Arms and the Woman - Page 19/169

Hillars hadn't been down to the office in two days, so the assistant

said.

"Is he ill?" I asked, as I carried a chair to the window.

"Ill?" The young man coughed affectedly.

"Do you believe it possible for him to come in this afternoon?"

"It is quite possible. One does not use the word impossible in regard

to Hillars. It is possible that he may be in St. Petersburg by this

time, for all I know. You see," with an explanatory wave of the hand,

"he's very uncertain in his movements. For the last six months he has

been playing all over the table, to use the parlance of the roulette

player. I have had to do most of the work, and take care of him into

the bargain. If I may take you into my confidence----," with some

hesitancy.

"Certainly," said I. "I want you to tell me all about him. He was my

roommate at college. Perhaps I can straighten him up."

"The truth is, the trouble began last September. He came back from the

Continent, where he had been on an errand, a changed man. Hillars

always drank, but never to an alarming extent. On his return, however,

he was in a bad shape. It was nearly November before I got him sobered

up; and then he went under on an average of three times a week. I

asked him bluntly what he meant by it, and he frankly replied that if

he wanted to drink himself to death, that was his business. When he

isn't half-seas over he is gloomy and morose. From the first I knew

that something had gone wrong on the mainland; but I couldn't trap him

for a farthing. No man at his age drinks himself to death without

cause; I told him so, but he only laughed at me. I'd give a good deal

to know what the truth is; not from curiosity, mind you, but to find

the disease in order to apply a remedy. Dan's father died of drink."

"No," said I coldly; "he was shot."

"Oh, I know that," was the reply; "but give a conditioned man the same

wound and he will recover, nine times out of ten. The elder Hillars

was so enervated by drink that he had no strength to fight the fever

which came on top of the bullet-hole. Something happened over there;

and it's pounds to pence there's a woman back of the curtain. It is

some one worth while. Hillars is not a man to fall in love with a

barmaid."