compromise. They would occupy
connecting rooms. Topper thought that that was compromising enough.

"You know," she explained to him, "it's better that I should sleep close by so that I can protect you in case somebody comes."

This  last  argument  struck  Mr. Topper with so much force that he was tempted to ask her to disregard his previous objections. His conventional
training, however, overcame his natural timidity.

While  Marion  Kerby was preparing a supper of soup, beans and coffee he watched her with a mixture of admiration and dread. And when at last she
placed  the provender before him, dread faded away and only admiration remained. Truly she was a remarkable woman for one so loose. He thought of
his wife and sighed. Then his thoughts reverted to Scollops. He wondered how life was treating his cat, and whether or not she still slept in his
chair. While wondering he ate diligently with the appetite of a famished man. Food had never meant so much to Mr. Topper. Presently he halted and
looked up from his plate.

"Do you like cats?" he asked.

Before  his companion had time to answer Mr. Topper's jaw dropped, his face changed colour, and with dilated eyes he gazed over her shoulder. For
a moment she was too startled to complete her chewing. Then she rose from her chair and hurried to him.

"Are you choking?" she asked. "Can't you swallow?"

And with this she began to pound him on the back. Mr. Topper almost fell from his chair.

"I'm not choking," he gasped, "but I can't swallow. Oh, look!"

Marion was too alarmed to heed his words. She stopped thumping and began to tear at his shirt.

"I'll open your collar," she said, "and then you'll feel better."

At this Mr. Topper returned to speech.

"Hell, no! " he shouted. "Don't open my collar. Open a window instead. He's standing in the doorway right behind you."

In  an  instant  the situation was clear to Marion Kerby. Slowly and with great dignity she turned and beheld a rough-looking individual standing
exactly where Mr. Topper had said, in the door-way. In one hand he held a lantern, in the other an ugly-looking stick.

"Will you be good enough to tell me just what you are doing here?" she asked in a calm voice.

The man hesitated and looked at her with a surprised expression.

"Protecting the master's property," he replied. "He don't allow squatters here."

"Squatters," she replied in a puzzled voice.

"Squatters? Now what exactly are squatters? Sounds like some sort of a pigeon, or perhaps a fish. Are squatters fish?"

"If  yer  don't  understand what squatters is," said the man, "I'll change it to housebreakers, trespassers, undesirable people, thieves, loafers
or--"

"It's quite clear," interrupted the girl. "Don't go on. Now tell me who is the master you referred to?

He's Mr. Wilbur," the man replied.

"And where is he now?"

"He's in Europe, that's where he is."

"How odd!" she mused. "So is my husband."

"I'm her brother," put in Mr. Topper in consternation. "Her eldest brother. We're nice people and--."

The man glared at Mr. Topper and raised his stick threateningly. Mr. Topper sank back in his chair.

"Leave this to me," Marion whispered quickly, then advanced on the unwelcome visitor.

"For  some unfortunate reason," she said, "I haven't taken a fancy to you. It might not be your fault. I hope it isn't, but the fact remains that
now you must go. Take your little lantern and swagger stick and hop off. If not, God protect you."

"Quit yer bluffing," replied the man, "or I'll use this club on the both of yer."

Then a strange and terrible thing took place. The woman, facing the intruder, crumpled to the floor. Nothing remained of her save an inert bundle
of  clothing. Even Mr. Topper, as accustomed as he was to unexpected occurrences, sat horrified in his chair. The man looked down at the clothing
and strove to collect his wits.

"She's fainted," he suggested, looking hopefully at Topper.

Mr. Topper began to laugh hysterically.

"What's that?" asked the man suddenly as his hat snapped down over his eyes. He raised his hands to his hat, then quickly transferred them to his
stomach.  As the stick fell to the floor it was seized by an invisible hand and brandished in the air. With great force and accuracy it descended
on  the now prominent region of his reverse exposure, causing him to snap erect. His face was a study in terror as he fell on his hands and knees
and began to crawl to the door.

"Here's your lantern! " a voice cried. "Clear out quick!"

The voice was too much for the man. He staggered to his feet and without waiting for the lantern fled from the cottage; the lantern, following in
close  pursuit,  danced  crazily  in the darkness. Mr. Topper could trace the retreat of the man by the crashing of the bushes and the cries that
disturbed  the  night.  Gradually  these  sounds  subsided and silence settled down. Some minutes later the bundle of clothing began to stir. Mr.
Topper  saw  a confused mass of feminine apparel arrange itself in the air and assume the outlines of a woman. He closed his eyes to blot out the
sight, and when he opened them again Marion Kerby was standing before him.

"What were you saying about cats?" she asked, seating herself on the table.

"I don't know," said Mr. Topper. "Was I saying anything about cats?"

"It doesn't matter," she replied. "That bird won't be back to-night. I couldn't get him to take his lantern so I was forced to throw it at him."

She  slid  over to the dejected Topper and, curving an arm round his shoulder, sat heavily on his lap. Too weak to protest, he allowed her to sip
his coffee.

"I doubt if he ever comes back," she added reflectively.

"What do you mean?" asked Mr. Topper uneasily. "I hope you didn't kill him or maim him for life. Did you?"

"Not quite," she replied. "Almost, though. He called us squatters. I don't mind about myself, but I can't bear to think of you as a squatter."

"I don't mind being called a squatter," said Mr. Topper thoughtfully, "but I couldn't stand that club of his. Every time I looked at the thing it
gave me the shivers. There were knobs on it."

Marion Kerby jumped from his knees and squeezed his hand.

"Don't think of him any more," she said. "Let's go outside and contemplate the stars."

"I hope that's all we'll contemplate," replied Mr. Topper.

They  sat on the steps of the veranda and Marion rested her head on Mr. Topper's knee. Once more he thought of Scollops. Then he looked down into
the  girl's  eyes  and  saw that in them, too, there was an expression he could not fathom, but on this occasion he was thrilled instead of being
troubled.

"You know," she remarked, smiling up at him, "you're not my eldest brother. You're my first and only child."

"Well, from the way you're bringing me up," he replied, "you must be one of those Spartan mothers I read about in school."

"Certainly I am," she answered. "I'll make a man of you yet."

"Then  keep  the  door  open  between  us,"  said Mr. Topper. "I'm feeling far from well. If I dream about clubs to-night I'm likely to die in my
sleep."

He lit a cigar and looked down on the lake. "Nice night," he suggested.

"Great," she replied, snuggling closer to him. "I'll try a cigar, too."




CHAPTER XVI Enter the Colonel and Mrs. Hart


A  shaft  of  hazy  sunlight sifting through moist green leaves found its way into Mr. Topper's room. After fingering the bedspread delicately it
finally  crept  up  to  his  strangely  innocent-looking  face,  now  lying unprotected beneath a nocturnal gathering of whiskers. Topper stirred
fretfully  and rolled over on his side. In his heart there was a fierce desire to remain oblivious of life, but somewhere within his subconscious
lurked  a  painful  suspicion that all was not well with the world, or at least, that part of the world which he, Topper, personally occupied. He
half  opened  his  eyes  and squinted at the room. Had there not been a man with an ugly club? Yes, there had been such a man. And had not Marion
Kerby done violence to this person? The fact was not to be denied. Topper was clear about that.

"What  a  life!  "  he  thought  to himself. "What a series of calamities! Every morning I wake up in a different place and under more depressing
circumstances. It's like a curse."

Nevertheless,  when  he  arose  and stretched, he felt within himself a spirit of freedom and buoyancy that had never come to him during his more
orderly  regime.  He  liked  the  smell of the room. The forest had gathered close to the walls and drenched them with the fragrance of its fresh
green life. And he liked the way the sunlight sprayed upon the matting. Matting was a pleasant sort of an arrangement. He enjoyed the way it felt
on  his  bare feet. It made him think of swimming. Why it did he could not tell, but it did and that was enough. Topper could swim quite well. He
was  satisfied about his swimming. It was his only accomplishment. Marion Kerby would be surprised when she saw him in the water. His new bathing
things  were in the suit-case in her room. Rather bearishly he moved across the matting, examining unfamiliar objects and thinking half thoughts.
One of these thoughts was connected with Marion Kerby's room. It occurred to him that it really was not her room, nor was this one his. The rooms
belonged to someone else. They were being unlawfully occupied. Topper trod the matting no longer like an aimless bear. His step was more like the
stealthy tread of a criminal, a modest unassuming criminal. He hurried to the open door between the two rooms and thrust in a frightened face.

"Get up," he said. "We can't stay here for-ever. The whole neighbourhood will be down on us at any minute."

No answer came from the bed, for the reason that the bed was empty. As he regarded the tossed coverings an alarming suspicion chilled his heart.

"My  God,"  he  thought,  "she's  left me. At any other time I'd let her go gladly, but not now. She got me into this fix and she ought to get me
out."

With  a  heroic display of modesty, considering his overwrought condition, he flung on his bath-robe and hurried outside. The object of his quest
was not in sight, but he found on the table a partially empty cup of coffee. The pot on the stove was still warm.

"She's had coffee," he thought bitterly. "She would. Then she left me without even a word--left me sleeping."

He  went  to the door and peered miserably out on the sparkling face of the lake. The scene hurt his eyes. How could the world look so happy when
he  felt so sad? And how could he ever hope to escape in the full light of day with a suit-case in either hand? He was reluctant to face the day,
and  was  about to withdraw from it when something resembling a song floated to his ears. He recognised the voice and was filled with relief. The
song drifted mournfully to him from somewhere close at hand.

"Oh, I was a daisy and highly adored, The boys said as much to my face. But now I'm a spirit and terribly bored With oodles and oodles of space."

Topper  did  not care for the words, nor was he impressed by the long-drawn-out plaintiveness of the voice, but he was overjoyed to know that the
singer was approaching the cottage.

There  was  a thrusting sound in the foliage, and, after a few muttered imprecations concerning a certain blackberry bush, Marion Kerby, wild and
dishevelled,  appeared  at  the  foot of the steps. Topper regarded her with thankfulness, but not with approval. That he could not do. In either
hand  she  held  a bottle and under one arm there nestled another one. Altogether, Topper decided, it was a convincing display of greed. Her face
was flushed and her eyes sparkled dangerously. She was obviously pleased with herself and expected Topper to be.

"See," she said, wiggling the bottles. "Look what I brought back."

Topper looked and observed that one of the bottles, the one under her arm, was not altogether full. It was nearly half empty. This sorrowful fact
did not add to Topper's spirit of tolerance.

"What do you mean by drinking at this time of day?" he demanded.

"No harm, old dear," she answered. "No harm."

"Have you no sense of decency?" he continued.

"None at all," she replied with unclouded cheerfulness. "Never had. You cornered the market at birth."

"Well, I'll tell you now it's far from decent to be in your condition at this time of day," said Topper.

"My  eye,"  she replied, leaping up the steps. "That's simply a question of time. Whether you drink it at dawn or at dusk, you get fuzzy just the
same.  The  earlier  the  better,  say I. Now, if you'd take a good stiff hooker of this Scotch, I'll lay you odds you'll jolly soon forget about
being decent. You'll be as happy as a lark--a decent bird, I'm told."

"But I haven't even had breakfast," Topper protested.

"Nonsense!"  she  replied  with  a  magnificent  sweep of her arm. "Look at the sunlight playing on the wind-struck lake. Catch the breath of the
morning  drifting  through  the  trees. See the young earth sending forth her, her--whatever they happen to be. Feel the world throbbing with new
life and impulse. Get wise . . ."

"But  I  can't  eat  sunlight  and  young  earth,"  complained  Mr. Topper, rudely cutting in on her poetical outburst. "A cup of coffee and some
scrambled eggs also have their decent points."

She looked thoughtfully at his troubled face.

"Take  a  drink  and  I'll  get  you some breakfast," she said. "This is good stuff. I stole it from Mr. Wilbur, our absent host. He has a cellar
full."

She filled a glass and handed it to Topper. Feeling the need for courage, he gulped it down and looked startled. The effect was almost immediate.
Like  the  young earth to which Marion Kerby had referred, his blood began to throb with new life and impulse. With a regal sweep of his bathrobe
he threw himself down in a chair.

"Did you see our friend, the caretaker?" he asked.

"I  did,"  she  replied,  splashing  some  eggs  into a pan. "He's still on his feet, but somewhat unsteady. There's a bandage round his head. He
limps."

Topper  took  another  drink  and  placed himself at the table. "On with the eggs," he commanded. "Now that you've crippled him, I'll try to kill
him."

Marion Kerby watched him with a kindling eye as he fell upon the eggs.

"That's right," she said. "Eat and acquire flesh. I'll drink and acquire merit, after which we'll both go swimming."

"Great stuff!" exclaimed Topper. "I'll swim right across the lake and back in my brand-new suit. It's in your room."

"Braggart," the girl replied. "I'm going in to dress."

"Just wait and see," said Topper, refilling the glasses. "Throw me out my rompers."

"Hand me in a drink," she called back, flinging his suit through the door. "I'm Eveish all over."

She  thrust out a bare white arm and wiggled the fingers impatiently. Topper placed the glass in her hand, then, seized by a sudden impulse, bent
over and kissed her smooth, cool arm. Marion gave a little gasp of amazement.

"If I wasn't afraid of spilling my drink," she said, "I'd come out and smash your face."

"You'd do nothing of the kind," announced Mr. Topper, straightening up and looking proud. "Nothing at all of the kind. I'll kiss you as much as I
want."

He finished his drink and walked unevenly to his room. At the door he uttered a triumphant laugh, which ended ingloriously in a hiccough.

"Merciful heavens! " came Marion Kerby's surprised voice. "What has come over our Cosmo? He's actually getting aggressive."

"Make no mistake," he shouted back, desperately weaving his legs into his shorts. "I'm the master in this house. From now on I rule."

Marion Kerby dashed into the room and Topper began to scream.

"This isn't fair," he protested. "Wait till I've got my shirt on."

Marion  refused  to wait. Like a white flash the slim figure darted around Topper, raining blow after blow on his well upholstered body. Fighting
his  way  into  his  shirt,  he  attempted to defend him-self, but his efforts were futile. She closed in on him and tickled his fat ribs. With a
series  of girlish squeals he sank panting to the floor, whereupon she danced on his stomach and uttered a cry of victory. Like a jovial porpoise
Topper rolled from side to side, sweating profusely from too much Scotch and exertion.

"Who's the master of this house?" she demanded, digging a toe in his side.

"You are," he gasped. "Stop tickling me before you give me a stroke."

With a final kick she withdrew from combat and stood looking down at the vanquished male.

"Get up, you tub," she said. "From now on I rule. Get up and swim across the lake."

"You're a fiend in a one-piece bathing suit,"Topper muttered in a husky voice. "Get that bottle. I'm all in."

"Keep a civil tongue in your head," she warned as she hurried from the room.

When  she  returned  with the bottle they sat down on the edge of the bed and eyed each other suspiciously. Topper gratefully swallowed his drink
and sighed deeply. Then he reached over and clumsily patted his companion.

"You  know,"  he  announced  rather  thickly, "I haven't been so happy in years. Take me out and show me the lake. Something seems funny about my
legs."

She threw an arm round his shoulder and together they left the room, their voices raised in song.

