grateful little man; you remember what Mrs. Wagner has done for you."
   "Remember?" Jack reported scornfully. "I say, if you can't talk more
   sensibly than that, you had better hold your tongue." He turned and
   appealed to me. "Did you ever hear anything like Fritz? He seems to think
   it wonderful that I remember the day when she took me out of Bedlam!"
   "Ah, Jack, that was a great day in your life, wasn't it?"
   "A great day? Oh, good Lord in Heaven! where are there words that are big
   enough to speak about it?" He sprang to his feet, wild with the sudden
   tumult of his own recollections. "The sun--the warm, golden, glorious,
   beautiful sun--met us when we came out of the gates, and all but drove me
   stark-staring-mad with the joy of it! Forty thousand devils--little
   straw-colored, lively, tempting devils--(mind, I counted them!)--all
   crawled over me together. They sat on my shoulders--and they tickled my
   hands--and they scrambled in my hair--and they were all in one cry at me
   like a pack of dogs. 'Now, Jack! we are waiting for you; your chains are
   off, and the sun's shining, and Mistress's carriage is at the gate--join
   us, Jack, in a good yell; a fine, tearing, screeching, terrifying, mad
   yell!' I dropped on my knees, down in the bottom of the carriage; and I
   held on by the skirts of Mistress's dress. 'Look at me!' I said; 'I won't
   burst out; I won't frighten you, if I die for it. Only help me with your
   eyes! only look at me!' And she put me on the front seat of the carriage,
   opposite her, and she never took her eyes off me all the way through the
   streets till we got to the house. 'I believe in you, Jack,' she said. And
   I wouldn't even open my lips to answer her--I was so determined to be
   quiet. Ha! ha! how you two fellows would have yelled, in my place!" He
   sat down again in his corner, delighted with his own picture of the two
   fellows who would have yelled in his place.
   "And what did Mistress do with you when she brought you home?" I asked.
   His gaiety suddenly left him. He lifted one of his hands, and waved it to
   and fro gently in the air.
   "You are too loud, David," he said. "All this part of it must be spoken
   softly--because all this part of it is beautiful, and kind, and good.
   There was a picture in the room, of angels and their harps. I wish I had
   the angels and the harps to help me tell you about it. Fritz there came
   in with us, and called it a bedroom. I knew better than that; I called it
   Heaven. You see, I thought of the prison and the darkness and the cold
   and the chains and the straw--and I named it Heaven. You two may say what
   you please; Mistress said I was right."
   He closed his eyes with a luxurious sense of self-esteem, and appeared to
   absorb himself in his own thoughts. Fritz unintentionally roused him by
   continuing the story of Jack's introduction to the bedroom.
   "Our little friend," Fritz began confidentially, "did the strangest
   things when he found himself in his new room. It was a cold day; and he
   insisted on letting the fire out. Then he looked at the bedclothes,
   and----"
   Jack solemnly opened his eyes again, and stopped the narrative at that
   point.
   "You are not the right person to speak of it," he said. "Nobody must
   speak of it but a person who understands me. You shan't be disappointed,
   David. I understand myself--_I'll_ tell you about it. You saw what sort
   of place I lived in and slept in at the madhouse, didn't you?"
   "I saw it, Jack--and I can never forget it."
   "Now just think of my having a room, to begin with. And add, if you
   please, a fire--and a light--and a bed--and blankets and sheets and
   pillows--and clothes, splendid new clothes, for Me! And then ask yourself
   if any man could bear it, all pouring on him at once (not an hour after
   he had left Bedlam), without going clean out of his senses and screeching
   for joy? No, no. If I have a quality, it's profound common sense. Down I
   went on my knees before her again! 'If you have any mercy on me,
   Mistress, let me have all this by a bit at a time. Upon my soul, I can't
   swallow it at once!' She understood me. We let the fire out--and
   surprised that deficient person, Fritz. A little of the Bedlam cold kept
   me nice and quiet. The bed that night if you like--but Heaven defend me
   from the blankets and the sheets and the pillows till I'm able to bear
   them! And as to putting on coat, waistcoat, and breeches, all together,
   the next morning--it was as much as I could do, when I saw myself in my
   breeches, to give the word of command in the voice of a gentleman--'Away
   with the rest of them! The shirt for to-morrow, the waistcoat for next
   day, and the coat--if I can bear the sight of it without screaming--the
   day after!' A gradual process, you see, David. And every morning Mistress
   helped me by saying the words she said in the carriage, 'I believe in
   you, Jack.' You ask her, when she gets up, if I ever once frightened her,
   from the day when she took me home." He looked again, with undiminished
   resentment, at Fritz. _"Now_ do you understand what I did when I got into
   my new room? Is Fritz in the business, David? He'll want a deal of
   looking after if he is. Just step this way--I wish to speak to you."
