In a fifth-story sitting room of a New York boarding house four youths were
holding a discussion. The sitting room was large and square, and in the wildest
disorder, which was, however, sublimated into a certain system by an illuminated
device to the effect that one should "Have a Place for Everything, and then
there'll be one Place you won't have to look." Easels and artists' materials
thrust back to the wall sufficiently advertised the art student, and perhaps
explained the untidiness.
Two of the occupants of the room, curled up on elevated window ledges, were
emitting clouds of tobacco smoke and nursing their knees; the other two, naked
to the waist, sat on a couple of ordinary bedroom mattresses deposited carefully
in the vacant centre of the apartment. They were eager, alert-looking young men,
well-muscled, curly of hair, and possessing in common an unabashed carriage of
the head which, more plainly than any mere facial resemblance, proved them
brothers. They, too, were nursing their knees.
"He must be an unadorned ass," remarked one of the occupants of the window
seats, in answer to some previous statement.
"He is not," categorically denied a youth of the mattresses. "My dear Hench,
you make no distinctions. I've been talking about the boy's people and his
bringing up and the way he acts, whereupon you fly off on a tangent and coolly
conclude things about the boy himself. It is not only unkind, but stupid."
Hench laughed. "You amuse me, Jeems," said he; "elucidate."
Jeems let go his knees. The upper part of his body, thus deprived of support,
fell backward on the mattress. He then clasped his hands behind his head, and
stared at the ceiling.