My  husband he did it. The devil would drive, The high-flying, low-lying soak. And that is the reason I'm no more alive, For he ran me smack into
an oak."

"I can't get used to that word 'smack,'" said Mr. Topper. "Otherwise the song's good."

Throughout  the  uneven  progress of the journey Topper was more helped than helpful. He had a decided tendency to starboard list, which the girl
gravely  endeavoured  to  offset.  Once  she  failed  and  the  great weight of Topper bore down on her with full force. For a moment there was a
threshing  of  arms and legs emerging from a cluster of deep-seated grunts. Eventually she succeeded in extricating herself and Topper was helped
to his feet.

"Don't trip me again," he panted. "It's not at all funny."

Marion felt her bruises and laughed sarcastically.

"Do you think it's my idea of a good time to be crushed to earth by a hulk like you?" she asked.

"Then why didn't you dematerialise?"

"Because you'd have broken every bone in your gross body," she answered with heat.

"Hadn't thought of that," Topper apologised. "Very much obliged."

"Don't mention it," she replied. "What's a little fall between friends? Here we are at the landing. It's your first move."

Topper swayed dangerously on the edge of the landing, then with surprising agility rose in the air and disappeared neatly into the water. As soon
as he reappeared he stroked out with a tremendous show of purpose for the opposite shore, about a quarter of a mile away. As the space grew wider
between them, Marion Kerby watched him at first with anxiety and then with admiration. His arms flayed the water rhythmically and a trail of foam
followed  his  churning  feet. Topper was swimming as if possessed. Everything was in his favour. He was unable to fall and too fat to sink. When
Marion  had  eased her mind as to his ability to keep above water, she arched her back in a businesslike dive of her own. Like a water sprite she
played  around  the landing, not troubling so much about swimming as creating a great confusion. By the time that the aquatic Topper had achieved
the  other  side  she  had  exhausted the possibilities of the lake. Like a fretful child she stood on the landing and stamped for Topper to come
home. The keen morning air was not the warmest of blankets. She raised her voice in a long cry.

"Come on over," she shouted. "I'm going back."

Upon  the  reception  of this message Topper placed an admonishing finger to his lips and with his other hand swept the surrounding hills. He was
partially sober now and wholly fearful.

"Why does she have to arouse the neighbourhood?" he muttered as he watched her dancing form.

Ceasing  from  this activity, she threw her head back and, thrusting her thumb into her mouth, gave an eloquent but vulgar pantomime of drinking.
Then  she  turned  and ran up the path, her white legs flashing in the sunlight. The effect was registered on Topper. He plunged back in the lake
and put forth his best efforts.

"She has no conception of honour," he thought gloomily as he wallowed along. "She'd cheerfully drink while I was drowning."

A  little  surprise  in  the form of a tall, distinguished-looking gentleman was waiting for Topper when he reached the landing. Upon seeing this
stranger,  Topper's  first impulse was to sink forever beneath the protecting surface of the lake, but there was still enough Scotch in his veins
to give him the semblance of courage.

"Good morning," said the distinguished-looking gentleman in a suspiciously friendly voice. "You seem to be enjoying yourself."

"I am," replied Topper. "I deserve to."

"I'll not dispute that," said the man on the landing, "but I doubt if you could prove it."

"My own enjoyment is proof enough," Topper answered.

"And how do you arrive at that conclusion?" asked the other.

"I've already arrived," said Topper.

"That I see. But how, I don't see," the distinguished-looking gentleman pursued.

"By  the  simple  process  of  reason,"  Mr. Topper explained as he laboriously trod water. "Any creature, man or beast, who has the capacity and
desire to enjoy life deserves that enjoyment."

"You preach hedonism," replied the other briefly.

"Whatever that means I doubt it," said Mr. Topper, "but, whether it is or isn't, I'm not going to drown myself to discuss the point further."

"And that's quite sensible," the gentleman answered. "Come out and I'll give you a lift."

Stooping over, he firmly seized Mr. Topper's extended hand and helped him out of the water, after which he continued holding the hand, shaking it
cordially the while. Topper feared he was captured.

"Delighted to meet you," said the distinguished-looking gentleman, beaming down on Topper. "I greatly admired your skill in the water."

"Thanks," replied Topper weakly, "but before we go any further let's settle one point. You are not by any chance remotely connected with the law,
are you?"

"I am afraid not," said the stranger.

"I'm glad not," declared Topper.

"As  a  matter  of fact," the other continued, "I've devoted most of my life to breaking the law. I have been a soldier, a legalised and official
killer, a person beyond the law."

Topper  drew  a  sigh  of  relief  and  rose  to his feet. For some reason he had taken rather a fancy to the distinguished-looking gentleman. It
occurred to him that he had not spoken to a man for several days. He had been too long in feminine company. He would cultivate this stranger.

"If you are beyond the law," said Topper, "you'd probably not balk at a glass of Scotch."

"I'd do more than balk," the gentleman answered. "I'd actually lie down to it."

"Then come along with me," Topper said, turning up the path.

"One moment," the man called, "I happen to have a wife about somewhere. Would you balk at her?"

"By no means," answered Topper. "Although convention prevents me from going to the same extremes as you, I should be delighted to meet her."

"The opportunity is at hand," replied the gentleman.

Topper  looked up the path and saw a tall, fair-haired woman approaching. There was something engagingly rakish in her bearing. He placed her age
as a good-humoured thirty-five. She was carrying some early flowers in her hand and puffing a cigarette.

"My dear," called the man, "this gentleman has been so good as to ask us to share his Scotch."

My dear dropped her flowers and flooded Mr. Topper with a delighted smile.

"He  is  heaven-sent,"  she  exclaimed in a rich voice. "Let's hurry before he drops dead or changes his mind. Watch the roots. He might trip and
lose his memory."

"Truly," thought Mr. Topper, as he led them up the path, "this is a frankly thirsty pair."

The  gentleman  began  to whistle and call the name of Oscar. Topper looked back in surprise, but seeing no new arrival, ascribed the gentleman's
conduct to a spirit of fun caused by the prospect of a drink.

On  arriving  at  the  cottage  Topper hurried up the steps and looked inside. Marion, still in her bathing suit, was sitting at the table with a
glass in her hand. She was smoking one of Topper's best cigars.

"I'm bringing some friends," he announced under his breath. "Are you sober enough to receive them?"

"Trot 'em in," she replied brightly. "But are you sure they're friends?"

"Positive," said Topper. "Good sports."

Marion went to the door and greeted the pair. "I am delighted," she said sweetly, "to meet any friends of my husband. Come right in."

The gentleman thoughtfully removed the glass from her hand and, bending low, ceremoniously kissed it, after which he waved to his wife.

"We are Colonel and Mrs. Scott," he said. "And I am sure we are all happily met. Lie down, Oscar."

"That's a joke of his," whispered Topper. Marion laughed agreeably and took Mrs. Scott's hand.

"Why,  you're  so  beautiful,  my dear," she said, "that I can't keep my eyes off you. Come in and give me a cigarette. I'm tired of my husband's
cigars. Cosmo, do the honours."

She took the glass from the reluctant Colonel and led the way indoors.

"And you," said the Colonel, "look like a creature from another world--the spirit of the lake, the priestess of the woods."

Marion threw him a narrow glance, then bowed gravely.

"Sit down, Arthur," said Mrs. Scott in a calm voice. "You'll get your drink, any way."

"My darling," exclaimed the Colonel, "what a cynical remark I Down, Oscar."

Both  Topper  and  Marion laughed politely, thinking that this was expected of them. Then Topper distributed the drinks and the party sat down at
the table.

"This seems," announced the Colonel judiciously, after he had sampled the Scotch several times, "this seems to be prime whiskey. Of the best."

Topper,  who  as  a  result  of  his long swim and liberal hospitality had been showing a decided disposition to slumber, opened his eyes at this
remark and squinted at the Colonel.

"It seems to me," he said unpleasantly, "that you do a devil of a lot of seeming."

"I do," agreed the Colonel with winning affability. "Because things are not always as they seem."

For a few moments Topper concentrated on this reply. To him it was fraught with meaning. It covered his whole life.

"You're  right, Colonel," he said at last. "You're dead right there. To you I seem to be a sleepy man in a bathing suit, whereas I'm a fat banker
running away from his wife."

The Colonel elevated one eyebrow just sufficiently to betray surprise.

"Then the present arrangement, I take it, is not permanent," he suggested with a delicate inflection.

"Neither permanent nor tangible," Topper answered, solicitously filling his own glass.

"I  see,"  replied  the Colonel thoughtfully, showing equal solicitude for himself. "Then, indeed, we are happily met as I have already remarked.
Neither is our relationship of a lasting nature. Mrs. Hart and myself are just visiting each other. Regards!"

Slightly scandalised in spite of the liberalising influence of the Scotch, Topper mechanically raised his glass.

"Regards," he said absently. "Happily met."

"Isn't  it  too  funny  for  words,"  exclaimed  the newly discovered Mrs. Hart, leaning over to Marion Kerby. "Give that man a few drinks and he
becomes as frank as a fool. I never do."

"I'm sure I don't know what's happened to Cosmo," Marion replied. "Usually he's the world's worst hypocrite."

"Not at all, my love," he protested. "Usually I'm the world's best hypocrite--and that in spite of you."

"Down, Oscar!" the Colonel irritably interrupted. "Damn it, go to sleep."

At this point Topper sprawled back in his chair and laughed uproariously, while the Colonel watched him in dignified silence.

"Tell me," asked the Colonel, when Topper had subsided, "why do you always laugh when I call my dog?"

Topper wiped his eyes and looked admiringly at the Colonel.

"You're a scream, Colonel," he said. "And you say the funniest things. Why I thought you wanted me to laugh. You haven't any dog."

"But I have a little dog," declared the Colonel. "Want to see him?"

"Don't be silly, Arthur," interposed Mrs. Hart.

"Nonsense," said the Colonel. "I'll show him my little dog. Come here, Oscar. Do your stuff."

Topper glanced down and saw a vague stirring in the atmosphere round the Colonel's feet. Then gradually the rump of a small, shaggy dog appeared.
Its tail was wagging excitedly.

"That's the boy!" cried the Colonel. "Keep it up, Oscar. Make a whole dog for the gentle-man."

A  few  more  inches  of  dog  appeared, but evidently Oscar had exhausted his talents. The tail continued to wag as if asking to be excused from
further endeavours.

Topper rose unsteadily from his chair.

"Please, please, Colonel," he pleaded, "don't make him do any more. He's done enough already. Ask him to go away."

"Very well," agreed the Colonel reluctantly, but he can do much better than that. Sit down, Oscar, like a good chap."

Apparently  forgetting  the  condition  he was in, Oscar, or rather the rear end of him, settled to rest. The tail gave a final wag, then came to
repose on the floor.

"I feel in need of a little fresh air," Topper remarked in a strained voice. "This has been a very unusual occurrence."

He turned to the door, then took a step back. Three large men were crowding in it, and in the background stood the caretaker.

"We're surrounded!" Topper exclaimed, turning back to the table.

But Topper found no comfort there. The table was empty.

"God," said one of the men, "they're all gone but him."

"He's enough," replied the caretaker. "Go in and drag him out."

The men advanced and Topper automatically retreated.

"And when you get him," continued the caretaker, "give him a few for me."

This  sent  Topper  shivering  to  the  wall.  It  was at this stage in the proceedings that the command "Sic 'em, Oscar!" rang through the room.
Immediately  a  low growl was heard and Oscar's hind quarters became involved with the legs of the bewildered attackers. Thus began the Battle of
the Lake, one of the few decisive engagements on record and one which Mr. Topper did not linger to witness.

Out  of  the  din and confusion that filled the room Topper heard Marion's voice shouting, "Break for the car, old thing. We'll bring the luggage
along."

Topper did not wait for further bidding. Stepping on the face of a prostrate man, he fought his way to the door.

"Don't forget my trousers," he called back. "They're on the chair in my room."

"Hell, no," grunted the Colonel. "Run for it, man."

Topper  dodged past the crippled caretaker with the agility of a fawn and darted down the steps. As he raced along the lake path cries of anguish
followed his flying feet.

"I don't hold with this at all," he thought to himself as he sped over the roots. "Is my life to be one mad pursuit, all summer long?"

As he rounded the bend two suit-cases flashed past him at a dizzy speed and these in turn were followed by a carefully poised bottle and a bundle
of Marion's clothing.

"Speed, O lout," a voice panted, and Topper redoubled his efforts.

The rear was brought up by Topper's trousers, snapping in the wind and Oscar following after, his rump low to the ground and his claws kicking up
dust.

Few persons have ever lived to witness such a remarkable sight--Topper and half a dog chasing a pair of runaway trousers, not to mention a flying
bottle and a couple of bounding suit-cases. Even at the moment Topper was impressed by the novelty of the situation.

Like  a  rallying  standard in a headlong retreat, Topper's trousers danced in the morning breeze. And Topper followed his trousers with his last
spark  of  energy.  Far behind him he heard shouting voices, but he kept his eyes to the front and a trifle raised. He could not bring himself to
look  at the contortions of Oscar. The impatient honking of a horn urged him onward, and with a final burst of speed he reached the car and flung
himself  into the front seat. Oscar was sitting beside him, his invisible section panting audibly. The automobile was already in motion, hurtling
down  a  branch  road  that  led  through  the valley. Mr. Topper collected himself and moved a little away from Oscar, whose hind leg was busily
engaged in dislodging an unseen flea.

"Well, Topper," came Marion Kerby's calm voice, "we got you out of that fix."

"You got me into it, too," replied Topper. "Why didn't you tell me they were all spooks?"

"Didn't know it myself," she answered, as the car lurched round a bend.

"I suspected something all the time," said the Colonel, "but I wasn't sure of Topper."

"Yes," put in Mrs. Hart. "What's the matter with him? Isn't he a low-plane?"

"No," replied Marion. "He's solid through and through."

"How very, very interesting," continued Mrs. Hart, poking an inquiring finger into Topper's shoulder.

"Make her stop," said Topper to Marion.

"Stop tickling my boy friend," she called back. "He's so bashful."

"Here, Topper," said the Colonel, passing the bottle forward, "take a drink, my buck. You need it."

Like  a  greedy baby Topper closed his fingers round the bottle and brought it to his lips. It was difficult drinking, what with the speed of the
car and the condition of the road, but Topper refused to remove the bottle until he was convinced that he felt better.

"Don't forget the driver," said Marion Kerby.

"And don't forget that we are still your guests," Mrs. Hart suggested sweetly.

"That's the last bottle," said the Colonel. "We'll have to do something about it."

"Well, you go ahead and do it," replied Topper. "I've done enough for one day."

"Trust me," agreed the Colonel. "I never fail. Stop at the next town and I'll visit a few of the best houses, guided by my unerring instinct."

"In the meantime, do you want your dog?" Topper asked. "I'm afraid he's crowded up here."

"Not at all," the Colonel answered. "Don't worry about Oscar. He loves the front seat."

Topper closed his eyes and let the rushing wind cool his face.

"There are three of them now," he thought, as he clung to the side of the car. "Three spirits and half a dog. I'm as good as done for already."

