“The Authors’ Room,” Longfellow repeated, smiling dreamily. “How long since I idled there with our friends! The world was a holiday planet then, and things were precisely what they seemed. I've just left some papers for Mr. Clark that needed my signature. But I ought to return to Cambridge to my girls.”
“I shall walk with you part of the way, if you'd allow it. I have my gloves on already.”
Osgood put his arm through the author's as they walked up Tremont Street through the blustery afternoon. Their talk, interrupted at intervals by the freezing gusts, soon turned to
“I believe I interrupted your shop boy's enjoyment of Drood's tale,” Longfellow said.
“Oh, yes. That's little Rich-he hadn't seen a schoolroom before two years ago, and now reads a book a week.
“It is certainly one of Mr. Dickens's most beautiful works, if not the most beautiful of all. It is too sad to think the pen had fallen out of his hand to leave it incomplete,” Longfellow said.
“Some months ago I had in my possession the final pages,” said Osgood, without exactly intending to. What would Osgood tell him about it? That Fred Chapman had taken the manuscript back to England? That an accident had occurred on board the ship and destroyed several pieces of baggage including the trunk carrying.
Longfellow paused before replying, pulling Osgood's arm closer as if to tell him a secret. “It is for the best.”
“What do you mean?”
“I sometimes think, dear Mr. Osgood, that all proper books are unfinished. They simply have to feign completion for the convenience of the public. If not for publishers, no authors would ever reach the end. We would have all writers and no readers. So you mustn't shed a tear for
Indeed, their edition of
The added attention by the trade journals not only helped sell copies of
It was all a revelation in the trade. The firm was poised not only to survive but to flourish.
Returning to 124 Tremont after parting from Longfellow, as he hung his hat on a peg, Osgood was greeted by the reliable clerk who had replaced Mr. Midges. “Mr. Fields wants to see you at once,” he said.
Osgood thanked him and started to take his leave before the clerk called after him. “Oh, Mr. Osgood, the operator has stepped out. Do you require assistance with the car?”
Osgood glanced at the firm's newly installed elevator on the east wing of the building. “Thank you,” he said. “I'd just as soon take the stairs.”
On his way through the corridors, he looked for Rebecca, who had some weeks earlier been promoted by Fields from a bookkeeper to the position of reader. The usual reader had fallen ill for two weeks. Rebecca had impressed Fields examining the manuscripts submitted to
Since their return from England, Osgood and Rebecca's contact had been the model of professional distance and propriety, all doors of communication between them open for anyone to see. But they had both marked their desk registers. May 15, 1871, approximately six months from the present: that would be the date the clock would wind down for her divorce to be as official as the gold dome of the State House. The wait proved to be a source of immense excitement. The secret was thrilling and increased their love for each other. Each day that passed brought them twenty-four hours closer to the reward of an open courtship.
When he entered the senior partner's office, Osgood sighed in spite of himself and their renewed successes.
“More extraordinary sales numbers for the last Dickens today,” Fields said. “Yet your thoughts seem far away.”
“Perhaps they are.”
“Well, where, then?”
“Lost at sea. Mr. Fields, I must speak my mind. I think it possible Frederic Chapman's baggage had no accident at all.”
“Oh?”
“I do not believe those pages were involved in an accident. I possess no evidence, only suspicion. Instinct, perhaps.”
Fields nodded contemplatively. The senior partner had the general mark of exhaustion on him. “I see.”
“You think me unjust to the gentleman,” Osgood said cautiously.
“Fred Chapman? I know him no better than you to judge him a gentleman or swindler.”
“Yet you don't seem the least bit surprised by my radical notion!” Osgood exclaimed.
Fields looked over Osgood calmly. “There
“I know. Yet you've suspected it, too,” Osgood said. “You've suspected something else from the beginning. Haven't you?”
“My dear Osgood. Have a chair. Have you read Forster's book on Dickens's life?”
“I have avoided it.”
“Yes, he hardly wastes any breath on our American tour. But he does print the text of Dickens's contract with Chapman.”
Osgood put the book down. “It is as the Major said, that books would be mere lumber. Chapman gets paid twice!” he exclaimed.
“Correct,” Fields said. “He earns the money from the sale of the book and he gets paid from the Dickens estate in compensation for the book being unfinished. On the other hand, if he waved the final chapter around for the world to see, the executors-Forster, who likes Chapman not a bit, considering him another unworthy competitor for Dickens's attentions-would argue that even without the entire final six installments, the last chapter proves Dickens
“Nor does he contend with pirates, as we do without copyright for Mr. Dickens over here,” Osgood said.
“No, he doesn't,” Fields agreed.
“Do you think the pages we gave him, that last chapter, still exist, then?”
“Perhaps an accident did destroy them. We shall never know. Unless-well, you say he gets paid twice, very