   He got up again, and taking my arm with a look of great importance, led
   me a few steps away--but not far enough to be out of sight of my aunt's
   bell.
   "I say," he began, "I've heard they call this place Frankfort. Am I
   right?"
   "Quite right!"
   "And there's a business here, like the business in London?"
   "Certainly."
   "And Mistress _is_ Mistress here, like she is in London?"
   "Yes."
   "Very well, then, I want to know something. What about the Keys?"
   I looked at him, entirely at a loss to understand what this last question
   meant. He stamped his foot impatiently.
   "Do you mean to say, David, you have never heard what situation I held in
   the London office?"
   "Never, Jack!"
   He drew himself up and folded his arms, and looked at me from the
   immeasurable height of his own superiority.
   "I was Keeper of the Keys in London!" he announced. "And what I want to
   know is--Am I to be Keeper of the Keys here?"
   It was now plain enough that my aunt--proceeding on the wise plan of
   always cultivating the poor creature's sense of responsibility--had given
   him some keys to take care of, and had put him on his honor to be worthy
   of his little trust. I could not doubt that she would find some means of
   humoring him in the same way at Frankfort.
   "Wait till the bells rings," I answered "and perhaps you will find the
   Keys waiting for you in Mistress' room."
   He rubbed his hands in delight. "That's it!" he said. "Let's keep watch
   on the bell."
   As he turned to go back again to his corner, Madame Fontaine's voice
   reached us from the top of the kitchen stairs. She was speaking to her
   daughter. Jack stopped directly and waited, looking round at the stairs.
   "Where is the other person who came here with Mrs. Wagner?" the widow
   asked. "A man with an odd English name. Do you know, Minna, if they have
					     					 			 />
   found a room for him?"
   She reached the lower stair as she spoke--advanced along the
   corridor--and discovered Jack Straw. In an instant, her languid
   indifferent manner disappeared. Her eyes opened wildly under their heavy
   lids. She stood motionless, like a woman petrified by surprise--perhaps
   by terror.
   "Hans Grimm!" I heard her say to herself. "God in heaven! what brings
   _him_ here?"
   CHAPTER XXIV
   Almost instantaneously Madame Fontaine recovered her self-control.
   "I really couldn't help feeling startled," she said, explaining herself
   to Fritz and to me. "The last time I saw this man, he was employed in a
   menial capacity at the University of Wurzburg. He left us one day, nobody
   knew why. And he suddenly appears again, without a word of warning, in
   this house."
   I looked at Jack. A smile of mischievous satisfaction was on his face. He
   apparently enjoyed startling Madame Fontaine. His expression changed
   instantly for the better, when Minna approached and spoke to him.
   "Don't you remember me, Hans?" she said.
   "Oh, yes, Missie, I remember you. You are a good creature. You take after
   your papa. _He_ was a good creature--except when he had his beastly
   medical bottles in his hand. But, I say, I mustn't be called by the name
   they gave me at the University! I was a German then--I am an Englishman
   now. All nations are alike to me. But I am particular about my name,
   because it's the name Mistress knew me by. I will never have another.
   'Jack Straw,' if you please. There's my name, and I am proud of it. Lord!
   what an ugly little hat you have got on your head! I'll soon make you a
   better one." He turned on Madame Fontaine, with a sudden change to
   distrust.