"Colonel," he called, continuing aloud, "give me another drink. I'll have to keep myself numb until I've got used to the situation."

"Eat, drink and be merry! " cried the Colonel, "for to-morrow . . ."

"Don't finish it," interrupted Mr. Topper, hastily reaching for the Scotch. "I am intimate enough with death as it is."

"I won't," agreed the Colonel, "if you don't finish that Scotch."

Topper did his best.




CHAPTER XVII The Colonel Orders Dinner


In  the  cool of the evening four flushed faces peered from Mr. Topper's automobile at a rain-washed sign bearing the legend: "The Sleeping Fox."
After  a  whispered  conversation within the machine, the four flushed faces once more emerged. Topper now was completely clad and his companions
had neatly materialised. To all outward appearances they gave the impression of being four quite normal persons bent on an evening's pleasure.

"With our thirst and Topper's money we should do very nicely here," remarked the Colonel, casting an anticipatory eye at the road-house.

"Don't frighten him before we get him inside," Mrs. Hart said warningly. "This looks to me like a lovely layout."

"Fear is my constant companion," replied Topper. "Don't consider me."

He  was standing in need of a little judicious propping and the women were furtively assisting him. They were endeavouring to give the appearance
of  two  ladies  being escorted to dinner by a prosperous and dignified gentleman. In carrying out the deception Topper was of little value. With
the most casual regard for dignity he ambled up the path.

"You women are so good to me," he murmured, and, as if overcome by his effort, sank heavily back in the supporting arms.

"For the love of Pete, stand up," Marion tragically whispered. "Remember, everything depends on you."

"I  know  it does," he gloated. "I know damn well it does. And you remember this, from now on I rule. No more foot-racing, no more queer dogs, no
more disorderly parties. Remember all those things."

"Of course we will," the Colonel hastened to reply in a mollifying voice. "Didn't we throw Oscar away half a mile down the road?"

"Half a mile is a short distance to throw that dog," observed Mr. Topper.

"I know," continued the Colonel, "but it showed that our spirits were in the right place."

"Don't mention spirits to me," Topper retorted. "The very word is revolting. And furthermore, you're not in the right place. If you were you'd be
far, far away."

"Ah, Topper, how cruel you are to us all," Mrs. Hart protested. "I'm sure you don't mean that."

He looked scornfully at the women, then plunged free from their grasp.

"Stand back, the pair of you," he commanded, "and I'll show you how a gentleman takes his ease at an inn. I am weary of your arms."

He  squared  his  shoulders  belligerently  and  with heavy dignity began to mount the steps. As if he were performing an acrobatic sensation his
companions  clustered  watchfully  around  him,  ready  to  spring  to  action at the slightest show of weakness. An immaculately clad individual
appearing in the door of the road-house, stopped with surprise on seeing Mr. Topper, then hastened forward with a smile of welcome.

"Why, Mr. Topper," he said. "This is an unexpected pleasure. How are things at the club?"

At the mention of the word club, Mr. Topper swayed perceptibly on his feet.

"Club,"  he  repeated thoughtfully. "Club. Why is it I don't like that word? Ah, yes, I remember, Williams. I have just recently escaped from the
most terrifying of clubs."

"And Mrs. Topper?" asked Williams, tactfully changing the subject.

"And Mrs. Topper, too," replied Topper. "I've just escaped from her."

As  if  cheered  by this reflection, he turned his back on the astonished Williams and beckoned to his companions, who were hovering like hopeful
orphans at the head of the steps.

"It's  all  right," he assured them. "Williams is an old friend. Knew him when I was a respectable member of the country club. He was our steward
then. First-class steward."

More for support than friendship he turned to Williams and extended his hand.

"Don't  mind my friends," he continued. "They're thoroughly low. And remember this, Williams: silence is crisp and green. Here's a little silence
now."

Williams, who had hitherto considered Topper as being rather a painfully proper man, was both surprised and delighted at this lighter side of his
character.  He  deftly pocketed the money and with a murmured expression of gratitude ushered the party to a table where he spoke impressively to
the waiter.

"Hear what he said," gloated Topper. "He told the waiter to bring us anything we wanted. That's because I'm here."

"Then tell him to bring us some cocktails and we'll be even more impressed," Marion remarked. "I'll raise it one," put in Mrs. Hart.

"And I'll double it," said the Colonel promptly.

"Bring them double cocktails," Mr. Topper explained to the waiter. "And bring me one, too."

"Any particular brand, sir?"

"Dry Martinis are more business-like," the Colonel suggested. "It would be wiser to stick to them."

When  the  waiter had departed the Colonel set himself the task of planning the dinner, and in this he displayed such a lack of self-control that
finally Mr. Topper felt called upon to interrupt.

"Don't look upon this as a barbecue, Colonel," he remarked. "Regard it rather in the light of a quiet little dinner. Don't stint yourself, but at
the same time don't stuff. Perhaps you once saw service in a famine district. There is no danger here."

Marion Kerby turned on Topper with venomously flashing eyes.

"Are you trying to humiliate me in front of my friends?" she demanded.

"Not  at  all,"  replied  Mr.  Topper.  "I  was  merely trying to introduce a little reason into this sordid discussion of food. It's not humanly
possible to consume at one sitting all of the things he's planning to order."

"You  forget  that  we're not human," Marion replied briefly. Then, turning to the Colonel, she continued with a sweet smile, "Go ahead, Colonel.
Order the whole damned card. Don't mind him."

"Let's  see," said the Colonel blandly, as if the interruption had never occurred. "Where were we now? Oh, yes, here we are. We'd got down to the
fowl."

"The fowl," breathed Mrs. Hart, clasping her hands in delight. "I'm a perfect demon with a duck."

"Well," remarked Mr. Topper, with weary resignation, "you're the most material-minded spirits that ever returned to earth to drive a mortal mad."

"Why, the more irregularly I live the more regular I feel," said Mrs. Hart, taking Topper's hand. "Aren't you that way?"

"I am not," he answered shortly, withdrawing his hand from the table.

"The  cocktails  are  among  us,"  Marion  announced  as  the waiter arranged the glasses. "Cheer up, everybody. I propose a toast to Topper, our
reluctant and respectable host."

She rose from the table and raised her glass.

"Here's to Topper," she said. "A good sport in spite of himself. I know him by the back."

"That's about the only way anybody knows me now," observed Topper. "I'm always running."

"You poor old dear," she said, and, bending over, quickly kissed him. Topper grew red in the face and looked guiltily about him.

"The last shred is gone," he remarked. "Nothing remains but blackmail--blackmail, divorce and disgrace."

He tossed off his cocktail at a gulp and gazed solemnly at his companions.

"From now on," he announced, "I cast decency to the winds. Let's strip ourselves naked and run around screaming."

"Hear! Hear!" cried the Colonel. "That was spoken like a man. Waiter, another flock."

And  another  flock  was  brought.  Nor  was  it  the  last flock. Nor even the next to the last. Great execution was done that night at the inn,
prodigious  eating  and  lavish  drinking,  the  Colonel leading the way by example and encouragement. Topper danced with Marion until his collar
became  a  rag  and his feet two nests of blisters. When finally, through a combination of complications, he was forced to retain his seat at the
table,  he  lived happily in the memory of his dizzy flights through space. Marion Kerby sat close to him, whispering surprisingly pleasant words
in his ear, and Topper, being in too expansive a mood to be suspicious, sweated in his seventh heaven.

This  state  of  things was suddenly demolished by an unexpected arrival. The Colonel and Mrs. Hart were engaged in a highly enterprising type of
dance  when  the unexpected arrival occurred. And the unexpected arrival was none less than Oscar, or at least that portion of Oscar which he had
chosen  to  show  to  the  world.  Topper  was the first to see that portion, and at its appearance his happiness vanished. Oscar dragged himself
wearily through the door of the inn, displayed an undecided rump to the assembled guests, then set off patiently to follow his master's exuberant
heels.

Unaware  of  this singular attachment, the Colonel continued to dance with the blissful Mrs. Hart. And even the other dancers appeared to take no
notice.  It  was  at  that stage of the evening when one would rather not see such things. Without a shadow of a doubt there were many diners and
dancers  who  really  did see Oscar in his unfinished condition, but those who did see him refused to report the fact, fearing that it might be a
serious  reflection  on  their  own  sobriety.  So  Oscar  followed  the Colonel until the Colonel passed Topper's chair. Here his gyrations were
interrupted by Topper's hand on his sleeve.

"Oscar's back," whispered Topper. "For God's sake do something about it. I knew you hadn't thrown him far enough away."

"But,  my  dear  man,"  the  Colonel  expostulated,  "there's a limit to my strength. I can't chuck him back into the fourth dimension the way he
insists on going about."

"Then sit down," said Topper, "and get him under the table. Some of these people might throw a fit. I'm sober myself already."

"If they don't like my dog," fumed the Colonel, "they can throw as many fits as they want."

"It's  not  that they don't like your dog," explained Topper, "it's merely that they don't understand your dog. Oscar to them is not quite clear.
Please get him out of sight."

"I'll  agree  with  you  there,"  replied the Colonel, seating himself at the table. "Oscar is no ordinary brand of dog. There's more to him than
greets the eye."

Oscar crawled under the table and Mr. Topper drew in his feet.

"That's just what I'm worrying about," he remarked. "Does the invisible part of him bite? If it does it is sure to bite me."

"Have no fear about Oscar," said the Colonel. "He never harbours a grudge. He was kicked around too much in life for that."

"I'm sorry," declared Mr. Topper, sincerely. "Perhaps he's hungry now. I'll give him this bone to gnaw on."

He held a bone under the table and it was instantly snapped from his hand.

"He is hungry," Topper continued, quickly, withdrawing his hand. "Very hungry. Listen to that."

The  bone was rattling on the floor and from beneath the table came the busy sound of crunching. The waiter, who had just arrived with coffee and
ices,  on  hearing  this  small  commotion, raised the tablecloth and peered down at the massed feet, in the centre of which lay Oscar engaged in
appeasing his hunger. The waiter dropped the tablecloth and leaned down to Mr. Topper.

"Don't  tell  the  ladies,"  he whispered, "but the funniest thing is going on under your table. Half of a dog is messingaround with the leg of a
duck, so help me God."

Topper glanced under the table, then looked stonily at the waiter.

"You  might  be  right,"  he said, "but I don't see it. One of the ladies has dropped her fur piece and I myself dropped that duck leg. Bring the
bill and say nothing more about it. No one will know you've been drinking."

"Sorry," apologised the waiter. "I hadn't realised it myself, but the Colonel kept on insisting."

"Then don't abuse his liberality," advised Topper. "Hurry with the bill."

"Yes," put in Marion Kerby, "hurry with the bill. This place begins to irk me. I'm dying to take a stroll."

The waiter hastened away and Topper leaned over to Marion.

"Collect that dog," he told her, "and keep him under your cape until we get out of here."

"Only for you," she replied, "would I do such a thing."

She  reached  down  and  after  a little scuffling succeeded in gathering up Oscar. For a moment his tail waved frantically above the edge of the
table,  then  flashed from view beneath Marion's cape, which from time to time thereafter became suddenly convulsed with life. The waiter arrived
with the bill and in his preoccupation handed it to the Colonel, who, upon scanning the total, promptly disappeared. It was like the flashing out
of a light.

"There isn't that much money in the world," floated through the air.

Only the bill remained, still poised above the table. It was trembling slightly as if the invisible holder were shaken by an attack of nerves.

"The shock was too much for him," whispered Mrs. Hart. "I've seen it happen before."

"He's gone," said the waiter, looking inquiringly at Mr. Topper. "He's not here any more."

"Of course not," laughed Mr. Topper. "He never was. Pass that bill to me."

Before the waiter could reach it the billmoved across the table to Mr. Topper's out-stretched hand.

"You're welcome to it," a voice murmured.

The waiter moved away from the Colonel's empty chair and stood close to Mr. Topper.

"Mr.  Topper,"  he  pleaded,  "please don't say he wasn't here. I could never bear that. Why his cup is still half full of coffee and there's his
smouldering cigarette."

In  the  face  of  this undeniable evidence of the Colonel's recent presence, Mr. Topper was forced to alter his bantering tactics. He opened his
wallet and selected several colourful bills.

"Take  this money away," he said, "and stop asking questions. Let us admit that the Colonel was here. What of it I As you accurately pointed out,
he  isn't here any more. He slipped away somewhere, as all of us must do at times. If I were in your place I wouldn't press the investigation any
further."

"I certainly wouldn't," remarked Mrs. Hart. "It has gone far enough."

"I'm sorry," replied the waiter, "and I'm very much obliged. As you say, Mr. Topper, he must have just slipped away in a hurry like."

Marion Kerby burst out laughing and patted the waiter on his back.

"That's it," she said. "That's exactly it. He slipped away in a hurry like, or, to put it differently, with all possible speed."

The  waiter  smiled  nervously  and bowed, then emulated the Colonel's example to the best of his ability. Mr. Topper, despite his eagerness, was
forced  to  be  more  leisurely in his retreat. With earnest but wavering dignity, he followed the women from the room. Oscar lent distinction to
their  departure.  Every  time  he  kicked  his legs Marion Kerby suddenly bulged out in the back in a most grotesque manner, an occurrence which
caused  Mrs. Hart to burst forth into hysterical laughter to the greater humiliation of Mr. Topper. Once safely outside in the darkness he mopped
his face and gave vent to his feelings.

"After eating and drinking his fill," he complained, "he plays us a trick like that. And he calls himself a soldier."

"A Colonel, no less," said Marion Kerby, "and he allows me to protect this unlettered hound."

She dropped Oscar to the road and readjusted her cape.

"He  couldn't  help it," Mrs. Hart defended. "The bill was too much for him. I'm sure he didn't mean to do it. At the size of the figures he lost
control, and anyway, think how much he drank."

"I never saw a man do better," admitted Marion, "and for that reason I forgive him. We all play tricks in our cups."

Without  paying  attention  to  their direction they wandered down the wooded road until they came to an open field, a meadow slanting off in the
darkness. In the distance, above the trees, an old battered moon was sailing low in the sky.

The night was quiet and peaceful round them, filled with secret rustlings and a thousand fragrant smells. The Sleeping Fox seemed miles away, its
brilliance  vanished  and  its orchestra stilled. Without knowing it they were soothed and subdued by the quiet beauty of their surroundings. And
out of the quiet beauty of their surroundings a singing voice, deep and undaunted, came storming towards them down the road.

"It's the Colonel," exclaimed Mrs. Hart. "He has a splendid voice. Listen!"

Marion and Topper listened without enthusiasm to the following chanty:

"Oh, dark and stormy was the night When last I left my Meg. She'd a government band around each hand And another one round each leg.

"Yo ho, my boys, yo ho, And a-sailing we shall go. We'll sail no more on England's shore--"

"A  splendid voice," remarked Mr. Topper, sarcastically interrupting the booming flow of the old sea song. "Caruso must be fairly spinning in his
grave."

"What's this about Caruso?" asked the Colonel, looming large in the darkness. "Why, I taught him his do, re, mi's."

"So you are once more with us," said Marion Kerby. "What was your hurry to go?"

