Arthur Train’s McAllister and His Double (New York: Scribners, 1905), is seven stories about the man his fellow clubmen call “Chubby McAllister” and his quondam valet turned notorious second-story man, Wilkins, known as “Fatty Welch,” to whom McAllister bears an unfortunate resemblance. The McAllister stories were published in Scribner’s, Metropolitan Magazine, and The Saturday Evening Post from December, 1904 until October, 1905. Scribners published the collection in 1905 as McAllister and His Double.
From the comfort of the Colophon Club on Christmas Eve, McAllister scoffs at the idea of prison conditions being deplorable . He thinks briefly of Wilkins, his valet who stole a pearl scarf-pin and whom his master turned in. But he soon finds himself taken for a criminal when he throws himself into what he thinks is a cab but turns out to be a getaway carriage for a thief. And the police are convinced he is “Fatty Welch,” which is the nickname of Wilkins. He is subjected to an “anthropometric” system developed by Bertillon, and two mugshots, front and profile, are taken of him, but there is no mention of fingerprinting. He is taken to the Tombs and put in with “Davidson,” which is the name Wilkins gave when he was first arrested. McAllister’s lawyer writes back to him indignantly that McAllister is out of town and he must therefore be an imposter, but he has second thoughts and shows up to get McAllister off. The next night, when someone at the club scoffs at prison reform, repeating McAllister’s own words about prison being no worse than a second-class hotel in Europe, McAllister shouts him down with “What do you know about it?” Such is “McAllister’s Christmas.”
These are tales about a fat, complacent rich man who, through his uncanny resemblance to his former valet-turned-burglar, learns about how the other half lives, and something about himself as well. After spending a few days in jail, McAllister tries to keep his friends from learning about what he considers shameful, for the sake of his dignity, because “Nothing so effectually, as McAllister well knew, conceals the absence of brains.” But McAllister either acquires brains or begins to use the ones he has in the course of the stories. He assists a detective, who becomes his friend, in a number of cases, several of which he figures out on his own, and he begins to think about his life and what he owes to his fellow mortals. All of this is handled with a light comic touch.
McAllister is grabbed by Inspector Barney Conville just as he is about to board the subway for a house party in Scarsdale. Conville agrees to go part of the way to see if McAllister can convince him he’s not Fatty Welch. The unlikely premise is that he goes all the way and is introduced at the house party as the Baron de Ville, but Chubby locks him in the bathroom because the inspector has no evening clothes. At dinner, McAllister sees that Wilkins is serving, just as a guest loudly proclaims her pearl necklace is gone. McAllister tells Wilkins to slip him the pearls and scram because there are cops in the house. Conville jumps to the ground from the bathroom window just as Wilkins drives off in the dog cart. Conville, now acknowledging that he was fooled, pursues. McAllister returns the necklace to everyone’s astonished admiration.
“The Escape of Wilkins” takes him to the Colophon Club, where he begs McAllister to help him. McAllister fends off the police and sends Wilkins on a train to Boston, where he himself shows up from a party, in costume as Henry VIII. After various comic adventures, Wilkins gets away and McAllister is arrested by a Boston cop and then sprung and returned to New York by Conville, who asks him why he doesn’t help them catch Wilkins. “Perhaps I will,” says McAllister.
Wilkins reappears as one of a gang attempting to steal the jewels in “The Governor-General’s Trunk.” Barney Conville is a step ahead of them: he has secured the jewels in the safe at the Waldorf, where McAllister’s aunt Sophia and uncle Basil are staying. Basil is Governor-General of “a small group of islands somewhere near the equator.” Wilkins managed to get hired as his valet and believes the jewels are still in the trunk where he put them before sending the trunk to Grand Central Station, where Conville and McAllister spend some time in the trunk working the capture of Wilkins co-conspirators, but Wilkins himself gets away.
In “The Golden Touch,” after hearing about a fellow clubman being cheated in a bunco scheme involving fake gold mine stock, McAllister finds himself investigating such a scheme, that seems to involve the same cast of characters as the clubman described. He brings Barney Conville and the clubman in and gets the gang together, but then he discovers Wilkins among them. He surreptitiously asks for Wilkins’s help when he finds himself in a tight spot, and when Wilkins gives it, McAllister allows him to escape. When we hear about Wilkins again, he has reformed and is once again McAllister’s valet. Moreover, McAllister himself has changed in the remaining stories.
In London ordering several suits to be made before his departure for New York in two days, McAllister inadvertently becomes the cause of two poor tailor’s assistants, one with a nasty cough, having to work all Saturday night and through Sunday to finish his clothes in time. McAllister stews over this Saturday evening and then goes back to the tailor shop at midnight to try to persuade the workers to stop their labor. Comic difficulties ensue. The workers won’t stop without the shop owner’s orders, so McAllister goes all the way to Kew in the wee hours and manages to convince him—he thinks McAllister is some sort of religious fanatic and agrees to let his people off work. McAllister returns to the shop and sends the workmen home in his own cab. “McAllister’s Data of Ethics” is not systematic like the Herbert Spencer work the title refers to, but McAllister is at least beginning not only to think about what is right and fair but to act on it as well.
The last McAllister story is a sentimental one, “McAllister’s Marriage.” He unwillingly tends a little girl in her train trip from Bar Harbor to Bangor when her uncle enlists him. Then he finds himself at the farm of an aunt who is her guardian, who will soon have to sell her land because she can’t make a go of it, and this will mean the child goes to her uncle, whose wife does not like her. McAllister buys the farm, and because the little girl has said she would be willing to marry a man who “never hurt anyone,” he slips a cigar band on her finger and symbolically marries her, sending her back to her guardian with a signed paper giving the farm to the child. He’s already promised her guardian that they can live on the land without rent.