   "I don't like the way you spoke of my leaving the University, just now. I
   had a right to go, if I liked--hadn't I?"
   "Oh, yes, Hans."
   "Not Hans! Didn't you hear what I mentioned just now? Say Jack."
   She said it, with a ready docility which a little surprised me.
   "Did I steal anything at the University?" Jack proceeded.
   "Not that I know of."
   "Then speak respectfully of me, next time. Say, 'Mr. Jack retired from
   the University, in the exercise of his discretion.' " Having stated this
   formula with an air of great importance, he addressed himself to me. "I
   appeal to you," he said. "Suppose you had lost your color here" (he
   touched his cheek), "and your color there" (he touched his hair); "and
   suppose it had happened at the University--would _you"_ (he stood on
   tip-toe, and whispered the next words in my ear) would _you_ have stopped
   there, to be poisoned again? No!" he cried, raising his voice once more,
   "you would have drifted away like me. From Germany to France; from France
   to England--and so to London, and so under the feet of her Highness's
   horses, and so to Bedlam, and so to Mistress. Oh, Lord help me, I'm
   forgetting the bell! good-bye, all of you. Let me be in my corner till
   the bell rings."
   Madame Fontaine glanced at me compassionately, and touched her bead.
   "Come to my sitting-room, Jack," she said, "and have something to eat and
   drink, and tell me your adventures after you left Wurzburg."
   She favored him with her sweetest smile, and spoke in her most
   ingratiating tones. That objectionable tendency of mine to easily suspect
   others was, I suppose, excited once more. At any rate, I thought the
   widow showed a very remarkable anxiety to conciliate Jack. He was proof,
   however, against all attempts at fascination--he shook his head
   obstinately, and pointed to the bell. We went our several ways, and left
   the strange little man crouched up in his corner.
   In the afternoon, I was sent for to see my aunt.
   I found Jack at his post; established in a large empty wardrobe, on the
   landing outside his mistress's door. His fingers were already busy with
   the framework of the new straw hat which he had promised to make for
   Minna.
   "All right, David!" he said, patronizing me as indulgently as ever.
   "Mistress has had her good sleep and her nice breakfast, and she looks
   lovely. Go in, and see her--go in!"
   I thought myself that she looked perhaps a little worn, and certainly
   thinner than when I had seen her last. But these were trifles. It is not
   easy to describe the sense of relief and pleasure that I felt--after
   having been accustomed to the sleepy eyes and serpentine graces of Madame
   Fontaine--when I looked again at the lithe active figure and the bright
   well-opened gray eyes of my dear little English aunt.
   "Tell me, David," she began, as soon as the first greetings were over,
   what do you think of Jack Straw? Was my poor dear husband not right? and
   have I not done well to prove it?"
   I could, and did, honestly congratulate her on the result of the visit to
   Bedlam.
   "And now about the people here," she went on. "I find Fritz's father
   completely changed on the subject of Fritz's marriage. And when I ask
   what it means, I am told that Madame Fontaine has set everything right,
   in the most wonderful manner, by saving Mr. Keller's life. Is this true?"
   "Quite true. What do you think of Madame Fontaine?"
   "Ask me that, David, to-morrow or the next day. My head is muddled by
   traveling--I have not made up my mind yet."
   "Have you seen Minna?"
   "Seen her, and kissed her too! There's a girl after my own heart. I
   consider our scatter-brained friend Fritz to be the luckiest young fellow
   living."
   "If Minna was not going to be married," I suggested, "she would just do
   for one of your young-lady clerks, wouldn't she?"
   My aunt laughed. "Exactly what I thought myself, when I saw her. But you
   are not to make a joke of my young-lady clerks. I am positively
   determined to carry out that useful reform in the office here. However,
   as Mr. Keller has been so lately ill, and as we are sure to have a fight
   about it, I will act considerately towards my opponent--I won't stir in
   the matter until he is quite himself again. In the meantime, I must find
   somebody, while I am away, to take my place in the London house. The
   business is now under the direction of Mr. Hartrey. He is perfectly
   competent to carry it on; but, as you know, our excellent head-clerk has
   his old--fashioned prejudices. According to strict rule, a partner ought
   always to be in command, at the London business--and Hartrey implores me
   (if Mr. Keller is not well enough to take the journey) to send Mr.