"Couldn't help it," explained the Colonel. "The size of the bill destroyed my resistance. There were no such figures in my days. But I've brought
along gifts as a show of atonement."

He slipped his hands into his pockets and produced two large bottles.

"In view of the size of the bill," he continued, "I took the liberty to remove these from the pantry. I have still another."

The  gifts  of  atonement  proved more than acceptable and the Colonel was reinstated with full honours and privileges. With a bottle circulating
freely  between them they wandered off into the meadow until wandering no longer suited their mood. Mr. Topper insisted on demonstrating the fact
that  he  was  rapidly becoming a spirit himself. With the utmost conviction he would throw himself into the air, but being a little heavier than
that  element  he invariably returned with great speed to the earth, from which his companions would lift him and once more set him in motion. It
was  a night of magnificent distances and headlong enterprise. They sang and danced and made patriotic speeches and pursued each other across the
meadows  to  the  intense  delight  of  the  gambolling  flanks of Oscar. To Topper, it was like a dream, one in which he was liberated and given
tremendous  strength.  His steps seemed as light as feathers and as long as leagues. The field was filled with dancing forms that swirled in wild
abandon  until  they left the earth and went circling round the moon. And through the darkness he heard shouting voices as the party searched for
one  another. The Scotch with which the Colonel plied them became transmuted in their brains into the glory of the night. Nature became intensely
beautiful  and  their  bodies  madly  alive.  It  was such a night as comes seldom to a man and which fortunately for his peace of mind is seldom
remembered  after it has gone. Topper remembered but little when he awoke the following morning on the bank of a slow-moving river. Oscar's bushy
tail  was  draped  across  his  chest, and that was all that remained of Oscar. He had lost ground during the exhausting activities of the night.
Topper slid cautiously from under the tail and looked down into the clear water of the river. His body was feverish and his head an aching weight
which  he  balanced  with  the greatest difficulty. Several yards away Marion Kerby was sleeping sweetly in Mrs. Hart's lap. The Colonel, deep in
slumber, was sitting erect as if he had forgotten to lie down. Topper turned his eyes away from his companions and looked longingly at the river.
His  body craved to feel the soothing flow of its cool waters. Unable to stand the temptation any longer he crept away into a clump of bushes and
divested  himself  of  his  outer  garments. With a last timid look at his sleeping friends he slid down the bank and insinuated himself into the
water,  his  hot  blood leaping with gratitude as the river closed around him. But Topper was not alone. A flaunting tail had followed him to his
tryst.  Round  and round it circled, splitting the water neatly like the periscope of a submarine. Topper was hardly pleased with the presence of
Oscar,  but  he  was  enjoying  the river too thoroughly to leave it undisturbed to the dog. His enjoyment was interrupted by a greeting from the
bank.

"Good morning," the Colonel called to him. "Will you join me in a drink?"

"That's  all I ever seem to be doing," replied Topper, swimming over to the Colonel. "But just for once I will. After this I'm going to swear off
for a while."

The Colonel passed down the bottle and Topper refreshed himself.

"My dog seems to have grown less," observed the Colonel, watching the sportive tail. "I'll have to do some hard work on him to-day."

"If you make him disappear altogether you'd be doing me a favour," said Mr. Topper, holding up the bottle.

"The creative spirit is too strong in me for that," replied the Colonel. "I must make him a whole dog or bust."

His  head  was  withdrawn  from  the bank and in a few minutes he reappeared accompanied by Mrs. Hart and Marion Kerby, very sketchily attired in
improvised  bathing suits. With little screams of delight they plunged into the river and swam friskily round the dismayed Topper, who, submerged
up to his chin, was modestly treading water.

"An auspicious beginning to a new day," cried the Colonel. "This will set us all up splendidly."

"This and a good breakfast," added Mrs. Hart.

"What a night it was, Cosmo," said Marion, swimming up to him and resting her hand on his shoulder. "Did you ever have so much fun?"

"It was fun," admitted Topper, "but whether I should have enjoyed it or not I am too vague to remember. What did we do with the automobile?"

"It's still at the road-house. We'll get it presently and move along."

"I don't move along an inch," replied Topper, "until all of you have cleared out of here."

"I'll get them out," said Marion. Then, turning to the others, she said: " The last one out forfeits a drink. Only three are left in the bottle."

This  announcement  was immediately followed by an undignified scramble up the bank of the river, the Colonel doing his best to block Mrs. Hart's
progress.  With  great  good humour Mr. Topper watched the three pairs of legs speeding over the grass. Marion Kerby was leading the way, running
like  a frightened deer, her flimsy draperies streaming in the wind. After a final turn in the water, Topper emerged from the river, and, casting
a cautious glance about him, sought concealment in the bushes, his eyes still filled with the grace and beauty of Marion Kerby's flying form.




CHAPTER XVIII Mr. Topper Does Not Celebrate


In this convivial manner began one of the most active and interesting periods of Mr. Topper's incredible vacation. He had originally decided that
he  needed  a  change.  Now his needs were more than satisfied. No man's life could have undergone more radical alterations. The Colonel and Mrs.
Hart garnished his trip with their misconduct, lending to an automobile tour the atmosphere of a raiding party.

For  three  weeks  the  four  of  them  cruised  perilously about the countryside, upsetting the entire New England States and leaving ruined and
shattered  nerves  in  the wake of the hard-pressed automobile. At night they slept wherever they chanced to find themselves, and frequently they
found  themselves in strange and unaccountable places. To-night it might be a road-house, on the following one a field. And there were moments so
fraught with danger that they retreated to the woods until the hue and cry had subsided.

Despite  the  many  discomforts  of  this open-air existence, Mr. Topper accepted his lot for reasons of economy, Mrs. Hart and the Colonel being
rather fastidious in their tastes. Whenever the party put up at an inn they loudly demanded the best of accommodations, for which they graciously
allowed  Mr.  Topper to pay. That neither of them had been asked to become permanently attached to Mr. Topper never seemed to occur to them. They
were  childlike  in  their faith that they were wanted. Topper occasionally wondered about this, reflecting that his invitation to the Colonel to
share his Scotch had turned out to be one of the most costly acts of hospitality he had ever performed.

Nevertheless,  Mr.  Topper appeared to have profited by his outing. His body had grown lean and alert, ready to run at a moment's notice, and his
skin  had  been  tanned  by  constant exposure to the elements. His character had also toughened considerably and his drinking capacity enlarged.
True,  he  was  hardly  what one would call a desperate and reckless man, yet he had learned to accept danger with fortitude and delinquency with
tolerance.  Nor  did  his  reputation  weigh  too  heavily on his mind. By day he flaunted it in the face of the world and at night it dangled in
jeopardy. And strangely enough Mr. Topper, in spite of his disorderly life, or rather, because of it, had become a better member of society; more
self-reliant,  more capable and far more interesting. He discovered in his heart the first faint whispering of pure Christianity, and in some way
he continued to keep his virtue intact by keeping his vices active.

After  the  swimming  party in the river he had eschewed strong liquor, and Marion Kerby had followed his example. Of course there had been a few
slight  lapses,  but  these  had  been  such  trifling  affairs that they no longer counted with Topper. The Colonel and Mrs. Hart, however, were
implacable in their thirst, to the quenching of which they devoted most of their energy and thought. For several days at a time they would absent
themselves  from  the  company  of  Mr.  Topper  and Marion to revel in more congenial surroundings. From these little side trips they invariably
returned in a state of moral collapse; Oscar, more or less visible, close on his master's heels.

During  the  absence of this unedifying couple, Topper and Marion dwelt together in comparatively quiet and peaceful companionship. On one of her
flights from his side she had acquired, without cost, a copy of the "Odyssey," and this brave tale they read together throughout the long, still,
summer days.

For  the first time in his life Topper came to realise that loose living and large thinking could get along quite comfortably together, that they
were  in fact boon companions. Under the influence of Marion Kerby he developed along altogether new and improved lines. But whenever the Colonel
and  Mrs.  Hart  returned  from  their  excursions,  Marion  reverted  to her former ways and joined them in a conspiracy to destroy Mr. Topper's
tranquillity.

On  this  particular  occasion  there were good reasons for rejoicing. Oscar at last, after a tremendous burst of concentration, had succeeded in
materialising  up  to  the  ears.  This was the farthest north the dog had ever achieved, and as a consequence the Colonel was bubbling over with
gratification and pride.

"Just mark my words," he went about saying, "I'll make a whole dog of him yet."

Oscar,  rather  dizzy  at his unexpected success, swaggered aggressively in his gait and danced incompletely around. Up to this time he had shown
but  little interest in his personal appearance, being satisfied to remain at whatever length of dog he happened to find himself. On some days he
was  only  an animated tail, on others a leaping rump, and on several occasions he appeared simply as a leg and let it go at that. Mr. Topper had
never  grown  thoroughly  accustomed  to  Oscar  because  of his continually changing appearance, but the man's natural love of animals gradually
overcame  his  first decided objections. Today he shared in the joy of the others and complimented Oscar on his brilliant showing, saying that he
hoped some day to see his face.

"If  ever  there  was  an occasion that justified a celebration that occasion is now at hand," declared the Colonel with conviction. "I know of a
first-rate hotel near by and I strongly suggest that we put up there for the night."

"You're  a  particularly  ingenious person in finding occasion to justify a celebration," replied Mr. Topper, "but on this one, Colonel, I'm with
you. I'd do anything in my power to encourage that dog of yours to go one way or the other, preferably the other. Let us descend on this hotel."

"Never have I seen such an improvement in a man in all my life," exclaimed Mrs. Hart in rapture. "Marion, you've done him a world of good."

Topper cast her a critical glance. "You look terrible," he remarked. "You should cut it out for a while."

"But  our  visit  is  nearly  over,"  she  replied  with a little sigh. "Let's all raise hell while our ectoplasm lasts. You don't have to worry,
Topper."

"What a tough baby she is," Mr. Topper mused to himself. Then he added aloud, "Is your husband still alive?"

"Yes, thank God," she replied with fervour, "and I wish him good health and a long life."

"Amen," said the Colonel piously.

"Beautiful characters," remarked Mr. Topper. "What about this celebration?"

To  deprive  the  hotel  of  its  legitimate  profit it was decided that Mr. Topper should engage a large room and that the others should, as the
Colonel tactfully phrased it, "join him there."

"The idea is good," agreed Mr. Topper, "but for one consideration. What about Oscar?"

"We can cram him into the trunk on the back and cut an air hole in it," replied the Colonel, proceeding to act on his words.

"If Oscar can stand it I can," remarked Mr. Topper. "What's to prevent him from de-materialising and joining us at some ill-chosen moment?"

"I hardly think he'll do that," said the Colonel. "He's so pleased with himself as he is that he wouldn't lose an inch for the world."

"Let us devoutly hope so," said Mr. Topper, as he watched the Colonel and Mrs. Hart unceremoniously cram Oscar into the trunk.

The  hotel  lay far back on a deep green, floor-like lawn which supported the weight of many trees, large trees whose generous limbs showered the
benediction  of  shade  upon  the opulent persons who sat beneath them discussing golf, bridge and gin and appraising the new arrivals. The hotel
itself  was  a  rangy  structure,  having been added to in various styles of architecture as its popularity spread abroad. However, through sheer
massiveness, it succeeded in presenting a harmonious whole, being sufficiently antique and modern to appeal to the comfortably artistic.

Around  dinner  time  the front of the hotel afforded a striking study in modesty. Some of the ladies dressed directly in front of their windows,
some dressed a trifle removed, but no lady, it seemed, ever dressed entirely out of sight. It was around dinner time when Mr. Topper arrived, and
so  naturally  he  had  no  eyes  for the blue sea that swept away to the horizon nor for the tent-like sails that slanted against the sky. As he
followed  the  bell  boy down a dark corridor along which trunks were parked like so many automobiles, a tinkling sound of an unmistakable nature
issued from every door. Patriotic Americans were paying their evening tribute to the sacred laws of the land.

"If it were not so confoundedly hot," thought Topper, "I'd think I was on a sleigh ride. That tinkling makes me thirsty."

With the foresight bred of experience, he halted the bell boy at the door and took the key from his hand.

"I can do very nicely now myself," he told the boy, giving him a generous tip. "Don't bother to come in."

It was well that he took this precaution, for, when he entered the room, he found his companions in varying stages of incompleteness. The Colonel
was practically present, but Mrs. Hart and Marion Kerby were still sufficiently vague to have given the bell boy a decided shock.

"Sorry to have kept you waiting," he remarked, dropping the bags to the floor. "This is a decidedly musical hotel, isn't it, Colonel?"

"It is," replied the Colonel. "And our room alone is silent. What do you say to my taking steps?"

"Under  ordinary  circumstances  I'd  say no," said Mr. Topper, "but as this is a celebration, and incidentally a hot evening, I quite agree with
you. Steps should be taken; but step, Colonel, with the utmost caution. Don't, for God's sake, stumble."

"Leave everything to me," replied the Colonel, as he swiftly faded from view.

"I don't have to," remarked Topper. "You'd take it yourself anyway."

In  a  few  minutes a gleaming cocktail shaker was seen to float through the open window. Without taking the time to reappear, the Colonel poured
out a small drink and tasted it.

"Terrible," the voice remarked. "I'll take it back and throw it in his face."

The shaker floated away, and after a short wait another one, accompanied by a bottle of gin, appeared at the window and, drifting across the room
to the table, settled there with a silvery tinkle. The Colonel emerged from obscurity and sampled his plunder.

"Excellent!" he exclaimed. "Excellent! Now we can all have a drink."

From down the hall came the babble of excited voices mingled with the sound of running feet and slamming doors.

"Somebody seems to be upset," remarked Marion Kerby.

"It sounds so," said Mr. Topper. "How did your victims behave, Colonel?"

"Very  nicely," replied the Colonel. "As is usual in such cases, they were too confused to realise what had happened until after it had happened.
The  man  was standing with the shaker held aloft, poised for the downward shake. I snatched it from his hand, seized the bottle of gin and fled,
casting back a fleeting glance at the petrified company. The man was still holding his hand in the air like Ajax defying the lightning or Liberty
bereft of her torch. One woman, I believe, had fainted. That was about all."

He knocked the shaker against the table and made a slight dent in it.

"In  case  of  a  search  being instigated," he explained, "we can identify our property by this mark. All gin looks alike, but to make assurance
doubly sure we had better drink this up as speedily as possible."

"Justifiable inebriety," Mr. Topper suggested.

"Exactly," agreed the Colonel. "Telephone for some glasses, ice and a few oranges."

When  Mr.  Topper  went down to dinner half an hour later he was in a state of high good humour. Marion, the Colonel and Mrs. Hart had elected to
remain  behind,  the Colonel judiciously pointing out that the dinner hour was the ideal time for looting, so many guests being absent from their
rooms.  Moreover,  there  was still some gin left to be turned into cocktails. Mr. Topper, relieved to escape from his boisterous companions, was
delighted with this arrangement.

"Don't hurry back," said Marion as he was about to leave. "We can manage everything. Stroll about and amuse yourself."

With  a grateful look Mr. Topper innocently departed and made his way to the dining-room. Here he was seated at an enviable table occupied at the
moment  by a handsomely gowned woman. She was plump and pretty and appeared to have been in this life long enough to have learned how to enjoy it
without  too many qualms. Mr. Topper bowed and the woman smiled, and before the end of the dinner he had gleaned the information that the woman's
name was Mrs. Brewster and that her husband had died some years ago of Bright's disease as she had repeatedly warned him he would. On leaving the
table  she  favoured him with a particularly promising smile, and intimated that there were many beautiful walks about the place if one cared for
that  sort  of  thing.  That  sort of thing, Mr. Topper said flatly, was exactly what he cared for most. She smiled again and undulated away, Mr.
Topper following her departure with glowing eyes.

When  he  had  finished  his  dinner  he  repaired  to  the  general assembly room of the hotel and mingled complacently with the guests. A tall,
perspiring  gentleman  was  raffling  lace garments for the benefit of some worthy cause, and round this gentleman the ladies were milling, their
ears eagerly attuned to catch the numbers he called out as he drew small bits of paper from a hat.

As  Mr. Topper was standing there enjoying this little flurry of excitement, the woman directly in front of him gave a most undignified start and
rubbed herself tenderly. Then she turned and glared at Mr. Topper, whispering a few words to the woman next to her as she did so.

"Why, what a thing to do!" exclaimed the woman, looking indignantly at Mr. Topper.

This  was  too much for Topper. He shrank guiltily away to the other side of the circle, where he stood wondering what it was all about. But here
the  same  thing  happened, only more publicly. A woman, brushing past Mr. Topper, suddenly stopped and, uttering a little cry of pain, looked at
him with a shocked expression.

"Sir," she said, "if you do that again I'll have you ordered from this hotel."

"But what have I done?" asked the bewildered Topper.

"You know very well," she replied significantly. "If you were a gentleman you wouldn't even ask."

Before  the  disapproving  glances of a number of guests, Mr. Topper abandoned all hope of clearing himself and fled to the smoking-room. Here he
sat  down  on  a  sofa  beside  an elderly gentleman who was snoring with childlike candour, his half-smoked cigar still held in his hand. Topper
produced his handkerchief and mopped his flushed face. When he looked up the eyes of the elderly gentleman were fixed reproachfully on him.

"Why did you do that?" he demanded. 'You were snoring," replied Mr. Topper for lack of a better answer.

"That was no way to stop me," said the gentle-man. "Don't do it again or I'll call for help."

Topper,  at his wit's end, thereupon decided that his room was the only safe place for him. Taking the precaution to stay as far away as possible
from  anyone,  he  made  for the stairs, but here his retreat was cut off by the charming Mrs. Brewster. He was on the point of hurrying past her
when she gave a sudden little cry of surprise and looked coyly at him.

"Why, you naughty man," she said. "I don't know why I'm not angry. Just for that you must take a walk with me."

Mr.  Topper,  too  alarmed  to  inquire what "just for that" signified to Mrs. Brewster, obediently followed her from the hotel. She led him to a
gathering  of  boulders overhanging the beach and gracefully arranged herself thereon, using Mr. Topper's hand for support and forgetting to give
it back to him.

Mr.  Topper's  mind was in a state of siege, unhappy thoughts attacking it from all sides, as he vainly strove to figure out what curse had over-
taken  him.  He  was convinced that Marion Kerby was in some way involved in his predicament, that she was, in fact, directly responsible for it.
Mrs. Brewster's cooing, voice interrupted his moody reflections.

"I was such a lonesome girl until you came," she said. "There's not a single man in all this hotel that's half alive."

"But I'm not a single man," Mr. Topper replied cautiously.

"Oh, I don't mean that," she laughed. "And anyway, I hate single men. They always propose marriage."

Not feeling quite sure as to what proposals were expected of him, Mr. Topper made some pleasant reference to the character of the night.

"It's delicious," murmured Mrs. Brewster, moving closer to him and extending one hand to the sea.

Then  a  strange  thing  occurred.  A  white arm suddenly darted from the night, and the hand at the end of it, seizing Mrs. Brewster's, shook it
violently  up  and  down. With a cry of terror she fell back into Mr. Topper's arms, and when he had succeeded in propping her up, a headless dog
was  sitting  calmly before them on the rocks. Mr. Topper recognised Oscar immediately, but Mrs. Brewster had never met the dog. Nor did she stay
now  to  be  introduced.  With  little moaning noises she rose unsteadily to her feet and scrambled over the boulders with goat-like agility. The
sound  of  maniacal  laughter bursting in the air above her hastened her departure. Mr. Topper turned back to the ocean with thoughts of suicide,
only to find that Oscar had vanished and that Marion Kerby was standing in his place.

"So  that,"  she began in a voice of cold fury, "so that is the way you make use of your liberty. Picking a woman up at dinner and taking her out
on  the  rocks.  You love walking, don't you? Yes, you do not. I know. I know everything, heard every word you said, saw every look you gave her.
Sitting here holding hands and expecting me to go hunting for drink for your fat paunch. Quite a ladies' man, aren't you? Having a grand time and
me  hanging  around  like  a  dope. Well, let me tell you one thing, I'm through. See? I'm through. I quit now, but if I ever catch you with that
moth-eaten  old  troll  again I'll scare the living lights out of her. Of all the nerve! Sitting here on the rocks. Disgusting. Don't talk to me,
you're too low for words. Come along, Oscar, and I'll shove you back in your trunk. We've intruded too long already."

Oscar  appeared from the shadows and followed Marion Kerby's swiftly retreating form. Topper, awaking from his daze, sprang to his feet and cried
after Marion.

"Don't go away," he pleaded. "Give me a chance. I can explain everything. Come back, Marion."

"If  this  damn  dog  only had a head," she furiously shouted back, "I'd sick him on you. Don't dare to follow me, or I'll make the scene of your
life."

Through  a  side  door of the hotel Topper sneaked up to his room only to find it depressingly empty. Squeezed oranges and empty gin bottles bore
silent  witness  to  the  success of the Colonel's endeavours. Topper walked wearily to the window and looked out over the lawn. Had Marion Kerby
permanently  left  him? That question was uppermost in his mind. He had never before seen her so angry or unreasonable, yet with all his heart he
wanted  her back. For a long time he walked restlessly up and down his room. Several times he whispered her name, but received no answer. Finally
he undressed, switched off the light and, getting into bed, lay there wondering what his vanished companions were doing.

"A lovely celebration," he muttered bitterly to himself, rolling over on his side and seeking forgetfulness in sleep.




CHAPTER XIX Oscar in Toto


Fervently  hoping  that  he would be less easily recognisable in a bathing suit, Mr. Topper on the following morning took a solitary breakfast in
his  room, then hurried down to the beach. Here for an hour or so he reclined torpidly on the warm sand, too dispirited even to attempt the water
lapping  invitingly  at his feet. Under happier circumstances he would have been secretly thrilled by this broad expanse of ocean, but to-day the
old spell was broken. Topper was a lonely man, longing for Marion Kerby.

With  gloomy  eyes  he  watched the early bathers and reviled them in his heart. Their care-free outbursts of enterprise depressed him. One young
chap  he  particularly  disliked.  He  was  tall and blond and beautifully tanned, clean-cut, 'varsity manhood every inch of him. A slim girl and
shapely  was  watching this cute giant with her soul in her eyes as he carried a canoe, as if it were a straw, down to the water's edge. And when
Mr.  Topper  saw  this  happy  couple  go  paddling  off over the deep blue sea he earnestly hoped that a large wet wave would rise therefrom and
mightily smite their budding romance.

"He smokes a pipe," thought Mr. Topper, jeeringly, "and that's just what he would smoke, a pipe, man-fashion." Nor did the children playing round
him  appeal  to his better nature. He thought they all looked bold and unpleasant and wished they would go somewhere else. The beach was no place
for them. Why couldn't they keep to their rooms? As a matter of fact, why couldn't all these people clear out and leave him alone? Take that man,
for instance, romping with his little son. Could anything be more revolting?

Mr.  Topper  turned  away  from  this disturbing scene and gazed idly down at two small bare feet, one of which was impatiently tapping the sand.
Automatically  his  eyes  travelled  up an attractive length of slim limbs until they found themselves squinting into Marion Kerby's face--a set,
unfriendly face.

"If I catch you in the company of that woman," said the face with suppressed conviction, "I'm going out to drown her."

"You won't catch me," he answered meekly. "Sit down."

Mrs.  Hart  and  the  Colonel  joined  them  at this moment and allied themselves with Mr. Topper in urging Marion to be seated. Ungraciously she
flopped to the sand and favoured Topper with a sneer.

"If it hadn't been for these two," she told him, "you'd never have seen me again. As it is, I doubt if I stay."

"But I hope you will," said Topper.

"Don't  speak  to  me  now,"  she  snapped.  "I can't stand your silly voice. It's 'yam, yam' this and 'yam, yam' that until I'm nearly mad. Keep
quiet."

"All right," replied Mr. Topper with even greater meekness. "I won't say a word."

The Colonel's voice broke in on their happy reunion.

"You should have been with us last night, Topper," he said. "We had a splendid time."

"What did you do?" asked Topper, not greatly caring now that he had Marion back.

"Made friends with the proprietor," the Colonel replied, "and got him squiffed on his own drink. It was wonderful stuff."

"Wonderful stuff," Mrs. Hart echoed with deep feeling. "Wonderful!"

"He  wants  me to stay all summer," Marion remarked casually. "Room and board free. He says I look all run down as if somebody had been terribly,
terribly unkind to me. I just laughed in his face, but I haven't told him whether I would or wouldn't. Not yet."

"You could do much worse, dearie," Mrs. Hart said, furtively eyeing Mr. Topper's face. "At least he doesn't seem to be the flighty kind."

Topper cast her a look of loathing, but discreetly held his peace.

"Well, Topper, shall we take a dip?" suggested the Colonel, rising from the sand.

Not knowing what else to do, Topper followed the Colonel's example.

"Sit down!" flared Marion Kerby. "Whatare you trying to do, make a show of me on this beach? Sit down before I knock you down."

In his eagerness to obey, Topper almost fell to the sand.

"All right," he said. "All right."

"Now get up," she commanded, "and we'll all take a dip."

"Don't let her get away with it," whispered the Colonel. "I wouldn't. They're always meanest when they know they're wrong. They want to break you
down."

"What chance have I?" said Topper. "She has every advantage in her favour and no scruples at all. She's got me where she wants me."

But  before  the swim was over friendly relations were once more established between Mr. Topper and Marion Kerby. From the way she treated him it
seemed  as if the unpleasant incident had never occurred. Topper, exalted to the skies, frolicked like a dolphin and lost all memory of the harsh
words  she  had  hurled at him. Exhausted at last by their flounderings, the party returned to the beach where they wallowed in the sand and went
over the events of the past night, Mr. Topper listening with such an envious expression, that Marion Kerby took his hand in hers and promised him
a bigger and better celebration.

It  was  then  that  from  down the beach came the terrified yelping of a dog. They looked in that direction and saw a large collie in the act of
going  mad.  As  he approached them his terror increased. He snapped at the air, spun round on his feet, arched himself in a desperate circle and
rolled  over  in the sand. Nurses snatched up their charges, women screamed and the bathers fled to safety. During all this commotion the Colonel
sat watching the actions of the collie with purely professional interest.

"Doesn't look mad to me," he observed. "Looks more as if he were fighting something."

"Oscar," breathed Mrs. Hart.

"Possibly," replied the Colonel. "I forgot to mention that when I brought him his chow this morning, Oscar was not in the trunk."

"Oh," said Mr. Topper slowly. "Oh, dear me."

At this moment the collie decided that enough was enough. He rolled over on his back, thrust his legs in the air, and let his tongue hang out. He
was  unmistakably  through. Then above the vanquished dog appeared Oscar's bushy tail, which was quickly followed by his hind quarters. Gradually
the  dog  progressed  until  he  had reached his ears. Here there was a hesitation, a noticeable wavering, then, like the final shove at the goal
line, Oscar's head swam into view.

"By God! He's done it," exclaimed the Colonel.

The collie took one horrified look at Oscar, then turned his head away and closed his eyes. This was indeed too much. Oscar, as if forgetting his
victim, trotted over to the Colonel and looked him square in the eye with an expression which eloquently conveyed the meaning that from now on he
would  take no more nonsense from anyone. He was a whole dog now in his own rights, and his rights were to be respected. With a nasty look at Mr.
Topper he sprawled out in the sand and began to police his newly acquired hide. Meanwhile the collie had dragged himself away.

For some moments the Colonel studied his dog with puzzled and considering eyes, then presently his face cleared.

"I  know  what it is," he said. "He must have forgotten his spot. He had a little spot in real life right on the side of his nose, the left side,
but in the excitement and all I fancy he must have overlooked it."

"That's merely a detail, Colonel," put in Mr. Topper. "Don't send him back for his spot now. He can pick it up later."

The  Colonel agreed to this and the party re-entered their bath-houses, Oscar's performance having attracted to them rather unpleasant publicity.
Some  time  later,  when  they foregathered on the lawn of the hotel, the Colonel was the last to appear, and when he did appear he was exploding
with excitement.

"Don't  ask  me where I got the news," he began, "and anyway it doesn't matter. George Kerby is back and is looking for you, Marion. He's heading
this way and he seems to have heard something."

Topper looked for a chair, but finding none, braced himself on his legs.

"You're not joking?" Marion calmly asked the Colonel.

"Credit me with more tact," he replied in an injured voice. "This isn't a trifling matter."

"Did they say," Topper painfully inquired, "did they say that he seemed to be angry?"

The Colonel laughed sardonically and Topper winced.

"Not at all," replied the Colonel. "He's just crazy to see you, Topper."

"I wish I could say as much," said Mr. Topper. "What, oh, what shall we do now?"

"Clear out," answered the Colonel. "Vamoose plenty pronto."

"I know just the place," exclaimed Mrs. Hart, with a wild light in her eyes. "What a lark!"

"Try to take things seriously," said Mr. Topper. "If you mean the lake, I won't go back there. I'm a marked man in that vicinity."

"No,"  Mrs.  Hart  explained.  "It's a deserted beach in Connecticut. No one ever goes there. It's been left vacant through a family quarrel ever
since my father died. What a family! I'm glad I'm out of it."

"This is no time to be abusing your family," Mr. Topper reported. "Let's start for this beach at once.

"Not so fast," said Mrs. Hart. "We'll have to stop somewhere to buy some tents and provisions and things--"

"And  I'll have to loot without delay the proprietor's private locker," interrupted the Colonel. "Oscar can sit with us and I'll fill the trunk."
Marion turned to the impatient Topper and placed a soothing hand on his arm.

"Don't worry, old dear," she told him. "We'll take care of you. Hurry now and pack your things. We'll be waiting in the car."

"Won't you come with me?" Topper pleaded. "For some reason I hate to be alone."

Thus  was  the  flight planned and right speedily was it executed. Twelve hours of high-pressure driving, relieved only by an interlude of hectic
buying, jostled them to their night-shrouded destination.

"What a devil of a place this is! " said the Colonel, sloshing about in the weeds and darkness. "The entire world is deserted."

"You don't know the half of it," Mrs. Hart replied. "Wait till the morning comes."