   Engelman to London. Where is Mr. Engelman? How is it that I have neither
   heard nor seen anything of him?"
   This was a delicate and difficult question to answer--at least, to my way
   of thinking. There was little prospect of keeping the poor old
   gentleman's sad secret. It was known to Fritz and Minna, as well as to
   Mr. Keller. Still, I felt an unconquerable reluctance to be the first
   person who revealed the disaster that had befallen him.
   "Mr. Engelman is not in good health and spirits," I said. "He has gone
   away for a little rest and change."
   My aunt looked astonished.
 &nbs 
					     					 			p; "Both the partners ill!" she exclaimed. "I remember Mr. Engelman, in the
   days when I was first married. He used to boast of never having had a
   day's illness in his life. Not at all a clever man--but good as gold, and
   a far more sensitive person than most people gave him credit for being.
   He promised to be fat as years grew on him. Has he kept his promise? What
   is the matter with him?"
   I hesitated. My aunt eyed me sharply, and put another question before I
   had quite made up my mind what to say.
   "If you can't tell me what is the matter with him, can you tell me where
   he is? I may want to write to him."
   I hesitated again. Mr. Engelman's address had been confidentially
   communicated to me, for reasons which I was bound to respect. "I am
   afraid I can't answer that question either," I said awkwardly enough.
   "Good heavens!" cried my aunt, "what does all this mystery mean? Has Mr.
   Engelman killed a man in a duel? or run away with an opera-dancer? or
   squandered the whole profits of the business at the gambling-table? or
   what? As she put these bold views of the case, we heard voices outside,
   followed by a gentle knock at the door. Minna entered the room with a
   message.
   "Mamma has sent me, Mrs. Wagner, to ask at what time you would like to
   dine."
   "My dear, I am much obliged to your mother. I have only just breakfasted,
   and I can wait quite well till supper-time comes. Stop a minute! Here is
   my nephew driving me to the utmost verge of human endurance, by making a
   mystery of Mr. Engelman's absence from Frankfort. Should I be very
   indiscreet if I asked--Good gracious, how the girl blushes! You are
   evidently in the secret too, Miss Minna. _Is_ it an opera-dancer? Leave
   us together, David."
   This made Minna's position simply unendurable. She looked at me
   appealingly. I did at last, what I ought to have done at first--I spoke
   out plainly.
   "The fact is, aunt," I said, "poor Mr. Engelman has left us for awhile,
   sadly mortified and distressed. He began by admiring Madame Fontaine; and
   he ended in making her an offer of marriage."
   "Mamma was indeed truly sorry for him," Minna added; "but she had no
   other alternative than to refuse him, of course."
   "Upon my word, child, I see no 'of course' in the matter!" my aunt
   answered sharply.
   Minna was shocked. "Oh, Mrs. Wagner! Mr. Engelman is more than twenty
   years older than mamma--and (I am sure I pity him, poor man)--and _so_
   fat!"
   "Fat is a matter of taste," my aunt remarked, more and more resolute in
   taking Mr. Engelman's part. "And as for his being twenty years older than
   your mother, I can tell you, young lady, that my dear lost husband was
   twenty years my senior when he married me--and a happier couple never
   lived. I know more of the world than you do; and I say Madame Fontaine
   has made a great mistake. She has thrown away an excellent position in
   life, and has pained and humiliated one of the kindest-hearted men
   living. No! no! I am not going to argue the matter with you now; I'll
   wait till you are married to Fritz. But I own I should like to speak to
   your mother about it. Ask her to favor me by stepping this way for a few
   minutes, when she has nothing to do."
   Minna seemed to think this rather a high-handed method of proceeding, and
   entered a modest protest accordingly.
   "Mamma is a very sensitive person," she began with dignity.
   My aunt stopped her with a pat on the cheek.
   "Good child! I like you for taking your mother's part. Mamma has another
   merit, my dear. She is old enough to understand me better than you do. Go
   and fetch her."