"I  won't  even wait for that," said Mr. Topper, who had been diligently applying himself to the bottle throughout the entire course of the trip.
"Here and now I sleep."

"In spite of my remarks I'm still desperately engaged with these damn prehensile weeds," the Colonel called. "This isn't a beach, it's a jungle."

"The beach is farther on," explained Mrs. Hart. "This field leads down to it."

"Then  be kind enough to put a cushion under me and place a bottle in my hand," said the Colonel. "Then kiss me a chaste good-night. Like Topper,
I sleep here and now."

Some  hours  later,  when  the nice, clean, freshly starched sun rose and favoured the field with its light it looked down on four untidy figures
plus  one  rumpled  dog stretched in various unpicturesque attitudes of slumber. Presently the figures stirred and sat up. They yawned, stretched
and  rubbed  their  eyes  with frank disregard of each other's presence. The dog unwound himself and snapped wearily at a fly. Mr. Topper was the
first to speak.

"Are we safe?" he asked.

"So far, it seems," replied Marion, fluffing out her hair, "but you never can tell about George."

"The bottle, Colonel," said Topper promptly. "Already I scent disaster."

The  bottle  went the rounds, then the figures shook themselves and rose to their feet. Mrs. Hart led the way to the beach, the others straggling
through  the  weeds  beneath  the weight of the tents and provisions. And the sun, as if to register its disapproval of their morning salutation,
caused them to perspire freely.

The  beach  was  a  narrow  yellow band, about one hundred yards in length, pocketed away in a wooded cove filled with cool, green water. Far out
against a wall of billowy clouds a single sail stole gracefully along. Gulls were in the air. The smell of clam shells, salt and shrubbery gave a
distinctive fragrance to the place.

"This is more than a deserted beach," said Marion Kerby, appreciatively. "It's a little pocket in nowhere. No wonder your family fought for it. I
could live here the rest of my life, if I had a life to live."

The  smile  she gave to Topper had lost a little of its old-time impertinence. Something about it troubled him. For a moment he tasted the savour
of  the end of things and caught a glimpse of an empty landscape. The very stillness of the place, its hushed, watchful solitude, the fanning out
of  the  green,  flat water and the clouds out there beyond conspired to make him feel that so much beauty could only end in pain. More than ever
before he realised Marion Kerby's keenness of feature and the world of untouched wonder that lay behind her eyes. Some subtle influence emanating
from her at that moment made him begin already to miss her. He wanted to go over and stand close to her side, but, in his self-consciousness, the
few feet separating them were as difficult to achieve as the Sahara Desert on stilts. All that he could say was:

"You've lived enough for two already."

Apparently  not  hearing  this remark, she walked away and sat down on a rock close to the water's edge. The Colonel and Mrs. Hart were wrestling
with  the  tents, the Colonel booming directions and assuring Oscar that if he did not go somewhere else he would speedily kick him back into the
fourth  dimension.  Topper  followed  Marion and sat down at her feet. They were happy as they were, with silence and space around them, the deep
blue  sky  above  and the green water murmuring along the beach. There was a remote expression in Marion's eyes as she gazed away from the shore.
She seemed somehow to have withdrawn a little from Topper and her surroundings.

"Listen to me, Topper," she said at last. "Are you any happier now that you've lost your stomach and your smug voluntary ways?"

"I've lost more than that," he replied, his eyes riveted on her face.

"What a coy devil you are!" she answered. "Do you mean to imply delicately that you've lost your heart to me?"

"You know it," said Mr. Topper. "You know it with hateful complacency, but it's true and so here we are."

"Yes," she answered with a little shrug of her shoulders. "And so here we are, but we won't be here long--at least, I won't."

"What do you mean?" he asked.

"Something is happening to me," she replied. "I seem to be losing interest in things--all except you. Perhaps I'm getting high-planed."

"Don't do that," he pleaded. "You never could be so lovely as you are right now."

"Do you think so?" she said with a thoughtful smile. "For that you deserve a kiss. Come closer."

Topper took her in his arms and pressed her to him.

"Make it snappy," she exclaimed. "I didn't ask you to strangle me. Hurry and help the Colonel. He's swearing abominably at that poor woman."

Topper  was  unable  to  analyse  his  emotions.  Sensations  were confused within him, happiness and sorrow, triumph and defeat. To work off his
feelings  he joined the Colonel's staff and became desperately involved with a tent to the amusement of Mrs. Hart, who, upon Topper's appearance,
immediately sat down and gave up the struggle. The Colonel regarded her with a brutal eye.

"Get up," he commanded, "and collect some wood and I'll show you how to cook breakfast in case you don't know."

"I  don't  know,"  admitted  Mrs.  Hart, "and I don't know that I care to know, but I will get some wood. The stomach of me is raging at the very
thought of food. Teach Topper to cook. He looks enterprising."

Under  the  Colonel's  skilful  direction  the  camp  was eventually arranged. During this interlude he showed himself to his best advantage, his
military  training  coming  to  the fore. Topper became his chief assistant and Mrs. Hart the camp drone, her disinclination for work manifesting
itself by her absence whenever there was any work to be done.

And  now  began one of the quietest and most peaceful phases of Mr. Topper's vacation. The nearest village was five miles off, and this they very
seldom  visited.  Topper  drove  over once and came back with a canoe and some fresh provisions. The canoe was received with delight, the Colonel
immediately  going fishing in it, taking a bottle along. Some hours later he came back with nothing more useful than a tendency to stagger and to
curse at the fish he had almost caught.

The  days  slipped  by  tranquilly,  almost unnoticed, and gradually the fear of George Kerby's arrival faded from Mr. Topper's mind. Someone was
always in swimming, and there was always ample Scotch or some other equally heady beverage, the Colonel being a splendid provider.

At  night  they gambled for Topper's money and cheated him when they could, Mrs. Hart being the most successful and persistent, making it a point
never  to  play  an  honest  hand  unless driven to it. Topper took Marion paddling whenever she would let him, and he fell more deeply under her
spell,  although no further demonstration occurred. And the Colonel succeeded at last in making Oscar retrieve his spot. Sometimes it would be in
the  wrong  place,  but  the Colonel was not particular. Topper became thoroughly attached to Oscar and told him about his cat, Scollops, the dog
listening with his head on one side and an ear politely cocked.

It  was  Mrs.  Hart's  surprising  suggestion  one  Sunday that they should all go to church. They did this, and Marion Kerby established a local
miracle  by  slipping  away  in  the  middle of the sermon and materialising angelically directly above the preacher's head. Mrs. Hart laughed so
hysterically  that  she  had  to  be helped from the church, but from that time on the preacher began to believe a little in the truth of his own
sermons. The news of this event spread throughout the county and brought much fame and many visitors to this little country church which hitherto
had been content to remain in bucolic obscurity.

The  following  night,  just before dawn, Topper awoke with a feeling of profound depression which was not relieved by what he saw as soon as his
eyes  had  grown  accustomed to the darkness. A figure was standing at the flap of the tent. That was all. It was motionless. It just stood there
and  seemed  to  be  examining  Topper  with calculating interest. When Mr. Topper moved, the figure laughed unpleasantly. Most unpleasantly, Mr.
Topper thought.

"Topper," said the figure, "Topper, I've got you now, and, God, how I'm going to make you sweat."

Mr. Topper was sweating already. His tongue clove to the roof of his mouth and his hands trembled on the coverings.

"Who's speaking?" came a sleepy voice from the other bed. "Are you awake, Cosmo?"

The figure at the flap of the tent raised its hands to its head and clutched its hair.

"By all that's holy!" it cried. "Living together in open shame."

"It's  all a mistake," said Mr. Topper in a despairing voice. "I didn't even know she was here. She must have sneaked in after I went to bed. For
heaven's sake, George, wait until I explain."

"And if I believed that," replied George Kerby more calmly, "you'd probably tell me another one, wouldn't you?"

"Why, if it isn't George himself!" exclaimed Marion, rising from the bed. "And he's in one of his most playful moods. Welcome home, honey."

"Shameless woman," he cried. "Put something over your shoulders. God, won't I make him sweat for this! Leave this room, Marion."

"It  isn't  a  room, it's a tent," she replied. "Do try to be accurate, and while we're on the subject of accuracy, I might mention the fact that
Topper was right. I did sneak in here after he fell asleep. My tent is some yards away, but the Colonel was snoring so violently I came in here."

"The Colonel?" said George and Topper at the same time.

"Yes," she explained patiently. "His tent is close to mine."

"It won't go with me," George Kerby replied. "Lies, lies, lies, a tissue of lies from beginning to end. Oh, but won't he sweat for this.'

"Don't keep telling me how much I'm going to sweat," put in Mr. Topper. "I've lost five pounds in the last five minutes. Let Marion explain."

"Yes, George," said Marion. "Don't be tragic. I can explain everything. Topper's as innocent as a lamb. He doesn't know any better. Don't jump at
conclusions."

Once more George Kerby laughed unpleasantly.

"I'm hardly jumping," he retorted. "Conclusions are forced down my throat."

Topper shivered and pulled the bed clothing round him.

"You  talk to him, Marion," he suggested. "Take him away somewhere and tell him everything. Maybe he wants a drink. It's such lovely Scotch. Will
you have a drink, George?"

Topper's voice trailed away to a wistful nothingness.

"I'll  go,"  said  George,  "but  don't  think  you're  going  to  escape.  I'll keep my eye on this tent and in the morning you'll answer to me.
Understand? In the morning you'll answer to me. You'll sweat then."

"Why must you repeat everything?" complained Mr. Topper. "Take a good drink and lie down. You're all upset."

"Not so upset as you are going to be," George Kerby replied. "Not nearly so upset. Now I'm going, but I'll be back at any moment."

"Good-night,"  said  Mr.  Topper  in a cloyingly friendly voice. "Good-night, George. I hope you'll feel better in the morning after you've had a
nice talk with your wife."

"Never felt better in my life," George answered. "I'm fit all over, and that's more than you're going to be."

Marlon  threw  on  a bathrobe and led her belligerent husband away, but sleep was murdered for Topper. In the pale dawn he sat hunched in his bed
and  wondered  what George was going to do to make him sweat so much. Not until it was well on to breakfast time did he have the courage to leave
his tent. The whole camp was astir and George Kerby was sitting on a log in dignified aloofness.

"Here's where the sweating begins," thought Topper as he looked fearfully at George's grim face.

When the Colonel saw Topper he greeted him with unusual impressiveness and led him aside.

"Topper," he said, "I'm sorry, but Mr. Kerby demands satisfaction. There's no way out of it. If you don't fight him he'll kill you."

"He'll kill me if I do," replied Mr. Topper.

"Perhaps, but there's always a chance, "said the Colonel. "Now this is what I propose and Kerby seems to agree."

The  Colonel's  proposition  was  unique.  It  was nothing less than a duel with clam shells at twenty paces, each principal to have three throws
apiece.

"Why  I  never  threw  a  clam  shell  in  my life," said Topper, "but I understand they're very dangerous. Isn't there some other way? Some more
reasonable way.?"

"I can't answer for the other way," replied the Colonel. "He is waiting for your answer. If you refuse, may God be with you."

"May God be with me anyway," breathed Topper. "Make him agree to one throw apiece, won't you, Colonel?"

"I'll do whatever I can," said the Colonel, walking with great dignity to George Kerby.

Marion brought Topper a cup of coffee and looked at him sympathetically.

"He's a rotten shot," she whispered. "Don't worry. It could be much worse."

"Can you do anything with him?" Topper asked. "Get him drunk or something?"

"Not until after the duel," she answered. "He insists on satisfaction. I've pleaded with him for hours."

"I'm  so  thrilled! " exclaimed Mrs. Hart, joining them. "When is it going to be? Think of it, a duel, and we'll be here to see it. It's just too
wonderful."

The Colonel left Kerby and approached the group.

"Be ready then at five o'clock," he said. "Kerby agrees to two shots apiece and intimates that he will need only one."

Kerby had left the log and was arranging a target on the beach. Then he collected some clam shells and began to hurl them at his imaginary foeman
with  all  his might. At first the shells went wide of their mark, but gradually he began to get the range of the target. Patiently, deliberately
and  earnestly  he  practised  all morning until he had developed murderous control. Everywhere Topper went he heard the clam shells striking the
target  with  increasing  frequency  and force. The sound got on his nerves. With fascinated eyes he watched George Kerby at his grim occupation.
After  a brief rest for luncheon Kerby returned at once to the target and put on the finishing touches. Topper, unable to bear the sight, retired
to  his  tent.  Once he emerged and endeavoured to do a little practising on his own part, but when he saw George Kerby sardonically watching his
futile attempts to hit a tree, he dropped the clam shells and stole back to his tent.

Slowly the hours dragged by until five o'clock, when the Colonel promptly appeared and solemnly conducted Topper to the beach.

"Gentlemen," he said, "take your places at the proper distance and when I drop this handkerchief start firing."

At  this  little  announcement, Mrs. Hart, who had been drinking a trifle in anticipation of the event, clapped her hands enthusiastically. "Atta
boy!" she cried.

Topper  looked  at  her  with  disgust,  then  turned his eyes to Marion. She smiled back at him encouragingly, but remained silent. George Kerby
beckoned to the Colonel and made a few hurried remarks, after which the Colonel approached Topper with a troubled expression on his face.

"Topper,"  he  said,  "Mr.  Kerby  insists  on  his privileges as a spirit. He demands to be allowed to dematerialise, as that is, he claims, his
natural state."

"Tell him not to be childish," said Mr. Topper. "How can I see to throw at him?"

"I mentioned that fact and he replied that that was your worry, not his," answered the Colonel.

"Ask him if he would prefer to murder me in cold blood," Topper remarked bitterly. "There's a razor in my tent."

"Do you agree to Mr. Kerby's proposition?" continued the Colonel.

"What else can I do?" cried Topper. "If I don't agree he'll chase me all over this place with clam shells anyway. Let's get it over."

"Very well," replied the Colonel. "Here are your shells, and good luck."

Topper looked miserably at the clam shells the Colonel placed in his hand.

"Give him little ones," he whispered to the Colonel. "Don't forget, Colonel, pick out two small ones, small and light."

"When I drop the handkerchief," the Colonel once more announced, "you gentlemen can begin to fire."

"At what?" called Mr. Topper as George Kerby faded from the scene.

"I can't see as that makes much difference," replied the Colonel. "But if you want a mark, fire where you last saw him."

The Colonel raised his arm and the handkerchief fluttered in the air.

"One minute," called Mr. Topper. "Suppose he sneaks up behind me? Tell him he shouldn't do that."

"Don't interrupt me again," said the Colonel impatiently. "Of course he wouldn't do that."

"Oh, wouldn't he I " answered Topper. "That's just what he would do."

He  looked  at the spot where he had last seen George Kerby and saw a clam shell poised in the air. To Topper it looked neither little nor light.
It was a brutal clam shell, the great-grandfather of all clams.

"Are you ready, gentlemen?" called the Colonel.

"I am," answered Mrs. Hart. "What a lark! Topper, you'll soon be with us, old boy."

The handkerchief dropped to the ground and Topper, aiming at the poised shell, missed it. Then the poised shell aimed at Topper and did not miss.
It  met  Mr.  Topper  just above the eye and sent him speedily to earth. As if the shell had struck her, Marion gave a little cry and ran over to
him, lifting his head to her lap. George Kerby reappeared and stood looking down at Topper rather guiltily. The Colonel was bathing the wound.

"If you've killed him," said Marion Kerby, "he'll be over on our side and then the triangle will be complete."

"I hadn't thought of that," replied Kerby, bending anxiously over Topper. "I didn't mean to throw so hard. Pull him through, Colonel."

Mrs. Hart was crying softly to herself and sipping a glass of Scotch.

"He was such a nice man," she sobbed. "Such a generous host."

The  Colonel  and Marion worked swiftly and silently as they skillfully bandaged Topper's head. Then the Colonel took him in his arms and carried
him to his tent, Mrs. Hart following after them with tipsy lamentations.




CHAPTER XX The Return to the Tree


With  an expression of congealed solicitude George Kerby was holding a glass of Scotch to Mr. Topper's lips when next the stricken man opened his
eyes  on  a  world  he had elaborately resigned himself to leave forever. The Colonel was making bandages with professional detachment and Marion
Kerby  was  sitting on one side of the cot. Mrs. Hart, in an attitude of florid grief, was untidily draped over the foot of it. As he took in the
serious group Topper was reminded of wax figures.

"Are you trying to poison me,"he asked, "now that you've got me down?"

"Oh, dear me, no," Mrs. Hart pleaded moistly. "Please take a little drink. It will do you a world of good. It's already helped me tremendously."

Mr. Topper looked with surprise at her tear-moist face.

"What's this?" he asked. "Tears? Don't cry, my child, he'll get me the next time."

"Yes,"  she answered dramatically, "they're tears if you want to know. Ask them all. Tell him, Marion. Ever since that clam shell knocked you out
I've  been  crying  as if my heart would break. And I do believe it will unless some considerate person gives me a little something to tuck up my
nerves."

Kerby bent over Topper and looked contritely into his eyes.

"Listen, old man," he said. "Tell me that I'm forgiven. I'm terribly ashamed of myself for getting you all messed up. The honours are even now."

But  not the injuries," Mr. Topper replied with a tired smile. "You put the gory in glory, George, but I don't mind. Give me that drink and let's
call it a duel. There's one thing, though, I'll never forgive, not to the end of my days."

"What's that?" asked George Kerby.

"You've  eternally ruined clams for me," said Topper. "You don't know what that means. Clams were my only vice once upon a time--a secret craving
I  kept  to  myself.  Even  my wife didn't know I loved them. That's all over now. Hereafter whenever I see a clam I'm going to duck and run like
hell."

"How droll he is!" murmured Mrs. Hart. "Let's all have a drink."

They all did, all save Marion Kerby, who held a moist cloth to Mr. Topper's head.

"Do you want me to send these ruffians away?" she asked him. "Perhaps you had better rest."

"Let the ruffians stay," he answered. "The situation pleases my vanity. Never before have I been such a centre of attraction."

The Colonel turned to Kerby with one of his most disarming smiles.

"Now  that the storm is over," he said, "I want to tell everyone that it's been a real pleasure to have met George Kerby. We have thought so much
about him."

"Thanks,"  acknowledged  Kerby,  "but  if it hadn't been for Marion's playfulness in that church you might never have had the pleasure. You can't
imagine what a great to-do her misplaced sense of humour has created. By this time, I'll bet, the papers are full of it and the sparks are fairly
flying from scientific and religious circles."

"She was too funny for words," said Mrs. Hart.

"Perhaps,"  replied Kerby, "but as soon as I heard of it I knew what had happened. I recognised that particular brand of madness, having suffered
from it for years. After that it was easy to find you."

"How  fortunate!"  said  the  Colonel, with highly polished hypocrisy. "If we had known you were back we would have scoured the countryside. Your
return was our constant topic of conversation. Topper and your wife were forever talking about it."

"Were they?" cried Kerby, pitifully pleased. "What a beast I've been!"

"They  were,"  continued  the  Colonel,  "but  don't worry. It's been a good summer all round. You've outraged Europe and we've despoiled the New
England States. At last we meet. A little misunderstanding, a most natural misunderstanding, is happily if painfully settled. Therefore I propose
a  final  celebration.  I feel that my ectoplasm is running low and I fancy we're all about in the same boat. We can't fade away without one last
fling, but this time the party will be on us. Mrs. Hart and your servant will give it."

"Where?" asked Mrs. Hart, sleepily opening her eyes. "May I come?"

The Colonel gave her a glance of commiseration.

"The events of the day have been too much for the poor woman," he remarked. "She is sodden with excitement."

"It's  not  that  at all," she protested. "Tell him, Marion. It's just because I'm so frantically sympathetic. No one suffers as I do. No one has
such nerves. You wouldn't believe how much . . ."

"The  Colonel,"  George  Kerby  interrupted impatiently, "has extended to us a very handsome invitation which I, for one, accept on the spot. But
where  can we stage this celebration? From what I've been able to gather, you people have about exhausted all the hospitality on this side of the
Rockies."

"How about right here?" suggested the Colonel. "This is a good, safe place."

"No,"  put  in  Topper, "let's go back to the old inn--you know, George, where we pulled our first party. Mrs. Hart and the Colonel would love it
there."

Marion Kerby was gazing at Topper with a reminiscent light in her eyes.

"I second the motion," she said. "The old inn would be a lovely place for a farewell party."

At this Mrs. Hart's shoulders began to shake convulsively.

"Don't say farewell," she sobbed. "I can't bear to think of the parting. Quick, Colonel, my glass."

Marion  motioned  to  the  Colonel,  who  immediately  lifted  the grief-stricken woman to her feet, and, whispering words of comfort in her ear,
assisted her from the tent.

Two  days  later the Colonel and Mrs. Hart left for the inn, there to complete arrangements for the celebration. The others, including Oscar, who
had stubbornly refused to dematerialise, were to follow by motor within a few days.

On the morning of departure Topper, still bearing the honourable scar of battle, wandered dejectedly about the place. He was looking forward with
but small eagerness to the farewell celebration and would have preferred to linger on forever in this quiet spot where he had spent so many happy
and care-free days. Everything spoke to him of Marion, the water, the beach and the trees. Everything breathed farewell, the parting of the ways.
If  he could only have remained near her, even with her husband present, it would have been better than a final separation. For the first time in
many  days  he  thought  of Mrs. Topper, thought of her miserably, protestingly and with a little pang of shame. He had treated the poor creature
terribly--he realised that--and the realisation made it no easier for him to face the inevitable reunion.

To  escape  his  thoughts  he put on his bathing suit and went for a parting swim. He swam far out to the mouth of the cove and looked across the
water  to  the  distant  horizon where tumbled clouds, touched with sunlight, were banked against the sky. He wished that he could swim out there
with  Marion  Kerby  and  hide with her behind that fleecy curtain, to be protected by it forever from the urgency of life, to prolong there in a
curtained  land  the romance and freedom he had enjoyed for only a few short months. His dream of escape was shattered by a voice floating to him
across the water. Looking behind, he saw Marion, clad in her bathing suit, gliding towards him in the canoe.

"What are you doing so far from shore?" she demanded. "It's time we were getting started."

"Are you so eager to leave?" he asked her.

"My heart is no lighter than yours," she answered, "but I'm not wasting time weighing it. Look out, I'm coming in."

She  poised  herself  and  dived  lightly  overboard,  emerging  close  to Topper. Together they swam back to the canoe, and Topper, with all his
strength, pushed it out of the cove.

"Let it drift away," he said, "as a symbol of my departing happiness."

"I'm in on that, old thing," she replied, "but just the same, cheer up. We'd better be getting back to shore or George will be collecting another
nice little pile of clam shells."

"But, Marion," Topper protested, "is it really to be the end of things? Can't we go on for a while?"

"I'm  afraid  not,"  she  replied. "You and George are not proper playmates, and anyway my ectoplasm is growing a trifle frayed. You'll be seeing
through me soon."

"You've  deprived me of all my old ideas," Mr. Topper answered, "and all I have in their place is an empty, aching feeling, a feeling of loss and
discontent, the makings of a rebellion."

"Memories! "she cried. "Memories, Topper. Do they mean nothing to you? Cling to them. The past is made of memories, the future is made of dreams.
Hot stuff!"

"Not mine," answered Topper. "Desk tops and legs of lamb."

"Well,  then,  here's a memory for you," she said, swimming close to him and giving him a little salt-edged kiss. "Now, quit your mooning and get
back to shore."

Topper buried his face in the water and swam to the beach, Marion following easily in his wake. George Kerby was waiting for them with a glass in
either  hand,  and  as  Topper  swiftly studied his face, he fancied he detected in Kerby's eyes a hint of pain, something lonely and hidden, yet
reassuringly sympathetic.

"I thought you might like these after your long swim," said Kerby, a shade apologetically.

Something  about the situation made it difficult for Topper to speak for a moment. He accepted the extended glass and pretended to be getting his
breath.

"You're thoughtful, George," he said at last. "Here are my best regards to you."

"Good luck," replied Kerby with a faint smile. "This place is almost too lovely to leave."

But  they  left  it  just  the same, left it as it was, the canoe drifting out with the tide and the tents rippling in the light breeze beneath a
high,  glad sun. Topper, with Oscar on his lap, slouched in the automobile and refused to look back at the little beach as Kerby drove across the
field  and  on  to  the  narrow  road.  No  one spoke, no one seemed inclined to look at the other. They were occupied with their thoughts, which
apparently were not happy. Presently Marion found a bottle and handed it to Topper.

"What's wrong with this outfit?" she demanded. "You'd think we were going to a funeral instead of a celebration. The pair of you depress me."

Topper  and  Kerby  drank, solemnly at first, but gradually their solemnity faded until at last the three of them felt moved to lift their voices
inwrithing harmony, so painful to the ears that Oscar howled in protest.

Dusk  was  drifting over the fields by the time they reached their destination, and already the old inn was partly obscured by trees and shadows.
They  parked  the  car behind a clump of bushes and entered the inn by a rear door, old memories rising up to greet them as they stood in the dim
light of the silent room. No one was there to receive them, but signs of preparation were every-where in evidence. A long table had been arranged
at  one end of the room and the great sideboard was burdened with provisions, glasses and bottles. In one corner Marion discovered a battered but
businesslike  phonograph.  Cigars  and cigarettes had been placed by thoughtful hands at all convenient points. Oscar was behaving strangely. The
hair stood up on his back as he sniffed the air excitedly and gave utterance to eager whines. Observing the behaviour of the dog, Topper began to
feel uncomfortable.

Suddenly  three  loud  raps  shattered the silence of the room and a voice called out, "Attention!" Topper, on his dash to the door, stopped long
enough  to  see  the Colonel, in full uniform, emerge from the gloom. The sight reassured him, as did the appearance of Mrs. Hart a moment later.
Oscar  was  barking madly and scrambling at the Colonel's feet. Mrs. Hart was approaching Topper with a tray full of glasses. This decided him to
stay. He took a glass and drained its contents.

"Take another," said Mrs. Hart.

"Thanks," replied Topper. "How are your nerves? Mine are terrible."

"Couldn't be worse," she assured him. "The arrangements have been such a strain. I think I'd better join you before I continue with the tray."

"Do," urged Topper. "It would be awful if you fainted."

They  drank  together quickly and Mrs. Hart hurried away. Topper looked about the room and was appalled by the sight he beheld. Bodies in various
stages  of  formation  were  appearing in every corner. Heads were floating in the air and bodyless legs were walking across the floor. Strangely
detached-looking  arms  were  already  snatching food and glasses from the sideboard. And as Topper stood there gazing, the room gradually became
peopled with men and women in evening clothes. They stood about in groups and conversed with animation. In the most natural way in the world they
consumed sandwiches and cocktails, and lifted their voices in laughter. Marion Kerby came over to Topper and took him by the hand.

"Stop  gaping  like that," she whispered. "It's only a few of the Colonel's friends he's invited in honour of the celebration, and if you'll take
it  from  me,  it's a pretty hard-looking crowd. Don't get giddy with any of the women or I'll have to start something. I want you for myself to-
night."

"Never  in  my life have I witnessed such a wholesale display of horrifying sights," said Mr. Topper. "You are welcome to have me all to yourself
to-night. I'm cowed."

"But first we must appear in public," she replied. "Come with me and I'll steer you safely through."

She led him to a table at which George and the Colonel were already seated. Topper was greeted with shouts of joy, and the Colonel, thrusting his
hand into a bucket, produced a bottle of champagne.

"Topper," he said, "nothing is too good for you. I've been waiting for this moment."

At the sound of the popping cork Mrs. Hart innocently sidled up to the table and sank to a chair with a weary sigh.

"I'm exhausted," she breathed. "Simply exhausted. What's that? Champagne?"

"Yes," said the Colonel. "Do you drink it?"

"I will try to-night," she answered in a resigned voice. "They say it's good for exhaustion."

When the Colonel had filled the glasses he rose and bowed to Topper.

"Topper,"  he said, "I toast you as a man in a million. On this, our last public appearance, so to speak, I am frank to say that of all the happy
things we leave behind you will be the most missed."

Amid enthusiastic shouts of approval the Colonel resumed his chair and Topper in turn got up.

"I  toast you all," he said, "as a revelation to me of a larger life and a lighter death. And I thank you all for the changes you have wrought in
me. Once I was a law-abiding, home-loving and highly respected member of my community. Within a few short months you have changed all that. Now I
am  a  jail-bird, a hard drinker, a wife deserter and an undesirable, dissolute outcast. And I am glad of it. Only a few short miles now separate
me from my home, but let me assure you that they will be the hardest miles I have ever travelled in my life."

Topper  sat  down to be thumped on the back by Kerby and the Colonel. Marion's eyes were like stars and Mrs. Hart's like pale moons, big but dim.
More  champagne  appeared  and  guests kept visiting the table, gossiping for a moment, then drifting away. Topper was elaborately introduced and
frequently  reintroduced. This continued for some time. Many flushed faces confronted Topper, many bright eyes challenged his. Thrilling laughter
floated  through the air, the quick responses to well-turned lines. Arousing perfumes, subtle yet intimate, quickened the expectant blood. A soft
light,  shed  by  the lanterns hanging from the rafters, flooded the room, and through this light the dancers revolved to the impersonal music of
the  phonograph.  The  Colonel  was at his most beaming best, gracious, immaculate and highly charged with champagne. Like a prince he sat at the
table  and  greeted his subjects with jovial words. It was an expansive, heady and fluid evening, a dizzy moment stolen from the lap of time. Mr.
Topper,  at  the urgency of Marion, danced with many fair women, listening to their leading remarks and capping them with his short but pertinent
rejoinders.  At  last he returned to the table and claimed Marion for a dance. They circled the floor once, then ducked through the rear door and
wandered off into the woods. Other couples were there before them. Laughter and whispers drifted among the trees.

"Well, Topper," said Marion, "how are you holding your drink?"

"With all my might and main," he answered. "You seem to be quite untouched."

"It's not my fault," she replied, sitting down with her back against a tree. "It just won't work to-night, although I've consumed enough for ten.
My heart is not in my glass. Only my reflection, which will soon fade away."

Topper was painfully inarticulate and Marion slipped her hand in his, letting her head rest on his shoulder while she gazed up at the sky through
the branches of the trees.

"Did  you  ever  look  at  the stars so long," she continued, "that you almost became a part of them, so that when a lightning bug flew past your
vision  it  got all mixed up with the Milky Way? Did you ever sit alone for hours chewing the cud of your own futility, hating yourself for being
yourself  and  blaming  life for making you so? Well, that's the way I feel to-night. It's time for me to be moving on. I've enjoyed this sort of
stuff  too  long.  There  are  other things to do. I don't mean better things, merely more interesting ones. Our capacity to enjoy life should be
measured  by our ability to create life, or beauty or some form of happiness. So far I've created nothing, only a constant confusion, a restless,
discontented stirring in the ether."

"You've  created  happiness  in  me," said Mr. Topper. "You've awakened dreams and left memories. You've made me humble and you've made me human.
You've  taught me to understand how a man with a hangover feels. You've lifted me forever out of the rut of my smug existence. I'll go back to it
I know, but I won't be the same man."

"You  never  were,"  she  answered  logically. "You were never intended to be. Nobody is, but life gets you, life and the economic urge--success,
esteem,  safety.  How  many  of our triumphs in life spring from negative impulses, the fear of losing rather than the wish to win. It's a lot of
talk, Topper, the whole damn show. And no one alive to-day is to blame. We must thank the ages past and how to their false gods. We dress them up
in  new  garments,  but  in their essence they're just the same--power, property and pride. You can't get away from them, the subsidised steps to
salvation.  I  talk like this, but I've contributed nothing. We must just keep on and on until the mountains themselves crumble from nausea or we
learn to scale them and cool our hands in the sky. Wild talk, Topper. Let's go back and cage a drink."

She would have risen, but he held her back.

"Rest here with me a moment," he said, "and let the world go to hell."

"If you feel like that," she answered, "we'll have to cage a flock of drinks."

They  rose  and  walked  back  to the inn from which issued the tumult of many voices raised in song and uncontrolled abuse. The room presented a
scene  of  great disorder. Couples not amorously inclined were either gambling or accusing each other of murder, arson and rape. George Kerby was
among  the  gamblers,  but  the Colonel still sat at his table with a far-away look in his eyes. With the methodical precision of a wax figure he
raised  his glass to his lips at regular intervals. Mrs. Hart was sitting in a corner devouring a leg of chicken, while Oscar with moist eyes was
trying  to  hypnotise it out of her hand. The hour was late, but no one seemed to care about that. There were still some uncorked bottles. Broken
glass lay on the floor and cigarette ends smouldered beneath the dancers' feet.

Topper  and  Marion  made  their  way to the Colonel's table and sat down. He regarded them with polite inquiry, then automatically passed them a
bottle.

"Good evening," he said. "Are you well?"

"We are very well," replied Marion, quite seriously. "And you?"

"I am well," said the Colonel. "I am well."

He  then lapsed into silence as if the last shred of conversation had been exhausted. Topper and Marion sat quietly drinking and listening to the
din  which  was constantly increasing in volume. It had arrived at that stage of the evening when the women were doing their specialty dances and
the  men  were  imitating  animals or encouraging the dancers to more abandoned efforts. Suddenly in the midst of this debauch a new and sinister
note was introduced. The doors of the inn flew open and in each door stood a man with a revolver in his hand.

"This place is copped," announced the leader. "Men and women line up in two separate rows. No funny stuff now. Get a move on."

As if they had long rehearsed the figure the guests arranged themselves in two rows and stood swaying and giggling at one another, all except Mr.
Topper. He neither swayed nor giggled, but trembled in every limb. The Colonel stood on one side of him and George Kerby on the other. Marion was
directly  opposite. The raiding party moved from the doors and walked between the rows, and as they progressed the rows gradually faded from view
until  only  Topper remained unhappily present. Each man in turn inspected Topper, then turned back to the guests, but there were no guests to be
seen,  nothing  but  Topper  and  an empty room filled with chuckling voices and glasses moving through the air. The raiders huddled together and
raised their revolvers,and as they did so the weapons were quietly removed from their hands.

"Out with the lights!" cried the Colonel's voice, and the room was plunged in darkness.

Cries of mortal fear now broke from the raiding party and a scuffling noise was heard. Topper was seized by either arm and carried from the room.
He  felt himself thrust into the automobile and heard the grating of the gears. There was a furious barking and Oscar sprang into the car just as
it wheeled down the path.

"Another pursuit," said Topper. "What a remarkable country this is! Someone is always chasing someone else, and I'm forever it."

"Killjoys," replied Kerby from the wheel. "I was fifty dollars ahead."

"I still have my chicken," Mrs. Hart gloated from the back seat.

"And I have a couple of bottles," announced the Colonel. "Oscar seems to have the seat of someone's trousers."

"And we all still have Topper," said Marion Kerby. "Let's escort him home."

When  the  party  had materialised Topper found himself seated between Marion and George Kerby. George was driving with one hand and reaching for
the bottle with the other. Thus they sped along increasingly familiar roads at an increasingly reckless speed. Marion admonished her husband, but
he  merely  took  another drink and broke into a ribald song. Marion was clinging to Topper's hand and pressing it from time to time. The Colonel
and Mrs. Hart had apparently gone to sleep.

"Here we are," said Marion at last. "We're approaching the old tree. It's our parting point, Topper. Can you take the car from here?

"It  was  a fine party," muttered Topper; then the words refused to come. He felt that his world was dropping away from him, and as if to hold it
back, he clung with all his might to Marion's hand. The automobile gave a sharp, uneasy bounce, then side jumped from the road. As the great tree
rushed  out of the night to meet them, Marion Kerby threw herself on Mr. Topper and held him in her arms. Then Topper's world in reality did drop
away.  He  had a sensation of clinging arms and a warm breath on his cheek. There was a terrifying crash and he caught a strange picture of Oscar
describing  an arc in the air and vanishing as he turned. The earth sprang up and struck Topper a smashing blow all over. Aching darkness settled
down on him.




CHAPTER XXI Through the Easter Egg


Mr  Topper  was  entering  the  peep-hole  of his sugar Easter egg. Once inside he felt that he was in a different world, different yet strangely
familiar. A soft, still radiance, more vital and sympathetic than that of the real world, lay over a vast hollow plain which ran in a great green
dip to a distant fringe of trees.

What  was  he looking for? he wondered. Was it for the shepherdess of his youth? He knew that it had something to do with romance. Was he looking
for  Marion  Kerby?  That  must  be it. But where was she? The hollow plain was empty. No living thing moved across it. And Mr. Topper was tired.
Never  before had he been so tired. He could hardly lift his legs, they dragged so heavily. But he had to find Marion Kerby. She was necessary to
him. Already she had been too long away.

With slow, weary steps he set out across the sunken plain to the far-away trees on the other side. The tops were dipped in a glowing light as the
roof  of  the  Easter  egg turned on its downward curve, but all was dark at the base of the trees, dark, hushed and mysterious. He wanted to sit
down  and  rest, but his eagerness to find Marion urged him onward. Several times he called her name, but was unable to hear his own voice. There
seemed  to  be  no  sound  in  this Easter egg world of his. Why was there no sound? Topper became confused. He had a faint suspicion that he was
suffering from an acute hangover.

He  leaned  against a small tree, and most amazingly the tree became Marion Kerby. This convinced Topper that he was suffering from a hangover of
an exceedingly virulent nature. He took a step back and eyed her reproachfully.

"Where  have  you  been?"  he  complained. "I've been looking all over for you. Looking and calling and wandering about. I'm going to cut it out,
Marion. Too much drink. What a head I have!"

"You do look a bit like the Spirit of '76 after a hard night," she said. "Sit down before you swoon."

Topper promptly sat down and nursed his head in his hands.

"Where am I?" he demanded. "How did I find this place? You're always getting me into scrapes."

"Don't blame me," she replied. "Blame my charming husband. He has a decided flair for trees."

"Oh, yes," said Topper. "There was a tree. I remember now."

"That's  why  you're  here,"  she explained. You became altogether too familiar with that tree, but the effect will soon wear off and then you'll
have to go back."

"But why do I have to go back?" he asked. "There is no other place. And I'm tired, Marion, dog tired."

"You don't belong to our club yet," she told him, "although you came close to joining. There's still a spark of life left in you. Furthermore, it
would make things extremely uncomfortable for me with you hanging around. George, as you know, has some rather archaic ideas."

"Marion," Topper pleaded, "don't send me away. You know how I feel. I can't go back to the world now. There's nothing left for me there."

"How about Scollops?" she suggested. "How about Mrs. Topper?"

"I'm done for," he admitted, after a heavy pause. "I see I've got to go on. But won't I ever see you again? Won't you ever come back to me?"

Marion shook her head.

"I'm moving on," she told him. "Some day we'll meet again, perhaps, but things will be different then."

"Worse, if possible," grumbled Topper, painfully getting to his feet and gazing ruefully at Marion.

She grinned at his woeful expression and lifted her face to his.

"I do believe you want to kiss me," she remarked.

"Damned if I will," he replied.

"Ah, come on," she urged. "It's the last."

Topper groaned and kissed her.

"You always were a jade," he said.

"How gracious!" she retorted. "You're almost like your old self."

"I'll never be that again."

"Don't,"  she  replied.  "Don't.  Remember  this, old thing: Too much virtue will sour the sweetest character. I've taken a sort of pride in you,
seeing  you  change  and grow gay. Don't spoil it all and disappoint me. Life will squeeze you if you let it, squeeze you back into a nice little
mould with whipped cream and fixings."

"I know," said Topper drearily. "Squeeze me back into the 7.32."

"But never into white duck trousers," she replied. "Promise me that, Topper."

"I swear it," he answered.

"Good man!" she exclaimed, patting his arm. "It's almost like leaving a son--my own creation."

For a moment she regarded him thoughtfully, then moved away.

"So long," she called over her shoulder. "Good-bye, old dear."

Topper's eyes grew round with desperation.

"But, Marion! " he cried. "Marion! When shall we meet again? Won't you tell me when?"

"When fate sends you up against a larger and tougher tree," she replied. "You're a hard man to kill."

Without looking back again she drifted away among the trees and Topper stood alone on the sunken plain.

"A pretty trick," he muttered. "Leaving me flat like this. Well rid of her, say I. Always getting me into scrapes."

But  as  he continued across the fields his heart grew heavy for Marion Kerby. Several times he stopped and gazed back, looking for all the world
like a small boy reluctant to set out for school.

"The  jade,"  he continued to himself, "the heartless little jade. I don't care a damn. Scollops has better sense. What's happening to the light?
I'll never get out of this place. Marion, where are you? You got me into this fix."

Gradually  the  plain  grew  dark and faded away as Mr. Topper, panting heavily, struggled through the peephole of his Easter egg world. It was a
tight squeeze. He seemed to be hanging in space.

"Still too fat," he growled. "My stomach sticks, damn it! "

* * *

When  Mr.  Topper  returned to consciousness he found himself in a small white bed in a small white room. The hospital was close to his home, but
Mr.  Topper  knew  nothing of this. During the course of his vacation he had awakened in so many unfamiliar places that he instinctively began to
figure out what had happened at last night's party. Where had he been? What had he done? In what place was he lying now?

Then  his  eyes  fell  on  Mrs. Topper and everything became clear. There were no adventures ahead. He looked at her through half-closed eyes and
wondered  about  the  woman.  She  was crumpled in her chair and her eyes were fixed on some green boughs tapping against the window. Somehow she
looked  quite  pitiful. Strange that was, she had never looked pitiful before. And her face was not so unpleasant, thought Topper; in fact it was
almost  attractive  now  that the petulant, self-centred lines had been replaced by those of genuine anxiety. Her hand was resting lightly on the
bed and Topper fumbled it into his.

"Hello," he said, "how's the girl?"

With  a little gasp she turned in her chair and looked at his sunken face. It was odd to see the tears in her eyes and the uncertain smile on her
lips.

"You can kiss me," said Topper magnificently. "I'm too tired to move."

Mrs. Topper was very much afraid. She kissed him, but did not linger over it.

"I might hurt you," she faltered.

"Am I as broken up as all that?"

"You're pretty well cracked," she admitted. "It's lucky you're still alive. The automobile burned up."

Topper heard this with relief. Much damaging evidence had been destroyed.

"It was the same tree," he remarked.

"They're talking of cutting it down," she replied.

A  nurse  looked  in  at the door and, seeing the two conversing, hurried for the doctor. Topper was examined and Mrs. Topper dismissed. When she
returned to say good-bye she found him white from pain.

"Go home," he said, "and take a rest. I've given you a tough time of it. How's the indigestion?"

"You know," she replied. "I've been so worried I think I've lost it."

"You'll get it back," he answered consolingly.

"I don't want it," she snapped. "I've got you back and you're trouble enough. No sarcasm, please."

"How's my cat?"

"As useless as ever."

Under her calm exterior Mrs. Topper was radiant. She gathered up her possessions and kissed her husband again.

"Those knickers," she whispered. "I'm sorry about them. They were lovely. I bought a lot more."

A  smile flickered momentarily across Mr. Topper's lips. His eyes moved to the window. The fields and the woodlands stretched out to the dropping
sun.  Somewhere  out  there in space was Marion Kerby. But was she there? Had he ever seen her? A remarkable dream? Hardly. Across the fields the
old song came back on the wings of memory:

"My husband he did it. The devil would drive, The high-flying, low-lying soak. And that is the reason I'm no more alive, For he ran me smack into
an oak."

He  raised  his  hand to his forehead. Yes, that was George Kerby's scar. It was still there. And where were the Colonel and the jocund Mrs. Hart
and  that  prince  of  dogs,  Oscar? Gone, all gone. Would he ever see them again? The sun had touched the treetops now, filling their limbs with
fire. Topper sat watching the glowing sky until the colours faded. A nurse entered and handed him a glass. Topper obediently drank it.

"Very poor," he remarked. "Very poor. Who bootlegs for this hospital?"

She  laughed automatically and departed with the tray. Topper cautiously eased his position in the bed. In a little while he would be leaving the
hospital, going home, going back to the distractions and obligations of life, going back to desks, schedules, daily travellings, legs of lamb and
familiar  eyes.  But  things  would  never be the same. Topper was sure about that. Life would never get him. He would use it differently now. He
himself was a different man. Perhaps he would sell his house and go away somewhere. He could get her to agree to that. In a little while he would
be  going back. Yes, going back home, starting the game all over. It would be good to see Scollops again. And the old girl was not so bad, not so
bad,  not  at  all so bad. But somewhere out there between the wind and stars, Marion Kerby was drifting, drifting farther and farther away. Thus
meditating, Topper fell into a quiet sleep and dreamed that he was introducing Scollops to Oscar and that Oscar, now thoroughly in control of his
members, amused the cat for hours by making his head and tail alternately disappear. Oscar was snappy about it.

THE END

End of this Meredy.com E-book Topper by James Thorne Smith, Jr.
____

Watch the 1937 version of Topper starring Cary Grant and Constance Bennett.

No comments:

Post a Comment